kzap333kinja
kzap333
kzap333kinja

He was the showrunner for season 2 of Torchwood I believe and I enjoyed that more than season 4 of Doctor Who, which it aired along side.

Depends if you keep your social media to your 'friends' list or if you read a lot of comments in public groups or look at replies from strangers on twitter.

I'm still waiting for Michael Cera as Shaft.

I hope it's done in front of someone who knows the Doctor so well they're not gobsmacked by the gender change.
Nardole shaking it off and just continuing to go about his day would be great.

Sadly it's not just guys, I was talking to my girlfriend about the character changing gender before this casting was announced and she said she'd find it weird and wasn't sure if she'd like it.
I really tried to get to the bottom of her issues with it (as I was genuinely curious about her position) but couldn't get any

Exactly.
A guy on twitter said that little boys can't look up to the character and won't want to be like him any more.
I asked him if he thought any guys wanted to be like Ellen Ripley, he informed me that none of us did.

It's just textbook gate-keeping.
When what they love is underground and unpopular they want to encourage as many people to join as possible, but when it gets too popular they're worried it won't be 'their' thing any more and they feel bitter that they were there "before it was cool".

It's just tough because from a character / narrative angle it doesn't make sense either.
So I guess people who are upset by the change are either sexist misogynist pieces of shit or far too obsessed with the continuity of a show they've managed to completely misread.
The latter certainly isn't worse than the former but

B- is hardly shitty and Fifth Element is great.

Weren't the mobile releases later?
I suspect it was both, a decision they made for budget reasons and so they could port to mobile platforms.

I just heard the word "Centennials" the other day which is the least clunky/cringeworth and most understandable name for that generation.
If Millennials are those that 'came of age' at the turn of the new millennium then Centennials is the logical next generation.

I haven't played one in a while but I love the first two seasons of The Walking Dead and The Wolf Among Us.
I can't really explain 'why' except that I found the story engaging.
Back in university I watched my housemate playing the first episode of The Walking Dead and immediately wanted to see what happened if I made

Yeah Talltale's graphics have never been the selling point but these look particularly bad. The Wolf Among Us is a few years old now (and last generation) and looks better than this, they should have really stuck with the thick-lined comic book aesthetic they established there.

I thought it was just a joke about the character always comes back. I don't think it's worth taking that seriously.
The more certain you make it to the audience the character is dead the more fun it will be when they return next time.

I am tired of it by now but honestly it would feel so weird if he changed that at the last minute.
I'd almost feel cheated if he finally killed off a companion with Bill when he never did with anyone else.
He's established that no one really dies on version of the show, even though I'm not the biggest fan of that, he

"Does she need the Pilot to keep her alive?"
Why would she?
Did I miss something where that was stated somewhere or implied? Why do people keep interpreting the ending like we're supposed to believe they're "in love" and spending eternity together.
She's just some chick that brought her back to life and now they're gonna

"But it's a pretty big assumption we're supposed to make here that they're perfect"
Are we supposed to make that assumption???
I never interpreted the scenes that way and saw nothing in them to draw that conclusion from.
Heather was a girl that thought Bill was cute and had the opportunity to save her life, so she did,

I didn't mind Bill's ending too much, maybe because I saw it coming a mile off. I knew Moffat wouldn't have the balls to kill her off (nor would it fit the tone of the show he's created) and it was pretty off she'd leave to have more adventures with a Doctor-lite, like Rose & Clara.
The only thing I didn't like about

There was a blowjob reference in Love & Monsters and a few other equally obvious innuendos.
Inappropriate sex jokes are practically a requirement for traditional British family entertainment, have you ever been to a panto?

Haha, just asked if anyone else made that joke and scrolled down to see they did.
Good job.