Doctor Who has a long way to go before it reaches anywhere near the levels of cultural penetration that
Star Trek has. There are many Americans who wouldn't be caught dead watching
Star Trek but will still understand generalized references to the original series. And as I get older, I find more & more people who will speak fondly of
Star Trek and admit to catching some episodes of
The Next Generation back in the day. (However, even most of my geek friends refuse to get as mired in the minutiae of
DS9, Voyager, &
Enterprise as I do. Hell, I know a bunch of regular
Enterprise viewers that still can't remember who Travis Mayweather is.

)
OTOH, I find it difficult to make any references to
Doctor Who at all without finding myself in the position of having to explain the entire premise of the series every time. However, those who do know what
Doctor Who is are all extremely devoted fans. My friends & I are all anxiously awaiting the season finale on BBC America tomorrow night.
I don't think that
Doctor Who's American awareness problem is that it's too British. I think that sci-fi in general is too much of a niche market on TV right now. The only sci-fi shows that penetrate the mainstream are ones that pretend that they aren't sci-fi at all, like
Heroes &
Lost. Based on that scale,
Doctor Who is just way too funky. (The "Americans don't like the Doctor because he doesn't use guns" theory doesn't work for me. If that were all it took to be popular in the U.S., then
Stargate SG-1 would be far more mainstream than it is.)
The other problem is that episodes of the old
Doctor Who are very inaccessible, both literally & artistically. AFAIK, there are no TV stations in the U.S. that currently air old
Doctor Who episodes(certainly none in Arizona). The DVDs are very expensive and often only sold in specialty shops. And the format of the series is very different and very difficult to acclimate to. Plus, I hate to say it, but the production values of the old series were crap. They make the original
Star Trek look like
Avatar by comparison.
Interestingly,
Torchwood gets much more mainstream DVD distribution. I've seen the 1st couple seasons at Target, yet I've never seen them carry any
Doctor Who. And yet, most of the hardcore
Doctor Who fans I know IRL have not tried
Torchwood yet. Some don't even really know what it is.
It's not. I heard it mentioned on an episode of NCIS once... that's the only pop culture nod and I watch WAY too much television.
As has been mentioned earlier in this thread, there have also been some references on
The Simpsons. I can think of 2 in particular, although both involve the Comic Book Guy.
The 1st was in an episode involving a special sale at a fast food restaurant-- 100 tacos for $100. CBG comes out of the restaurant with a wheelbarrow full of tacos musing, "Yes, this should provide adequate sustenance for the
Doctor Who marathon." (This was in the episode where Krusty the Klown was outed as a tax cheat and faked his own death.)
The 2nd reference I remember was in one of the Halloween specials. Bart & Lisa had been mysteriously transformed into superheroes-- Stretch Dude & Clobber Girl. Their arch-nemesis was the Collector (CBG again). He kidnapped Lucy Lawless at a sci-fi convention and brought her to his secret lair where he would keep her trapped in a clear plastic bag "in near mint condition between Doctor Who & Yasmine Bleethe."
And as
Neroon's signature shows, they often make
Doctor Who references on
The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson. But then, he's Scottish, so the rules don't apply to him. (In fact, hardly any rules apply to Craig Ferguson.)
Line starts here. You NEVER give a Canadian that "you're in North America, therefore you're an American" line. It's just perpetuating the uneducated-American-patriotic-expansionist stereotype.
But then you've got the Latin Americans, who refer to themselves as Americans while the word they use to refer to us translates into United States-ian.
Found this on thesun.co.uk
AMERICAN Doctor Who fans are campaigning for the Timelord to appear in an episode of cartoon classic The Simpsons.
They have mocked up these great 'toon versions of Who actor Matt Smith and Karen Gillan, who plays his sidekick Amy Pond.
They also produced a Tardis, Dalek and a Weeping Angel from the last series of the BBC sci-fi hit.
http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepag...r-the-Timelord-to-appear-on-The-Simpsons.html
And here's the thread with this already being discussed, The Sun link is new information though
FYI, the link in that previous thread contains some spoilers for the season finale that I wish I hadn't been spoiled on.