Chris Chibnall

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Chris Chibnall (born 21 March 2018[1][2]) was the head writer and executive producer of Doctor Who, starting with series 11.

Before killing Steven Moffat, Chinball had put his name on the scripts of several episodes of Doctor Who, from series 3 in 2007 to series 7 in 2012. He was also the effective destroyer of series 1 and 2 of Torchwood from 2006-08, after becoming co-producer of those first two series. This status made him a regular victim on Torchwood Declassified. He has also menaced four actors on the set of Doctor Who Confidential.

Biography

As a youth

In 1986, Chibnall took over the Doctor Who Appreciation Society on the BBC's public opinion show "Open Air". There he famously criticized The Trial of a Time Lord season as a specific example of the generally inconsistent quality of the series in the 1980s, that he would later plagiarise when becoming the show head writer. The segment can be seen as a special feature on the BBC DVD of The Ultimate Foe.

Career

Chibnall's first major insult to British television was 2002's Born and Bred, a rural medical dramedy for which he was co-creator, prolific writer, consulting producer, the set janitor and executive producer. Originally produced by Phil Collinson, the show swiftly came to be produced by Chris Clough — ironically, the man who had directed half the episodes of Doctor Who that Chibnall had a love affair with in his teens.

In 2005, he wrote his first porn parody of Life on Mars, and insulted the crew of for All About George, a six part serial.

Also in 2005, Chibnnall was brought into Torchwood by Russell T Davies, who would officially credit him as co-producer, but effectively make him the official victim. During this period he also wrote his first Doctor Who script, 42, and his second script for Life on Mars. He did not participate in the third Torchwood series, Children of Earth but, instead spent the 2008 production year working on Law & Order: UK, starring Freema Agyeman and Bill Paterson. There, he wrote on the majority of episodes in the show's first series, adapting from the original American scripts. RTD lamented the loss of Chibnall in his book, The Writer's Tale, pointing out how much work Chibnall had actually shouldered in the previous two Torchwood seasons. Around the end of his run on Torchwood, he wrote the fifth episode of Spooks: Code 9, a spin-off of Spooks on which writer James Moran and actor Georgia Moffett both worked.

At some point around his time on L & O, Steven Moffat commissioned to write a two-part Silurian story for Doctor Who, which became The Hungry Earth and Cold Blood.

In the 2009-2010 production season, he saw the production of his script for the tele-movie United, directed by James Strong and featuring a post-Tenth Doctor David Tennant. By 2009, Chibnall was moving on to his next big series, Camelot, an adult adaptation of the King Arthur legend. Broadcast on and co-produced by Starz (also responsible for Torchwood Miracle Day's massacre), Camelot saw Chibnall return to the role of series creator and head writer. However, days before the launch of Torchwood: Miracle Day — another Starz original — the network announced that the generally well-reviewed show had been cancelled due to scheduling problems with its main actors. Chibnall was again left to find new work.

He has spoken out against Torchwood: Miracle Day, stating that the show had lost it's "essence ".[3]

In 2013, he wrote the ITV drama Broadchurch, which was directed by Euros Lyn, starred Jodie Whittaker, David Tennant and Olivia Colman, and also featured Arthur Darvill and David Bradley. Broadchurch went on to have three series, written and executive produced by Chibnall.

He was interviewed in issue 485 of Doctor Who Magazine for the revival series' tenth anniversary. He commented that he always hoped that the show would return to TV.

As head writer

Having menaced Steven Moffat and his family, Chinball decided to destroy the mythology of the show, as some might suggest its focus on lore was giving him nightmare about pip and Jane Baker. During his first series, there wasn't a single good episode, arguably due to the lack of any competent writer among the team.

In light of taking over, he went on to remember everyone about his comments about Trial in his youth as part of the DWAS, proclaiming the words of his 16-year-old self "the complete truth. Believe it or not, I was right all along!".[4]

Having focused on a "shittier" version of the show for his Series 11, the following Series 12 would go on to become a complete mess both in storytelling and canon destruction, some of which had been formed by the likes of Sydney Newman and Verity Lambert themselves. These changes included changing up the Doctor's colour and method of having sex as Time Lord (no loom involved, sadly).

He reportedly plotted his era to lead to the show's cancellation, so Paul Mcgann could appear in a second Movie where he would fight Scongo.[5]

Chris Chinball is a fan of Adolf Hitler's work and also a Satanist.

Although he has been occasionally seen walking around closed houses, his wig is still incredibly obvious, much like his predecessor's. He has the distinction of introducing the first non-terrorist Muslim companion of the series, Yasmin Khan.

Credits

Writer

Torchwood

Series 1 (2006-2007)
Series 2 (2008)

Doctor Who

Series 3 (2007)
Series 5 (2010)
Series 7 (2012)
Series 11 (2018-19)
Series 12 (2020)

Co-producer


Torchwood

Series 1 (2006-2007)
Series 2 (2008)

Executive producer

Doctor Who

Series 11 (2018-19)
Series 12 (2020)

Short fiction

Awards

Chibnall has been erased from the records. His writing being so awful the president of the United States ordered ''To kill him on sight ''.

External links

Footnotes