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11th Doctor Casting announcment tommorow

I suspect Jackie was a worshy layabout who should have been made to get on her bike and get a job though :lol:
I always figured Jackie supported herself via her never-ending stream of boyfriends.

Doctor Who: The Encyclopedia indicates that Jackie ran a "mobile hairdressing business" out of her flat.
 
Doctor Who: The Encyclopedia indicates that Jackie ran a "mobile hairdressing business" out of her flat.
um I have a quick question, and please dont judge me as I am not a hairdresser, how can you run a mobile hairdressing business out of a fixed location?
 
Any business, even a mobile one, needs a 'business address' from which to function - somewhere to send bills, tax papers, bank statements etc.
 
Starkers has said most of what I feel on the subject of companions. I think RTD suffered from a bit of being in love with the Doctor himself, and can't imagine anyone else not falling in love with him. The old series had a whole range of relationships between the Doctor and those he travelled with, but RTD has failed to repeat them. I don't even think that's for want of trying: Rose was meant to fall in love. So was Jack, to a degree. Martha wasn't but RTD didn't know how to prevent her. Donna was set up as a 'mate' - but even so the only way to get her out of the TARDIS was to wipe her memory. The 'one off' companions have worked better, though even they might have leapt at the chance to travel 'for ever' if offered it.

It's too bad what they did with Martha. I really LIKED that character and her attitude, and thought she and the Doctor had a really interesting dynamic together.

Unfortunately once she got stuck in that unrequited love storyline, it became obvious they'd have to get rid of her a lot sooner. :(
 
Sci you have spent alot of time on that.

I was going to say, that was a pretty damn impressive (if slightly obsessive and manic) post. :lol:

Remind me never to argue with you again Sci, you have a knack for handing people their asses.

Well thank you. What can I say? Poverty issues mean a lot to me. I get very angry at the general perception that people have that if you're not starving to death, you don't have a real problem-- nevermind that people who are poor generally survive from paycheck to paycheck, often are incapable of paying all of their bills, often end up with varying degrees of food insecurity, have difficulty obtaining a proper education (in part because of a working poor culture that frowns upon an education out of resentment towards people higher-up on the economic ladder), and have an extremely difficult time moving up in life (far moreso than people from the middle class).

Anyone who's ever wondered how they were going to eat, or gotten an eviction notice with no idea where they could go, knows what a huge problem poverty is even if you're not destitute.

Sci you have spent alot of time on that.

I was going to say, that was a pretty damn impressive (if slightly obsessive and manic) post. :lol:

Remind me never to argue with you again Sci, you have a knack for handing people their asses.

Slightly obsessive? :wtf: Seriously some people have too much time on their hands!

If using a fictional example made any oblivious middle-class poster here more aware of the severity of the poverty problem in the first world, I wouldn't consider it a waste of time at all. :)

Sci is correct though, Rose is poor, at least in terms of the UK. Is she poor relatively?

Um, yes she is. Again, you are confusing destitution (or extreme poverty) with poverty.

I bet Jamie lived in far worse circumstances (heck I bet Ian and Barbara did)

Jaime, sure. He was from a pre-Industrial society. Ian and Barbara? Bull. They were clearly from the middle class and clearly had more prospects than Rose would ever have had had she not met the Doctor.

Rose, of course, is presumably doing quite well now that her adopted father is super-rich and she's an aget of the People's Republic of Great Britain's Torchwood Institute -- just like Martha's doing better for herself now that she's working for the Unified Intelligence Taskforce and Jack's running the UK Torchwood. Obviously meeting the Doctor is a pathway to career advancement!

Seriously though I don't think Rose was quite at the bottom of the ladder, close to it yes but not the very bottom.

She's as far down as you can go without being destitute. Why do you think Jackie began immediately harping on her to get a new job once Henrik's was blown up? Because she knew they were surviving from paycheck to paycheck, and any disruption in that was incredibly dangerous for them.

One factual correction on your figures though, in 2005 Rose would have probably slotted into the 10% tax bracket that existed at the time (before Gordon deleted it).

Thanks, I hadn't found any information on 2005 UK income tax rates. Do you know what her council tax rate would have been, or what the average London council tax rate for someing living in a council flat would be?

You're also failing to take into account any benefits that Jackie might have been getting

I don't see any evidence that Jackie was getting any benefits as of "Rose." "The Christmas Invasion"'s reference to Jackie between better off twenty quid a week seems to imply such, but that's a year and a half after "Rose." My interpretation would be that Jackie went on welfare after Rose disappeared.

As for class bias in the UK? I can only speak for myself but I grew up in Thatcher's Britain, my dad was unemployed and we lived in a council house. I went to university (and didn't have to pay for the privilage) and now have a good job and all that comes with it (mainly debts damn it!) and I love the argument that there's no class bias in the States--people buy the American dream far too easily, social mobility isn't much different between the two in my understanding.

Actually, I agree with you that social mobility in the US is much harder than our culture tends to pretend it is. I have, however, gotten enough complaints about major class bias in the UK (especially accent-based) that I find myself skeptical of the idea that your experience would necessarily be representative of most Britons' experiences. But either way, people in the United States do not have that immediate, "Ooh, what a chav!" reaction that people in the United Kingdom might have upon meeting someone from the working class, in part because our accents are more regional than they are class-based.
 
--Sci--

When I say Rose was better off than Ian and Barbara I mean it. Yes they had opportunities but remember this was the sixties. Rose's access to health care alone is going to be better than their's was. I was taking the temporal displacement into account ya see!

I don't know if Martha is doing better for herself, who knows if UNIT pay better than the NHS :lol:

Can't help much re council tax. It's a flat and not in a great area so I guess it would be in the lowest band. Can't quote mine off the top of my head but pehaps £80 or £90 a month--that's in Nottingham though not London.

It'd be hard to imagine Jackie wasn't on benefits of some kind but I can't confirm that.

Whilst I would agree that accent bias can exist in the UK, I don't see that as being any different from the States re good old boys/ Rednecks/ trailer trash etc. Chavs aren't neccesarily working class, and its quite possible to be w/c and not a chav, and vice versa. The trouble is what the media often refer to as the working class in the UK aren't really anything of the sort cos they're mainly not working!

There's also reverse accent bias as well, see how David Cameron is derided as a toff who went to public school (which is really private school I never understood that) irrespective of the fact that Blair was no better. Boris Johnson gets the same stick so it isn't always one way.
 
Dude be happy it's cool, no one ever quotes me in a sig- your rep is far greater than mine :lol:
im sure you mean it in a nice way, I have social problems, meaning I can never really tell how people are talking about me, and if I think people are being nice, it will take me all of 3 minutes to think "are they mocking me" "are they being sarcastic"

anyways I was just trying to add some humour in to a fairly dry post, and getting the point across that whilst I dont know alot about hairdressing I find the mobile one that came to cut my mothers hair tends to work out of my mothers kitchen not her own.
 
Nobody cares what Jim says...(runs and hides)

I'm pretty sure he meant it in the same way as me though.
 
To be an anonymous voice on the internet, you're far too paranoid wam. If we tease you, it's because we tease each other and just have fun. It's a form of showing appreciation for one's company.

Except for Jim Steele, though. He's just a mean tw*t... :angel: :lol:
 
To be an anonymous voice on the internet, you're far too paranoid wam. If we tease you, it's because we tease each other and just have fun. It's a form of showing appreciation for one's company.
I know this, but in the back of mind its the same nagging voice ive always had where other people are concerned.

as for "anonymous voice" christ I spend so much time on the net sometimes i wake up, look in the mirror and think my name is wamdue, also I use the same name across the web, so wamdue really is the real me, sometimes I worry about people from one forum, spotting me on other forums under the same username, where a different ascpet of my personality comes out.
 
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