Technically, Canadians are Americans.
But in my experience, they don't like you saying that.
Line starts here. You NEVER give a Canadian that "you're in North America, therefore you're an American" line. It's just perpetuating the uneducated-American-patriotic-expansionist stereotype. OTOH, we owe it to American PBS that we were even able to watch Doctor Who back in the 80s.
Line starts here. You NEVER give a Canadian that "you're in North America, therefore you're an American" line. It's just perpetuating the uneducated-American-patriotic-expansionist stereotype. OTOH, we owe it to American PBS that we were even able to watch Doctor Who back in the 80s.
Hmmm ... perhaps I should stop referring to Ontario as the 51st state, then. Oh well, I need a passport to go there now, anyway.
Very true. There are Trek references galore in "The Big Bang Theory" for example but I've only ever caught one to DW. It was quite funny though.Back on topic, I'd say it's moderately popular, especially with the "geek" crowd, but gaining ground as exposure to BBC America grows. I occasionally drop references to fish custard or similar nonsense in casual conversation just to see if I detect a spark of recognition. I do, sometimes, but it's nowhere near as ubiquitous as Trek references.
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