I am not a big fan of Capaldi's era. That said, this is one of my favorite Doctor Who monologues ever. Simply amazing.People did expect his doctor to get that creative. The intensity was definitely there:
I am not a big fan of Capaldi's era. That said, this is one of my favorite Doctor Who monologues ever. Simply amazing.
You've apparently never been in the real military.I'd rather them avoid swearing if possible.
Use only in extreme situations, and very sparingly please.
Especially from anybody in the UFP Government / Uniformed Services.
It's a civilian that should be swearing, not Professional Officers or Government Officials IMO.
I know that's how it is IRL, right now.You've apparently never been in the real military.
"Fucking" is considered the Universal Adjective.
An influence, yes.You make it sound like the Navy is a bad influence on people in terms of Profanity usage.
Why?It's the 24th century and beyond, we should be moving past that.
Why not?Why?
"You see, in our century, we've learned not to fear words"
-Lt. Nyota Uhura
Yeah no.Why not?
It's called maturation of your linguistic skills.
To grow out of using swear words every other sentence and start talking like a proper sophisticated adult.
It was edgey to talk like that when you're in middle-school or high-school.
It's just cringey to see it on most adults IMO.
Earth, this Dimension, 2025 ADYeah no.
Some of the smartest and most mature people that I've ever known were people who could find a use for the word "fuck" in just about every sentence that came from their mouths.
Beyond people that I knew personally, I can prove you wrong with two words: George Carlin.
Again, I have to question what planet you're living on where adults swearing is seen as some kind of oddity.
Well then I guess I'm the one living on Planet Fuckadoria, because people certainly swear plenty around me, and it's almost always adults.Earth, this Dimension, 2025 AD
The vast majority of people I deal with don't swear regularly.
That's an anecdotal observation that leaves out almost the entire population.Earth, this Dimension, 2025 AD
The vast majority of people I deal with don't swear regularly.
I don't have time to deal with the entire population.That's an anecdotal observation that leaves out almost the entire population.
I guess so. That's the world you live in.Well then I guess I'm the one living on Planet Fuckadoria, because people certainly swear plenty around me, and it's almost always adults.
Who fucking knows. The one thing I do know is that Trek characters are always better when they come off as normal people. Sure, they may be off on some Galaxy spanning adventure, but at their core, they're just regular people.I wonder if you take a poll of the vast majority of Trek Fans on this issue, I'm pretty sure most won't want swearing in Trek.
As a major fan of the 24th century shows, I don't feel a need to use profanity every other sentence.Who fucking knows. The one thing I do know is that Trek characters are always better when they come off as normal people. Sure, they may be off on some Galaxy spanning adventure, but at their core, they're just regular people.
They wake up.
They take a shit.
They drink a cup of coffee.
They go to work.
They save the day.
They come home.
They have a drink.
They go to bed.
The Original Series was like this. The cast felt like actual people. Some or more exaggerated than others, sure. But in the end they felt like living, breathing people.
Strange New Worlds understands this and has done a respectable job of making the characters come off people, with real people problems and issues. That's why it's great.
Even Enterprise understood this and tried to make the cast more relatable. If they succeeded is up for debate, but there was an effort.
It was the 24th century shows that decided that every human character needed to have a stick shoved so far up their ass that they could moonlight as a scarecrow.
All of this.Who fucking knows. The one thing I do know is that Trek characters are always better when they come off as normal people. Sure, they may be off on some Galaxy spanning adventure, but at their core, they're just regular people.
They wake up.
They take a shit.
They drink a cup of coffee.
They go to work.
They save the day.
They come home.
They have a drink.
They go to bed.
The Original Series was like this. The cast felt like actual people. Some or more exaggerated than others, sure. But in the end they felt like living, breathing people.
Strange New Worlds understands this and has done a respectable job of making the characters come off people, with real people problems and issues. That's why it's great.
Even Enterprise understood this and tried to make the cast more relatable. If they succeeded is up for debate, but there was an effort.
It was the 24th century shows that decided that every human character needed to have a stick shoved so far up their ass that they could moonlight as a scarecrow.
Then don't generalize about what's true of people while citing only your limited personal experience as evidence.I don't have time to deal with the entire population.
From everything I see and hear in daily life, I don't hear excessive swearing amongst the general populace that I interact with.Then don't generalize about what's true of people while citing only your limited personal experience as evidence.
The world's much bigger than your life and there are ways to learn what's going on beyond what you see and hear in your corner of it.
Come on. You deliberately use odd spellings like "StarFleet". So it's hard to take you seriously on thisIt's called maturation of your linguistic skills.
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