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Jul. 16th, 2017 11:41 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I am assuming, from the amount of anxiety I'm currently feeling about who the new Doctor will be, that I am generally not as OK as I would like to think I am.
I am very sorry to see both Capaldi and Moffat going; I think this era of Doctor Who has been incredible. In Moffat's hands, the modern show seemed to have the same magic it did when I was a child and never quite believed that I might not turn a corner one day and find the TARDIS waiting there. I also love the way the show has consistently promoted tolerance and progressive ideas - I am not a huge fan of the RTD era, which I find disturbingly prone to misogyny (as well as much too mundane to fit with my idea of what Doctor Who should be), but it certainly did a lot to normalise the depiction of LGBTQ+ relationships and characters on TV; in the Moffat era, we have had explicit confirmation that Time Lords are not confined to a single gender or the appearance of a single Earth ethnic identity* but can change both these things when they regenerate, as well as a black lesbian companion and, in the most recent series, a strong theme of social justice and the importance of kindness which has been particularly significant in an increasingly unjust and unkind world. On the night of the General Election last month, I struggled to sleep but refused to get up and watch yet another results programme that only confirmed that we were moving even further away from the world I want us to be living in (in the end, of course, that wasn't quite the case, but I didn't know that yet), so instead I lay in bed dozing and listening to episodes of the Verity! and Buffering the Vampire Slayer podcasts. And every time I got to the end of an episode of Verity! and woke up to hear the version of the Doctor Who theme they use as their theme tune, I was comforted by the reminder that, however dark things might seem, there are still lots of people who believe in doing the right thing, the decent thing, the kind thing, and some of those are the people who make Doctor Who and have created the character of the Doctor to stand as an example and a rallying-point and a symbol of hope.
And so I'm worried about who the next Doctor will be, and what Chris Chibnall's Doctor Who will be like. We know now that Time Lords can change gender and ethnicity, and knowing that, I will be so disappointed if it turns out that the next Doctor is still another white man, and I think that will be a sign that the next few years may well not live up to the wonderful, hopeful, magical promise of the Moffat years; that it may become ordinary, and dull, and reflect the flawed, unequal world we live in rather than suggesting a better, fairer, kinder world is possible.
I know it's only a TV series, and it's not really real, but still. Politics is ghastly, and the world is full of horrors; the future looks, frankly, pretty grim for all of us. Work is utterly draining and exhausting and all a few days away seems to have done is mean that I ended up working ridiculously long days last week and am still massively behind where I need to be and not sure how I'm ever going to catch up. I no longer seem to enjoy a lot of the things I used to enjoy (knitting, sewing, clothes), and the most recent series of Doctor Who has been one of the very few bright spots in the last few months. Yes, I am not as OK as I might like to be, and I'm really concerned that one of the few things that has helped recently is going to be taken away.
I am very sorry to see both Capaldi and Moffat going; I think this era of Doctor Who has been incredible. In Moffat's hands, the modern show seemed to have the same magic it did when I was a child and never quite believed that I might not turn a corner one day and find the TARDIS waiting there. I also love the way the show has consistently promoted tolerance and progressive ideas - I am not a huge fan of the RTD era, which I find disturbingly prone to misogyny (as well as much too mundane to fit with my idea of what Doctor Who should be), but it certainly did a lot to normalise the depiction of LGBTQ+ relationships and characters on TV; in the Moffat era, we have had explicit confirmation that Time Lords are not confined to a single gender or the appearance of a single Earth ethnic identity* but can change both these things when they regenerate, as well as a black lesbian companion and, in the most recent series, a strong theme of social justice and the importance of kindness which has been particularly significant in an increasingly unjust and unkind world. On the night of the General Election last month, I struggled to sleep but refused to get up and watch yet another results programme that only confirmed that we were moving even further away from the world I want us to be living in (in the end, of course, that wasn't quite the case, but I didn't know that yet), so instead I lay in bed dozing and listening to episodes of the Verity! and Buffering the Vampire Slayer podcasts. And every time I got to the end of an episode of Verity! and woke up to hear the version of the Doctor Who theme they use as their theme tune, I was comforted by the reminder that, however dark things might seem, there are still lots of people who believe in doing the right thing, the decent thing, the kind thing, and some of those are the people who make Doctor Who and have created the character of the Doctor to stand as an example and a rallying-point and a symbol of hope.
And so I'm worried about who the next Doctor will be, and what Chris Chibnall's Doctor Who will be like. We know now that Time Lords can change gender and ethnicity, and knowing that, I will be so disappointed if it turns out that the next Doctor is still another white man, and I think that will be a sign that the next few years may well not live up to the wonderful, hopeful, magical promise of the Moffat years; that it may become ordinary, and dull, and reflect the flawed, unequal world we live in rather than suggesting a better, fairer, kinder world is possible.
I know it's only a TV series, and it's not really real, but still. Politics is ghastly, and the world is full of horrors; the future looks, frankly, pretty grim for all of us. Work is utterly draining and exhausting and all a few days away seems to have done is mean that I ended up working ridiculously long days last week and am still massively behind where I need to be and not sure how I'm ever going to catch up. I no longer seem to enjoy a lot of the things I used to enjoy (knitting, sewing, clothes), and the most recent series of Doctor Who has been one of the very few bright spots in the last few months. Yes, I am not as OK as I might like to be, and I'm really concerned that one of the few things that has helped recently is going to be taken away.
no subject
Date: 2017-07-16 05:35 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2017-07-16 05:44 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2017-07-16 06:39 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2017-07-16 05:57 pm (UTC)I'm still feeling pretty wait-and-see about Chris Chibnall as showrunner: I wasn't particularly blown away by any of his Who episodes (I have a soft spot for "The Power of Three," but that is because I love the Pond family immensely and forever), and I couldn't even make it through Torchwood. But I enjoyed Broadchurch - and casting Jodie Whittaker as the Doctor at least suggests that Chibnall wants to keep pushing forward on making the show more inclusive, which is very good!
no subject
Date: 2017-07-16 06:41 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2017-07-16 06:59 pm (UTC)