Doctor Who Season 12 marks the second series with Jodie Whittaker as the Thirteenth Doctor, featuring a prominent gender swap of the lead role from its traditionally male portrayals, justified only by established regeneration mechanics but lacking deeper narrative imperative. The companions form a deliberately diverse trio: Bradley Walsh as older white Graham O'Brien (cancer survivor), Tosin Cole as young Black Ryan Sinclair (with dyspraxia integrated into his character arc), and Mandip Gill as British-Pakistani Yasmin 'Yaz' Khan (often highlighted for cultural background). Showrunner Chris Chibnall explicitly aimed for a cast reflecting modern Britain's demographics, emphasizing inclusivity. The return of pansexual Captain Jack Harkness in 'Fugitive of the Judoon' spotlights LGBTQ+ representation through overt flirtations with both Yaz and Ryan. Thematic elements include heavy-handed environmental messaging in 'Orphan 55' (future Earth ruined by climate inaction) and subtle refugee parallels in 'Ascension of the Cybermen.' The season finale's 'Timeless Child' revelation radically retcons the Doctor's origins, erasing traditional Time Lord heritage in a move some fans decried as lore-breaking modernization. These progressive choices notably shape casting, character development, and select plots without fully eclipsing classic sci-fi adventures involving the Master, Cybermen, and Gallifrey, but they correlate with dropping ratings (from 5m+ premiere to sub-5m finale) and fan critiques blending quality woes with diversity fatigue.