Here's the key: Some shit is serious and I am serious when I talk about it because it requires the ability to be serious.
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Fans have always thought that the 13th doctor would be the last, thanks to a 1976 Doctor Who episode, The Deadly Assassin, featuring Tom Baker as the Doctor in his fourth incarnation, and revealing for the first time the regeneration limit. But a passing comment in a children's television programme later this month is set to rewrite history and cast the Doctor, iconic hero of the world's most successful and longest-running science fiction series, as immortal.The moment comes in the CBBC spin-off show, The Sarah Jane Adventures, which stars former companion Elisabeth Sladen as Sarah Jane Smith. Matt Smith, who plays the current Doctor Who, guest stars in a two-part episode called The Death of the Doctor, to be screened on October 25 and 26. While the Doctor and Clyde Langer, played by Daniel Anthony, are in the process of outwitting spooky vulture undertakers the Shansheeth, Clyde asks how many times he can regenerate. The Doctor indicates that there is no limit. The action continues.
a passing comment in a children's television programme
The incredibly coherent Dr. Who mythology is ruined :'(
gosh, and here I thought they would cancel their multimillion dollar franchise based on something a contract writer made up in 1976. how dare they.
Quote from: Billy Rygar on October 15, 2010, 12:26:23 PMThe incredibly coherent Dr. Who mythology is ruined :'(exactly.Isn't Manabyte a super-Christian? You would think he would be use to the idea of incoherent mythology by now.
Maybe the fourteenth regeneration he'll come back as female or Asian or something.