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[personal profile] neadods
I've learned some interesting things today. I've learned that the Horsechicks have a term "Spanish Princess Day," in honor of the Spanish princess from Ever After. (If you haven't seen the movie, she gets one scene, where she is being unwillingly married in a political alliance to the hero. She's sobbing so hard she can barely walk up the aisle.)

Yeah. I'm stealing that.

There is more heartburn in the Whoniverse over the full text of the RTD interview. Me, I'm busy wondering how dizzy the author is after putting on all that spin, because it's really odd to me how the writer can insist that the audience as a whole didn't like Martha when the ratings for this last season of Who were excellent. Perhaps someone needs to whisper in that writer's ear that in Who, as in every other show in the universe, 98% of the audience is not fannish and thus doesn't give a rat's ass about fannish issues.

Unfortunately, that is taking away attention from what I think is the most charming and exciting thing I've heard today - Paul Cornell is writing another Whovian Christmas story for the newspapers.

Last year, Cornell wrote the bittersweet story "Deep and Dreamless Sleep" for the Times, where the Doctor found the TARDIS invaded by a little boy who wants to see Christmas. The Doctor takes him to the WWI Christmas truce, among other places. (The Times still has this story online. I dare anyone to read the third and fourth paragraphs of the last page without choking up.)

This year, he and the BBC have just announced, he will be writing "The Hopes and Fears of All the Years" for The Telegraph. It will appear in the printed issue of December 22 with illustrations by the guy who does the DWM comic art, then on the website on Christmas Eve (no idea if the illustrations will be there or not). Mr. Cornell has not given any plot hints.

Since we don't know about the art, would anyone within the Telegraph's print area be willing to grab me a copy and mail me the page with the story? I'm willing to paypal price & postage costs.

Also in Whovian news, prompted by the cover art of the upcoming March Torchwood tie-in novels, [livejournal.com profile] crabby_lioness has written an interesting essay comparing the Torchwood characters to stock Commedia dell Arte characters.

The Captain -- the oldest of the archtypes, he is a swaggering fellow in a spendid uniform who is always chasing the ladies. He is always a foreigner who speaks with an accent. His true history is always obscured and never as noble as he would like you to think.

Yes. Yes, that fits...

Date: 2007-12-19 09:18 pm (UTC)
ext_939: Sheep wearing an eyepatch (spiralsheep Cybermen Old Skool)
From: [identity profile] spiralsheep.livejournal.com
I don't care any more. My fannishness survived the writers making the tenth Doctor the first Doctor I've ever disliked but it stopped being My Programme as soon as I knew a companion had been deliberately undermined (although I was already unhappy about Mickey, and second season Rose, and even Adam). I have achieved a state of fannish zen about all forthcoming new Who. I honestly don't care about it any more. ::radiates indifference::

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