Yes, suffering. Common typo, thanks. But it doesn't change my point.
Is it? I hadn't ever seen it before. Hence the confusion. Most of your typos were easy to figure out, but that one was new.
So was the scenario. In Martha's equation, we had the Master, who the Doctor out of extreme desperation was trying to save/spare at all costs. Even enough, that he was sort of putting the attempt to help him above the potential cost to humanity, Martha's family included.
Both Martha and the Doctor were trying to put their "family" first.
Ah, we appear to be talking about completely different things. I was talking about the Doctor's reaction to Rose versus his reaction to Martha.
In some cases, yes. Viewers saw enough that was likeable in Martha, that even if it wasn't fully fleshed out, with the intent to further her character later, there's enough to work with without fear of stagnation.
Some viewers. Others wondered if she'd ever get interesting.
Plus, it's adding something to the dynamic. Because her time with Ten and the experience she'll gain at Torchwood, her medical career is being utilized to include xeno-studies. That alone will add to the things she can do once she's beack on the TARDIS.
If she acts like someone actually interested in medicine on Torchwood, I would be thrilled. So far, she hasn't done much that anyone with a CPR course couldn't handle (I mean, I can diagnose a concussion and the best treatment for it and I only had high school Health). The most involved thing she's done was the 'bones of the hand' speech, which anyone with a good memory and a course in Anatomy could pull off.
With Rose... she had so much focus in her two years that she almost eclipsed the Doctor at various points. As I said earlier, nothing wrong with that in the beginning, because it was necessary for viewers to get to know the Doctor again through her eyes. However, by mid-second season, they were ramping up her family, closing off her relationship with Mickey, while playing up her relationship with the Doctor. The writers were trying to give closure and this epic build-up for her departure at the same time, that prior to the finale, she was stuck in a holding pattern that chipped away at the characterization she built in season one.
*tips hand*
Points of view. I felt an evolution in Rose that started in Rose and continued all the way to Fear Her (the pinnacle of her development as the Doctor's partner before their relationship underwent its possibly finale change in Army of Ghosts/Doomsday). You clearly disagree. I suspect we can both provide evidence for our feelings. It seems to be subjective to me.
Basically, they were making her romance with the Doctor the most important, defining thing to her that it becomes the "death" of her character and her defining exit. In order to create the saddest, most epic good-bye, Russel kind of capped-off her character a bit. In my opinion, he tied so much of her heart into the Doctor, that being seperated from him, ripped it out.
Well, Russell was writing a love story. Generally, in love stories, losing the person you love does rip out your heart. Doesn't mean that it won't ever recover, but it is very painful in the start.
It's ironic that, Rose has so much more creative material to work with in the Alt-verse, had Rusty allowed a spin-off, than she does in this universe.
It's ironic that she's been given everything she ever thought she wanted (before she knew the Doctor), but without him it lacks its shine.
no subject
Is it? I hadn't ever seen it before. Hence the confusion. Most of your typos were easy to figure out, but that one was new.
So was the scenario. In Martha's equation, we had the Master, who the Doctor out of extreme desperation was trying to save/spare at all costs. Even enough, that he was sort of putting the attempt to help him above the potential cost to humanity, Martha's family included.
Both Martha and the Doctor were trying to put their "family" first.
Ah, we appear to be talking about completely different things. I was talking about the Doctor's reaction to Rose versus his reaction to Martha.
In some cases, yes. Viewers saw enough that was likeable in Martha, that even if it wasn't fully fleshed out, with the intent to further her character later, there's enough to work with without fear of stagnation.
Some viewers. Others wondered if she'd ever get interesting.
Plus, it's adding something to the dynamic. Because her time with Ten and the experience she'll gain at Torchwood, her medical career is being utilized to include xeno-studies. That alone will add to the things she can do once she's beack on the TARDIS.
If she acts like someone actually interested in medicine on Torchwood, I would be thrilled. So far, she hasn't done much that anyone with a CPR course couldn't handle (I mean, I can diagnose a concussion and the best treatment for it and I only had high school Health). The most involved thing she's done was the 'bones of the hand' speech, which anyone with a good memory and a course in Anatomy could pull off.
With Rose... she had so much focus in her two years that she almost eclipsed the Doctor at various points. As I said earlier, nothing wrong with that in the beginning, because it was necessary for viewers to get to know the Doctor again through her eyes. However, by mid-second season, they were ramping up her family, closing off her relationship with Mickey, while playing up her relationship with the Doctor. The writers were trying to give closure and this epic build-up for her departure at the same time, that prior to the finale, she was stuck in a holding pattern that chipped away at the characterization she built in season one.
*tips hand*
Points of view. I felt an evolution in Rose that started in Rose and continued all the way to Fear Her (the pinnacle of her development as the Doctor's partner before their relationship underwent its possibly finale change in Army of Ghosts/Doomsday). You clearly disagree. I suspect we can both provide evidence for our feelings. It seems to be subjective to me.
Basically, they were making her romance with the Doctor the most important, defining thing to her that it becomes the "death" of her character and her defining exit. In order to create the saddest, most epic good-bye, Russel kind of capped-off her character a bit. In my opinion, he tied so much of her heart into the Doctor, that being seperated from him, ripped it out.
Well, Russell was writing a love story. Generally, in love stories, losing the person you love does rip out your heart. Doesn't mean that it won't ever recover, but it is very painful in the start.
It's ironic that, Rose has so much more creative material to work with in the Alt-verse, had Rusty allowed a spin-off, than she does in this universe.
It's ironic that she's been given everything she ever thought she wanted (before she knew the Doctor), but without him it lacks its shine.