Imagine a better world where Bowie didn't die and was in both Doctor Who and the new Twin Peaks series. I wish I lived there.
As for Walsh v Whittaker: as an anglophile Canadian, I saw Walsh's whole run on Coronation Street and several of his Law & Order: UK episodes, and I saw Jodie Whittaker in Attack the Block and Broadchurch well before she was announced as the new Doctor. Corrie, L&O, and Broadchurch were hardly low profile. Eccleston was hardly an unknown when he was cast, either, having had a prominent part in several UK TV series like Cracker (popular enough to spawn a series of novelizations and an American remake).
TrekBBS is an Internet site. If you got here, you have some idea of how to use the Internet. If you don't know who either Whittaker or Walsh might be, you can use this same Internet to look them on IMDB to see what they've been in, then go to Amazon to buy some DVDs, or check your local streaming and on demand options, or whatever, and get yourself up to speed.
And seriously, anyone who's interested in Doctor Who but hasn't taken the time to see the first season of Broadchurch, where you can see the Tenth Doctor, Rory, and the Thirteenth Doctor in a show written and produced by the new showrunner, or Attack the Block, a fun and suspenseful science fiction movie set in London and starring our new Doctor along with one of the stars of the new Star Wars movies, isn't Doctor Who fanning as well as they could. To say nothing of missing out on a great TV series and a great movie. (The second and third seasons of Broadchurch are considerably less essential, but have their moments. Tennant and Whittaker are still there, and season 2 has Gwen from Torchwood and season 3 has, well, a better story than season 2.)
As for Walsh v Whittaker: as an anglophile Canadian, I saw Walsh's whole run on Coronation Street and several of his Law & Order: UK episodes, and I saw Jodie Whittaker in Attack the Block and Broadchurch well before she was announced as the new Doctor. Corrie, L&O, and Broadchurch were hardly low profile. Eccleston was hardly an unknown when he was cast, either, having had a prominent part in several UK TV series like Cracker (popular enough to spawn a series of novelizations and an American remake).
TrekBBS is an Internet site. If you got here, you have some idea of how to use the Internet. If you don't know who either Whittaker or Walsh might be, you can use this same Internet to look them on IMDB to see what they've been in, then go to Amazon to buy some DVDs, or check your local streaming and on demand options, or whatever, and get yourself up to speed.
And seriously, anyone who's interested in Doctor Who but hasn't taken the time to see the first season of Broadchurch, where you can see the Tenth Doctor, Rory, and the Thirteenth Doctor in a show written and produced by the new showrunner, or Attack the Block, a fun and suspenseful science fiction movie set in London and starring our new Doctor along with one of the stars of the new Star Wars movies, isn't Doctor Who fanning as well as they could. To say nothing of missing out on a great TV series and a great movie. (The second and third seasons of Broadchurch are considerably less essential, but have their moments. Tennant and Whittaker are still there, and season 2 has Gwen from Torchwood and season 3 has, well, a better story than season 2.)