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AnonymousRex
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And another furry was born unto the earth.

Here's my version. I don't imagine anyone who could use it will see it here, but I think I might maintain it while I finish catching up.

I liked this pair of episodes, but the conflict ball and convenient resolution was a little annoying. Of course we don't end up with any duplicates. Of course doppleganger Doctor dies by the end of the episode. Of course no one can work together and they split into factions. They were already in a factory that was

Amy's reaction made it even better.

Your comment sounded rather condescending.

Damn life - so cliche~

I don't think the pilot/medical computer change actually changes anything and introduces that annoying Human Aliens trope. A better alternative would have been if members of the original crew were also in stasis with the human virus, and the Siren had a couple scenes where it was allowed to actually display some

Pretty sure that's why the pirates thought she was a prostitute.

Victory of the Daleks didn't work at a fundamental level. It seemed to have been made specifically to introduce the new (old) Daleks. The plot idled a lot because there wasn't enough content in the episode.

I liked Planet of the Ood more than most episodes, too. Gridlock could have been good, but it needed a rewrite. The plot that ended up on screen didn't really make any sense.

Eccleston was angry. Tennant could be gloomy. Smith just seems to deny it. His coping method seems to be based around ignoring the things he isn't able to deal with. They didn't really have a lead or anything about the girl, so he may not have thought he could actually find her.

They would also provide a reason for the Men in Black cultural icon that arose during that time.

I loved this episode. I might even go so far as to say it was my favorite of the new series thus far. This shares a lot of elements with Girl in the Fireplace, but without the whole Doctor's romance bend it had. If I'm no introduce anyone to Who in the future, I think this may be a runner for which episode I show.

Being a kid's show isn't an excuse for being poorly written. Plus, it's a family show, anyway.

I sort of imagined it like the beach in Bioshock Infinite.

This is truth. The other folks who are disagreeing with you don't know what they're talking about. Women tend to be more attracted to confidence.

This stance takes as axiom that a need for validation is the same as enjoyment of validation. Pretty much all artists like when other people like their work and to not care at all would be incredibly alien.

Sadly, it'll never happen. It's a common word, and common words lose their distinctions over time because idiots misuse them. (The ironic diction was intentional.)

I noticed that, too. The kid's Dad did want to pick up some weapons, though, but that was more pragmatism. When Amy lost her own gun and the opportunity arose where it may have been a good idea to fire, he didn't.