Theory:Doctor Who television discontinuity and plot holes/The Sound of Drums


 * The Master used the Archangel Network to convince the world into believing "Harold Saxon" — him — was a real person. That means before the satellites were put in space he couldn't hypnotise people. How did he get permission to start the network in the first place?
 * On the in universe website www.haroldsaxon.co.uk, it states that Harold Saxon "dared to stand apart from the party system" and that "leaders of all three major parties - and even some Scottish Nationalists - defected to his banner of unity, bringing most of their parties with them". This implies he was leading a coalition government and wasn't part of a party himself. Since the Prime Minister is not directly elected, either being the leader of the party with the most votes or (rarely) being invited by the monarch to form a government, he would not have needed to have a general election to achieve this. The "Vote Saxon" campaign, meanwhile, presents the PM as being directly elected.
 * "Vote Saxon" could have just been intended as a catchy slogan for his movement, not literal.
 * Possibly, with the other parties joining his campaign, he ended up with the Saxon Party - the "Vote Saxon" slogan was used in the same way as "Vote Labour" could be used.
 * What exactly standing apart from the party system means is unclear.
 * It could well just be campaign rhetoric.
 * It's entirely possible for a bid for the premiership from outside the party system especially if unusual circumstances have disrupted it. In the real world both Lloyd George in 1918 and Ramsay MacDonald in 1931 were elected at the head of coalitions that drew together people from multiple parties, without really being the formal leaders of major parties themselves. It's most likely Saxon began a populist movement offering an alternative government and won power through the election with many from parties and independents standing as declared "supporters of Mr Saxon".


 * The Master had no way of knowing that Jack possessed a Vortex Manipulator, yet he seemed to expect that the Doctor's group would find their way back to the present, as evidenced by his televised speech, wherein he puts emphasis on the word "Doctor", and the traps he laid for Martha. How could he expect them to get back without the TARDIS?
 * The Master knows the Doctor well so he knows that the Doctor would find a way to return to Earth. Also, as Time Lords can feel each others' presence, he can likely feel the Doctor in London just as the Doctor could feel him.
 * He could also be joking about how the only person who could save the human race is the Doctor.


 * When the Master refers to the Battle of Canary Wharf, he only mentions the Cybermen but not the Daleks hovering above London.
 * Because the Daleks weren't around for as long, people may not have noticed.


 * Also, the Daleks were never seen up close by anyone outside the Torchwood Tower, nor were they referred to by name. For all the public knew, they were some kind of secret weapon deployed by Torchwood against the Cybermen.
 * That makes no sense because if they were secrets weapons from Torchwood to destroy the Cybermen why would they being killing human beings?
 * Because they were dangerous experimental weapons that caused a lot of collateral damage, which is why they were never used until that extreme emergency?


 * And also in the deleted scenes Lance mentioned them TV: The Runaway Bride


 * It wasn't until a year later in "The Stolen Earth" that the Daleks made themselves generally known.


 * The Master was giving a political speech. The fact that Daleks are actually more dangerous than Cybermen isn't relevant; what matters is what people were most scared of.


 * When Vivian interviews Lucy, she tells Tish to take the coats out of the room, by calling her Tish, but Tish had never introduced herself to Vivian.
 * She may have before the scene started, or she's done her research.


 * It has been previously shown and indicated that Time Lords have extremely long, almost indefinite, life-spans and can remain healthy and strong in one incarnation for centuries. Indeed the First Doctor regenerated at the age of 450, yet the Master reduces the Doctor to infirmity by ageing him a mere 100 years.
 * His health failed because of artificial ageing not natural ageing. See The Leisure Hive.


 * When the Doctor's flashback of Gallifrey is shown, the Time Lord headdresses are different and that they do not have the Seal of Rassilon on each side.
 * There are different headdresses for different parts of the Time Lord society but the Seal of Rassilon is seen below the Untempered Schism.


 * When the Master explains that he grew mad because of the Untempered Schism, this would appear to contradict how he came to be in the story of his name as he was Death's companion.
 * The production team may not be taking the Big Finish audios as canon.


 * Or there could be multiple factors on his going mad. In fact, The End of Time pretty much _proves_ there were multiple factors. For that matter, Master has multiple reasons piling up before he finally goes over the edge when Death asks him to be her champion. So, Master left out some of the factors making him unstable, so did this episode, and so did The End of Time. Maybe if the Master were speaking more precisely he would have said that the Schism was the first step toward his madness. Or maybe any one of them would have been sufficient, and his madness was actually over-determined, so it's reasonably correct to say that any of them were the cause.


 * Why does the Master need to become Prime Minister for his plan to work?
 * The Master's plans focus heavily on hurting and humiliating the Doctor, and modern Britain is one of the locations most dear to him.
 * The Master needs to be in some form of power to let Humanity know that he is in charge.


 * The Master always liked to be in control. Becoming Prime Minister would simply be the easiest way to do so until the Toclafane arrived.


 * If the TARDIS had been locked to the co-ordinates it had most recently visited, i.e. 21st century London and the planet Malcassairo in the year 100 trillion, how did the Master travel to Utopia to 'recruit' the Toclafane?
 * The Doctor indicates that the coordinates are locked approximately.


 * They may have been locked to a specific time but allowed travel to any space within that time.


 * The flashback of the Master as a novice looking into the void depicts him as a boy. But it is stated in Lungbarrow that Time Lords by his time were born/created in Looms as fully grown adults.
 * The production team may not count the various novels as canon.


 * Or, if they do, they may have read more than one novel, and may realise that the EDAs (and post-EDA audios) establish that it's not true that all Time Lords were loomed. Gary Russell (who I believe was either continuity advisor or script editor to the TV series at this point) has argued that, even without the EDAs, Time Lord history probably changed in the LGTW just as it did in the Time War in those books.


 * The sky of Gallifrey was exactly the same as ours in all its previous appearances, and not orange.
 * The sky is similar to how it was described previously at night. We have only previously seen the sky of Gallifrey during the day. Also, the sky here on Earth sometimes changes colour depending on atmospheric conditions, and it is reasonable that this is true for other worlds as well.


 * When Martha, Jack and the Doctor are in the car, Martha says 'its all your fault' to the Doctor. Surely it's not his fault as Martha was the person who aroused Yana's interest in the fob watch.
 * She means it as the Doctor set the TARDIS to go to Earth where the Master had her family arrested, and she was just angry, so she might not know what she was talking about.


 * If the Master travelled back to the downfall of Harriet Jones then how come the Doctor couldn't detect him through series 2 and 3.
 * A Time Lord can probably only detect another Time Lord from the same time period as him.


 * It was the signal from the Archangel network cancelling out the Doctor's perceptions. The Doctor himself points this out.


 * Also, the Master was changing history with a paradox machine, and the Doctor didn't have one, so he might have had a hard time fighting the Master's changes even if he had known about them.


 * The Valiant flying through space would suggest that some anti-matter device has been created to allow flying aircraft carriers. No such device is referred to however.
 * The Valiant never flew through space.


 * The Valiant shown in the Sound of Drums/Last of the Time Lords and The Stolen Earth is a different version to the one from BFA: The Nowhere Place.


 * Also, why would you need antimatter to fly through space, or to hover in the atmosphere? Antimatter devices are just power supplies.


 * Just because no such device is referred to doesn't mean no such device exists. Obviously, in addition to a power source, the Valiant also has some kind of engines, and is made of some kind of metal (or composites or whatever), and so on, but nobody told us what kind of engines or what kind of metal.


 * What exactly IS the Cruciform?
 * That was deliberately left unexplained, along with most of the other details of the things mentioned from the Last Great Time War, to keep the War mysterious and awesome.


 * I'm baffled why Winters had to be 'President elect' rather than President. If he were elected, but the outgoing president was still in the White House then the outgoing president should have been supervising the contact with the Toclafane.


 * Firstly, RTD has confessed that this was a misunderstanding on his part.


 * However, we could suppose that the Winters was in the same party as the serving President, perhaps serving as Vice President or Secretary of State, that the President was ill, so Winters was attending the conference as a member of the incumbent administration but referred to by his more senior title.


 * There's actually real world precedent for this. For example, George Bush met with Tony Blair while he was Vice President and President Elect. And when Cherie called him Mr President, he even corrected her, "Just President Elect".


 * Maybe Winters was almost at the end of his first term as President, and had been elected to serve a second term, but had not yet sworn his second inauguration. Then Winters would technically be both the President and the President-elect. Of course, in this scenario, it would be odd that Winters referred to himself as "President-elect" rather than simply "President", but it wouldn't technically be incorrect.


 * Why didn't Martha take Captain Jack with her at the end? She was obviously able to take care of herself but with him they could've accomplished more things.


 * Jack was a few feet away. If she were to be noticed moving towards him and be stopped, she would be unable to follow the Doctor's instructions.


 * Yeah, that doesn't make sense. She's pretty slow to leave, so she could've quickly latched on to him. And even if she hadn't, why couldn't he jump off the valiant and find Martha later?


 * If the Master has been suffering from "never-ending drumbeat" his whole life, why has he never mentioned it before? The Master is one of the most frequently recurring villains, but we've never heard about it.


 * It is possible that the drums have actually gotten worse over time or increased in volume as time got closer to the events that caused the drums in the first place.
 * Also, Rassilon changed the past by putting drums in his head. In the original timeline, there were no drums to tell the Doctor about.


 * Apparently, the Master gassed all the other members of the Cabinet, but this wasn't brought up again in the episode. Why?