The Doctor has unlocked the infinite lives hack...
Does this mean that the Doctor's Daughter is similarly immortal? How about Hand Doctor in Rose's universe?
Just wait until she flies like Cybermen without jetpacks, or Mary Poppins, when fly-mode collision-detection are disabled.
The episode doesn't list Ritu Arya or Gat in the credits. IMDB lists her in "archive footage" along with all the other people in the flashback.
You could make your own if you have a classic Cyberman, plus the most recent version. Just swap heads
I'm giving episode 10 a 10. I always loved the idea behind the Cartmel Masterplan. This isn't that per-se, but it has the epic scale of it. I could care less if Hartnell wasn't the first, but
he thought he was, so hes still the "definite article" you might say.
It definitely gives Big Finish a shit-ton of stuff to work with.
At least the Timeless Child actually turned out to be
something, unlike a certain hybrid.
The best part, very little needs to change going forward, except the Doc might have more memories and experiences to draw from if she/he remembers everything. That may not happen right away, or even ever.
Not just Cartmel, an episode from the original season 23 was going to have Gallifrey and its (possible) destruction. Of which there was a furore over details so it got scrapped.
https://forums.digitalspy.com/discussion/2060583/the-lost-season-23-according-to-ian-levine and
https://www.liquisearch.com/list_of...so_submitted_for_original_season_23/gallifrey P&J Baker would write a story based on the outline Eric himself wrote, involving the planet's destruction. JNT would not want the destruction to happen anymore than he wanted the show to end after "Trial" via a cliffhanger that would easily become a bookend for the show. JNT did not want the Trial theme, preferring the original stories as a lot of work was done, but caved. Saward would then try to end his trial in a way that would kill the show for good.
The Masterplan idea I wasn't lukewarm on. Silver Nemesis wanted to portray the Doctor as a god, which was vetoed. Chibnall's Masterplan was one step away from doing just that. What it's done, albeit for not the wrong reasons, is to move the goalposts regarding origins, into something that is increasingly convoluted, which will move them yet again. Partly because they were moved before, only I think Chibs put more thought into it than a one-liner to explain it but anyone would have to after decades of cultivated buildup. The show started with loose continuity and then later showrunners made a resolute decision. Now it feels like a diluted, diminished return. 3 times 3 or 4 times now with Gallifrey being destroyed and brought back and/or moved to a cubby hole pocket universe, and back ,and destroyed again all within the last 10-15 years... that's a bit frequent for something so major. Like losing what one does after the wedding night and/or copious amounts of malt liquor, one can't really get the mystery back. And people don't always want more of it, odd but true.
So not just 10-15 years, the first notion of anything major was 1985 - and while information over its more intricate details is woolly, it
probably would not have gone through had the original season 23 not been canceled. It is the sort of "big" thing to compete against American shows, though at the same time changing or removing the origins pretty much removes any remaining mystery. But fans in the 1960s and 1970s wanted more, hence tidbits with the Monk, War Chief, living forever barring accidents, home planet name revealed, numerous visits to the planet, dropping off a companion there to marry a guard... the mystery was already gone by "The Invasion of Time".
Also,
@Trinity Gingerbread pointed out a cool idea above. It does imply an antihero status, or villain-turned-good.
I'm on the fence because both sides have for the most part compelling arguments.
Especially as any later showrunner can and possibly would use the same "what you were told is a lie" and there is zero reason the Master isn't doing one massive mindbleep on the Doctor to sell something heinous. They were rarely friends or frenemies, mostly enemies. Increasingly insane ones. Maybe Robert Holmes threw in a terminal limit for a good reason. Or conversely why he felt he needed to at all. But each showrunner has their own mindset, and not all of them are going to diddle with an origin story - no matter how easy it is to overwrite at this point, Gallifrey has no fixed point in time it seems.
Agreed, re: the Timeless One isn't "The Hybrid".
Jo Martin sadly won't be returning on screen, probably.

Chibnall and Patel, who co-wrote the story, put a lot into her dialogue and role and it's a dreadful shame that she goes. At least Jodie's gotten better material, but Jo (for me) is easily the better incarnation from Chib's era so far.