Howling:How much history is gone?

The end of the universe is appearing as cracks in the universe and sucking people, events, etc. out of history, so they've never existed, and only time-travelers remember them.

The Doctor explicitly suggests that this is why Amy doesn't remember the Daleks (she wasn't a time-traveler yet).

That probably also explains why nobody in van Statten's bunker knew about the Daleks. And Zoe Heriot, and Hex, and... actually, probably half the characters from every story that took place in the 2010s-2050s or so (and even 2164--sure, those people did have bigger things to deal with than history lessons about the 21st century, but you'd think knowledge of a prior Dalek invasion would be the one bit of history they did remember).

The Doctor also mentions the Cyberking in the middle of London in the 19th century that nobody remembers.

So, what else is Moffat erasing? It almost sounds like he's planning on undoing the entire RTD era. (Even if the Dalek invasion never happened, the people in Fear Her who thought the old lady was crazy for believing in aliens should have known about all of the events that we've been told everyone saw, from Aliens of London to The End of Time.)

But I don't think he'd go that far--unless he went a lot farther, and undid all of the differences between the Whoniverse and our universe (as of 26 June 2010). Which could be interesting, but imagine how hard it'd be to write the show if it took place in the real world instead of a slightly different one. Especially since the real world has a TV show called Doctor Who. (Then again, remember Remembrance of the Daleks' "... an adventure in the new science fiction series Doc--"?) --Falcotron 10:29, May 3, 2010 (UTC)

Interesting theory falcotron but I don't think he will undo any even remotely significant part of the RTD era as if he did then the eleventh doctor would probably not be around. Furthermore the whole journey's end dalek invasion of earth thing isn't really a plothole as they never make any mention about not knowing of the Daleks before they invaded in Dalek invasion of earth, plus the Daleks also take over the earth using plague missiles rather than a full scale fight where people would recognise them before they invaded. The whole van statten thing is a plothole, possibly the biggest plothole of all time in doctor who, except for the whole year that never was coinciding with the reality bomb, which I am amazed has never been a topic of discussion on the howling. Also I think that Amy forgetting the Daleks will be a temporary thing, as if you think adeliade from waters of mars knew about the whole moving of the earth and called the daleks by name and she wasn't a time traveller at that point. Though your still right about it being weird zoe doesent know of the daleks but that was always a plothole because of the daleks invasion of earth, so i dont think steven moffat will adress it, if you think about it it is wierd that the doctor didn't know about the moving of the earth before stolen earth considering the amount of times he travels into the future you would think he would remembering reading that his greatest enemies stole the earth.- Winehousefan 22:56 May 7,2010[UTC]


 * Of course the 11th Doctor would still be around. Time travelers (like the 10th Doctor) still lived through, and remember, the unwritten events, so he still went through all of that and still regenerated.


 * As I said, I don't think Moff will go that far. But it's not because he couldn't make it work; it's because it would be a massive cheat to the fans to Dallas-out 5 years of the show like that (and he's not only a better writer than that, he himself is one of those fans).


 * But on further thought, I now suspect he's actually unwriting the minimal amount necessary to make alien invasions and monster attacks no longer common knowledge. (Maybe even from the classic show, except that I think he'll just ignore Nessie in the Thames.) If he's not unwriting _any_ history, why emphasize the line "History can be unwritten!"?) I just posted my reasons for this in another thread, so I won't repeat them here.


 * As for Zoe, it's unclear exactly when she's from, but it's definitely 21st century, which means long before Dalek Invasion of Earth. So, removing Journey's End will remove that plot hole. And the same for all those other 21st century characters from the series, novels, and BFAs.


 * And you're right about the Doctor, but that plot hole actually gets erased too. He's a time traveler, but he's reading the history books written by non-time travelers, which don't mention the invasion. It probably _is_ in UNIT's files, but I suspect he pointedly avoids reading those to avoid "spoilers". (Actually, has he ever worked with UNIT far enough in the future for that to matter anyway?)


 * The Year That Never Was isn't not a problem, because it was already unwritten before Journey's End happened. The two timelines exist side by side. Sure, the Doctor lived through that year twice, once in each timeline, but he's a time traveler, so he can do that. This _does_ require something like my metatime framework for time travel, because one timeline has to be "meta-before" the other, but with it, that's not a problem. (Of course if the Master had won, he'd suddenly find the Earth had been stolen out from underneath him, and _he'd_ have to go face down the Daleks. That could make an interesting what-if audio story....)


 * I'm pretty sure Adelaide Brooke can also be explained with the metatime framework, but I leave that as an exercise for the reader. :) --Falcotron 00:41, May 8, 2010 (UTC)
 * 'Dalek' was never a plothole - it was orignally just wiped over with the events of The Stolen Earth/Journey's End. As in, it was retconed out of the timeline. Steven Moffat, among other writers, have spoken of what some fans call these so-called continuity errors - they're not. In a show where the main character is a time traveler, he is changing time. Back when he visited 2012 in 'Dalek', there had never been any big invasions in the 21st century prior. That occured later in the Doctor's own timeline, erasing the events of 'Dalek'. It's time travel, changing history. Doctor Who has no, and never will have, a strict continuity. When the Doctor travels, he is potentially erasing thing s from history that we saw in other episodes, but he will never be affected because he is a time traveler.
 * The Dalek invasion never happened before, but the Dalek's time travel made it happen, changing the future of the 21st century, and erasing things such as 'Dalek'. That was the way it worked, however, until the cracks then removed the Dalek invasion, possibly reverting the timeline back to how it was like in 'Dalek' and 'Fear Her' - not everyone is that aware of alien life. Doctor Who, like they say, doesn't have one strict contininuity, the entire show retcons itself with all the time traveling, and erases so-and-so left and right and overwrites its own timeline. The nature of the show is that the Doctor, however, will remember everything - what happens, what happened, what should never happen, what will happen, and what once happened, but no longer has happened. That's the timeline for you - wibbly and wobbly, it's a big ball and is prone to change. There is no strict progression.
 * The Dalek invasiob being removed, however, is no big deal. It's just the show retcoing things again. We're not always areare what is retconed and what isn't. but this was in-you-face.
 * It's like with Earth being moved and renamed at a time period in the classic series, and then suddenly back and called Earth in the year 5 billion - that's retconing, too. Changing time and history. I believe either Russel T Davis or Steven Moffat said the Time War changed the timeline dramatically, rewriting things such as the Earth movement and rename. Doctor Who is aloud to overwrite its timeline continuity because it's all in flux and wibbly wobbly, as Moffat notes. Delton Menace 01:11, May 8, 2010 (UTC)
 * It's like with Earth being moved and renamed at a time period in the classic series, and then suddenly back and called Earth in the year 5 billion - that's retconing, too. Changing time and history. I believe either Russel T Davis or Steven Moffat said the Time War changed the timeline dramatically, rewriting things such as the Earth movement and rename. Doctor Who is aloud to overwrite its timeline continuity because it's all in flux and wibbly wobbly, as Moffat notes. Delton Menace 01:11, May 8, 2010 (UTC)


 * I understand what you're saying. I think Moffat has a different (and more thought-out) view of how time travel works than RTD did--but even if he didn't, there's still a question here: What's the point of doing this especially-in-your-face retconning? And I think the answer is that (a) he wants to write a "real time-travel story," and (b) he wants to return the Earth in the early 21st century to being unaware of aliens. --Falcotron 01:25, May 8, 2010 (UTC)
 * I personally think he is trying to make more fans aware of the way the show really works. Too many fans think it's all one, linear, and straight continuity flow. But as he has said both in episodes and in interviews and things, it really isn't. The best way to describe it - "Time is like a big ball of wibbly, wobbly, timey-wimey stuff." Ugh, something like that. The Doctor's time travel and dimension hoping + the Daleks time traveling and dimension hoping... oh boy, will time change, indeed. Plus, the Time War really did a no. 1 on time, too. Heck, Moffat jokingly blamed Rory's inncorect ID badge date (1990) on the Time War - "It's that time war again." xD


 * But my point is that he really needs to clear up some things established in the RTD - the so-called continuity errors. He is probably aware of fans speculating in the "errors" regarding them, so he needs to make clear that time in the Whoniverse isn't a strict cause of progression (which was noted in Blink), that it can change left and right because of the Doctor, and the Daleks, ect.. The crack arc of his has basically explained why no one ever remember the events of the Next Doctor, the CyberKing over London, and the Dalek invasion ot being remembered in quite a number of 21st century-related things - time being unwirtten and rewritten. He is really intending to clear up the "errors", as fans call them. He is a veyr smart man when it comes to how time works in Doctor Who. The fans should listen to him more. Instacnes in-universe of how time really works in the Whoniverse can be found in Silence in the Library/Forest of the Dead ("time can be rewritten), and the same thing was mentioned in The Time of Angels/Flesh and Stone, including how some things have indeed been unwritten. In Blink, written by him, there was the Doctor's comment that time isn't strict of liner- it can change and bend. Delton Menace 02:09, May 8, 2010 (UTC)