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I know: this pic is from "The Name Of The Doctor" from the Steven Moffat era. Its bleakness is plenty fitting for this post though. |
There might well be volumes written, many years from now, about what happened to Doctor Who: the much-beloved British science-fiction television series that had delighted generations of viewers around the world. Maybe those to come will take to heart the lesson of why the show defied so much, only to die at the hands of liberal ideology.
To Russell T. Davies and Chris Chibnall before him: the Doctor is dead... and you killed him! Oh sure, Davies had his moments when he first ran the show between 2005 and 2009, but there was still a good measure of respect for the saga, for the writing and for the audience. Chibnall was the one who first pulled the trigger in earnest though, when he decided to make the Doctor a woman (there is a dynamic at work in Doctor Who and the Doctor should ALWAYS be male in keeping to that) and then made practically every episode a sermon about leftism.
Then Davies took over again. And that's when the show truly went to hell.
Look, I had my hopes up. I knew nothing of Ncuti Gatwa. Just as I had known nothing of Peter Capaldi and Matt Smith when they were announced to be their respective Doctors. But I was willing to give them a chance. I was willing and eager to be surprised.
But Gatwa very quickly proved that of all the people who have ever played the Doctor, he is hands-down the very worst. That he casually and chronically insulted everyone who didn't like the new direction of the show, telling them to "touch grass" instead, only made it worse.
(Maybe it's just me but I also don't think the Doctor should wear a dress.)
Here's what I think happened in the past few years: Doctor Who became Russell T. Davies' midlife crisis. In the years between 2009 and 2022 Davies came to be confronted with his mortality. He has no family of his own, his lifestyle prohibits having any progeny. So Davies became driven to inflict his personal mark on the one thing that has proven to give him a sense of immortality: his work on Doctor Who. And so Davies made it all about himself. He opened up the spigot of his wokery. In the process he drove away the core audience of Doctor Who. Davies seriously believed that his fellow leftists were going to be legion enough to sustain his "work".
Doctor Who stopped being the show that it had been since 1963 and instead became a vehicle for leftist propaganda. And the true fans departed. They took Davies and Chibnall at their word: they had been told that they weren't welcome, so they grabbed their hats and left.
Former Doctor Who writer Robert Shearman has come forth to tell us what we all know: the show has been brought to a screeching halt right at the edge of an open grave. And there is no foreseeable plan to bring it back.
The series is stuck where it last left off: Ncuti Gatwa's "Fourteenth Doctor" regenerating into the form of Billie Piper (who has at various times played the Doctor's companion Rose ever since the show first restarted in 2005). It was a cheap stunt that underscored the obvious: the showrunners didn't know what they were doing. Their ideology is all that mattered to them. They were handed the keys to one of the most respected science-fiction mythologies ever crafted and they destroyed it with gross negligence.
For what it's worth, here's what I think: Doctor Who needs not just a hiatus but major invasive surgery under most potent anesthesia. Let it be asleep for the next five or ten years. And then pick up the show but ignoring everything from the Chibnall era on forward. The final canonical words of the Doctor before regenerating should be those of the Twelfth: "Doctor, I let you go." Let the Doctor disappear in that flash of light and in his place... a true Doctor. One bereft of egotistical management and political agendas.
A dire measure? Yes. Yes it is. But it's the only one I can see that will resurrect the Doctor Who franchise and correct its course.
1 comments:
Doctor Who survived the wilderness years between McCoy and Eccleston's eras. There were still stories being told in novels and audiobooks and the fans kept the spirit alive at cons and through fanzines. There is none of that now and like Shearman said nobody wants to write a story of Billie Piper as the Doctor. The show might need going away for 25 years like Twin Peaks did.
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