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Ooh, don't think Neil Gaiman will be back any time soon...

I feel like the headline and article oversells what little Gaiman actually said about Moffat's "No Girls Allowed" writers club. I see sarcasm, not "strong words" or "a rather pointed critique." Even mild sarcasm from a Hugo Award-winner isn't likely to prod Moffat to hire a female freelancer for series 9; it doesn't seem that Moffat has women writers on his radar.
 
Just because Mr. Gaiman made a slightly sarcastic remark (and a fairly clever one, at that), I doubt that means he won't write another Who episode in the near future. That's ridiculous.
 
Good. His handling of the Christopher Handley thing was disgusting. He needs serious help.

Would you please elaborate?

Everything I know about this comes from a quick Wiki article, which basically says ...

Neil Gaiman - "If you bought that comic, you could be arrested for it? That’s just deeply wrong. Nobody was hurt. The only thing that was hurt were ideas." He then initiated a perfume sales campaign to raise funds for Handley's legal defense.

How was Gaiman's handling of the case disgusting?
 
Yeah, it seems like an exaggeration, yes.

However, Gaiman could probably help influence Moffat more by continuing his connection with Who to consider women writers more.

Also, it makes me wish that the show finds a way to get JK Rowling to contribute an episode.
 
Also, it makes me wish that the show finds a way to get JK Rowling to contribute an episode.

The prospect of a Rowling episode doesn't excite me, for reasons that have nothing to do with Harry Potter. My issue with Rowling is that she has virtually no experience writing screenplays. (The "virtually no" caveat is important; isn't she writing the "Fabulous Beasts" script?) She would be a huge "get" for Who, but she'd be learning on the job to write the script. Novelists don't always make good screenwriters. F. Scott Fitzgerald famously went to Hollywood and produced nothing that could be filmed. Lawrence Miles' attempt at a Doctor Who script is a shitty, unfilmable script. Writing a script requires a different set of skills than writing a novel, in a far more restrictive format.

If she wants to write a Who episode, that's great, but it would be a "for love, not money" project for her, and she would find it would be more work than she bargained for. She would discover the hassle of the rewrites, the edits, and timing. Plus, she would earn a pittance compared to what she would make on a book contract. I think there's a very high probability she would say, "Thanks, but no thanks," and walk away once she discovered what she'd gotten herself into.
 
Could someone who's knowledgeable about that kind of things name a couple of female British writers with experience in writing television scripts, interest in genre fiction and who would potentially be interested in writing for Doctor Who?
 
So the show needs a quota system now? I suppose in that case we should start keeping count of how many black, asian, catholic, muslim, or gay (okay they're covered there) writers have worked on the show.

Unless somewhere theres a quote from Moffat saying "I don't think a woman can write Doctor Who". I chalk this up as yet more fannish bitching.
 
So. They are actively looking for such writers.

I may know of one here in Ottawa-Gatineau. Never written for TV yet, but...

*wanders off to ask said writer about it*
 
So the show needs a quota system now? I suppose in that case we should start keeping count of how many black, asian, catholic, muslim, or gay (okay they're covered there) writers have worked on the show.

Unless somewhere theres a quote from Moffat saying "I don't think a woman can write Doctor Who". I chalk this up as yet more fannish bitching.
*(emphasis mine)*

Indeed. I don't give a rat's ass who writes the show; I just want it to be well-written.
 
Could someone who's knowledgeable about that kind of things name a couple of female British writers with experience in writing television scripts, interest in genre fiction and who would potentially be interested in writing for Doctor Who?

Do they have to be British? Is that a BBC requirement or is it just something that is traditional.
 
I hope he won't be back, I don't think his style is right for the show.

As a massive fan of Neil Gaiman, I'm slightly inclined to agree. Gaiman is someone who specializes in dark fantasy. Adult fairy tales, if you will. It's why The Doctor's Wife was fantastic and Nightmare in Silver was a bit less than fantastic. The whole fairy tale angle worked really well for the Eleventh Doctor, but I don't think it would work to the same level with Twelve.
 
It's a simple problem: good writer does not mean good script writer.
I know one female novelist who would love to write for Doctor Who... but she's never written a script (four or more novels so far, but no produced scripts).
Suspect that if you really hunted for them, then there are a lot of female writers who could write very good Doctor Who.
Whereas Helen Rayner was, bluntly, slotted in to write the 2007 Dalek story when Moffat couldn't do it (he wrote Blink instead), and Russell T has said that he regrets that he didn't do more editing work on it (as he normally did, but he was too busy at the time).
But Helen Rayner writing a story (and doing it well, I thought, the next season) was basically an extension of the Casualty model of script editor-becomes-writer-and eventually becomes producer and finally executive producer (which is why Casualty and Holby City are now cursed with Oliver Kent as their ultimate boss). If the New York Dalek story was poor, that was more to do with the concept not working and needing a touch of genius to make it take off than any flaws in her script.
 
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