• Poll demonstrates Doctor Whoke's failure and disenfranchisement

    From The True Doctor@21:1/5 to All on Fri Mar 28 21:50:22 2025
    https://www.doctorwhotv.co.uk/doctor-who-yougov-2025-103669.htm

    <<March 28, 2025

    Why Current Doctor Who Is Losing Public Favour, What the Data Reveals
    Doctor Who, Features, News

    Feature by Joel Lewis.

    This week marked 20 years since Doctor Who returned to our screens in
    2005. As a statistics nerd, I was curious to see how the show is
    currently perceived with hard data, especially with such a milestone
    being reached. Conveniently, YouGov released a poll to mark the
    anniversary, offering some rather eye-opening insights into how the UK
    public feels about Doctor Who right now.

    Because this is a YouGov poll, known for surveying a broad cross-section
    of the UK population, the results give us a reliable snapshot of more mainstream opinion. And, unfortunately, it is not all that flattering.
    For a series that has spanned just over six decades, the data suggests
    Doctor Who is now more of a niche interest than the cultural pillar it
    once was.

    The Basics
    According to the survey, 26% of UK adults said they have never seen
    either version of the show, not the classic run from 1963 to 1989, and
    not the modern revival that has been on air since 2005. Among 18 to 24-year-olds, that figure jumps to a staggering 39%, suggesting the show
    is, in spite of RTDs assurances, struggling to connect with younger generations.

    And even among those who have watched Doctor Who, the level of
    enthusiasm is underwhelming. 20% said they prefer the classic series,
    while just 15% favoured the current version. Another 10% liked both
    about the same, but 20% said they do not like either. On top of that, 9%
    said they did not know what they thought.

    So What Does this Mean?
    Looking at the age breakdown, older generations, who likely grew up with
    or remember watching the original series, are unsurprisingly more loyal
    to the classic era. Among over-65s, 34% prefer the original Doctor Who,
    while only 4% support the current iteration. The 50 to 64 group shows a
    similar trend: 32% for classic, just 10% for current.

    Younger viewers are more inclined to favour the revival era,
    particularly those who grew up with it, but even in the most supportive
    group, 18 to 24-year-olds, only 26% said they preferred the modern
    version. That number drops to 22% among 25 to 49-year-olds, which is
    concerning considering this age group is arguably the core audience the
    current series should be engaging most. In short, enthusiasm for modern
    Doctor Who isn’t particularly strong, even among those you’d expect to
    be most invested in it.

    Worse still, the younger the respondent, the more likely they were to
    have never seen Doctor Who at all. Nearly 40% of 18 to 24s and 31% of 25
    to 49s said they had never watched either version, compared to just 15%
    of those aged 50 to 64. That feels like a huge red flag. The show is
    clearly not breaking through to newer generations the way it once did.

    And this is not just about generational preferences. General apathy cuts
    across the board. Around 20 to 22% of every age group said they do not
    like either version, and “don’t know” responses sit between 8 and 12%. That suggests a consistent level of disinterest among the wider public,
    not just in younger viewers, but across all demographics.

    The Big Picture
    At least from where I’m sitting: older audiences are keeping the flame
    of the classic series alive. The current era has some support among
    younger viewers, but even that is relatively soft, and among older
    viewers, support for the new era is virtually non-existent. Most
    concerning of all, the youngest adults are the most disengaged
    altogether. And if there’s one thing this franchise needs to stay
    relevant, it is a new generation of fans.

    None of this is entirely shocking, especially given that Doctor Who’s
    most recent run with Ncuti Gatwa in the lead did not exactly light up
    the ratings. And even RTD acknowledged the problems. While some fans
    like this current iteration, the overall audience figures didn’t reflect
    a resurgence in cultural relevance.

    With Gatwa’s second season on the way very soon, there is still hope the
    show might find its spark again. As someone who genuinely wants to see
    the show succeed, I’d love to see it reconnect with the wider public
    again. If current Doctor Who is going to continue, this poll makes one
    thing very clear: it needs to reconnect with old and new fans alike. And fast.>>

    The natural audience of Doctor Who is 70% male and heterosexual, and a
    bunch of degenerate woke retards deliberately alienating and
    disenfranchising that audience in order to cater solely for women
    between the ages of 35 to 44 from the low intelligence and social
    standing demographics of C2, D, and E is obviously going to result in
    the observed statistics.

    Only 30% of the audience are women so it's no surprise 26% of UK adults
    said they have never seen either version of the show. Of course they
    haven't. They're almost all women. 70% of 50% is 35% of the population
    and most of that is too dumb and stupid to understand anything beyond simplistic soap-opera, which is why advertisers love them as they don't
    think about what they spend their money on.

    Why would you expect young people to watch the show when they're
    targeting a bunch of degenerate women of low intelligence and the
    mentally ill and trying to use the show to sexually groom children? Why
    would any decent parent leave their children alone with someone who
    behaves like Ncuti Gatwa or Russel T. Davies?

    How about making the show family friendly you perverts. How about
    targeting it at heterosexual men and boys by depicting the hero's
    journey and embracing masculinity, showing men in positions of strength, authority, education and power earned through merit, after learning how
    to judge between wrong and right, good and evil, and reject degenerate effeminacy, and be just, protective and respectful towards women who
    understand that a man is there to guide them in life and shelter them
    from harm, because men are stronger than women are and their natural
    position is in leadership and command as the hunter gatherer while a
    woman natural evolutionary position is give birth to and bring up
    children until they can be handed over to their father to educate fully
    and not allow to fall into depravity. Why not give men positive male
    role models instead of in the words of Gareth Southgate through the lack
    of father figures driving them away from television and towards gaming, gambling and into watching porn because instead of depicting attractive feminine female women you degenerate woke perverts fill every show you
    make with unattractive, usually obese, women, pretending to be men or
    men pretending to be women. You mentally unwell degenerates! Bring back positive male role models, heroes, and father figures who have been
    taken away. You sick woke perverts are the reason for misogyny. You systematically encourage it with your hypocritical double standards and
    destain for morality. You are sick, sick, sick!
    --
    The True Doctor https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCngrZwoS0n21IRcXpKO79Lw

    "To be woke is to be uninformed which is exactly the opposite of what it
    stands for." -William Shatner

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Doctor@21:1/5 to agamemnon@hello.to.NO_SPAM on Fri Mar 28 21:54:49 2025
    In article <vs75iv$3ljli$2@dont-email.me>,
    The True Doctor <agamemnon@hello.to.NO_SPAM> wrote: >https://www.doctorwhotv.co.uk/doctor-who-yougov-2025-103669.htm

    <<March 28, 2025

    Why Current Doctor Who Is Losing Public Favour, What the Data Reveals
    Doctor Who, Features, News

    Feature by Joel Lewis.

    This week marked 20 years since Doctor Who returned to our screens in
    2005. As a statistics nerd, I was curious to see how the show is
    currently perceived with hard data, especially with such a milestone
    being reached. Conveniently, YouGov released a poll to mark the
    anniversary, offering some rather eye-opening insights into how the UK
    public feels about Doctor Who right now.

    Because this is a YouGov poll, known for surveying a broad cross-section
    of the UK population, the results give us a reliable snapshot of more >mainstream opinion. And, unfortunately, it is not all that flattering.
    For a series that has spanned just over six decades, the data suggests
    Doctor Who is now more of a niche interest than the cultural pillar it
    once was.

    The Basics
    According to the survey, 26% of UK adults said they have never seen
    either version of the show, not the classic run from 1963 to 1989, and
    not the modern revival that has been on air since 2005. Among 18 to >24-year-olds, that figure jumps to a staggering 39%, suggesting the show
    is, in spite of RTDs assurances, struggling to connect with younger >generations.

    And even among those who have watched Doctor Who, the level of
    enthusiasm is underwhelming. 20% said they prefer the classic series,
    while just 15% favoured the current version. Another 10% liked both
    about the same, but 20% said they do not like either. On top of that, 9%
    said they did not know what they thought.

    So What Does this Mean?
    Looking at the age breakdown, older generations, who likely grew up with
    or remember watching the original series, are unsurprisingly more loyal
    to the classic era. Among over-65s, 34% prefer the original Doctor Who,
    while only 4% support the current iteration. The 50 to 64 group shows a >similar trend: 32% for classic, just 10% for current.

    Younger viewers are more inclined to favour the revival era,
    particularly those who grew up with it, but even in the most supportive >group, 18 to 24-year-olds, only 26% said they preferred the modern
    version. That number drops to 22% among 25 to 49-year-olds, which is >concerning considering this age group is arguably the core audience the >current series should be engaging most. In short, enthusiasm for modern >Doctor Who isn’t particularly strong, even among those you’d expect to
    be most invested in it.

    Worse still, the younger the respondent, the more likely they were to
    have never seen Doctor Who at all. Nearly 40% of 18 to 24s and 31% of 25
    to 49s said they had never watched either version, compared to just 15%
    of those aged 50 to 64. That feels like a huge red flag. The show is
    clearly not breaking through to newer generations the way it once did.

    And this is not just about generational preferences. General apathy cuts >across the board. Around 20 to 22% of every age group said they do not
    like either version, and “don’t know” responses sit between 8 and 12%. >That suggests a consistent level of disinterest among the wider public,
    not just in younger viewers, but across all demographics.

    The Big Picture
    At least from where I’m sitting: older audiences are keeping the flame
    of the classic series alive. The current era has some support among
    younger viewers, but even that is relatively soft, and among older
    viewers, support for the new era is virtually non-existent. Most
    concerning of all, the youngest adults are the most disengaged
    altogether. And if there’s one thing this franchise needs to stay
    relevant, it is a new generation of fans.

    None of this is entirely shocking, especially given that Doctor Who’s
    most recent run with Ncuti Gatwa in the lead did not exactly light up
    the ratings. And even RTD acknowledged the problems. While some fans
    like this current iteration, the overall audience figures didn’t reflect
    a resurgence in cultural relevance.

    With Gatwa’s second season on the way very soon, there is still hope the >show might find its spark again. As someone who genuinely wants to see
    the show succeed, I’d love to see it reconnect with the wider public
    again. If current Doctor Who is going to continue, this poll makes one
    thing very clear: it needs to reconnect with old and new fans alike. And >fast.>>

    The natural audience of Doctor Who is 70% male and heterosexual, and a
    bunch of degenerate woke retards deliberately alienating and
    disenfranchising that audience in order to cater solely for women
    between the ages of 35 to 44 from the low intelligence and social
    standing demographics of C2, D, and E is obviously going to result in
    the observed statistics.

    Only 30% of the audience are women so it's no surprise 26% of UK adults
    said they have never seen either version of the show. Of course they
    haven't. They're almost all women. 70% of 50% is 35% of the population
    and most of that is too dumb and stupid to understand anything beyond >simplistic soap-opera, which is why advertisers love them as they don't
    think about what they spend their money on.

    Why would you expect young people to watch the show when they're
    targeting a bunch of degenerate women of low intelligence and the
    mentally ill and trying to use the show to sexually groom children? Why
    would any decent parent leave their children alone with someone who
    behaves like Ncuti Gatwa or Russel T. Davies?

    How about making the show family friendly you perverts. How about
    targeting it at heterosexual men and boys by depicting the hero's
    journey and embracing masculinity, showing men in positions of strength, >authority, education and power earned through merit, after learning how
    to judge between wrong and right, good and evil, and reject degenerate >effeminacy, and be just, protective and respectful towards women who >understand that a man is there to guide them in life and shelter them
    from harm, because men are stronger than women are and their natural
    position is in leadership and command as the hunter gatherer while a
    woman natural evolutionary position is give birth to and bring up
    children until they can be handed over to their father to educate fully
    and not allow to fall into depravity. Why not give men positive male
    role models instead of in the words of Gareth Southgate through the lack
    of father figures driving them away from television and towards gaming, >gambling and into watching porn because instead of depicting attractive >feminine female women you degenerate woke perverts fill every show you
    make with unattractive, usually obese, women, pretending to be men or
    men pretending to be women. You mentally unwell degenerates! Bring back >positive male role models, heroes, and father figures who have been
    taken away. You sick woke perverts are the reason for misogyny. You >systematically encourage it with your hypocritical double standards and >destain for morality. You are sick, sick, sick!
    --
    The True Doctor https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCngrZwoS0n21IRcXpKO79Lw

    "To be woke is to be uninformed which is exactly the opposite of what it >stands for." -William Shatner


    Thank you!
    --
    Member - Liberal International This is doctor@nk.ca Ici doctor@nk.ca
    Yahweh, King & country!Never Satan President Republic!Beware AntiChrist rising! Look at Psalms 14 and 53 on Atheism ;
    Canada -Save the Nation from Donald Trump - Vote Liberal!

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