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Yeah. A leather jacket and a dark jumper? WTF, am I right?

We weren’t talking about Eccleston.

I didn’t literally mean those titles. But a return to the conceit of “The Doctor’s Wife”, where the Doctor and a humanoid incarnation of the TARDIS interact, might be interesting. The question I was asking is, which option would be more fun: the TARDIS in a masculine or feminine incarnation interacting with a female

You should watch “Broadchurch”.

In America, we usually learn in a parking lot. Do Sheffieldians not have car parks?

Chibnall has said they’re not going to revisit any old villains in Whittaker’s first season.

I think you would need a Polish plumber on the TARDIS to get the full effect.

I had just texted to my friend “Grace is the perfect DW companion” before she got killed.

It’s not covered in question marks, and she doesn’t have a celery stalk pinned to her lapel, so I’m OK with it.

AND STEVE!

Hmm... which do I want to see more: “The Doctor’s Husband”, or “The Doctor’s Wife II”?

This was way better than “Rose”. Eccleston’s “I’m the Doctor” speech was all about how great the Doctor is. Whittaker’s was about choosing the kind of person you want to be. Also, “The Woman Who Fell To Earth” had a distinct lack of making fun of its characters( c.f. Mickey) and recycling classic monsters (The Stenza

I’ll wait and see if those characters are actually well-written and not just tokenism.

I would be perfectly happy is she were the next James Bond.

“American Gods, Season 2: Season 2 of American Gods”

The Laumer story is partially redeemed by the ending.

The Emshwiller and Delaney stories were flat-out amazing. There are also a handful, maybe two handfuls, of genuinely good stories, including Zelazny and Ballard and Anderson and Dorman. But there’s also a lot of mediocrity.

I recently re-read Dangerous Visions. I found that a lot of the stories did not really stand the test of time. “Incident in Moderan” was, to use a vocabulary that would have been futuristic at the time of the writing, “meh”.

I think people are more open to bolder ideas in TV shows these days.