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* The is the only regular season finale of the [[Russell T Davies]] era that doesn't feature the [[Dalek]]s in any capacity (however, they are mentioned in the previous episode when the Doctor and the Master discuss the Time War). | * The is the only regular season finale of the [[Russell T Davies]] era that doesn't feature the [[Dalek]]s in any capacity (however, they are mentioned in the previous episode when the Doctor and the Master discuss the Time War). | ||
* [[Scissor Sisters]]' "I Can't Decide" saw a bump in popularity after its use in this episode. | * [[Scissor Sisters]]' "I Can't Decide" saw a bump in popularity after its use in this episode. | ||
* [[Leo Jones]] was intended to appear, welcoming Martha back to Britain and introducing her to Milligan. This had to be changed due to [[Reggie Yates]]' scheduling conflicts, which meant that he could only spare one recording day. | * [[Leo Jones]] was also intended to appear, welcoming Martha back to Britain and introducing her to Tom Milligan. This had to be changed due to [[Reggie Yates]]' scheduling conflicts, which meant that he could only spare one recording day. Dialogue now referred to Leo working in the Master's slave force under an assumed name, although it was dropped from the final edit. | ||
* Originally, [[10 Downing Street|Downing Street]] played a much larger role in the story, serving as the location for the last of Martha's decoy chemicals. At this stage, Tom Milligan was in fact a traitor, who was killed after betraying Martha to the Master. [[Russell T Davies]] began to feel that the world of the ravaged Earth deserved greater exploration, however, and concocted the material involving Professor Docherty instead. | * Originally, [[10 Downing Street|Downing Street]] played a much larger role in the story, serving as the location for the last of Martha's decoy chemicals. At this stage, Tom Milligan was in fact a traitor, who was killed after betraying Martha to the Master. [[Russell T Davies]] began to feel that the world of the ravaged Earth deserved greater exploration, however, and concocted the material involving Professor Docherty instead. | ||
* Not counting minisodes such as ''[[Time Crash (TV story)|Time Crash]]'', this marks the final regular use of the [[Doctor Who theme|''Doctor Who'' theme]] first introduced in ''[[Rose (TV story)|Rose]]'', as well as the expanded orchestral version of the ''Doctor Who'' theme first used for the closing credits in ''[[The Christmas Invasion (TV story)|The Christmas Invasion]]'', as as new version of the theme was introduced as of the following episode, ''[[Voyage of the Damned (TV story)|Voyage of the Damned]]''. The 2005/2006 versions of the theme would continue to be used for marketing purposes both by the BBC and international broadcasters, and a version of the closing credits featuring VHS-quality audio and video was used for the end credits of the 2009 documentary ''[[Cheques, Lies and Videotape (documentary)|Cheques, Lies and Videotape]]''. | * Not counting minisodes such as ''[[Time Crash (TV story)|Time Crash]]'', this marks the final regular use of the [[Doctor Who theme|''Doctor Who'' theme]] first introduced in ''[[Rose (TV story)|Rose]]'', as well as the expanded orchestral version of the ''Doctor Who'' theme first used for the closing credits in ''[[The Christmas Invasion (TV story)|The Christmas Invasion]]'', as as new version of the theme was introduced as of the following episode, ''[[Voyage of the Damned (TV story)|Voyage of the Damned]]''. The 2005/2006 versions of the theme would continue to be used for marketing purposes both by the BBC and international broadcasters, and a version of the closing credits featuring VHS-quality audio and video was used for the end credits of the 2009 documentary ''[[Cheques, Lies and Videotape (documentary)|Cheques, Lies and Videotape]]''. |
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