Lokheed
Well-Known Member
The show has been running for fifty years (as of this Saturday) and celebrates its entire history as canon without reboots or reimaginings. It is not just the longest running science fiction television series in the world, aside from a couple of soap operas it is the longest running scripted television program of any kind. The imagery is a huge cultural touchstone in the U.K., with the TARDIS and Daleks on par with any Disney characters. It has a large enough fanbase that the 50th anniversary episode is being aired simultaneously around the world, the last time I looked more than 80 countries showing the episode in real time globally. I can't think of any other program with that kind of reach aside from the Olympics or possibly the World Cup. In the past eight years it has become the flagship program for BBC One. I'd say the show easily has global mass appeal.Same here...and I WANTED to like it.
While it's a large fanbase, it's a very "love it or hate it" franchise. There really isn't "mass-appeal" once you get past the large devote fanbase.
Regarding a theme park attraction, there is an excellent one at The Doctor Who Experience in Cardiff. It is a walk through experience, not unlike the sadly-missed Alien Encounter at the Magic Kingdom. Over the course of the ride you face off against a multitude of classic Doctor Monsters and even get to pilot the TARDIS. It is really great fun, and has the added advantage of then dumping into a genuine museum of Doctor Who artifacts ranging from original costumes and props right up to several different TARDIS consoles. If that attraction were to be replicated at the U.K. Pavillion at Epcot I would be there on a regular basis. I doubt if that will ever happen, but it's nice to dream.
(Yeah, I'm kind of a fan. Been watching the show since the Third Doctor, and as excellent as Tennant is he will never top Troughton as the REAL Doctor.)