The scriptwriters sure have a thing for putting cannon fodder in the way of the Blorgons, believing they will be sacrificed,
if only Blorgons could hit anything.


#dc#dc comics#batman#bruce wayne#dick grayson#dc fanart#batfamily#batfam#tim drake


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The scriptwriters sure have a thing for putting cannon fodder in the way of the Blorgons, believing they will be sacrificed,
if only Blorgons could hit anything.
Why dont you use they/them when refering to the inspector as a general entity instead of saying his/her or adjacent all the time? /gen
It's sort of 'canon' from the programme itself, but personally, I view each incarnation as singular rather than nonbinary. For the overall history of Inspector Spacetime, I can see the Inspector as nonbinary, but the writers don't seem to understand the entire concept of nonbinary people. (See 'The Tame Green Hither', for how the show runner/writer dealt with a nonbinary character.) Perhaps if the writers had nonbinary friends or family members, they would better understand what it means to be nonbinary and could write nonbinary characters that actually reflect reality rather than their interpretation that doesn't demonstrate what it's really like for nonbinaries.
For the fans of J.R.R. Tolkien,
the scriptwriters dropped ‘Mirkwood’ into the dialogue to provide a connection to The Hobbit, which included pixies.
While the show runners and writers love to focus on the Blitz,
the programme frequently returns to its roots: London, 1962.