Oh, I thought you supported that kind of attitude. I guess I owe you an apology.
Was the difference in the acceptance the stories themselves, or just the different attitudes of the times where they aired. It just feels like we've really gone backwards in the last decade or so, and I think that probably has more to do with it than anything else.
It also seemed at times like Jack and his sexuality was a little more over the top, and at times almost a joke, and I think sometimes people who would not usually accept a character like Jack when they're presented that way.
From what I remember of it, Rogue took a much more straightforward approach to the title character, and the Doctor and their relationship.
To be fair though, the only episode that really dealt with Fifteen's blackness was The Story & The Engine, which was written buy the Nigerian born Inua Ellams, and I believe it was one of the best received episodes of his entire run.
I admit, I'm not always great at judging this kind of stuff, and where exactly things cross those lines.
Yeah, there does seem to be this thing where ‘if not liking thing then enemy, and enemy always bad bigot man’ which people seem to suffer from.
Thanks for realising. Some people haven’t clocked on yet.
As to Rogue, well, there’s straightforward and then there’s straightforward with a whole other kind of time warp. It’s just a step to the left…
Tbh if there’s a cottaging joke to be had in Who, it’s probably best it doesn’t involve the Doctor.
And for a fandom that already has a fairly large group that don’t like any Romance for the Doctor, well, having what might very euphemistically be called a whirlwind romance was never going to land well anyway.
The reason why literally no Doctor prior had an outright Romance (remember, Ten can’t say anything to Rose at the end of Doomsday, and even the River Romance not only contains a wonderful speech on why humans can never be in love with the Doctor but also is inherently a relationship where both participants have no choice but to go through the motions of it on some level) before is because of this. Moffat in particular spends seasons slowly moving the Doctor back away from all that. And Chibnall of course barely has the Doctor engage with that, except to give fandom the smallest of bones after realising it was part of the appeal for some people.
Hip wiggling to Kylie is not subtle character drama.
I love the Story and the Engine, it’s a great parable for Omega and his history with the Time Lords. I like to think intentionally so.
It was very clumsy and kind of insulting I think to be crowing ‘hey look! Here’s our episode and it has no white people in!’ and I think it would have been so much more powerful if we knew it was say the Capaldi Doctor that put the fires out. I also think it would have been ten times cleverer to have Peter Davison instead of Jo Martin for the Anansi’s daughter reveal too.
Belinda of course is not of African descent, so it also splits the world into a binary that simply doesn’t exist, and I always believe thinking that way is a mistake the creates a lot of nastiness, these days in particular.
On a more fundamental level, it’s also kind of insulting to some of us in modern Britain to have that kind of weird segregationist talk at the beginning. Not to mention West Africa is not a nice place for Gay Men.
Then you have the bit where, having built these people up to be like a new Brigadier and Unit in terms of their friendship with the Doctor, within ten minutes they’re throwing him under the bus for their own self interest.
Probably something that may have worked better in the all human play it was based on.
In a way that brings me around to agreeing with you that I too think we have maybe gone backwards in many ways over the last twenty years ago, though I doubt many people will be comfortable with realising that or answering the uncomfortable question of why and how it happened. Because it’s almost certainly not as clear cut as some would like.
Better we just eat our greens.
And it doesn’t explain all of why there’s been such a rejection of recent Who. It’s not the audience who are wrong, essentially.