Earlier this week, the Doctor Who shoe finally dropped. The BBC announced that not only was the planned Christmas 2026 special canceled, but the show’s architect across multiple eras—Russell T Davies, who shepherded Doctor Who from 2005 to 2010 and again from 2023 to 2025—would also be exiting, along with his production company, Bad Wolf. This wasn’t exactly a bombshell. After the confusing way Ncuti Gatwa’s run as the Fifteenth Doctor ended last year, along with the sudden end of the BBC’s producing partnership with Disney, the future of the long-running series has been the source of much speculation. The fact that, in June, fans had heard zero details about the Christmas special, aside from Davies’ assertion back in November 2025 that he knew “exactly what happens in it,” was especially worrisome; now, of course, Davies has admitted that “there was no script, I never wrote it, and no actor was ever approached to play the next Doctor.” As the dust begins to settle and the BBC—which has always asserted it didn’t want to turn its back on one of its flagship titles—seeks a new producing partner for Doctor Who, we’re learning a little bit more about the situation behind the scenes.

According to a new Deadline report, the BBC and Bad Wolf parting ways came “after all sides realized that Doctor Who required a level of surgery that could not be masked by the sticking plaster of a festive episode. This creative surgery is expected to take years, potentially keeping the show off TV until 2028 at the earliest, sources said.”