This ranks right down there with TNG turning down George R.R. Martin.
Win-win.To judge by the way he's posting on Twitter, Ian Levine would die of happiness if the BBC were to hire JMS -- and then, being dead, he'd never see an episode.
I looked at his Twitter feed.Leave it to Levine. I didn't think it was possible for him to embarrass himself more than he has in the past, but looking over his Twitter over the idea of JMS running Doctor Who sure proves I was hella wrong about that.
The self-appointed Guardian of the Franchise. He trolled the BBC offices back in the 70s or 80s trying to become a continuity consultant on the show or something. Just to humor him, someone let him ransack the BBC dumpster where he ended up finding a hoard of missing episodes, including An Unearthly Child. This has since given him an exaggerated sense of importance and the belief that he owns Doctor Who or something.I looked at his Twitter feed.
Who is this dumbfuck?
Well I got one laughing today…
Oh, damn, I hadn't heard that story before!A funny story, one time at a press event during the RTD era, Levine kept trying to hog the spotlight, resulting in RTD saying quite publicly "Ian, this is for journalists. You're not a journalist. Fuck off."
JMS running Doctor Who? No, please and thank you.
I'm curious what makes people think he could do a good job with Doctor Who. What kind of Doctor Who do you think he'd create? What has he done in the last twenty years that gives you confidence in his ability to deliver? What makes you think he'd be able to work in a system like the BBC?
Season three and some of season four of Babylon 5 made for an amazing TV experience, but I haven't encountered anything by him since the end of B5 that did anything for me. And even B5 showed weaknesses, with some pretty bad dialogue, blatant borrowings from other things (you like Lord of the Rings, JMS, we get it), and allowing others to write really bad standalone episodes. To say nothing of Roddenberry Syndrome, the idea that unoriginal observations were deep and philosophical.
EDITED TO ADD... Well, that came off as more harsh than I originally intended. But for JMS to put himself forward to the BBC privately would be weird enough. For him to tell the world about it is... I don't even know where to start. Neither Moffat nor Chibnall publicly jumped up and down yelling pick me! Pick me! And both of them had experience with the show, and with running their own shows in the UK. I just don't know what the hell JMS was thinking with all this.
As would I.I'd love to see that footage if it exists.
I looked at his Twitter feed.
Who is this dumbfuck?
@Mr Awe said that rumors say that the BBC told JMS "No" flat-out, and yet we have JMS indicating that the possibility of future/further discussion is still open.
Hence my comment from before.
IOW, if the BBC had straight-up told JMS"No", I believe that he would've said so.
I wish...Well, Philip Hinchcliffe is still alive...
Honestly, that's American idiom, too. I've used it, and I've heard it from potential employers over the years. It's a way of being polite. Certainly better than an outright ghosting.One of the signs that Straczynski might not be the right person to capture the British idiom of Doctor Who is that he seems to think that if you offer your services, and a British person replies with, "Well, we have our own process, but we'll keep you in mind if that doesn't work out," that means he's still got a chance, and not that he's just been told in no uncertain terms to fuck off.
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