Howling:What do you get when you multiply 6 by 9?

When last season had the 50-foot-high letters on the oldest cliff face in the universe, that just seemed like a throwaway reference. But now, (35 minutes into Let's Kill Hitler) we learn that the Silence are devoted to stopping anyone from discovering the Question (the first question, the oldest question in the universe, hidden in plain sight). In HHGTTG, if anyone discovered the Ultimate Question, the entire universe would vanish, to be replaced by something even more bizarre. In Doctor Who, if anyone asks the Question, Silence Will Fall. --173.228.85.35 02:05, August 28, 2011 (UTC)

Douglas Adams worked on DW before he wrote HHGTTG. Arthur Dent was referred to in The Christmas Invasion. The title of Series 3, Episode 7 was 42. It shouldn't be a huge surprise if other similarities crop up. --2.96.17.180 19:37, August 28, 2011 (UTC)

Actually, he worked on them mostly at the same time. (He was writing his first Who episode when the BBC picked up the first HHG radio play.)

Yes, there are lots of references to HHGTTG in both the classic series and the new (and in the novels). And, confusingly, some of them imply that the HHGTTG universe is the same as the Whoniverse (Oolon Colluphid wrote at least one of the same books, Lazlar Lyricon makes custom spaceships, Arthur Dent is a real person, etc.), while others imply that the HHGTTG exists as fiction in the Whoniverse (the 7th Doctor quotes a line out of the first novel, Anji's boyfriend Dave was waiting his whole life for the movie to get made, the 6th Doctor and Iris Wildthyme knew Douglas Adams, etc.). Of course Remembrance of the Daleks implies that the Doctor Who series itself seems to exist in the Whoniverse, so maybe they're both true…

But anyway, the question is, if this an intentional borrowing or reference, does that give us any clues to the finale of this season's arc? Connecting one of the major plot points of this season to one of the major plot points of the HHG novels is different from mentioning a Lazlar Lyricon spaceship. I don't think we're going to learn that Earth was a custom planet built for hyperdimensional mice, but the idea that the Question is locked in Amy's or Melody's mind doesn't seem too implausible. --173.228.85.35 22:32, August 28, 2011 (UTC)