“Do you want your television just to broadcast agreement at your face?”

By Morgan Cormack

Published: Monday, 25 March 2024 at 17:06 PM


After much speculation, Steven Moffat has returned to the fantastic world of Doctor Who – and it’s safe to say that many fans are eager to see what will unfold in the new episode that he’s slated to write.

But of course, after an impressive tenure helming the BBC sci-fi from 2010 to 2017, there will be added expectation for the mysterious new episode.

Speaking with the University of Glasgow’s Screenwriting Society, Moffat was asked about what it’s been like to return to write on a show for a “very similar but yet very different society” compared to when he first worked on Doctor Who.

When asked about how he’s found that, alongside changes in “the way that we view TV but also what’s in TV and how we represent people in TV and Britain”, Moffat said: “Well, we are talking about a show that started in 1963 and hasn’t changed that much.”

He continued: “I don’t know, I think you’re slightly foolish to think it’s your job to reflect society. I don’t think it really is. I know people always say it is, but why?

“Do you want your television just to broadcast agreement at your face? ‘Yes, you’re right about everything, here’s your world.’ I don’t think you ever… you just try to tell exciting stories.

“Doctor Who is very much Doctor Who, and I can assure you, having read quite a few of the new ones, that it’s still that show.

Steven Moffat in a white shirt and black blazer
Steven Moffat.
Shane Anthony Sinclair/Getty Images

“Tiny little details change, but basically he runs out the TARDIS and says, ‘There’s something terribly wrong here,’ and sorts it out for a while, right? Then blows everything up at the last minute.”

He added: “I’m aware I’m the old geezer coming along to do Doctor Who but that’s alright, there’s nothing wrong with that. There’s also young people writing on this show.

“I don’t think you’re ever really that engaged by that, tell a story. It’s not your job to reflect people’s culture back at them, it really isn’t.”