Doctor Who: It's Not a Question, It's a Phenomenon

2. The Tinfoil Masters Are Gone

The original (1963-1989) program has been unfairly criticized for cheap special effects, when at that point in time, producers were doing the best they could with limited budgets. Now we have CGI, so the modern show can look as good as anything you'd see on TV, even the cinema. Luckily, since the Doctor is never stuck in one time or place, the story possibilities are endless; from Victorian England for a Sherlock Holmes-type mystery, to the court of King George, to the end of the world itself, even the end of the universe. But while there is plenty of action, it's not a boys-only club. Episodes like 2006's €œThe Girl in the Fireplace€ would appeal to you ladies greatly.
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I am me, essentially. I'm a 40-something year old college student, a father, and a photographer. I love Doctor Who and The Beatles equally, no matter how much people try to tell me it's not natural.