The BBC says it has dismissed complaints it received earlier this year about a Doctor Who episode that featured a passionate kiss between Ncuti Gatwa and guest star Jonathan Groff.
Groff guested on the long-running British science fiction show this summer to play the titular character in the episode “Rogue,” a man of mystery whose run-in with the Fifteenth Doctor (Gatwa) leads to intense romantic feelings between the two — and a steamy lip-lock that led to at least 169 complaints to the BBC’s Audience Services department, according to an official tally.
The broadcaster has since disregarded those complaints, as Deadline first reported this week. In a July statement, the BBC noted that complainants claimed the episode contained “sexualized content unsuitable for children,” and was replete with “inappropriate sexual innuendo,” as the complaints alleged. In response, the BBC’s Executive Claims Unit determined that any sexual innuendo in the episode was “towards the mildest end of the spectrum and in any case likely to go over the heads of children.”
Regarding further concern that Rogue and the Doctor’s relationship developed too quickly, the ECU wrote that their quick-burning romance was “unlikely to strike viewers of any age as a model for interpersonal relationships outside this particular fictional context.”
While the outrage against “Rogue” didn’t reach the same level of regressive indignation as “The Star Beast,” it’s good to see that the BBC didn’t cave to pressure over such a milestone Doctor Who moment. Groff, for his part, seems eager to run it back. “I hope we’re seeing Rogue again. Rogue tells the Doctor at the end of the episode to find him, so it’s totally up to the Doctor,” Groff told Out in June. “The ball is in his court, so to speak.”