lazylaz
lazylaz
lazylaz

This hair piece, the greatest ruse of all time!

I always liked this one:

If Marvel and DC had changed places what would DC be making right now?

The sequel is actually better, and it has Wilf in it too.

Yeah, at this point people have no one to blame but themselves.

And we'll just drop this here....

Just put this here...

It kind of sounds like this plot has some of the same problems that Star Trek had, that the characters had shown all this growth in the first film, and then kind of reset and go through it again. That's just lazy writing.

I just started to read the Culture series a little while ago. I just finished Use of Weapons, and so far have mostly enjoyed the series.

Ha, take that Guam!

Trust me, it's a thing. The hatred usually comes more from classic Who fans who hate how the show has focused on relationships or looks to flashy or is too slick. What's funny is it was their love of the show, and their efforts to bring it back, that lead to the return of the show in the first place. They chose the

Considering what a huge Doctor Who fan Tennant was, and how great he was in the part, I hope this signals good things for the new Doctor.

Well said. I actually have had similar thoughts about what motivates his regeneration. The River Song regeneration idea is also interesting. See, this is why Moffat needs to go and new ideas need to come in.

So it goes

See, people assume that fan outrage is a strict progression of cause to effect, but actually — from a non-linear, non-subjective viewpoint — it's more like a big ball of wibbley-wobbley, timey-wimey complaining.

I know, it's crazy! Everyone knows Colin Baker is the best Doctor.

Agreed. There are Doctors I don't like, and I'm happy to debate and joke about it, but to genuinely dislike people for enjoying the "wrong part" of your favorite thing is just stupid.To openly hate and attack people for it is just as bad.

Classic Who v. New Who. I know too many people divided by this!

Ah, well, few episodes of the show actually follow directly one after the other, so there is lots of space for the Doctor to have other adventures. Frequently in the classic episodes there would be noticeable gaps between things that allowed the Doctor to turn up in odd place. Even in the new Who, such as when the

Well a day is 18 hours long, so shorter days might mean much shorter years.