In which Ruby Sunday finds love - but is new beau Conrad Clark all that he seems...?
The Doctor and Belinda visit London on New Year's Eve, 2006, as part of the scheme to get the TARDIS to May 2025. They are spotted by an 8 year old boy - Conrad Clark - who witnesses the Police Box vanish into thin air. When he tries to tell his abusive mother about what he has seen, he is disbelieved.
As Conrad grows up, he begins collecting information about sightings of the blue box and its owner.
In 2024, he comes across it once again in an alleyway behind a closed down London department store. He enters the shop and spies on the Doctor, who is travelling with Ruby at this time. They are hunting a vicious creature called a Shreek. It uses a pheromone to mark Conrad as future prey.
He captures an image of Ruby and the TARDIS on his phone before it dematerialises.
The following year, Ruby is no longer travelling with the Doctor - wishing to stay behind to get to know her birth mother with whom she has only recently been reunited. She is troubled by her experiences with the Doctor and wants someone to talk to about them. Conrad is a successful podcaster on the subject of extraterrestrials, and she agrees to go on his show to discuss her personal experience of alien life. He is particularly interested in hearing about UNIT, a representative of which he has been trying to get on his podcast for some time.
The pair continue to meet afterwards and are soon dating. Conrad lets Ruby know of the incident in the department store, and she explains that the Shreek was seen again recently, but was captured by UNIT. It would have returned exactly a year after marking him in order to kill him. She gives him an antidote which prevents the creatures from tracing their prey.
Some time later, she agrees to spend the weekend with him at the village where he grew up, meeting some of his old friends. On getting off the bus, Ruby notices the indicator display going haywire.
That evening, the lights in the pub begin to go on and off, and Ruby decides to give UNIT a call.
Kate Stewart reports no anomalous activity in her area, and confirms that the Shreek is safely locked up.
Conrad's friends are asking Ruby about her experiences with the Doctor and UNIT when a customer rushes into the pub claiming to have seen a monster outside.
Ruby goes to the window and sees a Shreek prowling in the shadows. A second one is then spotted.
Conrad reveals that he never took the antidote, wishing to experience what it would be like to be the Doctor, confronting alien creatures.
UNIT are summoned and arrive quickly on the scene. With Kate are Shirley Bingham and Colonel Ibrahim, and a junior operative named Jordan. Jordan reports that there is still no anomalous activity registering, which Kate and Shirley find odd.
The two Shreek unmask themselves as friends of Conrad in costume. He reveals a T-shirt with "Think Tank" written across the chest - an on-line outfit which has been accusing UNIT of lying to the general public about aliens in order to justify public money being poured into it.
Conrad and his friends are all members, out to discredit the organisation - and he has exploited Ruby's love for him to get to them.
They take video footage on their phones, which is soon all over the internet, making UNIT out to be liars at best, and a danger to democracy at worst.
Conrad is arrested for stirring up public disorder, but released 24 hours later as social and mainstream media take his side.
Ruby is forced to shelter at UNIT HQ, where the Skreech is about to be transferred to Geneva.
Conrad has published a list of all UNIT personnel, and Kate wants to know where he got this information. Shirley points out that he could only have got it from someone within the organisation.
Downstairs, Jordan stuns a guard and lets Conrad into the building, picking up the guard's gun as he enters. Jordan is unhappy at the use of weapons and the pair struggle - the gun going off and shooting the UNIT operative. His treachery has been identified upstairs as his computer and phone records are accessed, and he is found to follow conspiracy theorists and right-wing content.
Conrad ascends to the command centre in a lift, demanding that Kate reveal the secret of their deception about aliens to the world. He believes all the recent alien activity to have been faked, with actors dressed in costumes.
Kate unseals the containment cube and the Skreech is released, so that Conrad can see for himself what alien creatures are really like.
He runs in panic, whilst UNIT allows his many thousands of followers to follow his live feed.
Cornered by the creature he admits his own lies about UNIT. Ruby saves his life by tasering the Skreech, but it suddenly lashes out and bites into Conrad's arm.
By morning, public opinion has swung away from Conrad and his like. He and Jordan are in hospital, and Ruby can return to her family.
Some time later Conrad is in a prison cell when the TARDIS materialises around him. The Doctor attempts to make him alter his mindset about alien life, but also to vent his anger at him for what he did to his friends.
Conrad is unrepentant, however.
After the TARDIS departs, he is confronted by the Governor - Mrs Flood - who has come to free him...
Lucky Day was written by Pete McTighe and was first broadcast on Saturday 3rd May 2025.
McTighe currently handles the specially filmed mini-episodes which help trail The Collection Blu-ray boxsets, having previously written episodes for the Thirteenth Doctor - Kerblam! and Praxeus. The themes of ocean pollution in the latter would be carried over by him into an entire spin-off serial - The War Between the Land and the Sea.
The idea for this episode came from Russell T Davies, however. Millie Gibson had left the series after only one season, which many fans were unhappy about as the character hadn't been allowed to fully develop. RTD2 had stated, however, that this wouldn't be the last viewers saw of Ruby. She had made a very brief cameo in the 2024 Christmas Special, but would have a better role to play in Series 15.
This episode was made back-to-back with The Robot Revolution, which is why Ncuti Gatwa and Varada Sethu feature so little. McTighe wanted his story to concentrate on Ruby and on Kate Stewart, whilst examining the potential toxicity of social media, disinformation and conspiracy theories.
He claimed he wanted to do a story that looked at what happened to a companion after they had left the TARDIS - though this had already been well handled in School Reunion, and we have also seen what Rose, Martha, Mickey, Graham, Ryan and Captain Jack have all done - being inspired by the Doctor to carry on the fight against alien threats after parting company with him.
So far this year, so Series 14.
RTD2 seems to think he has a winning formula for how to structure a season on his hands. Start off with a disposable sci-fi romp, then have a story featuring one of the Pantheon of Discord. Make the third one a story involving space soldiers on a hostile alien planet.
The fourth should be a contemporary story, Doctor-lite, which focusses on Ruby Sunday. It should have elements of folk horror about it - spooky things happening around a quiet village pub, where the locals pull her leg - before suddenly doglegging into something more political. UNIT get to feature, and the villain is a bit of a fascist.
It's 73 Yards again...
The episode is built on a rather stupid premise - Ruby electing to go public and talk about UNIT and the Doctor on a podcast. She has a direct link to UNIT, a member of which is the Doctor's former travelling companion Mel Bush - yet she doesn't have anyone to talk to about her experiences? Then there's Graham's companions support group, of which Mel and Kate Stewart are members...
There then follows a rather bland courtship between her and Conrad, which goes on a little too long.
Things only pick up with that sudden dogleg, when we discover that he isn't what he purports to be and the Shreek in the village are just his friends dressed up.
It's also revealed that he is a nasty piece of work who exploited Ruby emotionally, purely to get at UNIT. He lures the organisation into a trap which will allow him to expose their lies. Aliens are all faked, say Think Tank.
In this he proves successful, but then it's his turn to do something really stupid. He has UNIT on the run, discredited in the public's eyes and about to be scrutinised by the government, who may well withdraw funding and even confiscate their technology. It's surely everything he wants - but he embarks on a reckless mission to break into the high security, well defended, UNIT HQ - helping himself to a gun as he does so - supposedly just to get Kate to admit on camera that he was right. He's waving a gun about in a building full of soldiers. Why put yourself at such risk when you've already gotten everything you set out to achieve? McTighe needs an ending and Conrad needs his comeuppance, but plot logic has left the (UNIT HQ) building.
Apart from seeing that his mother wasn't very nice to him, we never really get to understand the motivation behind Conrad. The Doctor claims he's simply a pathetic little man out to make a name for himself at the expense of others, but that doesn't quite justify such extreme actions.
There's an earlier Doctor Who story I can see behind Conrad as a character, and it's one of RTD2's own - Love & Monsters. Conrad is basically a negative version of Elton.
Yes, he's the anti-Pope.
Childhood encounter with the Doctor which influences his future life - developing an obsession with him / aliens in general. Goes on-line to discuss this obsession. Adult encounter with Doctor and companion as they pursue a savage reptilian creature in a deserted building. Joins group of like-minded people who share his obsession. For Elton exploiting Jackie Tyler's affections to get to Rose, read Conrad's exploitation of Ruby's affections to get to UNIT. Doctor turns up late in the day to berate him, after not featuring very much at all in the episode.
The main guest actor - the only one actually - is Jonah Hauer-King, who plays Conrad. The British-American actor is best known for playing the prince in Disney's live remake of The Little Mermaid, and more recently he featured in the remake of slasher pic I Know What You Did Last Summer.
In 2024 he took on the main role in TV drama The Tattooist of Auschwitz.
It was already announced before the series aired that he would play Ruby's boyfriend, and that Conrad would feature in more than one episode.
The only other guest of note is Kareem Alexander, who plays Think Tank's UNIT mole Jordan.
The UNIT regulars appear, with mention that Mel is away in Australia. Ruth Madeley is back as Shirley, having temporarily been replaced as Scientific Advisor by Morris in the Series 14 finale.
Ruby's family members also make a return, including Faye McKeever as her mother Louise.
When Conrad does the round of chat shows etc, we see a few minor celebrities play themselves, and Lachele Carl makes a return appearance as news anchor Trinity Wells.
Anita Dobson makes her latest appearance as Mrs Flood, this time appearing as the prison governor who releases Conrad at the conclusion of the episode.
Overall, I actually quite enjoyed this on first watch, but have gone off it since - mainly because I know where things are heading. Unfair, I know, but there you go. Kisses to the past are all very well, but the parallels with Love & Monsters and 73 Yards are too many to ignore - especially the latter, as it had only been broadcast 12 months before.
Things you might like to know:
- This is the third time that something known as 'Think Tank' has featured in the series. The first was the "frontiers of science" institute which turned out to be a front for the fascistic Scientific Reform Society in Robot. The name reappeared in the unfinished Tom Baker story Shada - the space station on which Skagra drained the minds of its leading scientists. There's no stated connection between Conrad's group and the SRS outfit, other than the right-wing ideology they share, and the fact that both are brought down by UNIT. The writer did claim this to be a deliberate reference to Baker's first story.
- He also claimed that the village was inspired by Devil's End, which is the setting for The Daemons.
- Playing the pub landlord is Paul Jericho, who appeared in the classic iteration of the series as the unnamed Castellan in both Arc of Infinity and The Five Doctors.
- The mannequins in the department store, for adult Conrad's first sighting of the Doctor and Ruby, were a deliberate nod to the Autons in Rose. The location used for this sequence was Howell's Department Store in the centre of Cardiff - which had been Henrik's in that 2005 episode.
- According to McTighe, the Skreech were inspired by a childhood nightmare about dog-like monsters which lurked in the dark.
- In order that the fake Skreech looked a little artificial, the actual design was shown to another designer who then had to replicate it from memory.
- The creatures were first mentioned in a 2024 Doctor Who novel - Caged, by Una McCormack.
- In terms of timescales, young Conrad is meeting the Doctor and Belinda after The Well, whilst his encounter with the Doctor and Ruby in the department store follows on from The Devil's Chord. The Doctor's visit to the prison takes place, for him, before The Robot Revolution - which is why he mentions a "he" telling him about Belinda in that episode.































