Subj: I think they prefer being called Trekkers & not Trekkies.Posted: Sat Jan 12, 2008 at 10:25:19 pm EST (Viewed 583 times)
| Reply Subj: Trekkies are dilettantes compared to Dr. Who fans Posted: Sat Jan 12, 2008 at 10:32:24 am EST |
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> Especially in light of previous discussions I've had with friends about the Dungeons & Dragons alignments of each of the Doctor's incarnations and adversaries (specifically, Chaotic vs. Lawful), I found this chart fascinating:
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> Quoth its creators:
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> Doctor Who: Revolutionary or Tool of the Man?"
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> Methods: We counted the number of stories in each season where the Doctor overthrows the status quo. (For example, in "The Savages" and "The Happiness Patrol," he encounters a stable society and leads a revolution.) Then we divided that number by the total number of stories in that season, for a percentage. Then we included other events at the time that could explain the Doctor's changing politics.
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> [...] In general, we noticed the Doctor is more likely to overthrow the government on alien planets, or in the distant future. When he visits present-day Earth or our history, he's an arch-conservative. (He ousts Harriet Jones as prime minister of England in "The Christmas Invasion," but that's not the same as destroying the whole government.) Also, the Doctor acted out way more during the Thatcher era than any other period. During the Blair/Gordon Brown eras, he's been quite well-behaved.
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> Perhaps not surprisingly, the UNIT-era Doctors seem to have been the most pro-establishment, working as they did for big government and the military industrial complex (although it disappoints my fannish heart to be faced with the reality check that Tom Baker was apparently not nearly the mad anarchist that I fancied him to be). However, as someone who's only learned to appreciate Sylvester McCoy many, many years after the fact, I was stunned to see that no less than half of his adventures ended in him overthrowing authority.
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