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Post by Ela on Oct 2, 2016 18:04:32 GMT
Yeah, reading your link, I see what you mean about Katie Hopkins. Haven't heard or seen Harry Hill at all.
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aztec
Chancellery Guard
Likes: 2,849
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Post by aztec on Oct 2, 2016 18:48:00 GMT
Katie Hopkins as the War Rani the campaign starts now
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Post by TinDogPodcast on Oct 3, 2016 5:38:06 GMT
Please...
Even joking about hopkins makes my head hurt
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Post by Timelord007 on Oct 3, 2016 7:09:16 GMT
Noel Edmonds as the new Master, I'd practically beg Gomez to stay & you know my opinion of her as Missy.
Noel Edmonds as the Doctor, i would literally lose the will to live.
Noel Edmonds in Doctor Who.........I'd rather pull my toenails out with rusty pliers than see this smug egotistical imbecile in Doctor Who.
Ricky Gervais to guest star, another egotistical tosser who would induce me into a comatose state.
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Post by Timelord007 on Oct 3, 2016 7:10:54 GMT
Katie Hopkins as the War Rani the campaign starts now NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO, PLEASE NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO.
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Post by Timelord007 on Oct 3, 2016 7:14:16 GMT
Jim Carrey in Doctor Who, I'd practically go to the set & drag his ass back to America, he ruined Batman Forever with his campy over the top face pulling hammy acting, he ain't ruining Doctor Who.
Great thread this allows one to vent out there anger & frustration, I'm off now to erase the horrific thoughts of said actors in Doctor Who.
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Post by paulmorris7777 on Oct 3, 2016 9:41:26 GMT
Jim Carrey in Doctor Who, I'd practically go to the set & drag his ass back to America, he ruined Batman Forevet with his campy over the top face pulling hammy acting, he ain't ruining Doctor Who. Great thread this allows one to vent out there anger & frustration, I'm off now to erase the horrific thoughts of said actors in Doctor Who. To be fair, Batman Forever was pretty bad. Nothing worked in that film.
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aztec
Chancellery Guard
Likes: 2,849
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Post by aztec on Oct 3, 2016 15:38:23 GMT
Katie Hopkins as the War Rani the campaign starts now NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO, PLEASE NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO.
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aztec
Chancellery Guard
Likes: 2,849
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Post by aztec on Oct 3, 2016 15:40:54 GMT
Jim Carrey in Doctor Who, I'd practically go to the set & drag his ass back to America, he ruined Batman Forever with his campy over the top face pulling hammy acting, he ain't ruining Doctor Who. Great thread this allows one to vent out there anger & frustration, I'm off now to erase the horrific thoughts of said actors in Doctor Who. Personally I thought Batman Forever was ruined by the camp overblown tone, a thoroughly bored Val Kilmer, a terrible script, awkward pacing, hit and miss special effects and a director who seemed to think he was making a toy commercial for kids. Wasn't Jim Carrey on the early list for the TV Movie when it was planned to be a American reboot?
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aztec
Chancellery Guard
Likes: 2,849
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Post by aztec on Oct 3, 2016 15:42:43 GMT
Please... Even joking about hopkins makes my head hurt Yeah some of her opinions are rather inducing
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Post by mrperson on Oct 3, 2016 17:50:13 GMT
Two names: Jenna Coleman and Samuel Anderson, two names that will curse for the rest of my life. Matt Smith did his best to rescue the series when Clara came but when the Eleventh Doctor left, the golden age is over (his return in Big Finish, along with the Pond family, will be epic and great as the Sixth Doctor and Tegan renaissance) It's no big surprise that the best episodes of Capaldi, Heaven Sent, The Doctor's Meditation and "The Husbands of River Song" are those that irritating girl does not appear. I didn't like Clara in S7 because she seemed to be a blandly kooky/spunky plot device, in S8 and 9 she actually grew into a memorable, arrogant and strong willed character, I like that she didn't take any shit from the Doctor and called him out on some of his morals, Clara was rather full of herself and built up to falsely believe she was an equal to the Doctor, but she paid dearly for her mistakes, personally the companion/Doctor relationship between 12 and Clara struck me as perhaps the most believable in New Who rather than just being blandly cheerful besties all the time, Moffat actual took a gamble and pointed out how toxic/flawed the Doctor's reliance on his companions can be, Clara could be a self obsessed pain in the arse at times, but oddly enough that made it easier for me to belive/like her as Character than some of the other companions... I'm not necessarily saying it was brilliantly executed, but I really liked what Moffat was trying to do with the 12/Clara team, S8+9 have been my favourite of New Who and I can't wait for the day BF negotiates a license to use the characters and build/improve on what we saw on TV. Personally I find much of the Smith years unwatchable (though I was a huge fan of Smith's performance) but each to their own. Did she, though?
She now has, (1) no need to maintain biological functions, (2) no aging process, (3) a TARDIS, which she cannot fly. At some point, she has to return to Gallifrey and go get killed, but she potentially has as much life as she wants. She could take a billion years if she wanted to, so long as she doesn't get herself vaporized, thereby creating a paradox.
She has the power to select the moment of her death, a power some have revered as the most sacred of gifts that Gods might bestow on men (See: Bishma, from The Mahabharata). On top, she has a TARDIS with one of the best console designs to boot.
Anyway, I shall stop myself right there before I pump out paragraphs on this.
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Post by icecreamdf on Oct 3, 2016 22:38:23 GMT
I didn't like Clara in S7 because she seemed to be a blandly kooky/spunky plot device, in S8 and 9 she actually grew into a memorable, arrogant and strong willed character, I like that she didn't take any shit from the Doctor and called him out on some of his morals, Clara was rather full of herself and built up to falsely believe she was an equal to the Doctor, but she paid dearly for her mistakes, personally the companion/Doctor relationship between 12 and Clara struck me as perhaps the most believable in New Who rather than just being blandly cheerful besties all the time, Moffat actual took a gamble and pointed out how toxic/flawed the Doctor's reliance on his companions can be, Clara could be a self obsessed pain in the arse at times, but oddly enough that made it easier for me to belive/like her as Character than some of the other companions... I'm not necessarily saying it was brilliantly executed, but I really liked what Moffat was trying to do with the 12/Clara team, S8+9 have been my favourite of New Who and I can't wait for the day BF negotiates a license to use the characters and build/improve on what we saw on TV. Personally I find much of the Smith years unwatchable (though I was a huge fan of Smith's performance) but each to their own. Did she, though?
She now has, (1) no need to maintain biological functions, (2) no aging process, (3) a TARDIS, which she cannot fly. At some point, she has to return to Gallifrey and go get killed, but she potentially has as much life as she wants. She could take a billion years if she wanted to, so long as she doesn't get herself vaporized, thereby creating a paradox.
She has the power to select the moment of her death, a power some have revered as the most sacred of gifts that Gods might bestow on men (See: Bishma, from The Mahabharata). On top, she has a TARDIS with one of the best console designs to boot.
Anyway, I shall stop myself right there before I pump out paragraphs on this. (4) She can never go home or see the people she loves ever again. (5) Her best friend doesn't remember her. (6) She knows that when she does die, it will be a particularly painful death. (7) A major theme of this season is that immortality is a curse, not a blessing.
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Post by jasonward on Oct 3, 2016 23:32:06 GMT
Did she, though?
She now has, (1) no need to maintain biological functions, (2) no aging process, (3) a TARDIS, which she cannot fly. At some point, she has to return to Gallifrey and go get killed, but she potentially has as much life as she wants. She could take a billion years if she wanted to, so long as she doesn't get herself vaporized, thereby creating a paradox.
She has the power to select the moment of her death, a power some have revered as the most sacred of gifts that Gods might bestow on men (See: Bishma, from The Mahabharata). On top, she has a TARDIS with one of the best console designs to boot.
Anyway, I shall stop myself right there before I pump out paragraphs on this. (4) She can never go home or see the people she loves ever again. (5) Her best friend doesn't remember her. (6) She knows that when she does die, it will be a particularly painful death. (7) A major theme of this season is that immortality is a curse, not a blessing. But it's a kind of immortality, she can live as long as she wants, but doesn't have to live any longer, it's hard to see that kind of mortality as a curse, "I can live as long as I want", "OK so where's the problem?".
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Post by icecreamdf on Oct 4, 2016 4:20:11 GMT
(4) She can never go home or see the people she loves ever again. (5) Her best friend doesn't remember her. (6) She knows that when she does die, it will be a particularly painful death. (7) A major theme of this season is that immortality is a curse, not a blessing. But it's a kind of immortality, she can live as long as she wants, but doesn't have to live any longer, it's hard to see that kind of mortality as a curse, "I can live as long as I want", "OK so where's the problem?". Well, her heart doesn't beat, so that probably means her other bodily functions don't work either. She'll probably have the same problems as Owen and not be able to eat or heal or anything. She isn't really living forever. The end of her life has just been extended.
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Post by Sir Wearer of Hats on Oct 4, 2016 7:36:59 GMT
If they decided to have Benny and not cast Lisa Bowerman (or Emma Thompson at a push), but rather some flibbertigibbet songstress famous for being pretty.
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Post by paulmorris7777 on Oct 4, 2016 10:33:10 GMT
Did she, though?
She now has, (1) no need to maintain biological functions, (2) no aging process, (3) a TARDIS, which she cannot fly. At some point, she has to return to Gallifrey and go get killed, but she potentially has as much life as she wants. She could take a billion years if she wanted to, so long as she doesn't get herself vaporized, thereby creating a paradox.
She has the power to select the moment of her death, a power some have revered as the most sacred of gifts that Gods might bestow on men (See: Bishma, from The Mahabharata). On top, she has a TARDIS with one of the best console designs to boot.
Anyway, I shall stop myself right there before I pump out paragraphs on this. (4) She can never go home or see the people she loves ever again. (5) Her best friend doesn't remember her. (6) She knows that when she does die, it will be a particularly painful death. (7) A major theme of this season is that immortality is a curse, not a blessing. 4 - Says who? 5 - But, she remembers him. 6 - She already has died. 7 - Yet, she chose it.
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Post by mrperson on Oct 4, 2016 19:11:44 GMT
Did she, though?
She now has, (1) no need to maintain biological functions, (2) no aging process, (3) a TARDIS, which she cannot fly. At some point, she has to return to Gallifrey and go get killed, but she potentially has as much life as she wants. She could take a billion years if she wanted to, so long as she doesn't get herself vaporized, thereby creating a paradox.
She has the power to select the moment of her death, a power some have revered as the most sacred of gifts that Gods might bestow on men (See: Bishma, from The Mahabharata). On top, she has a TARDIS with one of the best console designs to boot.
Anyway, I shall stop myself right there before I pump out paragraphs on this. (4) She can never go home or see the people she loves ever again. (5) Her best friend doesn't remember her. (6) She knows that when she does die, it will be a particularly painful death. (7) A major theme of this season is that immortality is a curse, not a blessing. (4) Why not? The only time individuals are said not to be able to interact with their friends after a particular point is if, for example, the individual travels with the Doctor and interacts with a version of their own future in which said friends have lived for X years with that individual "missing" or presumed dead. Then they're stuck with that specific version of the future. But if not, the future can be changed. She hasn't interacted with a personal future in which they learned of her death - and they wouldn't do because she "died" in a hidden trap street - so long as she does not do that, she can go back and see them. She could resume teaching and it wouldn't matter. She would just have to make sure to automatically take off if she landed on Earth until she could pilot the TARDIS properly, and then make sure to land roughly the same day as she "died". Then she could contact her friends and stay for quite some time. (5) She's got "Me". She's got the possibility of making any number of other friends. And......she isn't dead. (6) So what? None of us have any guarantee of a peaceful death. And on the other hand, she also knows the pain of this painful death is actually only a couple seconds - a great deal shorter than most individuals who suffer painful deaths. (7) She still gets a billion years if she wants it, or more, and gets to choose the moment. That's more than any of us will get. That's also not "immortality". That's mortality where you get to set the bounds.
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Post by mrperson on Oct 4, 2016 19:16:41 GMT
(4) She can never go home or see the people she loves ever again. (5) Her best friend doesn't remember her. (6) She knows that when she does die, it will be a particularly painful death. (7) A major theme of this season is that immortality is a curse, not a blessing. But it's a kind of immortality, she can live as long as she wants, but doesn't have to live any longer, it's hard to see that kind of mortality as a curse, "I can live as long as I want", "OK so where's the problem?". For similar reasons, I also see the view of Me as being cursed as flawed as well. The Doctor explicitly explained that it'll keep healing you if you have normal injuries, even up to the kind of normal injuries one suffers in battle. That doesn't mean the chip will heal her if she stole a conventional ship and piloted it directly into a star or detonated a hydrogen bomb next to herself. She, too, could have chosen to end her life.
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Post by icecreamdf on Oct 4, 2016 19:18:51 GMT
(4) She can never go home or see the people she loves ever again. (5) Her best friend doesn't remember her. (6) She knows that when she does die, it will be a particularly painful death. (7) A major theme of this season is that immortality is a curse, not a blessing. (4) Why not? The only time individuals are said not to be able to interact with their friends after a particular point is if, for example, the individual travels with the Doctor and interacts with a version of their own future in which said friends have lived for X years with that individual "missing" or presumed dead. Then they're stuck with that specific version of the future. But if not, the future can be changed. She hasn't interacted with a personal future in which they learned of her death - and they wouldn't do because she "died" in a hidden trap street - so long as she does not do that, she can go back and see them. She could resume teaching and it wouldn't matter. She'd just have to avoid going to the doctor. (5) She's got "Me". She's got the possibility of making any number of other friends. And......she isn't dead. (6) So what? None of us have any guarantee of a peaceful death. And on the other hand, she also knows the pain of this painful death is actually only a couple seconds - a great deal shorter than most individuals who suffer painful deaths. (7) She still gets a billion years if she wants it, or more, and gets to choose the moment. That's more than any of us will get. That's also not "immortality". That's mortality where you get to set the bounds. She knows when she is scheduled to die, so she can't visit anyone she knows after her death is suppossed to happen. She has Me and may make new friends, but that doesn't mean she won't miss her old friends. She isn't dead yet, but she will be in a second. That second may last for an eternity, but she is still at the end of her life. If she waits long enough to die, she also might end up like Me did in The Woman Who Lived, and stop caring about people.
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Post by mrperson on Oct 5, 2016 16:18:43 GMT
(4) Why not? The only time individuals are said not to be able to interact with their friends after a particular point is if, for example, the individual travels with the Doctor and interacts with a version of their own future in which said friends have lived for X years with that individual "missing" or presumed dead. Then they're stuck with that specific version of the future. But if not, the future can be changed. She hasn't interacted with a personal future in which they learned of her death - and they wouldn't do because she "died" in a hidden trap street - so long as she does not do that, she can go back and see them. She could resume teaching and it wouldn't matter. She'd just have to avoid going to the doctor. (5) She's got "Me". She's got the possibility of making any number of other friends. And......she isn't dead. (6) So what? None of us have any guarantee of a peaceful death. And on the other hand, she also knows the pain of this painful death is actually only a couple seconds - a great deal shorter than most individuals who suffer painful deaths. (7) She still gets a billion years if she wants it, or more, and gets to choose the moment. That's more than any of us will get. That's also not "immortality". That's mortality where you get to set the bounds. She knows when she is scheduled to die, so she can't visit anyone she knows after her death is suppossed to happen. She has Me and may make new friends, but that doesn't mean she won't miss her old friends. She isn't dead yet, but she will be in a second. That second may last for an eternity, but she is still at the end of her life. If she waits long enough to die, she also might end up like Me did in The Woman Who Lived, and stop caring about people. Well, what I'm getting at, is no she does not know she can't visit anyone she knows after her death is supposed to happen because, on the show's own rules, she has not interacted with a future in which her friends counted her missing as of Face the Raven. As long as she doesn't do that, there is no fixed future requiring her never to appear again after the day she walked into Trap Street. (I could cite a certain BF release on this point....in fact more than one.... but don't want to give a spoiler) Only the aliens on trap street know about her death on that date because they witnessed it. She would have to avoid them if she returned to Earth after that date, but they stay there to remain hidden in a refugee camp. They aren't wandering London. Nobody she knows knows she officially dies at that time and place. If she returns to her home later in the day on the day she entered Trap street, nobody will have even considered her to so much as have gone temporarily missing. She really could go right back to the last time she was in public in London and pick up from there. She could wait until she'd be 40 or 50 (but not aging), then just disappear. Recorded history would be that she "went missing, presumed dead" on a certain day when she was in that age range, and then she could bang around a bit more off-Earth if she wanted, so long as eventually, she makes sure that real unrecorded history - her death - happens at the time and place it is suposed to.
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