gay-for-thirteen:

Thank you, Jodie

I dont know how to put this into words. Jodie Whittaker has taken on a huge challenge with Doctor Who, not only because of the huge history of the show, but also because she of the fanbase, which partially hasn’t reacted very kindly towards her.

Nevertheless, the took on this challenge and she mastered it. She made the 13th doctor her own, and gave us an beacon of hope and positivity, whilst still being an icon herself. She insists on setting things right, she fights for equality and strives to be the best she can, and that is what i admire about her so much. She’s shown all women and girls out there that we’re just as capable and just as brilliant as the men around us.

Series 11 has been a bumby, emotional and educational ride and i am so glad Jodie came along for it.

Just.

Thank you.

//And you know, I’ve thought about it too, and as much as I want the Doctor to “snap” for the sake of high drama, I also don’t think it would be appropriate in this season. 

Now I could be totally wrong since I’m only ten minutes into this episode and the New Year’s Special with the Daleks is still coming, but.  

I just feel as if it would be out of place, and tremendously discouraging, pessimistic, and gloomy, for the symbol of Hope Incarnate to lose her composure and become violent and vengeful.  That’ll come in time, as a reminder that even the best of us can fail, and need the love of others to get back on our feet.  But to expect the Doctor to snap already is to underestimate her strength. 

//Watching it. A bit under the weather today so I may not be doing the usual, lol, exuberant liveblogging, but I will say I can’t believe I predicted Graham’s moral dilemma and the Doctor’s exact dialogue in response, on a draft on my Thirteen blog a couple  days ago.  

I do wish her moral stance were not so absolute.  It’s always what disorients me about the Doctor. The Doctor is always, in their own conduct, a gray amoral scientist, preoccupied with the how’s of the universe, often negligent to the why’s, often at the expense of other people’s comfort. Yet when they examine other people’s conduct, suddenly they become rigid and almost (or sometimes totally) sanctimonious.  It’s an amazingly self-contradictory dualism.  

But basically, much as I agree with her stance toward what Graham tells her at the outset of the episode, I wish she would understand the context of his wrong-headedness.  Tim Shaw appears right after he’s just fought against the Solitract, which presented him with a tantalizing fantasy of everything he lost with Grace’s death.  This is so raw and fresh for him, and she has already asked so much of him recently. She needs to be more patient, even as she removes him from the picture (which I think she should do immediately, rather than scold him: he’s not in his right mind).