Theory:Doctor Who television discontinuity and plot holes/Listen


 * If it was only just fear, then who wrote "LISTEN" on the Doctor's chalkboard and was under the cover's of child Danny's bed?
 * It's suggested that the Doctor wrote "LISTEN" in a moment of absentmindedness and that one of Danny's friends was playing a trick on him. However, it's by no means confirmed that either is the case.
 * Since the word in question was written in the Doctor's handwriting (it's been pointed out and is easy to see), it's probably the Doctor who wrote it himself without even realising it. That's Occam's Razor: the simplest of competing theories should be preferred to the more complex.


 * This seems to occur numerous times at the end of series 7 and now 8. In some episodes like The Name of the Doctor and Robot of Sherwood, Clara knows everything that has happened to the Doctor and all of his faces. But in some episodes, like this one, she doesn't know everything. In this episode, she doesn't know about her coming to the Doctor's childhood.
 * She didn't know about her coming to the Doctor's childhood because it hadn't yet happened for her. I think it's hyperbole to say she knows "everything that happened to the Doctor". Moffat has said she only remembers bits and pieces of her other lives as if they were "dreamlike images". Also, the timeline we saw in Name of the Doctor didn't include the Twelfth since it was from a reality where the Doctor died on Trenzalore. So it's debatable whether Clara visited him as a boy in the "original history" or not.
 * She most likely did do it in the "original history" (is there such a thing in Doctor Who, really?), but the Clara splinters were not with the Doctor every day of his life. There is no indication of there being another Clara present and no reason why the First Doctor, or any incarnation, would relate to her a dream he had as a child (though, technically, this happens in Listen with the Twelfth Doctor).


 * If "the monster under your bed that grabs your leg" is a dream that everyone has, but we saw that it was Clara who grabbed the Doctor's leg, then what about everyone else who has the same dream?
 * It's a dream. There doesn't have to be a reason for everyone to have it. A lot of people dream about that in real world too, but it's not like there's really someone under the bed.


 * Wasn't the world of timelords supposed to be timelocked? With Ninth saying he couldn't return even if he wanted to. How come Clara just pops in there like nothing, in the time of Doctor's childhood for crying out loud?
 * Only the Last Great Time War was time-locked by the Moment, not the entire Gallifrey.
 * Alternatively, the doctor states he disabled all the safety precautions, hence how the Tardis is able to arrive at the last point before the universe dies. Perhaps with no safety allowed they were able to ram through.
 * Or, perhaps this is signifying that Gallifrey is no longer time-locked due to the events of The Day of the Doctor (TV story).
 * Remember too that the Tenth and Eleventh Doctors returned with the War Doctor to the time when the Moment was detonated (of course creating an alternate continuity instead). They remark that 'we shouldn't be here'. So someone or something has unlocked time, perhaps the Moment itself.


 * Considering the Doctor met Clara "prime" as a child (in the prequel to "The Bells of Saint John"), and is well aware of her early life (the leaf, etc., as per "The Rings of Akhatan" and "The Name of the Doctor"), it's odd that he'd think she was once an orphan who lived in a children's home in another part of the country.
 * It's not odd. We've seen that this incarnation of the Doctor is a lot more spacy and all over the place with his thoughts. He doesn't consider Clara's feelings or think much of her (of course he still cares about her and everyone else in the universe like the Doctor should, but he's far more flippant and dismissive than Tennant or Smith's Doctors were). He didn't realize Clara was on a date and that her date would most likely be on her mind considering how badly it was going. Because of that, he doesn't think to even consider that maybe Clara sent them somewhere wrong and just assumes that everything's fine, fitting in with his flippant, dismissive, and spacy/flaky nature. Twelve just doesn't see those things like we would expect him to.


 * There's simple explanations for much of what happens in the episode and there's plenty of closed loops that we never have to worry about after the episode ends, but some things just don't add up. The creature or thing under the covers of Danny's/Rupert's bed, then the whatever-it-is that opened the door at the end of time in Orson's little home, those things were there and definitely made the Doctor worry like he normally does when in actual danger. The door opening on its own at the end of the episode is the most glaring issue for me. If it was all based on a bad nightmare the Doctor had through Clara messing around in his childhood, what was it that opened up the door after the Doctor unlocked it? Something had to have been there is all I'm saying and we don't know what it was. Orson definitely thought something was out there or else he wouldn't have locked the door in the first place.
 * The lock was a pressure lock, the opening mechanism was triggered automatically after the unlocking. As for the blanket, it is said at least twice that it could be one of Rupert's friends.


 * If the Doctor wanted to find this "perfect hider", why did he let the opportunity go in Rupert's room, only to risk his life later on, trying to find it again at the end of the universe?
 * He's not exactly thinking logically in this episode so that explains some of it but also he didn't know what it would do if any of them actually saw it so he might not have wanted to risk anything happening to Rupert.