Sorry, but the way you argue sounds like, only male actors allowed because they would better in the role by default.
And before you go back to, but Chibnall has dismissed men from the get go...
First, the casting in this show has dismissed women for almost 50 years, so that is hardly unfair.
Second, there is no single best actor who magically shows up every 3-4 years.
That we had 14 amazing Doctors proves that there are loads of them out there, each capable of putting their unique spin on the character.
Going to the other half of the population doesn‘t deprive us of „the best“. It allows us to experience a Doctor flavor, we were err denied so far, not because only males are always best but because of narrow minded casting choices.
C,... no, Third, If you think that the female actor pool is incapable of giving us an exceptional Doctor, that‘s sexist, period.
If you‘re issue actually we’re just the casting of Jodie, you would not keep arguing over this issue like you do.
Why are you not capable to admit this?
No because you and people on here keep pulling it back to Sexism. And where the heck did only "White male" come in? Idris alba would have been great! You keep missing the point I am trying to make, it was never about if a woman can play the part. It is about the ideology and agenda behind the casting and the constant lauding of the part being given to a female as if this was progress.. or some great victory. Which in a vacuum that argument may hold water, but there are tons of female led shows and movies out today that smash that to shreds. I think a Female Doctor can happen.. Sure.
I've even said there's a great spiritual message there, one that could have been told in Star Wars too but wasn't. Rey could have been the embodiment of the Chosen force protector who comes about when ever the force is threatened, as a reincarnation of Anakin, I would have loved to see that. But they didn't, she is a nobody.. and a Mary sue, because hey Girl power..
This is the sad ideology I keep sighting, but all anyone wants to do is break everything down to a simplified monster of sexism. it's not.. and no matter how much the dialogue keeps trying to steer that way, none of what I say will ever be understood or acknowledged as anything other then what is being assigned to it.
The fact that there had been 13 doctors all male was based on the era, the ideology of the time, and a lack of female talent allowed to be in the BBC. sure the Beeb had it's culture there.. but to make this more about some agenda, then the talented is what is my major issue with the casting. Not the casting itself, except to say I think Jodie is a mediocre actress.. so the agenda, the Chernobyl admission of bias, and the acting chops that are lacking are why I think that Jodie was a horrible choice. Now, had they been transparent, and cast maybe someone else (a better female actress).. I wouldn't be so adverse to the whole thing, and series 11. Also had the last 2 seasons of Capaldi not been so blatant identity politics pandering, and Bill had more depth then a token Black Lesbian female, there would also be less of this feeling of dread I have for the future of Who..
People say, okay if you aren't sexist give me your reasons.. I give them, they ignore them
and twist it into another well maybe that is sexist argument, for some I guess that gives them comfort and then the concerns I sight are easily dismissed. Turn your opponent into a monster and all is right with the world. That is disingenuous. I suppose for some, the ideology must be protected at all times, target the opponent and make it personal to destroy them and then their argument can't hold water..
great tactic.. but not real and not what should be held up as adult and educated intelligent dialogue and discussion.
An
ad hominem argument is an argument that attacks a person directly, rather than addressing the point that the person is trying to make. This rhetoric technique appears frequently in discussions, so it’s important to understand it.
Specifically, by attacking the person making an argument rather than the argument itself, the person using the ad hominem attack fails to address the stance that they are arguing against.
As such, ad hominem arguments are categorized as a subtype of the fallacy of irrelevance, since they contain information that is not directly relevant to the discussion at hand. More specifically, ad hominem arguments are a subtype of the genetic fallacy, since the person using them is arguing against a certain stance indirectly, by attacking its source.
Note that in some cases, arguments against the source of the information can be relevant to the discussion. As long as they are relevant, and as long as the person using them explains why they are relevant, the use of such arguments isn’t logically fallacious. As such, an argument directed at a person becomes a fallacious ad hominem attack only when it is not directly relevant to the discussion at hand.
There are several different types of ad hominem arguments. What they all have in common is that the person using these arguments is attacking their opponent by focusing on something personal that is irrelevant to the discussion, instead of addressing the point that their opponent is trying to make.
As such, the difference between the different types of ad hominem arguments lies in the way in which the personal attack occurs, and each type of ad hominem argument attacks people in a different way.
Poisoning the Well is a rhetoric technique where someone presents unrelated negative information about their opponent, with the goal of discrediting everything that their target says.
For example:
A: I think that we should increase the federal spending on education.
B: You’re a fascist, so clearly we shouldn’t listen to what you have to say about education.
Case in point, anyone who has a disagreement with the casting of the new Doctor, regardless of their reasoning.
For example:
A: I think that a good case can be made that the casting of Jodie Whittaker is a pandering move by the BBC.
B: You’re a sexist, so clearly we shouldn’t listen to what you have to say about Doctor Who.