Oxford News
Doctor Who character to return 11 years since last story
The hit BBC show’s newest adventure, Circuit Breaker, releases in just a few weeks.
Circuit Breaker is a major, interconnected multimedia storytelling event centring around the Fugitive Doctor, played by Jo Martin.
It will span audio dramas by Big Finish Productions, as well as novels, comics from Titan Comics, mobile games, and digital platforms to unfold a single escalating crisis.
Doctor Who teases return of Osgood 11 years since character was last seen
Jo Martin’s Fugitive Doctor was first introduced in 2020 alongside Jodie Whittaker’s 13th Doctor, in the episode titled Fugitive of the Judoon.
Martin has since appeared in several Big Finish Productions audio dramas depicting stories starring the Fugitive Doctor.
However, she is not the only returning Doctor Who character for the Circuit Breaker storyline.
Ingrid Oliver will also be reprising her role as Petronella Osgood, having previously played the character opposite the 10th, 11th and 12th Doctors, played by David Tennant, Matt Smith and Peter Capaldi.
Osgood was a scientist who worked for UNIT, working as an assistant to Kate Stewart, and notably first appeared in the show’s 50th anniversary, The Day of the Doctor, in 2013.
She was last seen in season 9’s The Zygon Inversion, back in 2015.
Now, a new image teasing Osgood’s return was posted to the show’s social media, with the caption: “Osgood is awaiting YOU in the Black Archive! Sign up to UNIT HQ on the #DoctorWho website for exclusive access to the first instalment of CIRCUIT BREAKER, coming 25th June!”
Osgood is awaiting YOU in the Black Archive! 🫵🌐
Sign up to UNIT HQ on the #DoctorWho website for exclusive access to the first instalment of CIRCUIT BREAKER, coming 25th June! pic.twitter.com/iOLmeKOY6o
— Doctor Who (@bbcdoctorwho) May 26, 2026
What is Doctor Who’s Circuit Breaker?
Circuit Breaker was originally revealed by BBC Studios last year.
It is an “epic, multi-platform adventure unfolding this summer across audio, publishing, gaming and digital, bringing fans together for one connected, must-follow Whoniverse event”, the Doctor Who website says.
It explains: “The story event will see a single, escalating crisis play out across multiple formats, with each chapter unlocking new clues, new dangers… and a new side to the Time Lord.
“Circuit Breaker brings together a range of longstanding Doctor Who partners, including Titan Comics, Doctor Who Magazine, BBC Audiobooks, East Side Games, Puffin, BBC Books and Big Finish, each delivering a unique chapter of the story across the summer.”
The first chapter of the story launches on the in-universe UNIT website on June 25.
A synopsis for the story reads: “In the depths of UNIT’s most secure facility, the Black Archive, familiar objects have been pulled through time and space surrounded with a dangerous energy signature threatening to tear reality apart.
“With time running out, newly appointed Head of the Black Archive, Osgood (Ingrid Oliver) and her assistant Andrew (Omari Douglas) turn to the only person who can help… the Doctor (Jo Martin).
“This is no ordinary crisis, and not the Time Lord they are familiar with.
Recommended reading:
“As the Doctor confronts her most infamous enemies such as the Daleks, Cybermen, Sontarans and a rogue Weeping Angel, she is forced to complete a mission with an insidious presence lurking in the shadows.
“Secrets begin to surface, and trust between UNIT and the Doctor begins to erode as those who idolise her start to question if she really is the Time Lord they thought they knew…”
Will you be following along with Doctor Who’s Circuit Breaker storyline this summer? Let us know in the comments.
Oxford News
Wildlife disturbed after old trees felled on Bicester path
The path, which runs behind homes adjacent to Gavray Drive and between Mallards Way, is regularly used by dog walkers and is known locally for its wildlife.
Sandra Williams, who walks her dogs down the path daily, heard chainsaws and chippers from near her home, just off of the path, on Wednesday, May 27.
A Blue Tit bird which Sandra Williams says was displaced after the trees were felled (Image: Sandra Williams)
After the operation she noticed a sudden influx of distressed young birds take shelter in her garden.
READ MORE: Will trains ever run on £1.3bn long-awaited East West Rail line from Oxford?
“I had loads of flustered juvenile birds landing on my fences and bushes,” she said, explaining that their garden, which includes feeders and nest boxes, appeared to become a refuge during the disturbance.
Among them was a young blue tit, which flew into a window and was temporarily stunned. The resident was able to safely move the bird to a nearby tree, where it later recovered and flew away.
The felled trees on a path near Gavray Drive (Image: Sandra Williams)
She said: “Luckily I managed to scoop it up and after a short while, popped it into my Magnolia tree where it recovered itself and eventually flew off.”
She believes some of the trees removed were more than 30 years old, based on the size of the remaining stumps.
Photos shared show a stark contrast between one side of the pathway, which remains untouched, and the other, which has been described as “completely butchered”.
Concerns have also been raised about the loss of privacy for nearby homes and the potential long-term impact on local wildlife, including birds and squirrels.
The felled trees on a path near Gavray Drive (Image: Sandra Williams)
She added: “You can hear the number of birds that live in this alleyway – their undeniable tweetering is proof.
“If the rest of this pathway is scheduled for such drastic coppicing, it will be a disaster for the local birds and squirrels that live there.”
READ MORE: Chopstix opens at M40 services near Bicester after refurb
Someone who wants to fell trees on public land will need to apply for a felling licence from the Forestry commission. This is not the case on private land, such as in a garden, unless it is a protected tree under a preservation order.
While cutting trees in England during peak bird nesting season in the spring and summer months is not illegal, it becomes an offence under the Wildlife and Countryside Act if a wild bird is intentionally killed or injured or their nests and eggs are damaged or destroyed.
Oxfordshire County Council and Cherwell District Council and said its teams were not responsible for the work, with the latter redirecting their enquiries to Bicester Town Council.
A response from the town council is still awaited.
Oxford News
Oxford: Fight to create Ebola vaccine as cases reach 1,000
The vaccine group, at the University of Oxford, is targeting the Bundibugyo Ebolavirus, which is rapidly spreading in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Uganda.
The rare species of Ebola that is spreading in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, known as Bundibugyo, has no proven vaccine and kills 30 to 50 per cent of those infected.
READ MORE: Oxford University building to have makeover to restore ‘original splendour’
A health worker gets ready to start their shift at the Ebola treatment center in Rwampara, Congo, Friday, May 29 (Image: AP)
Bundibugyo has only caused two previous outbreaks, in Uganda in 2007 and then in the Democratic Republic of the Congo in 2012.
The Oxford Vaccine Group (OVG) is using the same technology that underpinned the Covid jab to develop a new vaccine for the specific strain of Ebola virus in the current outbreak.
Professor Teresa Lambe OBE, Calleva head of vaccine immunology at the Oxford Vaccine Group and Pandemic Sciences Institute, said: “We are hopeful that through a coordinated global effort, we will be able to curb this outbreak and stop this virus in its tracks.”
READ MORE: Popular burger van told ‘improvement necessary’ by food hygiene inspectors
Director General of the World Health Organisation (WHO) Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, center right, visits the Evangelical Medical Center (CEM) in Bunia, Congo, Sunday, May 31 (Image: AP)
The outbreak – declared a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC) and a Public Health Emergency of Continental Security (PHECS) by the World Health Organisation and Africa CDC, respectively – has already caused more than 900 suspected cases and more than 220 suspected deaths.
Five patients have recovered from the virus, the head of the World Health Organisation said on Sunday during a visit to a city at the heart of an outbreak in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.
Britain will provide up to £20 million to contain the outbreak in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo and Uganda.
Oxford News
Warning as flames burst from gas tank in Oxfordshire
The fire and rescue service said people in Witney should be aware of a controlled burn at the FLO Gas Witney site.
There is no cause for concern, Oxfordshire Fire and Rescue Service said in a public information notice to prevent people calling 999 out of concern.
The fire service has issued a warning (Image: OFRS)
The fire service has issued a warning (Image: OFRS)
A spokesman said: “Please be aware that FLO Gas Witney will be carrying out a controlled burn over the next 48 hours during daylight hours.
“Residents and visitors in the area may notice flames and smoke associated with this planned operation.
READ MORE: 97 drivers caught speeding in two hours by speed camera
“There is no cause for concern, and no action is required from the public.
“The controlled burn is being conducted safely and under controlled conditions by FLO Gas.
“Please help us by sharing this information with friends, family, and neighbours to avoid unnecessary concern and calls to the emergency services.
“Thank you for your cooperation.”
-
Crime & Safety3 weeks agoWaitrose supermarkets across UK shut due to ‘critical error’
-
Crime & Safety3 weeks agoMan arrested in connection with rape in Oxfordshire town
-
Crime & Safety3 weeks agoBanbury woman jailed after lying to police about kidnapped children
-
Crime & Safety4 weeks agoHow to spend a day in Harpsden among UK’s poshest villages
-
Oxford Events3 weeks agoStage Watch: Somerset House enters the comedy arena with major new festival Laughterama
-
Crime & Safety3 weeks agoStrictly Come Dancing new hosts reportedly Emma Willis
-
Business & Technology4 weeks agoCBI posts 14% revenue rise as payment services grow
-
Crime & Safety3 weeks agoUK Hantavirus update as 22 ship passengers moved to hospital
