2008

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Timeline for 2008
21st century | 2000s

2002 • 2003 • 2004 • 2005 • 2006 • 2007 • 2009 • 2010 • 2011 • 2012 • 2013 • 2014
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Doctor Who Universe

January

Early February

March

  • The Eleventh Doctor met Amy Pond in Leadworth after twelve years of waiting. A Multi-form named Prisoner Zero, who had escaped through the crack in Amy's wall at that time, attacked. The Atraxi arrived, threatening the destruction of Earth if Prisoner Zero did not comply. The Doctor created a sentient computer virus for the Atraxi to track back to its source in Leadworth (spread by Jeff). The Doctor also transmitted Prisoner Zero's disguises to the Atraxi so it couldn't hide in the bodies it previously took over. It then took the form of Amy using her mind, and the Doctor made Amy think of Prisoner Zero's original form. Now in plain sight, Prisoner Zero was captured by the Atraxi and left. The Doctor took a test drive of his refurbished TARDIS, only to land two years later. (DW: The Eleventh Hour)

Spring or Summer

  • Maria and Alan Jackson moved into 36 Bannerman Road, Ealing, the house opposite where Sarah Jane Smith lived. The Bane used a 'natural ingredient' hidden in their Bubble Shock! drinks to enslave humanity. Sarah Jane and Maria went to the Bubble Shock! factory, stealing their human archetype that was grown there. The archetype used a communication device from a Star Poet to destroy the Bane Mother, and freed the mind-controlled people. One Bane, Mrs Wormwood, escaped from the exploding factory. The archetype was adopted by Sarah Jane and named Luke. (SJA: Invasion of the Bane)
  • The Slitheen family killed overweight teachers and created technology labs disguised as means for their energy draining machine to cool the Sun, selling off the destroyed Earth as profit. In the testing phases, the Earth briefly experienced a worldwide power outage. Luke unwittingly gave the code that would make the machine work properly to the Slitheen. Clyde Langer joined Luke, Maria and Sarah Jane in investigating the schools, fighting the Slitheen off with vinegar. When tried out on the Sun properly, the Slitheen's machine overloaded and was destroyed, with a lone survivor teleporting away. Sarah Jane, utilising her supercomputer Mr Smith, later orchestrated a cover-up that suggested the darkening of the sun and the power outage were caused by a sudden, but temporary, shift in Earth's magnetic field. (SJA: Revenge of the Slitheen)
  • Royal Hope Hospital was teleported to the Moon, with the Tenth Doctor and Martha Jones inside, for the Judoon to search for a murderer. Being identified as non-human, the Doctor escaped the Judoon after he was mistaken for the murderer. The Doctor's blood was later sucked by Florence Finnegan (the actual suspect), with Martha reviving him. With the blood she drank non-human, the Judoon positively identified and executed Finnegan. Shortly afterwards, the Doctor stopped a supercharged MRI machine from wiping out Earth. The hospital was returned safely and Martha joined the Doctor in the TARDIS. Mr. Saxon continued his campaign for British Prime Minister. He was given high support after the hospital's disappearance, then reappearance. (DW: Smith and Jones; The Sound of Drums, et al, establishes this occurs only a few days before the election.)
  • Richard Lazarus unveiled an age-reversing machine which initially de-aged him, then transformed him into a possible evolutionary branch of humanity, latent in his DNA, becoming a monster in doing so. The Tenth Doctor killed Lazarus. (DW: The Lazarus Experiment)
  • Election Day began and Harold Saxon was voted British Prime Minister. A mysterious woman was holding surveillance on Francine Jones' phone, as she knew Francine's daughter Martha was in contact with Saxon's enemy, the Doctor. (DW: 42 / The Sound of Drums; Note: This is likely to replace whoever was appointed interim PM after the ouster of Harriet Jones per DW: The Stolen Earth)
  • The Tenth Doctor, Jack and Martha, who had returned from 100,000,000,000,000, went on the run as fugitives declared by Harold Saxon, who was in fact the Master. The Master announced on television that humanity was to make first contact with the Toclafane. President Winters stepped in, allowing UNIT to take command of the contact. The Doctor, Martha and Jack snuck aboard the Valiant with Jack's vortex manipulator to witness this event and the Toclafane murdered President Winters. The Master, seeing through the Doctor and his companions' perception filters, heavily aged the Doctor and captured him and Jack. (DW: The Sound of Drums)
  • The Year That Never Was began, during which the Master built a Time Lord Empire and Martha Jones travelled the world executing a plan of the Doctor's to defeat his enemy. Ultimately, the year was negated (with the Doctor's age restored) and the clock reset to just after the Master killed Winters. Following this, the Master was killed by his wife Lucy, the Master deliberately failing to regenerate. Martha Jones and Jack returned home and left the Doctor on his own. (DW: Last of the Time Lords) Lucy was subsequently arrested and imprisoned; unknown to her, a group of Saxon's followers retrieve a ring from Saxon's funeral pyre and begin preparations for eventually restoring the Master to life the following year. (DW: The End of Time, Part One)
  • Captain Jack reunited with Torchwood Three, and met John Hart, who was sent on a wild goose chase to find an Arcadian diamond. In finding the apparent keys to its location, he was instead implanted with a bomb attached to his DNA. The Torchwood Three team disposed of the bomb and sent John through the Rift. In doing so, John told Jack that he found Gray. (TW: Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang)

May

July

June-August

  • Jonah Bevan was stolen away by the Cardiff Rift, ending up on a burning planet. A much older Jonah would be found on the island of Flat Holm seven months later. (TW: Adrift)

October

Autumn

Spring/Summer - December

  • A Gorgon, hidden by a group of nuns while trying to find a new host, was discovered by Sarah Jane Smith. Maria Jackson used a mirror to turn the Gorgon into stone, and the gateway to the race's galaxy was sealed. (SJA: Eye of the Gorgon)
  • The Torchwood Three team discovered Cell 114 sleeper agents in Cardiff and stopped them from setting off nuclear warheads hidden under Cardiff. (TW: Sleeper)
  • Annual de-frosting of Tommy Brockless, a young soldier first cryogenically frozen in 1918. Ultimately, this turned out to be the final defrosting. Tommy returned back in time to use a 'Rift key' and stop the two timelines in this year and 2008 from colliding with one another. (TW: To the Last Man)
  • A number of teenagers went missing after playing Combat 3000 - Luke Smith and Clyde Langer were among those who went missing. Sarah Jane Smith discovered that they were being teleported by an alien named Kudlak who has taken them to a war ship to fight in an alien war. After Luke discovered that the war ended 10 years previously, Kudlak returned the children home, and searched for the children he had sent to distant worlds. (SJA: Warriors of Kudlak)
  • Rhys Williams discovered the truth about Gwen Cooper's job when he was caught up in Torchwood Three's investigation of the imprisonment and exploitation of a Space Whale. Due to the sheer punishment it was receiving, Owen euthanised the whale. (TW: Meat)
  • A being that used the name "Adam Smith" escaped from the Void and lived parasitically by altering and inserting himself into others' memories. Adam was drawn to the unique memories of Torchood Three and made them believe that he was a long-time member of their team and Toshiko Sato's lover. Ianto Jones and Captain Jack Harkness exposed Adam after Ianto found no reference to him in his written diaries, and the team banished him back to the Void by retconning themselves to forget the whole incident. (TW: Adam)
  • Sarah Jane Smith was handed a puzzle box by a Verron soothsayer she and her team helped return to his own planet, with instructions to give it to someone she trusted. The next week she gave it to Maria Jackson. The Trickster retroactively wiped Sarah Jane out of existence, but reality was restored with help from Maria Jackson, Alan Jackson and Andrea Yates, the woman who had caused all this. Mr Smith pushed a meteorite headed for Earth out of the way. (SJA: Whatever Happened to Sarah Jane?)
  • A few days after the incident with the Trickster and 5 months after the thwarted Bane invasion, Mr Smith, with the help of the Slitheen, tried to uses Luke Smith's telekinetic abilities via a MITRE headset to collide the Moon with Earth, freeing his Xylok brothers. He was defeated by Sarah Jane, who infected him with the Armaggedon virus made by Alan Jackson. Mr Smith was rebooted, forgetting his purpose. (SJA: The Lost Boy)
  • Dr. Martha Jones arrived in Cardiff on the trail of the the Pharm, who had been experimenting on humans with a drug called Reset. Martha was temporarily assigned to Torchwood Three. The Pharm was shut down, but Dr. Owen Harper was shot and killed by Aaron Copley. (TW: Reset)
  • Before Martha Jones could conduct an autopsy on Owen Harper, Harper was revived by Jack Harkness using the second resurrection gauntlet. As a direct consequence, and for reasons unknown, Harper continued to live past the standard 2.5 minute revival time, but was briefly possessed by Duroc; the embodiment of Death. A number of deaths also occurred at a Cardiff hospital as a result of Duroc's manifestation. Owen defeated Duroc, not having any life energy for Duroc to steal. (TW: Dead Man Walking)

December

Dates Unknown

Negated Timelines

Donna's World

  • Spring or Summer - The Judoon defeated Florence Finnegan, but all but one of the people inside Royal Hope Hospital, which was taken to the Moon, died of asphyxiation, including Sarah Jane Smith and Martha Jones. Luke Smith and Maria Jackson were also reported missing. (DW: Turn Left)
  • 25th December - While Donna Noble, her mother and her grandfather holiday in the English countryside, the alien spaceship Titanic crashed into London, destroying the city and contaminating most of southern England with radioactivity. (DW: Turn Left)

Andrea Yates' World

  • Spring/Summer-December - Maria Jackson, remembering a life of Sarah Jane thanks to holding the Veran soothsayer's puzzle box, discovered Sarah Jane died in 1964, taking the place of Andrea Yates and that Mr Smith was never installed in 13 Bannerman Road's attic; Andrea having made a deal with the Trickster. As a result, the Earth was susceptible to the meteorite strike, fuelling chaos that the Trickster could feed on. Maria was then erased by Krislok. Alan, who remembered Maria when no-one else did thanks to holding the puzzle box, confronted Andrea Yates about Sarah Jane's lost life. Andrea revoked her deal with the Trickster, sending the timeline back to normal. (SJA: Whatever Happened to Sarah Jane?)

Real World

  • The announced 2008 production hiatus sparks speculation in the media over whether David Tennant will be continuing in Doctor Who, with reports published ranging from suggestions that Tennant would leave at the end of the then-upcoming Series 4, or during the specials, to published reports suggesting he had negotiated a deal with the BBC that would keep him on the series through Series 5 in 2010 or possibly longer. This speculation finally ends in October with Tennant's announcement regarding his future on the series.
  • Silva Screen Records reissues Doctor Who - Original Television Soundtrack, the soundtrack CD featuring music from the 2005 and 2006 seasons. Due to licensing changes, the reissue features a new cover photograph of David Tennant by himself, with Billie Piper's image having been removed.

January

February

March

Spring

  • For the third year in a row, episodes of Doctor Who receive nominations in the Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form category at the Hugo Awards. The 2008 "Doctor Who universe" episode nominees are DW: Blink by Steven Moffat (making this his third consecutive Hugo nomination) and the DW: Human Nature/The Family of Blood two-parter by Paul Cornell, and the Torchwood episode TW: Captain Jack Harkness by Catherine Tregenna.
  • In the weeks preceding the debut of Doctor Who Series 4, the BBC releases a trailer to cinemas in Great Britain - a rarity for a television series. The trailer includes scenes from most episodes from the first half of the season (except DW: The Doctor's Daughter), and also includes a clip from DW: Turn Left from near the end of the season. The incorporation of a clip of Billie Piper as Rose Tyler from Turn Left makes official that the character is returning in the new season.
  • After nearly a decade of being available sporadically through comic shops, distribution of Doctor Who Magazine in Canada is increased considerably, with the magazine now widely available in bookstores and magazine specialty shops, although issues are distributed in Canada 2 to 3 months after their UK publication dates.

April

May

June

July

  • BFA: The Boy That Time Forgot is first released.
  • CC: Here There Be Monsters is first released, marking the first appearance of Carole Ann Ford as the "true universe" version of Susan Foreman since DW: The Five Doctors.
  • ST: Short Trips: Transmissions is first published.
  • Early July - The week between the cliffhanger ending of DW: The Stolen Earth and the broadcast of DW: Journey's End is marked by some of the most intense media attention Doctor Who has ever seen, especially given the uncertainty over whether David Tennant is remaining with the series.[3]
  • 1 - UK DVD release of Doctor Who Series 4 Volume 2 with the episodes DW: The Sontaran Stratagem, The Poison Sky, The Doctor's Daughter and The Unicorn and the Wasp.
  • 3 - DW: The Invasion of Time is released to DVD in Region 4.
  • 4 - WC: The Baktek Illusion is uploaded, concluding the BBC Writers' Comics special series.
  • 5 - DW: Journey's End is first broadcast, bringing to a close the fourth series of the revived Doctor Who and it is the last episode to be produced by Phil Collinson, the first of the revived series' original producers to depart. The episode features the one-time returns of Noel Clarke, Camille Coduri and K9 to the series; Catherine Tate leaves the series as a regular with this episode. This is the last regular weekly episode of Doctor Who scheduled until Series 5 in 2010. Like the previous season finales, the broadcast of Journey's End sparks a frenzy of Internet discussion, both pro and con. The episode features the greatest concentration of active companions (as opposed to illusions and images) in the series' history (not including the non-canonical DW: Dimensions in Time). The episode is viewed by 10.57 million people and becomes the No. 1 program for the week -- the first time this has occurred for any episode in the 45-year history of Doctor Who -- despite competition from the Wimbledon finals; it also repeats the previous week's feat and scores an Appreciation Index figure of 91, again unheard of for both Doctor Who and for a mainstream television production.[4][5]. The episode concludes with a teaser for the 2008 Christmas special, at the time of broadcast left untitled but later announced as DW: The Next Doctor. As K9 does not appear in Series 2 of The Sarah Jane Adventures, this marks his final appearance until the post-season mini-episode SJA: From Raxacoricofallapatorius With Love airs in March 2009.
  • 6 - DW: Partners in Crime is broadcast on ABC in Australia.
  • 7 - The Daily Mail reports that more than 2,500 people actually attempted to phone the Doctor's phone number as shown in DW: The Stolen Earth, in hopes of hearing a special recorded message, but the number was in fact non-functional.[6]
  • 8 - The Bred for War DVD box set (DW: The Time Warrior, The Sontaran Experiment, The Invasion of Time, The Two Doctors) is released in Region 4.
  • 11 - The Telegraph reports on rumours of David Tennant stepping down from the role of the Doctor, with David Morrissey, John Simm, and Robert Carlyle cited as the book-maker's favorites to replace him, despite Morrissey scheduled to guest star in the 2008 Christmas special and Simm having already played The Master in Season 3. Julie Gardner confirms in the article that Tennant has made his decision as to whether he'll be staying on for the 2010 season, but she confirms that he will appear in all of the special episodes scheduled for 2009.[7] Despite this, wildcat Internet rumours persist that Morrissey will replace Tennant as early as the 2008 Christmas special, while some UK media report that Tennant has signed an agreement to stay with the series through Series 5 in 2010.
  • 12 - Doctor Who sweeps the television categories at the second annual Constellation Awards, a Canadian award presented as part of the Polaris science fiction convention. David Tennant wins for best Male Performance in a Science Fiction Television episode for his work on the two-parter DW : Human Nature/The Family of Blood; Carey Mulligan wins the female equivalent for DW: Blink; and the series itself wins for Best Science Fiction Television Series of 2007. Doctor Who is eligible for these awards thanks to its co-production arrangement with the CBC.
  • 21 - DW: The Brain of Morbius is released to DVD in the UK.
  • 23 - Copies of issue No. 397 of Doctor Who Magazine come polybagged with randomly chosen original Target Books editions (from a selection of 27 books), giving the Target novelisations widespread exposure for the first time in years; also included in the mix were a few non-novelisation releases such as REF: The Making of Doctor Who. The issue also includes a second surprise: when the polybag is removed, all text on the front cover (except around the UPC symbol) is revealed to be "BAD WOLF", including the title banner for the magazine itself! This is a tie-in with the ending of DW: Turn Left.
  • 27 - The first Doctor Who Proms concert is held at Royal Albert Hall in London, featuring music from Doctor Who. An interactive mini-episode, DW: Music of the Spheres, is shown as part of this event, which is initially broadcast on BBC Radio. The concert is hosted by Freema Agyeman, with Catherine Tate appearing to introduce a segment, as well. Singer Tim Phillips, who performed "Song for Ten" in DW: The Christmas Invasion, performs the extended version of the song introduced on the Series 1 & 2 soundtrack CD. Davros, the Graske and other monsters make cameo appearances as well. As a tribute to the BBC Radiophonic Workshop and Delia Derbyshire, Music of the Spheres ends with the original 1963 arrangement of the "Doctor Who theme". The BBC later announces that an edited version of the broadcast -- including Music of the Spheres -- will air on 1 January 2009.

August

Late summer

September

October

November

December

Footnotes