In honour of Doctor Who's 60th birthday, here are 60* things that I like about less popular** Doctor Who stories.
(*in multiple posts because I'm falling foul of the character limit)
(**IMDB rating of less than 7/10)
1. Susan is great in The Sensorites. She's at her absolute best in stories like this where she gets to be genuinely a bit alien and a bit weird.
2. "So," said someone at the BBC, "we're going to produce an allegory for different political systems, using insects. Choreographed by a mime artist. On a budget of about £2.50." The Web Planet might not entirely have succeeded, but my god, you have to love that they tried.
3. They introduced Jamie, the best companion, in The Highlanders! How is does this have less than a 7/10 rating, what is wrong with you people. It's Jamie.
4. I applaud the utter bonkersness of The Underwater Menace, and Patrick Troughton really gives it socks.
5. The Wheel in Space is proper 60s sci-fi: Servo-Robots, x-ray lasers, radio beams! I can practically smell Penguin mass-market paperbacks thinking about it. And with the introduction of Zoe, it completes my all-time favourite TARDIS team.
6. The Dominators contains the Quarks, who are adorable. They weren't supposed to be, but it doesn't matter.
7. Zoe is still relatively new to the TARDIS, but she has heaps to do in The Krotons. Nice having a female companion who's written as smart and capable.
8. We have entered the 70s, so with Colony in Space, we get Social Issues. Especially an Evil Mining Corporation, which are always fun.
9. More Social Issues in The Mutants, but this time they're paired with big sci-fi ideas. Ancient tablets! Strange life cycles! Love how much is going on here.
10. The Time Monster is like the Eurovision of Doctor Who. Deeply silly, but what would Doctor Who be without silliness? I'm sorry about Jo's coccyx too.
11. I love that they returned to Peladon in The Monster of Peladon, especially with the 50-year time jump. I'd like to see that kind of follow-up more often.
12. Is it not cool to love K9 any more? Well, I like my Doctor Who with a dose of silliness, and The Invisible Enemy delivered that. Every time traveller needs a robot dog.
13. The design of the Seers in Underworld is excellent, I love a brass dome.
14. Doctor Who doesn't have enough giant squidmonsters looming on the horizons. I'm glad the The Power of Kroll does something to address the deficit.
15. The Creature from the Pit gave us the line "a teaspoon and an open mind", and I appreciate it for that at least.
16. Romana wears one of her best of many splendid outfits in The Horns of Nimon.
17. I liked all the arch dialogue between the Doctor, Enlightenment and Persuasion in Four to Doomsday.
18. Heathrow airport is an underrated setting. I also appreciate how Time-Flight prominently features Concorde, making it far more 80s than they could ever have planned.
19. I don't intend this to be damning with faint praise (even though it probably sounds like it) but my favourite thing about Arc of Infinity is that we get a little jaunt through 80s Amsterdam. I do love a tram.
20. Babyfaced Martin Clunes doing his spoiled princeling thing in Snakedance is enjoyably disconcerting.
21. Terminus is tense and scary and bleak. Another one that I'd expected to be more highly rated.
22. Warriors of the Deep gives us a very solid base under siege. Silurians + Cold War is a winning combination.
23. Landing in a modern village doing a historical re-enactment in The Awakening is a witty touch.
24. I can’t say I enjoyed the idea of the Doctor’s violent moods in The Twin Dilemma, but I have to commend it as a punchy way to introduce the new regeneration.
25. The Mark of the Rani should surely get some love just for introducing the Rani: camp, delightful, iconic.
26. Herbert turning out to be HG Wells in Timelash is a lovely twist and handled well.
27. The Trial of a Time Lord is so grand and ambitious. If the show hadn't been struggling in general at this point, it would be among the all-time greats.
28. With its colour-coded gangs and faux-urban slang, Paradise Towers is gloriously of its time in a way that currently feels quite naff, but that I suspect will be fascinating to revisit in about 30 years.
29. Delta and the Bannermen is action-packed and has one of the best titles in 80s Who.
30. Possibly the most terrifying moment in all of Doctor Who is Kane's face melting in Dragonfire. This series is nothing if it doesn't send children running for safety behind the sofa.
31. Got to love it when Who gets aggressively anti-Thatcher, and they never did it more than in The Happiness Patrol.
32. The TV Movie is a joyous romp and I won't hear a word said against it.
33. RTD's fresh approach to Doctor Who gets its first proper outing in Aliens of London, where people have loved ones who are not casually forgiving of them disappearing for a year. It makes everything feel more real and more grounded.
34. Rose's costume is stunning in The Idiot's Lantern. I wish she'd got the opportunity to dress up more.
35. The outside perspective in Love and Monsters is genuinely interesting. Honestly, if they had just left out that joke, I think I would remember this one much more fondly.
36. Fear Her is hated in fandom and I'm not sure why. It's a solid episode. I think Doctor Who should do near-future settings more often.
37. Daleks in Manhattan/Evolution of the Daleks has a fabulous setting and they really make the most of it.
38. Victory of the Daleks is another one I wasn’t expecting would be rated so low. I’m amazed it took this long for Doctor Who to combine Daleks and WW2; the camouflaged Daleks look fab.
39. I’m realising writing this that I’m a big fan of companions getting to play dress-up, and Amy in a pirate outfit in The Curse of the Black Spot is no exception.
40. I genuinely think Robot of Sherwood is one of the most fun Capaldi episodes. Deep? No. Cheering? Absolutely.
41. Kill the Moon is nuts, but it’s impressively memorable.
42. London covered in trees is marvellous in In the Forest of the Night.
43. Sleep No More is another example of Doctor Who doing something genuinely different – no title sequence, and a genuinely creepy opener.
44. The Eaters of Light was always going to be a winner for me: a lost Roman legion and it’s by the writer of Survival.
45. The Ghost Monument is the start of Jodie Whittaker's stories getting disproportionately negative IMDB ratings. It's a genuinely good story! The rally concept is great and I love how we get to know the new companions, Ryan in particular.
46. It's giant spiders, it's Sheffield, it's the dangers of unconstrained capitalism, it's all good fun in Arachnids in the UK. Graham really grew on me in this one.
47. The Tsuranga Conundrum features mpreg and I remember this one really annoying Daily Mail readers, always a worthy goal.
48. Demons of the Punjab feels like Doctor Who going back to its educational roots. The partition of India is something that a lot of people in the UK are shamefully ignorant about, and it's laudable that Doctor Who decided to address it. And it's a genuinely good episode too.
49. Kerblam! had an ending that took me fully by surprise.
50. Alan Cumming is just fabulous as King James in The Witchfinders.
51. Lovely Norwegian setting in It Takes You Away. I think this era takes us to more different countries than any other.
52. The Battle of Ranskoor Av Kolos gives us a proper don’t-kill-the-villain moral dilemma.
53. I am a sucker for video game-esque plots where there’s a doohickey in multiple places, and Resolution delivers that, plus archaeologists.
54. Spyfall gave us Sacha Dhawan, who in a crowded field has quite possibly become my favourite Master of post-2005 Doctor Who.
55. Great costumes in Nikola Tesla's Night of Terror and it’s nice to see Tesla himself celebrated too.
56. Lots to do for experienced companions in Praxeus! They really feel like equal participants by this stage.
57. The Irish storyline in Ascension of the Cybermen/The Timeless Children is deliciously mysterious. I love the confidence of using that to introduce a canon-shaking revelation.
58. The way Graham and Ryan leave in Revolution of the Daleks is sweet.
59. There are so many good characters in Flux: Karvanista, Azure and Swarm, Vinder and Bel, and above all the wonderful Jericho. I usually don't follow the extended universe stuff, but I hope Big Finish and the novels are making the most of them.
60. Eve of the Daleks is brilliant, are you kidding me, what is it doing on this list?! I always love a time loop and both the guest cast and regulars were great in this. I'm not normally a big Doctor/companion shipper but Yaz admitting to her feelings for the Doctor charmed even me.
There were a total of 73 stories with an IMDB rating below 7/10. I skipped the Reign of Terror, the Smugglers, the Space Pirates, the Nightmare of Eden, the King's Demons, Frontios, Attack of the Cybermen, Time and the Rani, Silver Nemesis, the Lazarus Experiment, Orphan 55, Can You Hear Me? and Legend of the Sea Devils. Do feel free to add nice things about those if you've made it this far.

















