Doctor Who fans have been stunned by a game-changing moment between the Thirteenth Doctor and Yaz in a new Big Finish audio story. The development, first highlighted by Radio Times and confirmed by Big Finish itself, gives “Thasmin” shippers the romantic payoff the TV series withheld and raises fresh questions about how the main show will treat licensed canon. In “The Violet Hour”, Yaz kisses the Doctor to bring her back from another dimension, and the Doctor never realises what happened.
The Thirteen-Yaz Moment in The Violet Hour
According to reporting from Radio Times, “The Violet Hour” is the fifth instalment in The Thirteenth Doctor Adventures range from Big Finish, released in March 2026. In the key scene, Yaz pulls the Doctor back from another dimension with a kiss; when the Doctor wakes and asks whether Yaz punched her, Yaz replies, “Yeah, something like that.” The moment is framed as a secret the Doctor does not yet know about, but that listeners and Yaz share.
Fans reacted quickly on social media, treating the scene as overdue justice for the relationship arc that unfolded onscreen from 2018 to 2022. Mandip Gill has said that in the new audios the dynamic between the Doctor and Yaz “goes further” and that both characters have matured in the time since the TV era. Jodie Whittaker and Mandip Gill both reprise their roles for this audio range, which launched in 2025 with a slate of hour-long, full-cast dramas that sit alongside the television canon.
Why This Matters for Representation
On television, the Thirteenth Doctor and Yaz shared romantic subtext across multiple seasons. In the New Year special “Eve of the Daleks”, Yaz admitted she was in love with the Doctor; in “Legend of the Sea Devils”, the Doctor said that if she were to date anyone, it would be Yaz, but she could not commit because of the way her life works. The show then ended their era without a kiss, leaving viewers with acknowledged feelings but no explicit on-screen payoff.
Diva Magazine and fan-focused coverage have argued that the TV handling of Thasmin skirted close to queerbaiting: the romance was talked about and coded, but never allowed to resolve in the same way straight relationships often do in the series. The Big Finish moment changes that calculus. Because the audio drama is licensed and positioned as part of the extended canon, the kiss becomes text, not subtext. For queer fans who invested heavily in the pairing, that recognition matters even if it arrives in a different medium.
How the Main Show May Respond
Doctor Who has a long history of treating novels, comics, and audio dramas as a kind of “soft” canon that television can acknowledge or ignore as needed. Radio Times has reported that Jodie Whittaker praised Chris Chibnall’s “beautiful” writing of the Thasmin relationship on screen, but the TV run still chose a bittersweet, unresolved ending. Now that a clear romantic moment exists in licensed audio, future showrunners face a choice.
If the BBC and upcoming production teams treat the Big Finish stories as part of continuity, any future appearance by the Thirteenth Doctor or Yaz will carry the weight of that unseen kiss. Dialogue and character beats will need to reflect that their relationship crossed a line that the TV audience never saw. If, instead, the main show quietly brackets the audios as a separate branch of canon, it risks reinforcing the hierarchy in which queer payoff is shunted to side media while the flagship series stays comparatively cautious.
What This Actually Means
The Big Finish kiss is both a win for representation and a domino in the franchise’s wider continuity. It offers fans who wanted closure a concrete moment to point to, but it also puts pressure on the television series to decide how seriously it takes its own licensed spin-offs. For BBC decision-makers, the question is no longer whether to acknowledge Thasmin as canon — that happened years ago — but whether to honour the emotional arc that audio writers and actors have now pushed further.
What Is Big Finish?
Big Finish Productions is a British audio drama company that has been producing Doctor Who stories under licence since the late 1990s. Its ranges feature past Doctors, companions, and new characters in full-cast stories that are released as digital downloads and CDs. Over time, many fans have come to regard Big Finish releases as an integral part of the Doctor Who experience, filling in gaps between seasons and offering character-focused tales that television schedules cannot always accommodate.
How Extended Canon Shapes Long-Running Franchises
Doctor Who is far from the only franchise that relies on extended media to explore stories that television or film either cannot or will not tell. Tie-in novels, comics, and audio dramas often take greater risks with structure, tone, and representation because they target a self-selecting core audience rather than a broad Saturday-night broadcast slot. When those stories land, they can retroactively reshape how fans read the main text, even if the flagship series never explicitly references them.
The Thirteen-Yaz kiss in “The Violet Hour” is a textbook example: it retrofits a romantic payoff into a relationship that millions of viewers watched develop on screen, and it invites future writers to decide whether to treat that moment as a fixed point. In doing so, it highlights both the strengths and the limits of a transmedia approach to queer storytelling in a global brand.