I was under the impression that it was popular in the US when Tom Baker was the Doctor, unless you're referring to the continuation. In that case, I was under the impression that anyone with access to the internet or BBC America was watching Doctor Who when Eccleston took on the role.
Just watching (again). The scene where the Doctor talks about his face and being Scottish, it just gets more wonderful the more you watch it. I wonder if the reason behind it will become obvious later.
... (I haven't seen Capaldi in Torchwood, so I'm not sure if that would be easily explainable as the Doctor).
None of those seem like good reasons for him not to be excited. He gets excited over new things that pop up in regenerations all the time. Hair, ears, chins. So why not accents?Why was he excited about being Scottish when he is from Gallifrey and isn't even human? Confusing.
I like how people attack Moffat's style as being nonsense when RTD did the same crap and only worse. Drives me nuts.
It was. There were Doctor Who conventions, just like there were Star Trek conventions, and a lot of years it was the Whovians PBS had to thank for a noticeable chunk of their donations. Heaven forbid the classic era should ever get credit for being popular in North America.I was under the impression that it was popular in the US when Tom Baker was the Doctor...It seemed like Doctor Who in the States got more popular in the Matt Smith Era (You now have pre and post shows with Chris Hardwick for one) so maybe this was to make the US fans happy and I appreciated it.
Why was he excited about being Scottish when he is from Gallifrey and isn't even human? Confusing.
P-Cap
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