Live+7 Viewing Figures First Day Repeats Timeshift iPlayer Live +7 The Bells of Saint John 6.15m - 63% 0.39m - 4% 2.29m - 23% 0.95 - 10% 9.78m The Rings of Akhaten 5.48m - 63% 0.28m - 3% 1.98m - 23% 0.90 - 10% 8.65m Cold War 5.57m - 68% 0.18m - 2% 1.67m - 20% 0.76 - 9% 8.28m Hide 4.97m - 65% 0.27m - 4% 1.63m - 21% 0.77 - 10% 7.64m Journey to the Centre of the TARDIS 4.86m - 65% 0.28m - 4% 1.54m - 21% 0.79 - 11% 7.47m The Crimson Horror 4.61m - 61% 0..32m - 4% 1.83m - 24% 0.83 - 11% 7.59m Nightmare in Silver 4.73m - 61% 0.29m - 4% 1.87m - 24% 0.89 - 11% 7.78m The Name of the Doctor 5.45m - 63% 0.28m - 3% 1.99m - 23% 0.92 - 11% 8.64m

For the second month runningwas the most requested programme on the BBC iPlayer, with the series finale, The Name of the Doctor being accessedtimes.Doctor Who also took third place in the list with Nightmare in Silver havingrequests and fifth place with The Crimson Horror havingrequests.The other places in the top ten we taken by five episodes ofand two editions ofEarlier Doctor Who episodes were still available during the month with Journey to the Centre of the TARDIS adding 0.59 million requests to its April total, while other episodes each added around 0.2 million requests.The most requested Doctor Who story of the year remains as The Bells of Saint John which has a total of 2.5 million requests and is the sixth most requested programme of the year. The top four places are held bywithcoming in fifth.NB: The request figures refer to download and streaming requests only and don't necessarily reflect the total number who watched the whole episode. However the BBC does estimate the unique number of viewers watching each episode within a week of transmission via it's Live + 7 figures.The figures show Doctor Who is timeshifted far more than most BBC programmes. Around 62% of the audience watch Live or within one day, compared with the BBC average of 87% watching Live. Around 23% of the viewers timeshift using a PVR compared with the BBC average of 6%, while 11% now watch via the iPlayer, compared with the BBC average of 2%.