Buffy the Vampire Slayer (franchise)

Buffy the Vampire Slayer is an American television series which ran from 1997 to 2003, and was created by Joss Whedon. It follows the adventures of Buffy Summers, chosen by mystical forces to be the Slayer, and who fights vampires and other demons with her friends. The television series also had a spin-off, Angel; The fictional universe in which both series, as well as their various tie-in media, inhabit is known as the "Buffyverse".

The Tenth Doctor and Rose Tyler made a cameo appearance in the canonical comic  alongside a red telephone box.

David Tennant also later appeared as himself in the comic .

Similarities

 * Perhaps the biggest similarity is that several Doctor Who stories, such as State of Decay, The Curse of Fenric and Smith and Jones include vampire-like aliens. The Vampires of Venice specifically references them, although the 'vampires' are later revealed to be Saturnynians.
 * Both Doctor Who and Buffy also have a spin-off, darker in tone, in which an immortal protagonist moves to a city and protects the public from things they often cannot comprehend, Torchwood and .
 * The Cardiff rift was a plot generator for series 1 and 2 of Torchwood, in the same way that the is in Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Both series also have episodes entitled 'End of Days'.
 * An shares the same name as the recurring villain the Master.
 * Both the Doctor Who serial The Talons of Weng-Chiang and the Buffy episode  feature ventriloquist dolls which are actually alive.
 * The Buffy episode "" featured fish-like demons which resemble the Silurians.
 * In the Buffy episode "", the character "" uses the alias "The Doctor" when breeding and planning to sell a species of dangerous demons.
 * The audio drama Minuet in Hell also has several similarities. It features an organisation that is dedicated to dealing with supernatural beings, fronted by a young girl, in a similar way to the and . In addition, the use of the phrase "Bored now" before attacking someone is also seen in the 'Buffy' episodes, , and . It also features technology that can digitise and replace peoples memories and brain waves in a way similar to that seen in Whedon's later series, .
 * In Assimilation², Rory Williams uses his knowledge as a Roman Centurion to bluff two guards into allowing him to pass, a tactic also used by in the episode . Like Rory, Xander also received his knowledge after an alternate 'existence' as a soldier.

Connections with Doctor Who

 * Anthony Stewart Head, who plays Buffy's mentor and father figure, has many connections to Doctor Who. He guest starred in School Reunion and The Infinite Quest, as well as various Big Finish Productions audio dramas. He also narrated Doctor Who Confidential and Project Who. He has often been reported as a potential candidate for the role of the Doctor.
 * It has been acknowledged that some of the dialogue in School Reunion, such as Finch's line "ignore the shooty-dog thing," was inspired by the style of writing used on Buffy.
 * The 2001 Buffy episode "" references the series when mentions he has seen "every episode of Doctor Who."
 * Russell T Davies has mentioned that the Buffy episode "" was a possible influence on the Doctor Who episode Love & Monsters.
 * A reference to the series is made in PROSE: Homework, where a character from the year 2008 is said to be wearing "a T-shirt that said Duffy the Vampire or something."
 * "William the Bloody Awful Poet," the former human self of the vampire Spike, briefly appears in Camera Obscura.
 * Although unlikely to be made, a potential spin-off titled Ripper has been discussed as a BBC co-production when Anthony Head introduced Whedon to Doctor Who producer Julie Gardner.
 * Seeing Sam Jones armed with a wooden stake, the vampire Slake said: "Well, well, if it isn't Buffy the Vampire Slayer!" (PROSE: Vampire Science)
 * Buffy creator Joss Whedon expressed admiration for Russell T. Davies while speaking as part of the Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog panel at the 2008 Comic-Con.
 * The character Fillion, who appears in the comic Space Squid, is named after, and features a likeness to, actor, who appeared in the series.

Connections with Torchwood

 * On the Torchwood website, one of the creatures described by Owen Harper as being in stasis in the Torchwood morgue is the "Invincible Vampire", which reconstitutes itself after it is "dusted". "Dusted" is terminology from Buffy for the slaying of a vampire.
 * The Angel episode  features a pit which extends all the way through the Earth, between England and New Zealand. Miracle Day has a similar feature called the Blessing, which extends between Shanghai and Buenos Aires.