Cultural references to the Doctor Who universe/2000s

Occasionally, elements of the Doctor Who universe are referenced in the broader popular culture. This page exists to throw a spotlight on some of these casual references made in television, comics, films and other media which happened during the 2000s.

Television

 * A number of Doctor Who references appeared in The Simpsons.
 * "Co-Dependent's Day" (2004): Two Daleks can be seen in the Galactic Senate in Cosmic Wars: The Gathering Shadow.
 * "My Big Fat Geek Wedding" (2004): The Fourth Doctor can be seen at the Comic-Con.
 * "Springfield Up" (2007): Homer mistakes Declan Desmond for the Doctor, when stating "Check with me in 8 years, Doctor Who, I'll be kicking your ass with a golden boot!".
 * "Husbands and Knives" (2007): Comic Book Guy says: "Nice work, Doctor Boo-hoo".
 * Doctor Who is referenced in a number of skits in the stopmotion animated series :
 * A season 2 sketch entitled "Do You Get It?" (2006) is a short clip of the Fourth Doctor standing on first base in the middle of a baseball field. The skit ends with the Doctor asking the audience "do you get it?”. The skit is a visual pun referencing the classic routine "Who's on first?": the joke being that (Doctor) Who's on first (base).
 * Another season 2 sketch entitled "Ogre Returns" (2006) shows a boy during show and tell showing his toy TARDIS and Fourth Doctor doll to his class explaining what "TARDS" stands for, only to be interrupted by Ogre from Revenge of the Nerds who promptly shouts, "NERD!"
 * In the fifth episode of the second season of the ABC television series, the scientists Phil and Lem name the small robot designed to clean up spills in their laboratory Chumbley. This is the name that Vicki Pallister gives the robots that she, Steven Taylor and the First Doctor encounter in Galaxy 4. Later in the same episode, Phil and Lem enter a room full of used robot parts. A Dalek can be seen clearly in the corner nearest the door.
 * features multiple sketches derived from Doctor Who.
 * A sketch set in 2052 has Queen Elizabeth II's 100 year reign commemorated with a jubilee. Prince Philip is seen in a chair resembling Davros' chair but with a gunstick which he uses to shoot one of the Queen's corgis while exclaiming "Exterminate! Exterminate!" much like a Dalek.
 * Another sketch features a pair of grey Daleks who have returned to "exterminate the new Doctor, whoever he is". One is met by fashion gurus Trinny Woodall and Susannah Constantine. Trinny observes "30 years on and still the same old cheesy outfit", adding that perhaps it suited the Dalek "in 1970". The pair then give it a makeover in the style of What Not to Wear, including a bra worn over two of its "baubles". The Dalek then exclaims "Accessorise! Accessorise!" before passing a 1980s-style Cyberman, who it brands a "skinny bitch".
 * In, the character of Tyler is a delusional man known for claiming that numerous fictional elements, including those from Doctor Who, are real:
 * In the 2002 episode "Baby Talk", he claims to baby Ollie Sunday that "Skaro, home of the Daleks" is one of the "seven planets" in Earth's solar system. He later claims to Ollie's father, George Sunday, that the Daleks "really exist, you know."
 * In the 2005 episode "Brain Drain", Tyler claims to an NHS inspector that he studied medicine "on the planet Gallifrey".
 * In the 2005 episode "Fear and Clothing", Tyler presents the so-called "lucky teaspoon of Gandor", which he claims "Dr. Who" once used "to jam up the wheels of a Dalek."
 * One episode of features a cameo of a Doctor Who fan club. Most of its members wear scarves resembling that of the Fourth Doctor, while another member wears the Eighth Doctor's costume. A K9 prop also makes a cameo. In another episode set on a spacecraft, a Dalek and several sonic screwdrivers can be seen in the background.
 * In, the son proves he's a better geek by mentioning every actor who played the Doctor.
 * Several episodes of the 2008 series include references to Doctor Who. In one episode a character is identified as "Lethbridge-Stewart". Only twelve episodes were produced, with the decision made not to produce a thirteenth. That episode, The Doomsday Armageddon Apocalpyse, also contained several references to Doctor Who, most notably having the Middleman recite the First Doctor's farewell speech to Susan Foreman in The Dalek Invasion of Earth ("There must be no regrets, no tears, no anxieties..."). The script for this unmade episode was performed by the cast in a "read through" at the 2009 San Diego ComicCon, and adapted into a graphic novel by Viper Comics, both with the Doctor's speech intact. Given the series' acknowledged debt to Doctor Who, the fact that the lead character is never referred to by name, only as "the Middleman", is probably a reference to the fact that the Doctor's real name is never revealed. (The final episode, however, does reveal the Middleman's real name.)
 * The pilot for the 2000 series The Invisible Man contains at least four references: A doctor named Troughton, a business card reading I.M. Foreman and a magazine cover with the headlines "Time and Relative Dimensions in Space!" and "Playing the game of Rassilon!".
 * In Nightshifter, an episode of the series, a character is convinced that a "mandroid" is responsible for several crimes and holds up a magazine with a Cyberman on its cover to illustrate his point. In "The Girl Next Door", Sam confronts a Kitsune with the name Amy Pond.
 * In one episode of The Sarah Silverman Program, one character (Brian Spukowski, played by Brian Posehn) buys a DVD boxset of a science-fiction show called Dr. Lazer Rage. He later feels regret at buying the expensive boxset. Ninth Doctor actor Christopher Eccleston makes a cameo as "Dr. Lazer Rage" coming to life on the cover of the box. In the same episode, one character calls another from a blue telephone box. Interestingly, this is the only example of Eccleston participating in a guest appearance that directly references and parodies his involvement in Doctor Who.
 * In, in the final episode where the vicar, Geraldine Granger, gets married, her friend Alice Tinker and two orther bridesmaids go as the Tenth Doctor and two Daleks respectfully.
 * Doctor Who is referenced several times in episodes of . In "The Dumpling Paradox" (2007), Sheldon tells Leonard that every Saturday, he awakens at 6:15 and watches Doctor Who. Later in the episode, he says that he will watch the last twenty-four minutes of Doctor Who, though at that point "it is more like 'Doctor Why Bother?'".
 * In the American animated sitcom Family Guy:
 * The Star Wars Episode IV spoof "Blue Harvest" (2007), incorporated footage from the Tom Baker-era opening credits in the scene in which the Millennium Falcon enters hyperspace.
 * In the season 7 episode "420" (2009), Brian says that ever since weed was legalised "crime is down, productivity is up and the ratings for Doctor Who is through the roof".
 * In the episode "I Do Again" (2008) of Eureka, Zoe refers to her Aunt Lexi's boyfriend as her 'gorgeous Doctor WHO', meaning he's a doctor with the World Health Organisation, however, Vincent mistakes it as a reference to Doctor Who, exclaiming that he loves the tv show.

The Tomorrow People

 * In episode 2 of Big Finish's The Tomorrow People, The Deadliest Species, Stephen says to Tim, "You've redecorated. I like it." This is a reversal of the famous line from The Three Doctors, which would later recur multiple times in revived Doctor Who.

Prose

 * The Bunny Suicides book, Return of the Bunny Suicides (2004), involves a Doctor Who themed suicide.
 * In 's novel, (2008), a reference is made to a 'lonely god' 'adrift on the seas of time.' Paolini later admitted in the acknowledgements that he is a massive Doctor Who fan and that he believes the Doctor might have visited his world of Alagaësia at some point. In the sequel to this novel, Inheritance, the herbalist Angela begins to tell another character what she has inscribed on her blue hat- "Raxacori- Oh, never mind. It wouldn't mean anything to you anyway." Also, someone mentions having seen rooms that are bigger on the inside.

Disney Comics

 * The 2000 Donald Duck serial  saw Donald and his cousin Fethry meet a time traveller from the 27th century, whose time machine was bigger on the inside and travelled through a Time Vortex.

The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen

 * Alan Moore's crossover series links the Silurians to . Additionally, the TARDIS appears in the background of the Black Dossier.
 * In the second volume of series' final installment, Century: 1969, the Second Doctor makes a cameo in the background. The comic strip of Karkus is visible in a bookshop on the same page. A Dalek appears to Mina Murray during a drug-induced hallucination sequence at Hyde Park.
 * Additionally, in the third volume, Century: 2009, the Eleventh Doctor and the First Doctor both appear in a cameo. Captain Jack appears a few panels above this cameo. Additionally, the James Bond character M makes a reference to United Nations Intelligence Taskforce and "our Cardiff enterprise", namely Torchwood Three.
 * In the fourth and final volume of the series, Tempest, the Dalek Fleet is shown launching an attack on a future Earth. Mina states that Earth had just ended its war against the in 2160, inferring this to be the 22nd century Dalek invasion.

2000 AD

 * The strip  features Doctor Who references so often that they are practically part of the series' format. However, it also depicted a character clearly intended to be Tom Baker being murdered by Scottish nationalist demons. (Although this would appear to undermine the frequent suggestion by Caballistics, Inc fans that the series is unofficially set in the Doctor Who universe, one should remember that more than one version of Tom Baker has been featured as an in-universe character in Who-related media.)

DC Comics/Wildstorm

 * The title  (2005-06), scripted by  and plotted by her father Alan Moore, featured a Cyberman and an Ice Warrior. It is unclear whether the Cyberman was meant to be "real" or a costume, as the scene was set in an SF-themed bar (although the "real"  is also on display). Like The Establishment, which featured a Doctor Who pastiche character, Albion was deeply rooted in English popular culture.
 * JLA Classified #1 reveals that Batman keeps a Dalek in his "Sci-Fi" closet.

Buffy the Vampire Slayer

 * The Tenth Doctor and Rose Tyler can be seen in Part 1 of the Season 8 comic .

Team Fortress 2

 * A cosmetic item in the game called "Dr. Whoa" closely resembles the Eleventh Doctor's signature bow tie, and also the name is similar to Dr. Who.
 * Another cosmetic item called "The Cronoscarf " resembles the Fourth Doctor's scarf.

Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney

 * In  during the "Turnabout Serenade" case, if you examine the top hat in the Wright Anything Agency on the 2nd day, Trucy Wright states that her hat is "like a little universe! Bigger on the inside than on the outside!" At this, Apollo muses that this reminds him of a sci-fi show he used to watch.

Wizard101

 * A quest called "The Five B.O.X.E.S. Event" featured a character called "The Professor" from outside the normal flow of time and his assistant "Rose Piper" as well as five "B.O.X.E.S.", that resemble a TARDIS in shape but is red in colour, and bigger on the inside and resembling the Ninth/Tenth Doctor's interior.
 * "The Professor" dresses like multiple versions of the Doctor.

Out-of-universe references

 * In the Christmas special in which the title character of got married, her bridesmaids were dressed as the Tenth Doctor and two Daleks.
 * In an episode of the British TV series The Story of Tracy Beaker (which featured Ciaran Joyce, Sonny Muslim, Clive Rowe, Nisha Nayar, Morgan Hopkins, Roderick Smith, Richard Elfyn, Julian Lewis Jones, Madeleine Rakic-Platt, Simon Ludders, Phylip Harries, Gareth Wyn Griffiths, Amy Starling, Victoria Pugh, Brendan Charleson and Claire Cage), Elaine (who was played by Nayar and was one of the main characters) had tried driving the kids at the care home away from the TV by using a puppet theatre. After showing it to the kids and asking them what they thought it was, Rio (one of the kids) asked "Is it a TARDIS?".
 * In the 2009 Christmas special of, as a meta reference, a future version of Susan Harper (played by Zoë Wanamaker) makes several references to "moisturising", winking to the viewer as she does, a nod to Wanamaker's Doctor Who character.
 * A 2009 episode of, "", includes the character of McGee comparing the unexpectedly spacious interior of a cargo container to the TARDIS. McGee briefly explains the meaning to his co-worker, DiNozzo, who replies with "Doctor Who - who watches that?"
 * A reference to Doctor Who also occurs in the episode "". Flack says "Paging Doctor Who." Later in the episode, the time travel machine makes a noise very much like the noise the TARDIS makes.
 * In the episode "Karma,"  believes he could put himself up for the part of the Doctor.
 * In the Disney Channel series, the title characters once travelled to a parallel universe via a phone box.
 * In the comedy show (made by Steven Moffat), the character of Oliver runs a science fiction bookstore with a replica Dalek. In one scene he has a package that shouts 'Exterminate'.
 * In the British comedy, Max (one of the main characters) ended up getting a portable reading lamp Philip (another of the main characters) had invented clamped to his head. He then remarked about why else he'd walk around looking like a Dalek, and that if he didn't find Philip soon he might as well exterminate him.
 * Several episodes of Leverage reference Doctor Who. In "The Mile High Job" (2008) Nathan Ford is asked what ID's he has on him so that he can board an airplane. He replies, "I've got a Peter Davidson, Sylvester McCoy and a Tom Baker." Sophie adds, "I've got a Sarah Jane Baker." Hardison pronounces them man and wife. "The Bank Shot Job" (2009) had Hardison mentioning that he had been torrenting the latest episode of Doctor Who.