I Had Every Right to Leave (Fugitive of the Judoon)

It’s January 26th, 2020. Eminem is at number one with “Godzilla,” featuring the late Juice Wrld, which is not a sentence I realized I was going to get to type before now. That was fun in a way the music charts haven’t been since the Wilderness Years. And I don’t even much rate “Godzilla.”
Anyway, at the precise time this airs, I’m with Penn at my mother’s house in Newtown, just a few hours we leave for JFK and fly to London for a week. It’ll be my first time there since just before Christmas of 2011, where I wrote The Ribos Operation entry in a hotel in Manchester. I think this time I’m working on the early stages of Dalek Eruditorum, trying to get that to work and having it go about as well as writing up this era of the show does, but with less obligation to keep at it. Anyway, I’d long since switched from a full laptop to a tablet/keyboard case combo, so I couldn’t have torrented the episode if I’d wanted to, and even if I had I’d have been racing the car to leave to the airport, and frankly Chibnall Doctor Who didn’t warrant that kind of urgency.
So instead it’s January 27th. The charts don’t change til Thursday. Penn and I are holed up in a fourth floor walkup hotel room in Paddington. We’ve gotten in at the ass hours of the morning and run straight into the classic overnight to London problem of being at your hotel hours before it’s ready for you, exhausted and smelling like you’ve been wearing the same clothes for 36 hours. So we spend the afternoon in the Science Museum looking at the reconstruction of Babbage’s Analytical Engine and sitting on a bench, then stagger back to the hotel, pass out for a three hour nap, and get ready to go out to our “holy shit we’re in London” dinner reservation. And somewhere in there, I pull up Fugitive of the Judoon on iPlayer, literally the only time in my life I have ever watched Doctor Who on the BBC.
I don’t remember if I’m spoiled. I probably am. I usually am. But what’s remarkable is that this is a concept. The fact that Twitter is buzzing about the episode—that people are talking in awed voices about its twists and implications—is unusual for this era. There’s an excitement and enthusiasm that hadn’t really been there since The Woman Who Fell to Earth, save, perhaps, among those who were especially excited about the short-awaited return of the Master, and that won’t be seen again until the buildup to the second Davies’ era. Perhaps most notably, the ratings saw an appreciable uptick—one of only a handful in the course of the Chibnall era’s gradual bleedout, and something that appears to have been caused at least in part by the hype over how seismic this episode was.
Or at least, appeared to be. It’s difficult to recapture that now, knowing where all of this is going, and more to the point where it isn’t.…