You’re the only one, then. Even the Daleks knew who she was.
You’re the only one, then. Even the Daleks knew who she was.
Fair point, but as nuWho Doctor-to-Doctor interactions have been few and far between, and I don’t recall Twelve and One trying it, perhaps it’s been retconned as more problematic.
Point taken, but nuWho always prefers things not being so easy, and tends to take liberties with early Who canon (especially the tangled thread that is Timelord/Gallifrey canon). I don’t recall Peter Capaldi and David Bradley-as-William Hartnell doing it. Or did they?
I can’t imagine a telepathic link between two versions of the same Timelord going well. Like, at all. Maybe both of them understood that instinctively even before the big reveal.
A regeneration between Two and Three would lack Thirteen’s 2,000 years of additional experience. Ruth Doctor seems very much Thirteen’s equal, as when they start speaking the same lines and completing each other’s sentences.
OTOH, Ruth Doctor’s TARDIS had a very retro look with the round ports and much smaller bridge…
How Covenant utterly ruined that family with his heinous act really took that trilogy down a road Tolkien never considered.
If it’s anything like Book Five, “interesting” will be an understatement.
The Rocka-WHO??
That exposure helped Campbell land The Rocketeer, a truly underrated and fun movie (also AVC’s “Age of Heroes” choice for 1991).
GRRM mentioning he’d written for the Twilight Zone revival meant he’d worked with that revival’s showrunner — Harlan Ellison. That probably ended his chances of getting hired right then and there.
Lore had no problems with contractions, which is what tripped him up. Writer’s contrivance. But it’s not like the problem is limited to Trek: The Android on “Dark Matter” had the same speech impediment.
The scene where Kirk goes all Harry Potter and engages in a wizarding fight with the leader of the magic-using aliens was well worth the offensive premise.
The planned story arc for the “Conspiracy” parasites was another casualty of the Writers’ Strike. That said, overall the strike delivered many needed improvements for television writers. A few inferior TNG episodes were a small price to pay.
Edison was distraught and angry at the murder of his employees (wonder if any of them changed the timeline with their sudden deaths?), which helped give him a sympathetic side.
Descendant species, and clearly not as advanced or powerful as the Racnoss of a billion-ish years ago.
The Racnoss were a couple billion years old, long-forgotten and assumed long-dead. Hiding in stasis deep inside the young Earth (below the Silurians) until revived in “The Runaway Bride” and almost immediately destroyed again.
I see what you did there.
A) Diana wasn’t driving; 2) They were being aggressively pursued by multiple vehicles in an unsafe manner, in large measure because of her choice of “rich playboy.”
Except at the end the Master implied he’d been stranded on Earth the past 77 years, having made numerous escapes along the way — presumably (though left unspoken) to avoid interacting with previous Doctors, previous Masters, previous Companions, various alien invasions and threats, and finally from his own timeline…
Fleeing aggressive paparazzi who DID care about skin tone and other forms of “scandal” is how they died.