

Once there, I was intrigued to see that there was a selection of other science-fiction themed decorations, and on the spur of the moment decided to add a couple of the others to my collection: Fortunately, the ornaments came packed in a box from the Vancouver Art Gallery gift shop, so I decided to pay them a visit on my way home on Friday and purchase a replacement. However, I failed to grasp the fact that the ornaments were made out of glass, and as such didn't use sufficient care when unwrapping them at home. (Living on the edge with the last one, but they got lucky and bought one of the Dilbert collections that I don't already own.**) Which added to the scary, because it would be impossible to tell either way.You know, it's comforting to discover that if you talk about your interests enough, people will eventually get the idea and apply that knowledge where appropriate.* As an example, although I expected some sort of generic gift-card style present from my Secret Santa in our workplace holiday gift exchange, to my complete surprise I received two robot-themed Christmas ornaments and a collection of Dilbert cartoons. Even there, not every shadow was dangerous. The Vashta Nerada (flesh-eating shadow things) were explained as mostly lurking in forests as scavengers, and that the library was really exceptional. It implies that maybe some of them are unlucky Angels who got stuck in a place so populated that they're trapped forever. The middle of parks, fountains, the fronts of buildings. The end of Blink was just to freak people out, because it could, but if you think about it, statues are in places where people look at them.

Rose and the doctor go into detail explaining why noone would ever notice if the royal family were werewolves, though I would definitely not mind an episode about it. Can you tell I like typing "flying double-deckar bus"? Can you tell I can't spell "Decker"?Īnyway, those other things are kind of general and passive. It's like the third law of weirdness magnets- never shall the doctor and a flying double-dekar buss pass within a decade and three hundred miles of each other without meeting. It would just be weird to introduce Christina, leave her on the run from the police in a double-dekar bus, and then never have her show up again. It any good?) I think that this is one of those things that doctor is just bound to run into again- Like Captain Jack or the Zepplin dimension, or the bit about the bees dissapearing. While I'm not saying that this is spinoff-worthy on a Torchwood scale (which, by the way, I've never watched. They've got to leave room for both.Įdited 6th Oct '09 9:16:24 PM by DaeBrayk

Why yes, I *am* talking about that episode again! What do you know. What would be really sick is the sort of balance they had in "The Girl in the Fireplace". Making things darker, though? first I've heard of this. really did like the orange, but, you know. Oh, and of course, belated return of *the-angels-have-the-phonebox-shirt-high-five*. I also watched the Ninth Doctor Episodes, and they were pretty rockin. and no, I haven't actually got a list.) but seriously. new list-topper for my list of favorite episodes. Of course, I watched it coming off the awesomeness-buzz from "The Girl in the Fireplace" (by the way. "Love and Monsters" just broke the streak in a really amazing bang of "why did anyone ever think anyone would want to watch this crap". now, bear in mind that up to now there have been good episodes and great episodes, and episodes that were just mostly OK but worth watching. just watched my first official least favorite episode of Doctor Who.
