

The episode was bad, and so was every other episode this season. I'm sorry, but just because you made a bad episode about Rosa Parks doesn't make it good. This shows that it was so bad that eight times more people felt the need to get on her and say it was bad, dumping the ratings to 20%, yet fifteen times the number of critics needed to say that it was amazing.
Season 11 has 327 critic reviews and 8362 audience reviews, showing 90% and 20% respectively. Looking back at the reviews from season 1-8, the most reviews were 26 critics and 1000-1500 average audience reviews. I think the biggest problem with this season is the politics. I was actually hopeful of her in the next season, wishing the writers would give her something more to work with, but that will be in the next review. She turns everything up to eleven, so now nothing has any intensity because it is all at eleven all the time. Jodie Whittaker seemed like she could be a good doctor, but her entire character looks like a reboot of a single episode of watching David Tennant. You won't miss any character development from one to the next (there isn't any) and you won't really care which one you are watching next as they are ALL BAD. The episodes in-between the first and last are not connected at all and can be watched in any order. The problem is that they are not mentioned or cared about for the entire rest of the season, so that when the villain showed up in the last episode I actually didn't remember who he was and had to look him up. The first episode introduces the characters as well as the villain for the season finale.

The story arc didn't even come close to existing.

His sole purpose in life is to nod and say, "yes doctor, you are right" and when she isn't around I assume he stands there not moving waiting for her to come back. That is all I know about him, and that is all I will know about him. Tosin Cole played a character who lost his grandmother in episode one and he couldn't ride a bike. This event seemed to involve Milly, as well as the TARDIS team somehow, as Milly. Five years before the Eighteenth Doctor, Ruby and Damien arrived on Karison by accident for the first time in their own personal timeline, the Ravagers arrived on Karison and liberated it, taking over control for themselves. The character development is so bad that by the end of the season, I still didn't know the names of the doctors companions. The Ravagers were a group of raiders who forcibly took control of the planet Karison. The one time she goes to the future was in "Kerblam!" and episode designed to tell us how evil Amazon is as a company. The doctor has a time machine and can go anywhere, so she only goes to horrible things in our past to show us how bad of people we are. The writing was 100% woke Hollywood style politics. I feel strongly enough about these things that I'm about to give them each their own paragraph. The writing was horrible, there is ZERO character development, and there is a complete lack of story arc. She'd certainly be a casting that Doctor Who fans would surely be excited about, especially given her past experience with science fiction on shows like Black Mirror.This season was such a change from the seasons before that it wasn't even the same show. Current rumors about Michaela Coel taking the role feel just as valid as every other rumor floating out there, though there's no denying her star power would bring a spotlight to the long-running series. It would be crazy for The BBC not to consider her as a replacement for Jodie Whittaker, but can the rumors be trusted that she's most likely to take the role?Īs I've stated before, The BBC has done a great job of keeping the identity of the next actor to play The Doctor until just days before the announcement. She's a British internationally renowned actress ( up for an Emmy this year) with shows like Black Mirror, Chewing Gum, and I May Destroy You under her belt. Michaela Coel is another big name that's risen to prominence as a frontrunner in the 14th Doctor betting pools for Doctor Who, and it totally makes sense.
