I wish they'd just killed the damn zygons and got it over with.
You are Donald Rumsfeld, and I claim my five pounds.
I said that while ignoring all political allegory this episode was attempting. The zygons are literally shapeshifting aliens who arrived on earth, after trying to invade it at least twice, and then had another random alien and a woman whose authority seems to reside in about a dozen soldiers worldwide saying they could make the Earth their home. I don't care what stuff the writer was trying to say about real world events, from a purely in universe stand point, the zygons are on Earth uninvited, and just shown that they could easily kill everyone, and humans wouldn't know because they were never given a choice.
The Doctor gave humans a choice over the stupid moon egg monster, but didn't allow anyone but some random military woman with practically no authority to say yes or no to the zygons. In the Doctor who universe, there has got to be dozens if not hundreds of planets suitable for the zygons. The Time War destroyed their planet, not humans. The Doctor might feel responsible for them, but he's dragging Earth into a situation it should never have been in.
Predictably we don't get a straight answer as to whether this is the real Osgood or her Zygon double or which one was killed in Death in Heaven. But really, how much sense does this make?
On the one hand, the Doctor hates the genocidal Sullivan's Gas. On the other hand, the Doctor, in The Macra Terror, genocides the native population of the planet Macros.
And nobody's batting an eye at the Doctor giving his first name as 'Basil.' I'm assuming we all think he's lying.![]()
Dr. Basil Disco. More Pertwee, than Capaldi?
I just saw the preview for next week's episode. Are they really resusing the set/warehouse from Magician's Apprentice/Witch's Familiar, and Under The Lake/Before the Flood again for 3rd (6th) time?
That's pretty funny.
And nobody's batting an eye at the Doctor giving his first name as 'Basil.' I'm assuming we all think he's lying.![]()
(https://www.washingtonpost.com/nati...bce896-7ca7-11e3-9556-4a4bf7bcbd84_story.html)Neurobiologists from the University of Chicago have discovered that rats display empathy-like behavior toward other rats, but the basis of that empathy is environmental, rather than genetic. The creatures aren’t born with an innate motivation to help rats of their own kind, but instead those with whom they are socially familiar.
The episode was clearly signposted as science fiction set in a fantasy world and no one died in the scene.
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