um..... I guess to entertain or make money?
um..... I guess to entertain or make money?
What's the point of writing if you don't have anything to say?
...yeah, I agree with having something to say... but frankly the reason I don't watch Torchwood is because I don't need to be told repeatedly that homosexuality is perfectly normal behavior or whatever.
Acceptable, legal, viable, those are different than normal.
IMO, Its acceptable to do it with one episode or one character, but when its repeated more often than the norm in real life, then it becomes an obvious agenda.
I don't think positive agendas are wrong, but I can see where you're coming from. I think it's a bit disingenuous in a way (not you personally). If TV suddenly reflected actual demographics conservatives would be howling with outrage at the number of gay characters and racial and political minorities. How many Latinos are on TV? How many subcontinental Asians? Are one in 10 characters gay, lesbian or transgendered?
If Doctor Who became a show specifically targeted to gays and they felt the need to have a token gay Doctor to make gays feel good about seeing themselves "represented", I simply wouldn't watch it anymore.
As for sexuality, I think for most show topics, as it is for most of life, its irrelevant to a third party.
However, depending on what show/channel you watch, I think its arguable that homosexuality (when sexuality is relevant to plot) is represented far greater than the real world.
If Doctor Who became a show specifically targeted to gays and they felt the need to have a token gay Doctor to make gays feel good about seeing themselves "represented", I simply wouldn't watch it anymore.
Trying to make minority groups more acceptable to the mainstream is in many ways an admirable thing but RTD does it in such an "in your face" style that it'll only make those that are already offended by such themes even more unwilling to accept them.
Having a character like Captain Jack is fine but what annoys me are all the blatant references that are obviously there just for the sake of pushing the idea even more aggressively at audiences such as the bit in Planet of the Ood where one of the characters was going on about "Ood Rights" and them being "able to marry now".
Why is that any more inappropriate than what Star Trek was doing in the '60s? The only reason Rose/Mickey and "broken home Martha" aren't blinked at today is because other socially responsible shows got there first and helped normalize those situations.
Good on Doctor Who.
I just think that those sort of situations and themes are best suited in something like a soap opera as opposed to Doctor Who.
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