Duh.
Duh.
As much as I love him being a moral sweet dude, him yelling at the baseball game was a series highlight and calling someone daft would make my life.
Aww.
I think the modern clothes could be a tight trouser/skinny jeans, a loose button-down, and a nice peacoat. The boots might be the only thing that doesn't have the easiest replacement, but there are a lot of combat boots and other lace-up or more vintage-looking styles for men that I see.
Okay, this is AMAZING and I would LOVE IT. As long as he doesn't veer into the "magical negro" trope, because that would make me furious, but I have confidence that the show could work around that stereotype.
SKINNY JEANS. SKINNY JEANS. I need him to complain that wide-cut jeans make him feel like he's a bird flapping in the wind or something Ichabodesque. I will even except jeggings.
Completely allowed, completely encouraged, can we fit a camera crew into the average-sized dressing room? Can we get a Joe Boxer promotional tie-in for this episode?
I get that she's "clean and shiny" but I know for a fact that I would never, ever mess with someone whose eyebrow game is that strong. I feel like those things could cut you and leave a scar. She looks just crazy enough to me.
Reminiscent of the Helena flare scene from Orphan Black, which was also masterfully shot.
Gina Torres is MY wife. No one else's (I am a straight woman and this is just how things go).
Maybe a car accident, or he didn't pick her up from school so she walked home and was involved in an accident I don't know if this show would go into something as deep as "Frank put a bad guy away and he retaliated by going after Irving's family." I mean, they definitely would, but I don't know if that would do…
The reviewer discusses the "black guy is the first to die" trope, which factually does happen here, but I thought that bodyguard looked threatening as hell and so it made for quite the sight to see him sitting there. A beefy white dude with a beard would have made a less visually shocking image. Also, we then have…
Look at my Disqus profile - I go into an in-depth discussion where one user speaks to me in a polite way and I return the favor. THIS board might have a certain opinion, but mine is one that many people share. I even like Moffat's work on Sherlock, I just don't enjoy his tenure as showrunner (not episode writer but…
Oh of course they're underdeveloped and by no means perfect, but that's a start. We need those relationships explored and discussed. Mothers need better stories on television. A show that explored parents really well was Alphas, who had the mother of an autistic boy and a father/daughter relationship that had depth to…
The woman at the cake shop gave me EVERYTHING. EVERYTHING. She read that clueless man to filth with a smile on her face. Who is she and how do I ask her to be my third grandmother?
I think you and I disagree about Donna's end. I thought it was very tragic, a masterstroke of the show. You think it cheapened her arc, which I can understand because it did, but I think that was a very interesting move that if not done there, Moffat might have tried later. It was a true mindfuck and created a deep…
Because Donna's arc wasn't finding a man. It was having her learn of her own value without one, and as a person overall. The fact that she struggled with the issue made her real and whole. Amy's arc had strongly sexist moments that contradicted her previous development - people here complained that Rose and Martha…
A true fourth wave feminist would not shame a woman for getting married, or even feeling a strong want for marriage. First of all, Rose does not end up married. If she marries Handy, we do not see it. Martha winds up with another very undervalued character, who developed well over his series and with the renegade he…
That's a strong misinterpretation of what I said. I said that Amy's entire arc on this show related to herself and her husband. The first season of hers culminates in her returning to her husband. The other seasons have arcs of her relating to her husband in some way, or the child they created (barely touched on and…
Every recurring or regular female I have seen developed in Moffat's time is a representation of sexism. I've typed the supporting points four times already. I didn't say I've seen all of Old Who, but I am familiar with many characters and how they were written. This is not an Old Who argument, though - you brought…