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[personal profile] green_amber
Actually I wasn't bothered enough this week to write one, but then I wondered if everyone had found this ? Good fun in places, (do Cybermen really run on Linux?) and it also gives you a useful password :-)



Most people seem to agree with me that this ep was altogether rather bla - a fault I lay squarely at the feet of the writer whoever he is (Tom McRae - but who be he? (other than quite a nice singer/songwriter?) . The Cybermen looked great (though like several people over at [livejournal.com profile] blue_condition's place, I was mildly amused that they seemed to be wearing steel flares and matching 70s steel hush puppies), the soap opera elements were enjoyable, if a mite predictable (go Mickey! Rose, get over your father already! if I was Mickey I'd give her a good slap , now we've find out that he's lost *both* parents, not just one like Rose, and THEN had his sainted gran fall downstairs to boot) but the dialogue in the main plot was just either boring or pantomimeish - especially the dire Cyborg inventor guy. (The actor was OK, not his fault - he did as well as you could with dialogue straight out of Comic Villain Mastermind No 101). And nothing really seemed to HAPPEN (except nice shots of Zeppelins) for acres of time - why did this one get two-parter status when either Moffat's effort or School Reunion could have done so much with more space? was it just because (as seemed the case from Dr Who Confidential) creating the Cybermen cost so much money, they had to get their screen-time value out of them?

And what was with the alternative London politics? This seemed a really lazy case of world-building (as full of holes as Mickey's comics-derived knowledge of alternate universes, in fact) - compulsory downloads into people's heads, police state, army on streets, curfew , ok, so far so Brazil/Matrix -- but how did that go with a state that still apparently has ethics committees, bioethics conventions, the rule of law (it was Cybus not the government who were disappearing people, and Cybus didn't seem to run the govt judging by its President, however much they may have wanted to)and a humanist President who tells Cyber-guy off, and apologises to the Cybermen for the wrong done unto them? It was noticeable too that the compulsory downloads didn't have anything remotely unsavoury in them. If a "subversive" point was being made about how we all absorb the same media nowadays through our pores, then it was both too obvious and too irrelevant to the main plot to be bothering with. (And in fact even as satire it's WRONG - the effect of the Internet and new technology has been to give us all wider access to different media, the *opposite* of consumer homogenisation. Very few marks out of ten here at all.)

Battersea Power Station & The Lion Sleeps Tonight was great tho.

The only redeeming bit of this ep was really Mickey/Rickey (shades of Eastenders - Rick--aaayyyyyyyy!! something only [livejournal.com profile] catabolism will understand)- not to mention Noel Clarke with his kit off - phhwooaarrr! - I shall add him to the esteeemed glade of People Who Are LOTS Better With Shirt Off, like Sawyer from Lost and my long lost Spikey. Mickey's suddent rejection of his spare part/tin dog status did seem a bit - well - sudden - he's seemed to quite enjoy being the kid mascot up till now; also why should he expect the Doctor to care about him? Rose yes: but that didn't seem to be what was upsetting him - his lttle tantrum was all aimed at De Doc. (Mickey/Dr shippers - do any exist? - must have been wetting their pants.) Anyhow I hope Rickey dies heroically, Mickey fixes his gran's carpet and comes back to our universe for a grateful shag from Rose, who's remembered what great pecs he has. That would be a consummation devoutly to be worth watching :-)

you call this heterogenous

Date: 2006-05-17 10:41 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] thishardenedarm.livejournal.com
"on an intra-national basis it's increasing. The number of people watching any one channel has dropped significantly over the last twenty years..."

The very fact that your default example of cultural "heterogeneity" is what TV chanel a person choses to watch kind of proves my point.
Every evening almost everyone comes home and sits and stares at a light box. All evening, almost all of us swim in a sea of luminescent drivel. If you just zoom out _a little_ and take your eye of the content of the behaviour (what chanel we are watching) and switch to the form of the behaviour (everyone is sitting watching light boxes) you'll witness a truely astonishing homogenization in our use of leisure time, in our use of our selves, a kind of massed habit in which our idiosyncracies, our personalities are expressed by, what, the number we press on the remote control?

Re: you call this heterogenous

Date: 2006-05-17 10:48 pm (UTC)
andrewducker: (Default)
From: [personal profile] andrewducker
Every evening almost everyone comes home and sits and stares at a light box.


Actually, the number of hours of TV a person watches has also dropped over the last ten years. And I know people (at work, so proper people, not my actual friends) who spend little-to-no time watching TV. I also know people that spend a lot, of course. I, personally, spend about 3 hours a week watching TV.

Go back a hundred years or so and people were spending much the same amount of time in all the same pursuits as each other - either in churches or in the social sense. The homogenity level hasn't changed much, as far as I can tell.

Re: you call this heterogenous

Date: 2006-05-17 11:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] surliminal.livejournal.com
Oddly , this is pretty much the argument I used to have with Andy, about living alife directly rather than intermediation into other people's lives. (Oddly also, we seem to have stopped having it.)I actually spend very little of the week staring at the TV on my own - i do use it as background/company while I eat, play with the PC, work etc. I only WAAAATTCHH probably Dr Who and Lost right now, and used to with the Apprentice (and yeh, Green Wing.) So about 4 hrs per wk? I see a lot of people, I work a lot, I walk, i swim, I go to yoga (not enough), I cook and play with cats and do LJ and listen to music & sometimes even read. Is this so different from ye olden days? One thing that always strikes me while watching period drama is how DULL it is - all people have to do is play games, eat too much and gossip. Of course that's the UCs - the LCs would just have been working, shagging or sleeping, one assumes..

Also it isn't really all staring at boxes of the same kind - talking to someone via LJ or email really does feel different to me to passively watching TV. And talking to someone about what we've both watched on TV or done on LJ is absolutely fine. It may be hermetic, but no more so really than discussing our 10 favourite books (or 10 best shags.) ata North london dinner party. I'm not totally convinced any more that I get more cultural diversity or stimulation out of going to theatre or other arts than TV /Film either, frankly: so much theatre is incredibly fossilised these days.

If what you mean really is that we aren't doing enough with our BODIES then yes, I agree. But I am trying and so are most my post-30s, equally interlektual friends; A has taken up rowing, C running, S plays tennis practically every nights at the moment. This isn't just fitnes (tho it's significant all are female) - it's also a gut feeling that we live via our bodies as wel as our brains.

In the end diversity isn't what gets us through our lives really - it's companionship, however repetitive. (discuss.)

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