I don't get all the people complaining about Ruby doing nothing. What did they want, a cat fight between her and Lindy? Is that what a black Doctor needs, a white saviour? If there'd been an actual confrontation I'm sure Ruby would have got involved, and you only had to see the look on her face to know she was angry and disappointed and disgusted. She was there for the Doctor, she didn't need to scream at Lindy to prove it.
One other thought about Lindy, the final moments with her looking back at the Doctor, I dunno, maybe it's my innate desire to see good in people, but I wonder if she was having even the teeniest of doubts about her reaction to him, and her choice to head into the wilderness with the rest of Gen-Aryan? Or was it a smug, I'm going to keep looking at you because I know I'm right and I like how it makes you uncomfortable?
Hats off to Ncuti, he was phenomenal in those final scenes.
One quibble I had with some online discourse. People said that even setting aside the racism, the Doctor had never had people refuse his help to the point where they'd sacrifice their lives before, and that isn't true. There's Cas if nothing else.
Frankly I don't much care Jaime, you're just hate watching now you rarely have anything positive to say and frankly I have more important things to do with my time than simply complain about stuff I hate. As I've said before, no one is making you watch it.
Are you perhaps thinking of the Stargate SG-1 episode "The Other Side"? It has a similar twist that is explicitly revealed late in the episode, but if you pay attention to René Auberjonois' character (specifically, his tone of voice and facial expressions when he delivers a two-word line) you can figure it out very, very early in the episode. (I mentioned it in an earlier comment)
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 genuinely don't understand what you expected the Doctor to do with bred racists who refused to listen to him whatever he said. You also ignored my response to you on specifics. I just don't think you want to understand what the episode is about.
No peeing for three days?
I wondered about this and thought it was going to lead to something, but maybe it was just to signal they weren't human but were humanoid?
Where do you get the idea that all of time and space is presented as racist here, or even “just” all of humanity?Specifics from your response (though I noticed my post to which you responded was riddled with typos, so amazed I made any sense there)
I don’t think we are shown the Doctor ignoring the racism. We are shown him responding to it as RTD thinks a human would. Which is problematic in itself — “you’re being racist to me, but I am going to tell you you can think what you like and beg you to come with me” is certainly a choice.
I also *know* that RTD deliberately buried the ‘all look alike’ cliched racism (they know people don’t, they just say that when they want to dehumanise, they don’t usually actually believe that) by first making sure the wording didn’t make it obvious, but also by making sure there were reasons presented as to why her saying that would make sense *without actually being a sign of ethnic prejudice*. He deliberately misled the audience.
Firstly, we see The Doctor. We do not see Ncuti, we do not see a Black Man, anymore than we see White Man when we see any of the pre-Jodie Docs. So, we are used to him being ignored at first. We also see him as older, even if Ncuti isn’t that old. He is presented as breaking his way in. As the equivalent of a pop-up on the internet. He’s not onscreen long before she blocks him.
Even when he returns, he’s still essentially playing authority figure, but Ruby when she appears plays subservient, ingratiates herself and compliments Lindy’s top.
These are all reasons why it is perfectly logical *without stepping to racism* for a character such as Lindy to react the way she did. Bear in mind these interactions *also* contain Ruby and the Doctor interacting with a Susan Twist image (side note why do they both look into the middle to see her?) and not sure if they have seen her before and unable to place where. So that undermines the idea as well.
Even immediately before the racism is made crystal clear, and shown not to be *just* Lindy or even just her rather weird friends list, we are shown that Lindy herself is basically some kind of socio or psycho path. All is not right with her from earlier on, with the whole punishment shtick, but again… in the milieu of Who, this could be a class or societal thing quite apart from racism (Varos tortures its leaders for failures for example, and that serial has recently been back in the limelight) and is also dressed in class. We know it costs a lot to send these idiots to live on finetime.
People aren’t ’not noticing these micro aggressions because they have secret prejudice’ they are not noticing them because they are being deliberately introduced and obfuscated by the writer of the story. A very well-to-do White Man, with a lot of power in his industry, incidentally. Who then in-not-so-many words calls half the audience racist, and for the other half — assuming they aren’t already wondering if there’s something wrong with themselves for not picking up on it either — accidentally suggests the entirety of all of time and space is at some point bigoted only at Black Men. And that a heroic character will turn the other cheek so much as to literally weep and beg before even slightly addressing that *at all*. While their friend says and does *nothing*.
Great Black Mirror episode.
Shite Doctor Who one.
Which puts it in the middle, because at least it’s not all bad, just bad in relation to Who.
Where do you get the idea that all of time and space is presented as racist here, or even “just” all of humanity?
It was this colony specifically. Nothing more, nothing less. And by this colony I mean Finetime and Homeworld.
The episode says nothing about humans or elsewhere in space or the future.
It does by implication. The implication that The Doctor never encountered bigotry or prejudice at him, over his skin colour, ever before in thousands of years of travel. That in the future, things will somehow have gotten worse, and now he is Black rather than White he has experienced it first hand.
That this doesn’t chime with the rest of Doctor Who is another reason I do not like the way the ending was handled, but it pales beside the implicit implications on show here, and how the character of the Doctor has changed/been changed.
That’s what I mean about the difference between a clever story in an anthology show, and something that has to fit in with a show that does have ongoing characters and an overall milieu. Regardless of any pedantic discussion about canon or continuity, there is a wider ‘whoniverse’ in which these things are supposed to fit.
Well if they turn out to be a Dalek level problem in the future, this is the locus to come back to, to snuff them out in the cradle... And who is to say that the Seventh Doctor isn't behind these slugs and 15 just forgot, during a prolonged senior moment?
He's standing on a land mine two weeks ago, and they don't care. You're just a regular person and we'll treat you like a one of us, and enjoy the fire works because you're not special. Oh, but I am special, and when I blow up, I'm taking this moon with me.
Tennant pretend to be Scottish to fit in with Queen Victoria.
I can think of at least four times, where some one assumed that Grand zaddy Graeme was Doctor Who.
Was it ever handled seriously, as here to an extent, though?
Mistaken identity because the Doctor used to be a fella is one thing, discrimination another.
I can remember finding some of the Master/Doctor stuff in Skyfall quite uncomfortable, even if it was well within something like the relationship established with Ainley/Davison.
But I can’t remember any time where she was discriminated against as a woman — I didn’t watch all her episodes though, but don’t remember any such event even being commented on. The Chibnall era essentially returned to an asexual Doctor in order to avoid a lot of stuff. Until they went all in on queerbaiting a segment of fandom with the wishy-washy screen resolution of Thasmin.
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