People assume that canon is a strict progression from episode to episode, but *actually* from a non-linear, non-subjective viewpoint - it's more like a big ball of wibbly-wobbly... timey wimey... stuff.


This is one of the laziest pieces of crap writing I have ever seen in the nuWho series. It's baby-talk.People assume that canon is a strict progression from episode to episode, but *actually* from a non-linear, non-subjective viewpoint - it's more like a big ball of wibbly-wobbly... timey wimey... stuff.
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I've seen the Tom Baker episodes many times, and am very sure that this is not a line that is spoken in any of them.Honestly, it's always sounded to me like something Tom Baker's Doctor might say. I'm sure I remember him once referring to a technical problem on the TARDIS as "The 'whiz-bang' goes 'boom'."
Way to miss my point. I'm not "appealing" to canon authority. I'm saying what I would consider "canon authority" to be. That would be anything that's been on TV or referenced by what's been on TV (and preferably available to North American audiences as well as UK audiences).
And yet it is one of the most popular and quoted lines from Doctor Who. Even a Star Trek novel used it in one of the quotes on the opening pages.This is one of the laziest pieces of crap writing I have ever seen in the nuWho series. It's baby-talk.
It's funny, although that's considered his catchphrase, Pertwee only said that twice, and even then only once during his actual run, The Sea Devils. The other time being in The Five Doctors. It's mostly in the Target novelizations that the line got used the most."Reverse the polarity of the neutron flow" is a line of technobabble that has been used by more than one Doctor, though.
Yes, I'm aware of the Atlantis issue. Unless they're officially disowned, all three are canon and can be used as fodder for some other Atlantis story. It would make as much sense as any of the nuWho stuff, particularly the post-Tennant seasons. Hardly any of the stories in those seasons make any sense.There's a difference between the stuff that's on screen and the stuff that someone running the show has decided can't be contradicted. The latter is canon.
On TV, Atlantis has had three mutually incompatible fates. Where canon would come in is if the God Emperor of the BBC said, the version of the Atlantis story from The Time Monster (or The Underwater Menace or The Daemons) is the one you all have to be consistent with. But no one has ever done that.
Yes, it's a popular catchphrase. I've used it myself in some of my Doctor Who lolpics.And yet it is one of the most popular and quoted lines from Doctor Who. Even a Star Trek novel used it in one of the quotes on the opening pages.
It's funny, although that's considered his catchphrase, Pertwee only said that twice, and even then only once during his actual run, The Sea Devils. The other time being in The Five Doctors. It's mostly in the Target novelizations that the line got used the most.
Really? Which one? Aside from most of the post-Nemesis, non-Voyager books, I've largely stopped keeping up with all of the books.Even a Star Trek novel used it in one of the quotes on the opening pages.
Yes, I'm aware of the Atlantis issue. Unless they're officially disowned, all three are canon and can be used as fodder for some other Atlantis story.
I was thinking of how at various times the Animated Series has been declared non-canonical, and the Voyager episode "Threshold" has been disowned. It was so bad in enough ways, that as far as canon goes, it officially no longer exists. But that's Star Trek.Officially disowned by whom? New producers have often overwritten what previous producers have done. Writers have even contradicted their own stories, as Terry Nation did with The Daleks and Genesis of the Daleks. Does canon reset every time a new producer comes in? Does it reset at the moment one story overwrites another? Evidently not, if all three versions of Atlantis are canonical. Meanwhile, we're talking about a show in which changing the flow of history is built into the concept. Maybe canon's just not a very useful concept here.
Oh, and the other thing I meant to say... Doctor Who is a wide-ranging show that includes a variety of styles, genres, settings, and so on. It's not a closed off kind of world. So it feels right for me that it should include comics, audios, books, as well as spinoffs like K9, Bernice Summerfield, Faction Paradox, Time Hunter, Erimem, etc.
It's Doctor Who. There have been time wars. The universe has been recreated. Atlantis had three different fates, the Daleks had two different origins, and you can't create a clear and logical timeline of Lethbridge-Stewart's life.
DTI Watching the ClockReally? Which one? Aside from most of the post-Nemesis, non-Voyager books, I've largely stopped keeping up with all of the books.
I had a feeling it was going to be one of those.
Interestingly, Davison had changed his mind late in the game and had hoped to stay for a 4th season, but JNT was already fixated on Colin Baker.
I was thinking of how at various times the Animated Series has been declared non-canonical, and the Voyager episode "Threshold" has been disowned. It was so bad in enough ways, that as far as canon goes, it officially no longer exists. But that's Star Trek.
I have never heard that. What is your source?And more recent accounts suggest that Troughton left less because he was afraid of being typecast and more because he asked the BBC for more money and they wouldn't give it to him.
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