 
 On November 23, everyone will be able to watch the Doctor’s newest adventure at the same time.
The upcoming “Doctor Who” 50th Anniversary Special is already highly 
anticipated thanks to the return of David Tennant’s Tenth Doctor and 
Billie Piper as Rose Tyler alongside the current Doctor, Matt Smith and 
Jenna-Louise Coleman’s Clara Oswald. BBC still hasn’t released the 
trailer for the special that was previewed at Comic-Con International, 
but there is some good news for Whovians. 
 BBC has announced that the “Doctor Who” 50th Anniversary Special will 
be simulcast around the world on November 23. That means that while 
“Doctor Who” airs on its traditional 8pm Saturday night timeslot on BBC 
One, fans on the East Coast of the United States can watch it on BBC 
America at 3pm, while the West Coast fans can catch it at Noon Pacific 
Time. In Australia, the special will air at 7am. 
 In a brief statement, BBC said "It's always been our ambition to work 
with our broadcast partners so that international Doctor Who fans can 
enjoy the 50th Anniversary special at the same time as the UK." 
 Presumably the simulcast was done in part to prevent piracy from 
cutting into the viewing numbers. It also seems likely that BBC America 
will run the Anniversary Special again later in the day or at night as 
part of its Supernatural Saturdays. 
 If the simulcast experiment is a success, BBC could potentially try it 
again for this year’s Christmas special, which will be Smith’s final 
adventure as the Doctor.
 
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