Wednesday’s disturbed by Torchwood news

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  • Sacha Baron Cohen to do Bruno and Dinner for Schmucks
  • Pinewood does well from tax credits
  • Ooh. Dé jà vu. Ben Kingsley to star with Mike Myers, Justin Timberlake, Jessica Alba and The Daily Show‘s John Oliver in The Love Guru as?��Ǩ�� an Indian guru
  • Tron pioneer finally sells script

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Tuesday’s eh-oh news

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There will be a fifth series of Doctor Who

So much room for twisting and turning, but:

After months of media speculation, the BBC can confirm that the BAFTA award-winning Doctor Who will return for a fifth series in Spring 2010.

Viewers are in for a treat this Christmas, as a special episode starring David Tennant and Kylie Minogue will be broadcast on BBC One in December 2007.

Series Four, which went into production in July 2007, will hit UK screens in Spring 2008, followed by a special episode for Christmas 2008.

In 2009 Doctor Who will return with three specials starring David Tennant, with Head Writer, Russell T Davies.

The full-length fifth series will transmit in 2010.

No one’s saying not nothing about who’s around for the 2010 series though.

UK TV

A quick question of Doctor Who philosophy

The Doctor and the Master

Slightly geeky this, I know, but I was a-pondering because I was just marvelling to myself at how much I liked the last three episodes of the last series of Doctor Who.

As we all know, Time Lords can regenerate. The Doctor, who is a Time Lord, has regenerated many times. Each time he regenerates, his personality changes, yet there is some intrinsic “Doctor-ness” that remains the same from incarnation to incarnation. And as viewers, we accept each different incarnation, even if we prefer some (David Tennant) to others (Sylvester McCoy).

The Master is/was a Time Lord, too. He, too, regenerates and has changed personality with each regeneration.

But, he recently regenerated into John Simm, as you all know. But many people thought he did not have enough “Master-ness”. Problems ranged from the trivial (he didn’t have a beard) to the not so trivial (he lip-synced to Scissor Sisters).

So, the question is either (depending on your point of view):

  1. Why is it that viewers are more able to accept the changing character of the Doctor with each regeneration than they are with the Master? Is it because we have more time to get to know him?
  2. Or, how much does a Time Lord have to have in common with his previous incarnations for us to recognise him as being the same person? Why do some regard Simm’s Master as being sufficiently different from Delgado, Ainley, Roberts and co that they can’t accept him as the Master?

Alternatively, what is “Doctor-ness” and what is “Master-ness” – that is, what characteristics does someone have to have to be recognisably the Doctor or The Master (assuming they have the same memories as well)?

And just for luck, I throw in the Valeyard to really complicate things. Answers on a postcard or below.

Monday’s Labor Day Weekend news

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