It is what it is. I stopped watching Who during Capaldis run. It was not that good. From what I read and saw clips of, the next few seasons would not have been to my liking. The fact is some franchises just run way too long. Who and Star Trek are mostly stale to me now. I have watched new Trek and like a small amount of it but for the most part it's not been very good or memorable for me. Doctor who is closing in on 1000 hours of content. That's a lot. I suggest to people to just watch your favorite seasons and doctors and leave it at that. Most of us are at an age where we won't ever watch the series from episode one all the way to present. Time is no longer on our side. Same with Trek. Just counting live action it's over 800 hours.
One of my all time favorite scifi shows is Farscape. It wasn't ran into the ground. I would like to see at least one reunion mini series but overall I'm good with how that show all turned out from start to finish. With the exception of two episodes I loved them all. 90 episodes and it never spinoffs, cast changes etc. It's highly rewatchable for me.
Star Trek and Who's heydays are long behind them. They are not coming back. No matter what is churned out at this point.
Trek is whole *slightly* different discussion. My summing up of it would be that Trek is a period piece, but instead of real history, it’s a made up future history. Once you start getting certain period details ‘wrong’ it’s in danger of losing itself of its existing audience.
(It’s quite a rare thing. BladeRunner 2049 was a good example of a story recognising that kind of fiction, and Alien Romulus too to a certain extent. Basically Trek is in many ways a precursor to what we now call RetroFuturism. We just didn’t recognise it at the time, because we hadn’t really started impinging on that future history until basically Voyager and DS9.)
Who is more like a soap opera, but instead of changing characters in a location, you change locations around a character. Just as some Soap Operas will always keep their pub, so Who must always keep the Time Lord and the Blue Box. The great thing is, regeneration means you can keep it going… well, forever, barring accidents.
For an example of a show that brought about its end by not recognising this, the kids show Grange Hill up and relocated to a different city for its setting, whilst pretending it hadn’t. It was very noticeable, and not much of a surprise what *could* and *had been* an essentially evergreen Soap/Drama was cancelled within a very short time frame. (It was ironically one of the series original creators making a return and moving both its production locale and in a *really* weird way, it’s setting, that did this.)
In both cases, whilst the formula is actually very open, there are limits — especially when the value in long running thing is their history. If a creative wants to throw that out, then they aren’t actually wanting to work on that story, they want the existing audience and reputation as leverage to get something else in front of more eyes.
The only aspect of the political that I will touch on this time is this — at some point this idea of using a well regarded media property as a messaging platform has lead to the strange idea that roles like The Doctor or James Bond are like political figures. That just as it is right to finally have a woman as a Prime Minister, or simply someone who isn’t White (Labour will get there one day. Maybe.) it’s also the case that groups *must* get a turn at being these popular figures. Not by making a new character and growing its audience, but by supplanting the existing one and hoping you keep the audience.
I am not sure this works. It can. But it can’t be…. done clumsily. Or done in a way that it looks like thats the only reason for doing it. Some characters have more fluidity built in, particularly The Doctor. (I would have preferred Paterson Joseph over Tennant, annd even over Ecclestone at first, and have long thought Adrian Lester is the best modern Doctor we never got for instance.)
The problem as ever is apparent motivation and clumsy execution.
A desire to take away, rather than finding the way to simply add.
It is ironic that the Master is mostly better handled than the Doctor in that regard, but maybe they got lucky with casting, or maybe *that character* has even more fluidity than The Doctor luckily patched in over the years. He remains the only one to ever regenerate into an American after all.
Edit: and just to follow up on that idea, I think it would have interesting, useful, and possibly even actually powerful to have the 13th Doctor experiencing a degree of dysmorphia — thousands of years as a man, suddenly a woman, a radically different biology with different needs, and quite possibly a sense of being reborn in the ‘wrong’ body was an opportunity for useful allegory and exploration. Admittedly, it also may be too much for a family show — but at least it would have made organic narrative sense, and may not have been as hamfisted as the awareness leaflet derogatory stuff RTD then did with the Second Coming of Tennant. Ooh er missus. And better than all the ‘had an upgrade’ gags we did get.
Doing ‘something’ because you’ve decided ‘something must be done’ with no thought into it is worse than doing nothing at all.