The Doctor is in… big time. The season 11 premiere of Doctor Who, featuring the debut of Jodie Whittaker as the Doctor, was a major hit for British audiences. In fact, it was the biggest non-holiday or anniversary episode of Doctor Who in over a decade.
According to unofficial overnight ratings figures — that’s people watching live on the night, not factoring in elements such as people recording the episode to watch later, or viewing it officially online — reported by Doctor Who News, “The Woman Who Fell To Earth” was a ratings smash for Doctor Who, garnering 8.2 million viewers on BBC One in the UK, which was about 40 per cent of the total TV audience.
This beats overnight ratings for both Matt Smith (8 million) and Peter Capaldi’s (6.8 million) debuts as the Doctor, but didn’t match David Tennant’s (9.4 million) — though that was also a Christmas special, which tend to draw in larger audiences.
In fact, the overnight ratings for “The Woman Who Fell to Earth” are the biggest a “normal” episode — as in, an episode that isn’t a Christmas special or an event broadcast, such as the 50th anniversary special in 2013 — has had since 2008’s “Journey’s End”.
We’re still waiting to see the audience size for ABC in Australia and BBC America in the US (which both aired the episode at the same time as BBC One), as well as how many people watched the episode later on streaming services or through timeshifted recordings — final ratings, which factor in all that, will be available next week.
But all things considered, it’s our first empirical sign Whittaker’s debut was a smashing success.