Yeah.
This is the guy who saved a giant snot monster in the first episode of this series despite it being designed to terrify him.
The person who begged Davros to let him save them.
Are you aware of what character you're watching?
I was thinking Solarians all the way through as well.
Now here's a thing. I'm an ethnic minority, a child of immigrants in the country I was born in. My experience of racism has ranged from the visceral to the subtle, and I've watched society's expression of such wax and wane. When I watch entertainment, I generally choose not to watch reflections of that. I get enough of it in the real world; unless it's flagged up before the show airs, "in a very special episode of..." or more usually a trigger warning beforehand, and a phone number to call for a hug afterwards.
There was none of that with Dot and Bubble, So I actively chose not to see it while I was watching it; instead trying to rationalise it away with other explanations. Indeed, the Solarian analogy from Asimov's The Naked Sun made the most sense to me. A society so fixated on their personal bubbles and social media interaction that they literally don't know how to walk without a personal SatNav, that they've never actually looked at the real world, never interacted with anyone in the flesh, never hugged. Imagine how they wouild react to people who did.
So when the final scene arrived, and Lindy and her contacts treated the Doctor in that way, I really couldn't believe what I'd seen. So much so that I was still trying to rationalise it when I switched over to the behind the scenes show, where Russell straight up came and said that yes, this was racism.
I don't know what that says about me. Have I picked up and internalised the unconscious bias that has been directed towards me all my life, so much so that I'm now effectively racist against myself? Am I just hopelessly naive in not seeing it? Or after a lifetime of evidence to the contrary, am I still hopefully trying to see the best in people?
Very much. And if you can’t see the difference between these things and events, and utterly failing to speak out at racism, then you need to watch a bit more of the show. Doctor Who has been anti-racist since at least the second serial.
Interesting discussion.
I assumed this story was about class, not race.
Anyway, the ending seemed kind of abrupt, but the concept was very clever.
7
You can watch twelve hundred hours of anything and not learn a thing.
There's a difference between being anti-racist, and being anti-racist right at the moment you're trying to SAVE the racists and need them to trust you.
Kira's "yeah, Damar, what kind of people give those orders?" line only works because Damar's already chosen to work with a Bajoran.
I believe there was an Orville episode that dealt with social media dominating a society. I want to say it was in its first season. Been a long time since I've seen it but I don't think it was similar other than featuring social media gone amuck.Still trying to remember where I've heard/seen/read a very similar story before.
Many decades of sci-fi to sift through, with variations of tech to account for.
I was sort of hoping that the little boat was going to suddenly disappear over a waterfall or weir, or smash into a grill...
I believe there was an Orville episode that dealt with social media dominating a society. I want to say it was in its first season. Been a long time since I've seen it but I don't think it was similar other than featuring social media gone amuck.
I believe there was an Orville episode that dealt with social media dominating a society. I want to say it was in its first season. Been a long time since I've seen it but I don't think it was similar other than featuring social media gone amuck.
Yeah, society ruled over by Like and Dislike buttons, with those getting a certain number of Dislikes getting penalized.The episode is S01E07, "Majority Rule". You're right in that there was no racial aspect . . . rather, it was a world where all political decisions, judicial decisions and scientific epistemology were based on majority vote using a social-media-type system.
Well, since you're asking...I love Bridgerton, got a problem?
Kind of shocked anyone didn't get that the characters were refusing to go with the Doctor because of his skin colour, I'm not sure how much more obvious they could have made it without Lindsey using a racial slur (something they wouldn't do at teatime on BBC 1.) Was the "you all look alike" line not enough of a clue?
.
We ignore or don’t notice how racist Lindy and her peers actually are, because we also have been conditioned to this kind of behavior and social filters to one degree or another.
I'm boggled by myself: I thought it was about class too.I assumed this story was about class, not race.
Thanks for saying that because I know I was hesitant to post because I figured everyone was going to mock the admission that I missed it upon initial viewing.I feel like I worded this in a way that sounds overly harsh: I didn't meant to imply that I instantly knew it was about racism after the "look alike" line. But that line did stick out when it happened (and I think the Doctor did have a visible reaction to it) and I thought of it when the ending reveal what was really going on. I'm very pleased it ended with the Doctor just silently watching them leave instead of making a big speech about racism. Thought it was much more powerful that way.
There's a lot to unpack here, but basically, you're comparing apples and oranges. The point of the Doctor punching that douchebag for insulting Billie was that he was protecting his friend's pride after he insulted her to her face. He wasn't gonna let him die or anything. The ending is about the Doctor, now a black man, ignoring the racism inherent in these pathetic fools, totally willing to save them because they were gonna die if he didn't offer them his help. Whether they were racists or not was not just irrelevant, it didn't matter.If it was real life, it’s the sort of thing I would notice no problem. But here it’s being deliberately hidden because of its presentation. For example, I’m look at Ncuti being The Doctor. So I am looking for peoples reaction to the character, or his ethnicity. I’m being shown a vapid self-centred character in Lindy, so I am not going to notice anything like the racism because I am not even necessarily assuming she is even human.
Hidden too well to make its point.
Why has that changed? Why isn’t the Doctor calling it out? Why isn’t Millie?
Clumsy. Serves fable, but not the character, serves the writer but not the show.)
Exceptionally well told. The Doctor's in despair at the end because there's nothing he can do to save them. They can't see past his skin color, and he's the smartest guy they'll ever know easily. Its exactly the reaction you'd expect from the Doctor.Exactly. Their prejudice was about to lead them straight to their deaths. The Doctor wasn't crying because he was being discriminated against. He knows that by any objective measure, he is a more advanced lifeform. He was crying out of pity for them and frustration that they clung to their narrow-mindedness so tightly that they were literally going to die from it.
Why didn't the Doctor call out the racism?Maybe. Maybe not. And even if they were going to *possibly* die trying to live in the woods, what makes them any different from a hundred other times the ‘plucky survivors’ head off to tame a world?
I mean sure, they’re effing idiots, but again, what’s the difference?
It’s not made explicitly clear those woods are anything other than a forested world after all.
And fundamentally… what was the last episode we didn’t see this Doctor shed a tear in? I think maybe 73 yards because of how long he is in it perhaps, but he cries a *lot*.
Which is all beside the point really, because neither the Doctor nor Companion challenged blatant racism.
That’s shite.
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