I get it just fine. I just don't have the same goals as you do.
It's not about whether the Doctor is a man or a woman. It's about not caring whether the Doctor is a man or a woman, and casting only on the basis of who's best for the role. Casting the Doctor means looking for a gifted, charismatic performer who dominates the screen and brings enormous personality to a role. Surely there are plenty of female actors who can do that, and how do we know we aren't missing out on some brilliant Doctors by considering only half the available talent pool?
Talk about "not caring." The answer is simple. TV people in any country tend to gravitate to what works, over and over, and what has worked for The Doctor since the frigging early sixties is some
guy "careering around space in a police box," and until that set up stops working, it will be a
guy doing the careering.
So the important point is that TPTB don't care if they leave out half the potential actor pool, and they're the ones that have to, canon possibility or not.
Imposing limits is a failure of imagination.
It's not a failure of my imagination. I don't cast Doctor who. I just watch it.
The reason Doctor Who has been so popular and lasted so long is because of its unfettered imagination, its refusal to be bound by the limits of the ordinary. The very fact that it constantly changes the portrayer and the entire persona of its lead actor, that it's made recasting and reinventing its hero an integral part of its very identity, should prove how utterly wrongheaded it is to insist that this role, out of all the roles in television, should be permanently constrained within a rigid set of definitions. It's an affront to the very things that have made the show so special -- to its fearlessness, its flexibility, its gleeful disregard for the ordinary and conventional.
But you're forgetting that most of that fearlessness and flexibility has come from changing the things
surrounding the doctor, the settings, the companions and the villains, and that because of all the personality changes you've gotten enough differences between twelve portrayals of the main character that changing the gender would simply have been redundant.
All you people who look at the Doctor and see only "Male" -- you're just seeing the outside. And Doctor Who fans should know how small that truly is.
And all you people trying to browbeat us into changing our mindsets on the subject are completely missing your target. Try and convince SM and company that a female doctor needs consideration.
As long as male doctors maintain the show's popularity, I wouldn't hold my breath waiting for it...
why should i have to stop watching something, boycott it for something that is already totally viable within-canon to happen?
Because it will never happen just because it can happen. That's wishful thinking. It will only happen when those with the authority to make it hapen choose to do so, and they'll never make that choice unless not making it hurts them.
thats the sort of attitude that thinks that racism being unacceptable is just there to infringe on your right to call someone the n word.
And how has unacceptable racism - or sexism, or any kind of -ism - been defeated time and again around the world? By
boycott and protest, the very things you just poo-poohed a line ago...
what it boils down to is, ''i don't want the doctor to be a woman because it would cause me momentary awkwardness due to it not aligning with my world view''
Or, "the doctor doesn't need to be a woman in order for me to enjoy Doctor Who, and I'm not going to put on a hair-suit and flagellate myself just because my opinion is considered regressive."
so maybe you and kirk5555 should go compare your fedoras.
Better to wear a fedora and be considered old-fashioned, then desperately want something but do nothing to get it...and be considered hypocritical and lazy.