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https://youtu.be/R-dy12Q9Ys8

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For Steven, “Travelling with you made me feel really special. Thank you for that.” —— I know I’m very late to the party, but I wanted to do something to pay tribute to my favorite writer leaving my favorite show. Over the years Doctor Who has become something very meaningful to me. (I know it’s just a silly British TV show, but humor me!) The idea that a person can be more than just one thing, that they can change and evolve, and that that can be sad yet thrilling has been extremely impactful on my life since I started watching. I was 22 the first time I watched Doctor Who. It was 2008, and I was visiting my aunt at her home and she had it on. I had absolutely no interest in watching what looked to me at the time like cheap, campy, science fiction garbage, but I was stuck there. I fidgeted, I sighed, I complained. The sets were unconvincing, the monsters looked cheap, and there was SO. MUCH. TALKING! But as the episode continued, I started to feel concern for the players. That perhaps these characters (I absorbed none of their names at the time) weren’t going to make it out of this. That maybe the threat was still right around the corner. And then, when the episode was over, I realized that I had been clutching a throw pillow. How did they do that? I remember thinking. It looked so cheap. I knew how they made it. I understood how it was filmed. It was not at all convincing, at least compared to the Hollywood films I was used to. So what was it that got me? I concluded that it must have been the writing. The episode was called “Silence in the Library”, written, of course, by Mr. Steven Moffat. After that I binged the rest of the (revived) series, enjoying every minute of it, but Steven’s episodes in particular. And was over the moon when he became the new head writer for the show. It was actually only recently that I learned he’s considered a divisive writer. And as much as I’ve tried to understand that view, I don’t. It saddens me to know that the last Steven Moffat penned episode of Doctor Who is behind me. I can’t wait to see what comes next, both for the Doctor and for Steven. But I couldn’t let the moment pass without saying something to commemorate the man that has taught me so much about storytelling. Thank you, sir! I let you go.
Fighting the Future
Stories and people who take them in can be like star-crossed lovers a lot of the time.
A story can be life-changing, but not get to the right person. Or the right person might come along, but at the wrong time to be open enough to what the story’s really trying to get at. But, when the right story comes at the right moment and really gets into your heart and under your skin, you remember it. And that’s why I’m so enormously grateful for Peter Capaldi’s time on Doctor Who.
In The Doctor Falls, we get to see a man who’s finally come to terms with himself. He’s contemplated the nature of goodness and come up with definitions he can live with; change what you can, let go of what you can’t. Every life matters. Kindness matters, above all. More than any other of the re-boot Doctors, 12 knows who he is. No other Doctor has fought so hard against regeneration, but then again, no other Doctor has been so sure in themselves. Bill tells him, “I don’t want to live if I can’t be myself, you know?” And he does know—he’s already planning his last, last stand. “Where I stand is where I fall.” If he can’t be who he’s become, he doesn’t want to face starting over again.
I turned 42 this year, 6 months after everything went wrong on November 8th. The story of a hero fighting against the things that have so turned my stomach during the campaigns and since —greed, poverty, racism, sexism, homophobia— has been a lovely, weekly respite. But the ending 12’s been given was even more poignant. I’m just finally beginning to feel comfortable in my own skin. I’m embarking on a career I’ve always wanted. And just as this is happening, the world is falling apart. I’m being called upon to move my personal goalposts in order to be the person I feel like I should be and fuck me, but that’s hard. “I can’t keep changing!” he roars. Being called upon to leave our comfortable spaces sucks and it sucks hard, but change is a catalyst for growth. (Although, after two millennia, the Doctor might be forgiven for feeling that he’s grown quite enough, thanks very much.) Not to mention necessary for us to continue doing good as circumstances around us change. It’s the lesson I imagine 12 will learn as he’s forced to go back to his beginnings.
My god, have I enjoyed this story. It got to me just in time.
He is my favorite Doctor <3 I had a lot of fun doing this! I hope you like it.

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Doctor Who #9 - Empress of Mars
Tools Used : .Sketchbook Pro 6 .Clip Studio Paint .Wacom Intuos Small
Relax or die.
Oxygen w.i.p.
Oh, I so happy and proud to realize this video 🤗 Careful-spoilers for those who haven't watched .... Anyway, enjoy this video Love u 🌞🌺✨