Comments by "Debany Doombringer" (@debanydoombringer1385) on "" video.
-
3
-
2
-
@deadpooldan9862 If something that hasn't happened does happen, that's by definition "new". Words have meanings as annoying as that is for you. That attempt at an explanation of his new sexual orientation is laughable. The show hasn't even made that claim, but you're writing fanfic and making it lore in your head. He was married to a woman on Gallifrey and is married to a woman as The Doctor. Her name is River. The lore was he simply changed forms, not became someone completely different. Only in the last two, which saw fans tune out, did he start taking on traits of whoever's face he copied. He's not taking over their bodies so it makes zero sense. I'll explain why it doesn't work. In Scifi and fantasy you're asking the audience to suspend a certain amount of belief. However, if you push the audience too far outside those boundaries, it becomes too much for the mind to accept. That's what's happened. Saying it's "magic" or it's "scifi" isn't enough for people fans of that genre to just automatically accept it. It must make sense in the context and boundaries that's been established in the lore. When you toss those established rules aside without a logical explanation for the change, it's called world breaking for a reason. That Davies said he was going to alienate fans means he knew he was asking too much suspension of belief for the majority of the audience. He's aware it leaves him with just consumers of a product rather than a fandom that will keep it alive. That's why he's set it up how he has. He knows it's no longer going to have a fandom willing to introduce it to their children or friends to keep it going for another 50 years. You're what's called a low information viewer. Someone that just watches or consumes something no matter what tripe gets handed to them. A consumer. Judging by the massive audience decline, it is indeed not good. Like it or not, our opinions are just as valid as yours and a lot more share ours than yours. Like StarWars and many others, Doctor Who has fallen for the mythical new modern audience that doesn't exist. These franchises are now dead because they courted an audience of consumers that when it dies due to ratings won't care, won't buy the seasons to rewatch, won't buy the merchandise, and will simply consume the next thing and forget it ever existed.
2
-
1