10 Doctor Who Easter eggs even die-hard fans might have missed
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How many did you spot?
Across its six-decade history, Doctor Who has brought us Easter eggs
galore.
There's nothing quite like spotting a hidden detail or a cheeky
reference in your favourite show, and Doctor Who fans are the best
for the job.
Whether it's homages to the first ever episode, references to other
sci-fi classics, or just the writers having a joke with fans, here
are some of our favourite hidden details and Easter eggs.
How many did you catch the first time round?
1. Hidden homages to An Unearthly Child - The Day of the Doctor (2013)
Susan, with Ian and Barbara in the background, in Doctor Who.?BBC
The 50th anniversary special, starring David Tennant and Matt
Smith, is filled with loving nods to the show's origins, including
Totter's Lane, Ian Chesterton's name on a school sign, and the
original broadcast time and date etched into a wall.
- Totter's Lane - The iconic junkyard where the Doctor's story
began reappears, quietly grounding the 50th anniversary special
in the series' original setting.
- Chesterton on the school sign - A subtle tribute to the
Doctor's very first companion, now listed as chairman of the
school board at Coal Hill.
- "23 November 1963, 5:15pm" scratched on a wall - The exact date
and time Doctor Who first aired, immortalised as a
blink-and-you'll-miss-it piece of graffiti.
- Headmaster Coburn - A nod to Anthony Coburn, writer of the very
first episode, whose name appears as the school's headmaster.
These little references connect the modern era of the show to its
very first episode, rewarding long-time viewers but not getting in
the way for newer fans - proving that even after 50 years, Doctor
Who never forgets where it came from.
2. Doctor Who existing in Doctor Who - Remembrance of the Daleks (1988)
<
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sjLDwUw2gW8> (11secs)
One of the most meta moments in Doctor Who history arrived in 1988's
Remembrance of the Daleks, in which we hear a continuity announcer
introducing "a new adventure in the science-fiction series Doc...".
The scene cuts before the full title can be announced.
The idea that a TV show called Doctor Who might actually exist in
Doctor Who has been played with a few times across the show's
history - with the Fifteenth Doctor actually meeting some "fans" in
Lux, by stepping out of the TV.
While this doesn't have any major impact on the story, it's a fun
blink-and-you'll-miss-it detail, and an intriguing little joke from
the writers.
3. The Cloisters of Gallifrey - Hell Bent (2015)
Doctor Who fans got a stark reminder of the terror of the Doctor's
enemies in Hell Bent, showing a hidden chamber filled with
motionless remnants of past enemies - including a Cyberman, a
Weeping Angel, a Mire helmet, a Scarecrow, and the severed head of
an Ood.
As the Doctor and Clara pass through the Cloisters of Gallifrey,
these creatures are not alive but serve as frozen echoes of the
Doctor's long and troubled history, haunting the digital landscape
of Time Lord memories. The ultimate sci-fi rogues' gallery...
4. Clara's mother death date - The Rings of Akhaten (2013)
Clara's mother's gravestone in The Rings of Akhaten shows she died
on 5th March 2005 - the same day the Nestene Consciousness attacked
London in Rose, the revived series' first episode.
While the rest of the episode mainly explores alien worlds - and of
course features that fantastic speech from Eleven - this poignant
moment links Clara's backstory to the wider Doctor Who mythos and
the show's modern rebirth.
5. John Smith's parents - Human Nature/Family of Blood (2007)
In the devastating two-parter Human Nature/Family of Blood, the
Doctor creates an entire human identity for himself, calling himself
by his alias, John Smith, to hide from the Family of Blood.
At one point, John Smith reveals his parents names are Verity and
Sydney, a sweet tribute to Doctor Who's creators.
The sci-fi was originally created by a team including the BBC's head
of drama Sydney Newman and Verity Lambert, who was the first female
producer at the BBC, and who was instrumental in bringing the show
to screens.
It's a tiny detail from one of the show's most popular stories that
ties it beautifully to its origins.
6. A Slade soundtrack across time - Merry Xmas Everybody in multiple
episodes
Slade's 1973 classic Merry Xmas Everybody plays quietly in several
episodes, including The Christmas Invasion, The Runaway Bride, Turn
Left and The Power of Three.
The song is often heard faintly on radios or in shops, making
Christmas on Earth feel very familiar in the Doctor Who universe -
monsters might attack, but Slade still fills the airwaves every
December!
7. A DeLorean in disguise - Face the Raven (2015)
The Doctor and Clara enter the hidden trap street, a secret refuge
filled with strange architecture, and coded signage. The set
includes subtle background details and sly visual jokes, with one
nod in particular being picked up on by sci-fi fans.
During an emotionally charged scene, a poster of a flux capacitor
(a reference to Back to the Future) is accompanied by text in
Aurebesh (Star Wars script) that translates to "DeLorean",
referencing the time-travelling car from Back to the Future.
Maybe an epic Doctor Who, Star Wars and Back to the Future
crossover isn't out of the question after all..?
8. Billboard nostalgia and Susan - The Devil's Chord (2024)
The Doctor explicitly mentions his granddaughter Susan Foreman
while in 1963 Shoreditch, connecting to An Unearthly Child. A
rooftop billboard also advertises "Chris Waites & the Carollers",
the band Susan listened to in the first episode.
Of course, this would all lead up to Carole Ann Ford's
long-awaited return to the show in The Interstellar Song Contest.
It was a huge talking point for fans young and old, as new viewers
went back through the Doctor Who archives to learn about Susan's
time in the TARDIS.
9. Richard E Grant in Rogue (2024)
It's not often an Easter egg can change the canon of the entire
show, but Richard E Grant's appearance in Rogue, alongside an
homage to all the past Doctors, did exactly that.
Grant played the Doctor in a 2003 animated web series Scream of the
Shalka, which was previously thought to be non-canonical. However,
his inclusion in the episode completely shatters the canon.
Doctor Who's canon has been changed and messed with, for better or
for worse, quite a few times over the course of the show. But never
quite like this!
10. The Doctor's library card - Vampires of Venice (2010)
There have been plenty of homages to the late, great William Hartnell
but one of the sneakiest came in Vampires of Venice, when Matt
Smith's Eleventh Doctor shows his psychic paper as a library card -
only for it to display a picture of Hartnell's First Doctor.
During the episode, the Doctor's attempt to show the library card
backfires, as he realises he hasn't renewed it since his first
incarnation.
It's a small moment but beautifully pays tribute to Hartnell, the man
who first brought the Doctor to life.
<
https://www.radiotimes.com/tv/sci-fi/doctor-who-easter-eggs-hidden-details/>
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