Doctor Who is greatest TV show ever made, says Moffat

Photo credit: Eamonn M. McCormack/Getty Images
Photo credit: Eamonn M. McCormack/Getty Images

From Digital Spy

Last night, this year's Doctor Who Christmas special was screened to select press and fans - and, in his final engagement as showrunner, Steven Moffat delivered a hell of a final speech.

Rounding off a Q&A session with the cast and crew of 'Twice Upon a Time', Moffat leapt into a lengthy monologue about why, without doubt, Doctor Who is the greatest TV show ever made... and it was really quite something.

Presented here - in full and unedited - is Moffat's speech from the event. (He makes a very convincing argument.)

"I'm just going to say it, because I don't ever say it, but now I'm leaving I'll just say it... it is actually the greatest television show ever made. And I'm going to prove it to you.

"There are probably press here who are saying, "No, it's The Wire!" or something. No, it's not! It's not The Wire. It's not I, Claudius. It's not The Office. It's not even Blue Planet. It is Doctor Who... and I'm gonna prove to whoever is doubting me the hardest that they're wrong to doubt me.

Photo credit: Simon Ridgway / BBC
Photo credit: Simon Ridgway / BBC

"How do you measure greatness? Do you measure it by ratings? Do you measure it by reviews? Christ, no, of course you don't.

"Do you measure by perfection? Is Doctor Who perfect every week? No, it's not. It really isn't. It can't be, because every episode of Doctor Who is an experiment and if you experiment every single week, sometimes you get a faceful of soot and you're blinking the smoke away and you look a bit ridiculous.

"That happens. Perfection is the refinement of boredom - it's doing the same thing all the time, perfectly. Doctor Who, by always being different, can never be perfect.

"So how do we measure its greatness? There are people who became writers because of Doctor Who. Loads of them. There are people who became artists because of Doctor Who. There are people who became actors because of Doctor Who... and two of them have played the Doctor!

Photo credit: Chris Jackson / Getty Images
Photo credit: Chris Jackson / Getty Images

"There are people, believe it or not, who have become scientists because of Doctor Who - and that seems improbable given that we said the moon was an egg. You'd think they'd have a problem with it!

"People become scientists, people change their view of the world and what they're capable of, because of a silly show about a man who travels around in time and space in a police box.

"So never mind the reviews, never mind the ratings, never mind any of that. Countless scientists, the musicians, the scholars, the writers, the directors, the actors who became what they are because of this show... count, as you might say, the hearts that beat a little faster because of Doctor Who.

"I do not even know what is in second place, but without doubt, and by that most important measure, Doctor Who is the greatest television series ever made."

Doctor Who: Twice Upon a Time will air on BBC One on Christmas Day at 5.30pm. The hour-long special will mark the departure of both Moffat and series lead Peter Capaldi, with Chris Chibnall and Jodie Whittaker stepping in as their replacements.


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