BW’s Daily Video> How Streaming Is Ruining TV

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I can go on YouTube and other ad-supported 24/7 streaming services and find literal ambiance channels, from music to nature themes to fireplaces. I don’t need or want stories to be background noise. I want them to be stories. Kind of in the name.

What’s Happening With Doctor Who Villains?

I wasn’t going to do two Doctor Who related articles together, and then yesterday morning I get an article from Inverse in my recommendations feed. It seems that even when it comes to spinoffs like The War Between The Land And The Sea he still can’t stop himself from monkeying with classic villains.

Radio Times recently visited the set of The War Between the Land and the Sea, the upcoming Doctor Who spinoff miniseries following a battle between the humans and the Sea Devils, an aquatic humanoid race that first appeared in Doctor Who back in 1972. But according to showrunner Russell T. Davies, they’re not called Sea Devils anymore.

“It’s racist to say Sea Devil,” Davies said. Apparently, the species formerly known as Sea Devils prefer the more politically correct “Homo Aqua,” the Latin words for “man” and “water.” This report also included our first description of the plot of the series: “After years of humankind polluting the oceans, Homo Aqua have had enough, with violence brewing unless human negotiator Barclay (Russell Tovey) and aquatic ambassador Salt (Gugu Mbatha-Raw) can broker peace.”

While “homo” in this case is a scientific terms (humans are also homosapiens, which is not the same as homosexual), would anybody be surprised if he didn’t change it for the “homo” part? Apparently it’s all Davies knows how to write anymore, given his pre-Doctor records and what he did to the last two Doctors. The problem is that the classic enemies of the Doctor has been altered a lot in New Who and you can’t blame it all on Davies. Whether or not the change is for “wokeness” with the racist line, or as Inverse contributor Dais Johnson suggests ” a way to level the playing field for a story that doesn’t pit these creatures as villains set on taking over the world, but as fellow citizens of the world who don’t want to see it destroyed, even if that means conflict”, it’s still a change for the ecological message rather than the Sea Devils and their Silurian cousins wanting to take the Earth back from the damn dirty apes. Having the sea creatures as your enemy in a pro-ecology story, if indeed that’s what they’re going with, doesn’t look very good to your message of “man pollute water, it bad”.

Unfortunately all three of the recent showrunners have made the same error. Chris Chibnall changed the Sea Devils when he first got a hold on them, and while the “new subspecies” of Silurian was also Chibnall’s writing, it was done under Steven Moffat’s approval during his time as showrunner. Of course there’s also the change to Davros because we can’t make wheelchair bound people look bad even though fiction has more wheelchair bound heroes and neutral characters (aka the victims or supporting cast) than villains. This is the same guy who gave us farting space nudists who disguise themselves as obese people, literally get high on their own farts, and want to turn Earth into an intergalactic fuel station by blowing it up and selling off the radioactive material. That was his first run, and he wants to talk about offending people now. That was his first SEASON and it was a two-parter, and he brought them back twice, once in another spinoff, The Sarah Jane Adventures. I have to ask, outside of make-up that’s a byproduct of the budget and time period, what was wrong with the classic Who villains?

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> Thunderbolt #55

“Should have chosen the lady.”

Thunderbolt #55

Charlton Comics Group (December, 1966)

“Where Stalks The Mummy”

WRITER/ARTIST/CREATOR: PAM

The Sentinels: “Beware…The Menacing Mindbender!”

WRITER: Gary Friedrich

ARTIST/LETTERER: Sam Grainger

[Read along with me here]

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BW’s Veteran’s Day Video> You Are The Reason

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Chapter By Chapter #25 Reveal

Chapter by Chapter features me reading one chapter (or possibly multiple chapters for this one) of the selected book at the time and reviewing it as if I were reviewing an episode of a TV show or an issue of a comic. There will be spoilers if you haven’t read to the point I have, and if you’ve read further I ask that you don’t spoil anything further into the book. Think of it as read-along book club.

And we just finished reading the previous book. I wasn’t expecting it take almost a year to finish. That was a very long book and so is the next one in the series. I plan to return to it someday, but not for a while. It’s time to break out a new, much shorter book. And since we’re in licenced mode there are really only three short but still decent length series I can go with.

I do have the novelisations of the first two Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles movies, but they’re the junior novelizations because I didn’t know there was a full-sized one for both movies. You know, the good ones from the 1990s. I also have a novelisation of the game Ninja Gaiden, though I don’t know how accurate it is because I never finished the game. Maybe someday we’ll get to those, but no ninjas this round. Instead, we’re talking Time Lords.

I only have handful of Doctor Who episode novelisations. Having reviewed the lone standalone novel I own in a previous Chapter By Chapter, The Time Travellers, it’s time to go through the novelisations, but which episode should I chose? Most of mine are the Target produced books, not the US store but the UK book publisher. I do have one that was made by an American publisher as Tom Baker’s Doctor was gaining popularity in the US. That might be fun and it’s an episode I have yet to check out. Or I could go chronologically with the next episode after the standalone. Target didn’t release them in that order, so I could go the numbered order, or whatever book I’m in the mood for like I do with the Star Trek novels, or stay chronological like I do with the Star Wars novels. (Star Trek and chronology is something hard to pin down. Stardates are BS.) So I wasn’t really sure what to do next.

And then the official Classic YouTube channel gave me the answer. As if they knew what I was planning they dropped a combined arc that is the next book chronologically in my collection, which I was kind of hoping they would. I could have pointed to Tubi, but that would only work for my US readers as the UK readers would have to go to BBC’s I-Player and I don’t know what other countries needed to be pointed to. I’m not even sure the YouTube one works in multiple countries due to rights issues. Still, they dropped it and I can use it. The twenty-fifth book in the Chapter By Chapter review series is therefore….

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> The Solution #7

I’m sparing you a very terrible joke about hands. Two, actually.

The Solution #7

Malibu Comics/Ultraverse (March, 1994)

“Payback” part 2

WRITER: James D. Hudnall

PENCILER: John Statema

INKER: Tom Florimonte

COLORING: Tim Divar & Violent Hues

LETTERER: Tim Eldred

EDITOR: Hank Kanalz

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BW’s Daily Video> The Alternate Ending Of Doctor Who’s Reality War

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