Doctor Who parodies

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As a cultural phenomenon for nearly half a century, Doctor Who has been both the target of parody, as well as the frame of reference for satire of other subjects. All of these references are viewed as parody and therefore not-canon.

Television

1970s

  • An episode of the children's variety series Crackerjack featured "Hello, My Dalek" including Don Maclean as a Tom Baker-ish Doctor Why and Peter Glaze as a portly Brigadier. The sketch takes place within the TARDIS which has landed on top of the Post Office Tower. Harry is absent having been despatched to hospital to have his duffelcoat removed. There's a cameo from a Dalek with a eyestalk in a fixed rampant position.
  • An episode of "Emu's Broadcasting Company" (aka EBC1) featured puppeteer Rod Hull and his permanently attached avian sidekick Emu as a gestalt Doctor battling the Deadly Dustbins (with their war cry "Rubbish! Rubbish!"). The TARDIS in this segment was seen to be a red UK telephone kiosk.
  • An episode of the London Weekend Television sketch show "End Of Part One" (directed by Geoffrey Sax) featured a spoof called Doctor Eyes. Fred Harris played the Doctor who is shot through his contract, and is quickly replaced by Tony Aitken. Sue Holderness played a Romana-like Gloria
  • An episode of Spike Milligan's "Q" series featured the sketch "Pakistani Daleks" in which a turban-wearing Dalek is shown living in a suburban home, with a human wife, Dalek child, granny and dog. The chant "Put them in the curry" followed the extermination of the last two

1980s

1990s

2000s

  • The comic impressions show Dead Ringers has featured a number of Who related sketches in its radio and TV incarnations. The earliest examples featured Jon Culshaw making spoof phones calls to retailers and service providers in the guise of the fourth Doctor. Radio sketches included calling B&Q to get a quote for a Sonic Screwdriver, enquiring of a taxi to take him to Gallifrey and calling Nasa for the loan of a space shuttle. In the TV version Culshaw appeared in costume as Doctor 4, attempting to buy a transdimensional wardrobe from a furniture shop. Another sketch, involved the Doctor taking part in the TV show 'Living With the Enemy' in which he lived with the Cyberman family.
  • Other Dead Ringers sketches included Phil Cornwell as Christopher Eccleston in which the actor returned home to find his family disappointed by his role as The Doctor- because they're Star Trek fans. Eccleston's mum was supposed to have made his prominent 'Ferrengi' ears. Another sketch featured Culshaw and Jan Ravens in character as the Tenth Doctor and Rose Tyler in which they complain about the overly loud background music and elect to read their own subtitles. In a multi-Doctor sketch the 10th Doctor spends Christmas with some of his former incarnations and tries, unsuccessfully, to get them to watch the Christmas Special. It also features Culshaw as the 4th Doctor, with Cornwell as the 9th, Kevin Connelly as the 7th Doctor and Mark Perry as the 2nd Doctor.
  • In the premiere of Series 4 of The Sunday Night Project which aired on 5th January. Justin Lee Colins (wearing the Tenth Doctor's outfit) starred as the Doctor in a spoof of Doctor Who. He travelled to the Pink Planet with his "gorgeous time travelling assistant" played by David Tennant in drag, there they faced up against "the most evil Time Lord of them all, the Gaylord", played by Alan Carr. After this came other aliens which the assistant thought were the Daleks. The Doctor explained that these creatures were far worse, the Carrleks. The Carrleks were shown with Dalek skirts played by two men painted silver with Alan Carr's glasses and teeth, while Alan Carr in a silver catsuit played the Carrlek supreme.
  • The 2007 "Extra Special Series Finale" of the comedy series Extras featured Ricky Gervais as struggling actor Andy Millman, playing an alien villain opposite David Tennant in a fictional Doctor Who story. The finale showed a brief excerpt from his death scene.
Ricky Gervais as "Shlong".

In the special, Ricky is reluctantly cast as a slug-like alien called Shlong. David Tennant reprises his role as the Doctor in a cameo appearance. A brief clip of the episode is shown in which the Doctor and an unidentified companion, a female police constable are attacked by Shlong. The Doctor describes the attack as "hyper-podulating", a manipulation of "molluskian glang valves to internally vibrate our DNA", a process that will turn its victims into slugs in roughly thirty seconds. Shlong is quickly dispatched when the Doctor throws table salt on him.

  • In a 2010 episode of Harry and Paul, starring Harry Enfield and Paul Whithouse, they performed a sketch called 'Rockin' the TARDIS', or 'Doctor Who: The ITV Years'. The Doctor (Harry) and his companion (Paul) crash land on the planet Woompa-woof', the planet of gay people. Suddenly, three three-breasted woman come along and start dancing with the Doctor and his companion. The
    File:FunnyBot.png
    The "FunnyBot," very simuarly designed to a Dalek.
    whole sketch is played out like a cheaply made sitcom. Another sketch was shown, which involved them playing two characters from 'On the Buses'.
  • In a 2011 episode of South Park, the Germans created a "Funnybot" in order to try and convince the world they could be funny. The FunnyBot was very similarly designed to a Dalek, with a Plunger and eye stalk, and at multiple occasions yelled "Exterminate!" or "Exterminate all humans!" (he believed it would be of the most ultimate irony for a human-created robot to kill the Robots, thus being the worlds funniest, and indeed last, joke.)

Comics

1970s

1990s

  • In 1996, comic magazine Viz featured a one-off strip called Doctor Poo. In it the Doctor and his assistant Jamie search time and space for a safe place the Doctor can use the toilet. After being menaced by he Cybermen, Sea Devils, and the Master, the Doctor finally arrives at Davros' private loo on Skaro. This spoof was also published as a Flash cartoon on the magazine's website.

2000s

Other

1970s

  • Doctor Poo (not to be confused with the comic strip of the same title described above) was an Australian comedy radio series which ran for over 400 episodes from 1979 to 1981.

1980s

  • Doctor Why, a 1986 game for the ZX Spectrum home computer, featured Doctor Why and his other incarnations Doctor What, Doctor Where, and Doctor When hung over after a night of heavy drinking. The Doctors must each recover their TRYDIS in order to find the jelly baby of infinite wisdom.

2000s

Doctor Who parodies