Happy to Be There
In a distant future where all life has been destroyed by technology, Brendan, James and Nathan sit down with their friend Bjay from The Bjay BJ Game Show to record a podcast about a Doctor Who episode called Smile.
Notes and links
Anticipating with relish the final demise of X, we have decided to preserve here for posterity the Twitter exchange between Nathan and Mina Anwar that he mentions early this episode.
Nathan suggests taking a look at this — an aerial view of the City of Arts and Sciences in Valencia in Spain.
Brendan admits that he is a regular reader of Lance Parkin’s AHistory: An Unauthorised History of the Doctor Who Universe, which is an impressively quixotic attempt to harmonise all the televised stories, spinoffs and deuterocanonical material into one vast, sprawling ridiculous chronology. We thank him for his service.
James mentions how the phenomenon of social contagion was observed in a large-scale study conducted on Facebook in 2012. The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences published an article describing the results of the experiment in 2014, which makes it a plausible influence on this episode. Here’s a contemporary news article discussing the ethical problems with this experiment.
Grey goo is a kind of technical term for the possibility that everything on Earth might be consumed by rogue nanotechnology. The term was first coined in 1986 by Kim Eric Drexler in his book Engines of Creation: The Coming Era of Nanotechnology. It’s also the basis of Michael Crichton’s 2002 novel Prey.
Erewhon: or, Over the Range (1872) by Samuel Butler is a satirical description of a utopian society, which bans machines for fear that they might become conscious and self-replicating.
Follow us
Nathan is on Bluesky at @nathanbottomley.bsky.social, James is at @ohjamessellwood.bsky.social, and Brendan is at @retrobrendo.bsky.social. The Flight Through Entirety theme was arranged by Cameron Lam.
You can follow Flight Through Entirety on Mastodon and Bluesky, as well as on X and Facebook. Our website is at flightthroughentirety.com. Please consider rating or reviewing us on Apple Podcasts, or we’ll sneak over to your house next time you’re on holiday and replace all the walls with angry clockwork lego bricks.
And more
You can find links to all of the podcasts we’re involved in on our podcasts page. But here’s a summary of where we’re up to right now.
500 Year Diary is our latest new Doctor Who podcast, going back through the history of the show and examining new themes and ideas. Its first season came out early this year, under the title New Beginnings. Check it out. It will be back for a second season early in 2025.
The Second Great and Bountiful Human Empire has broadcast our hot takes on every new episode of Doctor Who since November last year, and it will be back again in 2025 for Season 2.
This week’s guest on Flight Through Entirety is Bjay Hobbs, who can be heard regularly discussing indie games with our very own Brendan Jones on The Bjay BJ Game Show. In their most recent episode, they discuss The Talos Principle (2014), a puzzle-based game that raises questions about identity, consciousness and religion. The episode Brendan mentions on Lost in Play will actually be out in a couple of weeks.
Brendan, Richard and Steven have just released another episode of their Avengers podcast The Three Handed Game. It’s the third episode of their triptych The Cool War, covering an early Season 2 episode called The Decapod, featuring Julie Stevens as Venus Smith, with a guest appearance by Philip Madoc, (probably) not in fishnets.
The Blakes 7 podcast Maximum Power started recording its Series D coverage yesterday; new episodes will be released in December.
And finally there’s our Star Trek commentary podcast, Untitled Star Trek Project, featuring Nathan and friend-of-the-podcast Joe Ford. Last week, they paid a visit to an idyllic bird person planet with deranged exocomp Peanut Hamper in an episode of Lower Decks called A Mathematically Perfect Redemption.
Episode 284: Happy to Be There · Recorded on Sunday 4 August 2024 · Download (58.0 MB)
Transcript
Hello, dear listener, and welcome back to Flight Through Entirety the only Doctor Who podcast made of pure soaring optimism. And of course, nerds. I'm Nathan. James. I'm BJ with an AY. And I'm BJ without AY because some little microscopic robots have turned it into 2 radioactive cinders floating about in Spain. Well, there's platform one, new New York, Starship UK, the Rings of Atkinson, the Planet Desolation, and perhaps even a spaceship orbiting Pacifico del Rio, all perfect places for a 1st date. But this time, the dates on an unnamed planet in the distant future where modern technology has risen up and killed everyone which is just the sort of thing that always happens if you don't remember to smile. So this is one that I hadn't watched for a while, and I don't think I had a very strong opinion of it. That's the same for you, I think, BJ, is that right? Yes, well, I went to go watch it yesterday, because it'd been so long since I'd seen it. And I realised I'd actually gotten halfway through a while back and hadn't gone back to it. So I found that was a little bit telling of the episode. But the reason why I thought this would be a good one to chat about is because it was this season that I started coming back to it a bit more and it reminded me more of the David Tennant and Christopher Eccleston kind of era. So, I mean, it is the 1st time Peter Capaldi's doctor has introduced a new companion to travel in the TARDIS. You know, he came with Clara and we already had a sort of problematic relationship with Clara. So he never just got to go and have fun. You know he never got to kind of show off. And so it's actually quite fun seeing him in that mode. And I think you're right. I think it is a lot like, you know, the tenant era. He gets to do that a couple of times and so does Smith. Yeah, yeah. I definitely enjoyed the banter between the doctor and Bill being kind of like a combination between Rose and Donna. Yeah. I just enjoyed her naïveness of it and just questioning and asking silly little questions and sort of giving him a little dig every now and then about it all, which is very kind of donner-ish in that sense. She really does a great job of kind of undermining him and puncturing him and asking questions that haven't occurred to any other companion. And we saw that last week and we saw it in that promotional video friend from the future, which we thought last week was fairly terrible. But it is the thing that Bill does, I think, more than anyone else. She's the one who realises that the seats are too far away from the console. She's the one who kind of threatens to steal a TARS off the doctor and so on. Yeah, so she's more the everyday person, again, trying to bring the people that were watching it back in the tenant era back into the fold of the casual viewer. Yeah, I think that's right. She's also arguably the 1st companion, since Martha, to not be or spoiler alert, end up as a complex space-time event. Well-ish.ish. Yeah. Yeah. So this is a really oddly structured episode. And the reason is that we get our 1st actual other person around about 30 minutes in. And so we get what is, you know, slightly longer, I think, than the 1st episode of, say, arc in space, where it is just the 2 regulars. We've got a brief cameo from Nandol, but he's a regular two. We get them just wandering around. How do we think that works? I really like it. You know, the characters that die before the opening title sequence are completely unconnected to our regulars, so they have no knowledge of them. They are just introduced fresh into this world, not knowing what's going on, and they have to solve the mystery, which is, it's sort of unfolds and they keep making assumptions based on the information they have and not quite getting it right. And then you can see the doctor working it out in his head and realising he has to get Bill the hell out of there because he, you know, like her life is in danger. Look, I really enjoyed this episode. I only had watched it twice on original broadcast. I watched it once and then I watched it about a week later, and I hadn't gone back to it since, but I thought, oh, you know, it was flawed, but, you know, it had some good ideas. When I went and rewatched it a few weeks ago. really, really enjoyed it. I thought, I mean, I liked in the Forest of the Night, flawed though it is. I do too. I think this is a better, a better script from him. And it does some really interesting things with technology and, and you know, like ideas. We've gone back to time and time again in the show, say, the evacuation of the earth because of the solar flares, but does it in a way which doesn't detract from those earlier stories and actually kind of expands on them and makes it part of a bigger, a bigger universe without really relying too much on, on that previous continuity. I really enjoy the story. Yeah, I've had take a drink, listener. I've had the Todd experience of this one. Um, which is I really didn't think much of it when I 1st watched it. I have the weird position where this is by far the season of Capaldi, I remember the most fondly, but if I look at my spreadsheet of scores, the average is actually the lowest score out of the 3 series. And I'm thinking because I haven't seen this season since original broadcast at all at all. So I'm thinking maybe some of my lower scores, such as for this knock knock, lie of the land and eaters of light may go up as I'm watching this. And certainly it went up this time. I loved the doctor and Bill. exploring by themselves. I remember at the time, I feel like a lot of people were very disappointed that Mina Anwar was in it so little at the beginning she's good thing, the one saying, just big smile. Mother's dead, you know, it's fine. And of course, we know her from the Sarah Jane adventures and previously before that, the thin blue line. There was a lot of her cutout, but watching it again now, it's like, no, you want that to be sure and punchy and shocking. And also, if they kept in everything, that pre-titles would have been about 7 or 8 minutes. It's actually a slightly odd pre-titles, isn't it? Because it's got an important role in the actual ongoing thing. We need to see Nardol and we need to see the doctor kind of escaping from Nardol. I mean, this is laying out the new premise for Beale, who has some idea of the premise because she's known the doctor for over a year at this point. And then we go to the planet, to the colony. And I actually tweeted Mina Anwar after this episode, just to say how great I thought she was, because she has to be kind of smiling but she has to be terrified and grief stricken all at the same time, and she's so good. Like, that's a really great scene. It's really very strange and kind of weird, which is kind of what we're going for. But I think she's wonderful and I think that's one of the best bits of it. Yeah, I agree. I think the 1st half of the episode's great. I love it. I love that we get to learn more about Bill and the doctor's relationship and how it's going to be moving forward right at the start and the intro to the show. I think it was a good strong start for sure. I think it's just once they get onto the ship. It sort of petered out a little bit for me and then when we get to the end, we'll talk about that. Yeah, yeah, I feel I feel sort of similar way, I think. I think a huge role is played by the incredible location work. Like the, just the extraordinary location work. And I think that if we'd been wandering around a small studio in BBC television centre one, It would have been nowhere near as interesting. This is television. It's got to be visual. So this is the city of arts and sciences in Valencia in Spain. It's in the middle of Valencia. It's in the middle of a city and you can see, see it on Google Earth and stuff surrounded by other buildings, but they've taken it out, put it in the middle of this barley field or cornfield from somewhere in England. Yes, yeah. Seamlessly, like just incredibly well. Like the way that they've constructed the location just looks amazing. The scene where the doctor and people go back to the TARDIS, and you've got the parts of the field that still have their tracks in it from them leaving the TARDIS, with the building out of focus in the background. Like it just looks stunningly great. And it's the sort of thing that Doctor Who has sort of done before a bit. I'm thinking the end of the gangers 2 parter has a modern building playing a space building. Can anyone think of anything else where this has been done? I don't think it's been done at this scale. No, usually, like, if it's being done. It's being done with a model in the background rather than a genuine location. Yeah. Yeah. They also go back to Uskmouth Power Station. Is that the spaceship? I thought that's what you were referring to. The paper mill. That's right. Yeah, I believe I believe the last time Doctor Who was here was possibly for either Sleep No More or the Under Lake, before the flood, two-part, I think it was sleep no more. And Jenna Coleman tells his story of Capaldi going wandering off when he's not needed for a shot and coming back completely soaked because he found a big red button that said, do not press, and he pressed it happened to be an emergency anti-chemical burn shower. So she was just plastered with water. Now, he got in real trouble, didn't he? He did get in real good costume and stuff. So he was, well, no, he was just cosplaying that scene at the beginning of New Earth. Could be that. Could definitely be that. But yeah, it's astonishingly beautiful. And as a dedicated nerd, I was checking the reflections in all of the windows to make sure that there weren't Spanish streets or a restaurant visible opposite or anything like that and they really nailed it. It just looks so incredibly good. Can we talk a little bit about the setting, because James said, and I agree with him, that there's some attempt, I think, to tie this into the beast below an arc in space and make it the same space catastrophe that causes people to leave Earth. But that does read very much like it's been added later to the script because we do talk in terms of it being the last group of human beings alive, and it looks like they left the earth because some catastrophic political problem occurred. It's actually one thing I wanted to ask you guys about because um the doctor does comment that um, he's come across the last of the human ships a few times in his journey. So I was wondering if there were episodes about that at some point. I don't know if you remember, but Matt Smith's 2nd episode is called The Beast Below, and it involves them coming across Starship UK, which is a big spaceship that contains sort of a lot of kitschy English memorabilia and stuff. Well, I mean, technically it's a bit of space rock on the back of a whale. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah. And in both of in both of those instances. And I think it is Stephen Moffat doing this. Stephen Moffatt inserts references to Scottish independence. Yes. Dashing. Scotland wanted their own starship in The Beast Below and the doctor says here that there's loads of new Scotland's around the place and they're all declaring independence from any other planet they've landed on. You know, we do we do get Rose asking the questions that no one else has asked before. And obviously she comments on the doctor's accent. And so we get Bill doing the same thing here. And she says, why are you Scottish? And he says, I'm not Scottish, I'm cross, which is definitely Moffat, I think. I don't think Frank Cottrel Boyce could say that without being cancelled. So Moffat gets to insert that line in. So I think Moffatt does do that thing that kind of inserts it into the wider universe for want of a better word. But I don't think frank cultural voice. aware enough to do that. And I think he wants to tell the story of the last humans arriving. And so you get that wonderful moment. And again, it's sort of 27 minutes in. It's quite late where Bill comes across the dead body of the old lady of sort of patient 0 essentially. And the book, the big history book, which is so great, isn't it? And you open it up and there's a screen. The big history iPad. Yeah, I'm getting missed vibes from it. And that does tell a different story. It doesn't seem to be solar flares or some kind of exogenous space disaster. It just seems to be things have got very terrible on earth. And again, you know, we're told it's the 1st earth colony or something like that, but then we're told it's 1000s of years in the future. So it doesn't really fit in with anything that we know about the history of Earth, but I don't care. And I think Doctor Who should do that more often. Just contradict people. contradict, get in and contradict some TARDIS Wakia entries, I think. I mean, yeah, it definitely doesn't tie in with, say, the arc or Frontios, let's say. It's not that human evacuation. But I think it is much closer to the beast below the arc in space in particular. If we're, say, 1000s of years in the future, say, around the year 6000, I think in the arcade space, Earth is evacuated sometime after the 30th century. So that kind of fits there. But again, it doesn't matter. I think there's enough clues for people who read Lance Parkin's history of the universe every one or 2 years, which is me, to fit it in, but it doesn't rely on that. You know, we're all familiar with the concept of colonisation and we're familiar with the concept that the earth may become an inhabitable, you know, and Frank Cottero Boyce has touched on that before in the forest of the night. Yeah. And I think this one is rather more successful. I have my problems with that story, but I feel like this historic cultural voice going, okay, no, I'm going to do proper space opera but talking about some of the same themes. Well, isn't that the whole point, like with Doctor Who, the past and present never really exists in a same status. It's always changing, you know? Um, so it's good that they're exploring different ways of telling the same stories that are similar because that's going to happen. If it's always changing, there's always going to be similar patterns happening and but different stories to tell of that. Yeah, I think so too. I think that's exactly how it should be. And there is a sort of butterfly collecting instinct that fanboys have. And they want to pin down, you know, exactly what's happening and where and stuff. And I think Moffatt throws them a bone. I'm assuming that these are Moffatt's edits to Cultural Boys script, but that's not really what the story's about, what the episode's about. Yeah. And, you know, like, in a couple of years time, Chris Chibnall will ignore this dystopian future of humanity for his own one, and that's exactly the show functioning as it should, I think. One of my favourite concepts in this episode is the idea of the emotional contagion of grief. I don't know whether it's at the same time as this or slightly before or after, but Facebook got in a bit of trouble for doing widespread experiments on their uses by promoting certain posts to the top of feeds in a whole range of people's Facebook feeds and seeing how the emotions that they were, I believe they were negative emotions, which is incredibly problematic. how those posts affected the friends in your friends list when they read those posts and how they how that emotional contagion spread. And it's, um, I mean, that's, that's got a lot of uh, um, ethical issues. But in this episode, like it's a really interesting concept to take that and show how it spread like a plague and how these robots who don't quite understand human emotions deal with that by killing everybody. So, in fact, the spread of the, those deaths is explicitly linked to the idea of virality, which is obviously an idea that comes from viruses originally, but does actually refer to things spreading online. And, you know, like even media things, I think we've got the right wing entertainment industry, which is rendering all of our grandparents kind of unfit for human companionship. But here I think, and there is something that I want to come to later is that this episode has a real suspicion of technology and in particular the kind of technology that teenagers or young people use, we will get there. But I also think that that scene where we discover the virality of it. And we, that's what we'd seen, isn't it? That's what that opening scene with Mina Anwar is telling us that the grief is catching, uh, because she tells, she's just speech with, with, you know, mum is dead, and her friend's sunshine is also dead. The whole, whole, all about the people are dead. Smile, you know. That emotional contagion study was 2014. So it could have it could have influenced this episode. And what's interesting about Frank Cultural Boyce is he went on a conference which was designed to bring together authors of science fiction with scientists to capitalise on current scientific ideas put them in science fiction, and that's actually where the Vardi get their name from. He met a professor, Dr. Andrew Vardi, who is an associate professor working in swarm robotics at a university in Canada. And after he wrote the script, he emailed Dr. Vardi and said, I've named the swarms of robots after you and Dr. Vardi was over the moon with that. We just never hear the same story about Dr. Dalek, do we? Salvador to his mates. But yeah, what you're saying there about emotional contagion, James of the science behind it. Frank Cottrell boys actually viewed emoji very favourably, he thought this is an evolution of language. This is a new idea coming about, and you can actually convey emotion more easily and readily than you can with text alone. Whereas Stephen Moffatt was baffled by emoji and said, I never used them, but Jenna would use them in every text and I didn't know what was going on. And you get those 2 voices in the program, you get Bill going, it speaks emoji. This is amazing, and you get the doctor saying, of course, that's what survives for 1000s of... What I find interesting is the doctor and Bill's emotional states influence each other as well. Yeah. And in a way, Bill's enthusiasm actually tempers the doctor's fear. Like when he's exploring the city by himself. He's really afraid, but as soon as Bill comes after him, he's all laughter and smiles and jokes again. There's also that wonderful bit which calls back to her 1st episode, which is when she's confused or doesn't understand something she smiles. And there's a moment where she's bemused by something about the Vardis and the emoji bots, and she smiles because she doesn't understand, and the emoticon her back lights up with a little smile. It's the bit, isn't it, just before she says, you are such a great tutor, which I just think is wonderful. It's so good. It's one of my favourite moments. And that thing that Moffatt hits on for her 1st episode is the thing that the doctor notices, that she smiles when she comes across something she doesn't understand and that's what attracts him to her. Seeing it there. And it's wonderful. Like, like, Pearl's face just lights up. It's terrific. Yeah, definitely. I love the energy she brings with that, the excitement of exploring new things, and it kind of makes you feel like you're exploring it for the 1st time again, because you guys have talked about having to introduce the TARDIS again and all of that in other episodes of beginning of seasons and this is cute. This feels different and she's excited and asks not 2 clueless questions so that she's completely stupid, but just fun in it and wanting to know and getting excited and yeah, happy to be there. Yeah. The show hadn't had this for a long time. Jenna is introduced in 2012 initially, isn't she? And then properly introduces the new companion the next year leading into the 50th. This is 4 years later. And this is the 1st time we get a new jumping on point with a new audience identification figure. Like, I think, you know, you just jump into Doctor Who with whatever's on when you start watching it. I think that it's a show that doesn't really need a jumping on point because the premise is so thin, not thin, but it's not complicated. But I do think that there is something about that regular thing of having a new person in and introducing them to the show and seeing their reaction, which really does lift the show. And you remember when Russell 1st started it back in 2005, he had no idea that he'd be saying goodbye to the doctor at the end of that 1st year and then goodbye to Billy at the end of the following year. This could have just been the show starring Christopher Eccleston and Billy Piper for years and then it stops. And he says, you know, we're not going to introduce the idea of regeneration. We're not going to do any of that until we have to. But it turns out, you know, he changes cast every year that he does the show and it works really well. It's a really good thing. And we have missed that with Moffer. You know, we had 3 years of Rory and Amy. We had quite a bit of Jenna, for whom the relationship with a doctor becomes an addiction or a problem. It's problematized in some ways. And so having this doctor just uncomplicatedly decide to take his new friend off into space, he's showing off to her. You know how he tries to impress her by saying, oh, I stole it. I'm kind of cool. stole it from you. Like all of that works so well. It's just tremendous. I think it's really, really good, it lifts the show in a great way. Yeah, my sister, she tapped out when Kapati came on board. She battled her way through the Matt Smith. Her doctors, David Tennant, and that writing. And I told her to get back into it from this season because it was more what she was used to. And so, and she really enjoyed it. Yeah, I think that this season is that, and it is, we talked a little bit about it last time, because Moffatt comes back for the final season, but he wasn't expecting to do it, and so everything's sort of tied up. There's nothing much up in the air. He knows he's only doing it for one year. And so he doesn't create a big complex puzzle box or anything like that. He just tells Doctor Who stories for a year with a companion who's just a normal person rather than a strange, you know, as Brendan said, I think, a complex space-time event. She's just a person. And it works terrifically well. It's actually a real breath of fresh air, I think. Yeah, agree. So, one of the problems I had with Frank Cottrell Boyce last time was, and it's the same problem, I think, or one of the same problems that Brendan has, was the children are overmedicated these days and should consider stopping taking their medication. And that seems like a particularly old man sort of point to make. And I have to say that I think that there is suspicion of young people and their technology, and I'm not entirely sure that it is all from Moffat, remember the line that the doctor says, where emojis have come and it's the utopia of vacuous teens, you know, we communicate via texting and emojis and that's how young people communicate and that's a problem. And I also think part of the thing, part of the reason why I don't think anyone's really on board with emoji as a way of communication is that the emoji bots emoji game is really bad. Like they're really bad in it. There are things that aren't emojis. like they look kind of a bit crap, you know, compared to actual emojis and and I don't know. Like, there just seems to me to be this thing. Like, like, Bill decides to take the photo with her phone. Do you know what I mean? We make a big thing about that. And it's kind of like we all take photos of documents and things that we want to see and we all do it all the time and why does it take bills so long and why is that a bill thing? You know, young people take photos on their phones and, and, you know, Bill's response to having the watch me call it. I think the doctor calls it. Does he call it a thingam bomb? Yeah, think about the thing about... Yeah, where the ear upgrade thing, which does get a role. Her response to that is sort of like a bit ridiculous, you know like, oh, I'll never have to recharge my phone again. My ear's just been invaded by some strange technology. I have no control over. I don't have to charge my phone. Yeah, yeah. And I kind of think that's a bit of a shame. Doctor Who, we've said before. It's not always, you know, up to the moment with the latest trends and stuff. And I mean, it's doing an emoji episode years after we've all been using them for a long time. Yeah, this strange thing that teenagers are suddenly into. And it seems to do a bad job of actually giving us a sense of what it is and how it works. My favourite example of the failure of those emojis is the fact that they think the pound's still going to exist. in what 10,000 years time. But I mean, there is that emoji with the dollar, isn't there? Is it like, is it money sort of? No, it's a pound. But I mean, in real life, you know. Oh, yeah. Yeah, with the tongue out, yeah. I just find it creepy that the robot's got 3 mouths when it does the smiley emoji. It's got 3 mouths and it's like, it just doesn't quite... No, it's like, I think it's kind of crap. And I'm not super sold on the actual physical robots themselves. They've got a cute pot belly and stuff like that, which I guess is a thing. I don't know. I don't know. They're a bit Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Disney movie Marvin. Well, I think that Marvin is great, actually, I have to say, that Marvin is pretty good. I don't think it's anywhere near as good as that But on a BBC budget. that's right. Yeah, we do have Quran Shah as the as the main emoji bot who had previously appeared as the creature in listen. And much like his contemporary, Deep Roy, has a long history. He, you know, he's a little person. He has a long history of playing the same kind of roles that say Deep Roy and Warwick Davis have played in the past. Like he was an e-wok. you know, all those sorts of roles you might expect. I actually quite like the robot designs. I feel like they're sort of a rundown version of the handbots from the girl who waited, which I loved and a little bit going right back. They're a little bit of a smaller version of the IMC robots from Colony in space, but you know, obviously you don't have to fit 3 people inside it, so it doesn't have to take up half the studio. The cleaners from Paradise Towers. I'm exactly... Right. You know, all these small robots. Yeah. And I think, you know, part of the thing of making them sort of 3.5, 4 foot tall is we automatically think they're on threatening. Yeah. And the doctor and Bill kind of go along with that as well. Bill adores the robot, but we've already seen what happened in the pre-titles. So is this basically episode 6 of the Chase? So that is actually pretty great. And there's no way that Cultural Boys is aware of episode 6 of the chase, although I may well be wrong. But the idea that you send the robots ahead to build the colony for you. I do think that, I don't know, maybe they're commoditized. Maybe you can just churn out 1000000000s of nanobots in one go because I think building a massive giant building out of them seems to be kind of excessive. I watched Waters of Mars recently. And I spent a lot of time thinking, how did they build this massive base for all of these people? They also have robots that made the base as well, but it's a line that's just papering over something that's clearly just terribly ridiculous. So I don't quite know why we decided to make the thing out of the emoji bots. I guess there's some good visuals that come out. Dramatic tension. Yeah. They could jump on you at any moment from any wall. I mean, right at the beginning, the ones that attack Kesia. you know, detach themselves from a sort of pile on the roof and they'd land on her. So I guess there's that. Yeah. It's one of the ideas that Frank Cottro boys picked up from that scientific conference he went to and talking to Dr. Vardi and Dr Vardi said, we'd send robots 1st and nano robots or something already well established in the new season of Doctor Who. And there is also the concept, and I can't remember who came up with it. But the concept of gray goo and the danger of making nanobots that can say break down at carbon into its constituents and reform it into something else is that eventually they'll start breaking down the planet to put it into something more efficient and you just end up with this sphere of gray goo. And so that was another idea that sort of informed him of, okay we're sending robots to colonise this planet, but it's Doctor Who. So what's going to go wrong? Yeah. I mean, Doctor Who has a history mostly in the new series of technology going wrong in a way that is just entirely preposterous and completely designed to produce sort of great visuals. And that's right from the beginning where people's faces are turning into gas masks and stuff like that in the empty child which is, again, nanopots go crazy, misread what human beings need by, you know, analysing little Jamie's body or something and then going viral and sort of creating this effect everywhere. And the show has helped itself to this quite a lot in the intervening period. And this is the 2nd episode in a row, in fact, where we've had technology getting out of hand, you know, wild future technology getting out of hand and affecting people and stuff and being the main thing. And I think that's fine. That's the thing that Doctor Who could do. And if it allows the sort of visuals that we get in this episode then I'm forward, I think. I think that we should talk about what happens at the end. So at 30 minutes, we meet praiseworthy, who is the little kid, and then soon after that, we meet steadfast, who's the chief medic, and chief med tech, med tech, chief med tech, quiet, right. That's got to be a Moffat thing taken from the ark in space doesn't it? And the thing that you said before, James, where the doctor's theorising all the way through about what's happening here, but getting it wrong and discovering that there isn't a colony ship on its way. It's already here. I have to say that my opinion was always that this is the pier where it all falls to pieces. Yeah, I agree with that. The storyline gets very thin from that point onwards, like to the point at one point. I rewound and went, did I miss something? Like right at the end. I mean, it makes sense. He worked out. The majority of it that the ships were coming, so we sets off the explosion without checking, I don't know, like just a few points in the plot that were very amiss. Where's his due diligence? Study before he does that. Well, actually, I think before we properly launching to how terrible that ending is. I have to say that there is a moment there, which I think is really good, but where Bill gets to realise that the doctor's not just the tutor, but that he is the helpline. Yes, that's right, that he's advice and assistance available immediately. You know, it's on the box. It does what it says on the tin. And that's a great moment, I think. And even the doctor's line where I've got a childish impulse to go and blow it up. It is pretty awesome. That is pretty great. And obviously he does get to reflect for a 2nd that he could have blown up everyone on earth. He does realise that he'd been a little bit premature. But I do like that moment because that is the last thing that Bill doesn't know about the doctor. She knows that he travels in time and space and stuff, but what she doesn't know about him is that he saves planets and she realises that that's what's going on. And I thought that was a great moment and I thought that making that the last big revelation, the last big thing that she learns about the doctor is pretty good. Saving it up to be a big dramatic sort of moment for her and a realisation in this episode is great. It gives that 2nd half of the episode a bit more punch that maybe it doesn't necessarily have with the ongoing plot of the episode. She mentions it a little bit earlier saying about him being the helper and he doesn't like being referred to as that and he says, I just happen to be here. But then it's, I mentioned again later at that point. So it's like, oh, that's interesting. It's, yeah. It sort of goes back to the beast below a little bit as well where you know, Amy convinces the doctor do the right thing by pointing out that, you know, when you're very old and very kind and you're the last of your kind, you go out and you rescue children and that's what you do. And, you know, for years, I've said, I have a problem with that because it relies on the doctor being stupid. Whereas here the idea is a lot more refined because the doctor's going off and doing this thing and trying to keep Bill safe and telling her to stay in the TARDIS, you know. So he, like he's learned from that experience. And so Bill throwing herself back into the adventure is it's an informed choice and it is a supportive choice of what the doctor's doing. It's not sort of butting heads and saying, no, like, we have to be on opposite sides of this. It's like, no, no, no, we are on the same side, now I understand everything that's going on. But yeah, I agree that sort of once the colonists start waking up things take a bit of a plot convenience turn. You know, it's kind of like we have to raise the stakes, so praiseworthy has to wander off without the doctor realising I can accept, without Bill noticing, I find much harder to accept because Bill is like, yeah, come with me down to the engine room that I know is going to blow up shortly. and then wander off. I have to say that I did like the way that the threat was that he was going to be the new patient zero, that he was going to discover that his mother was gone and then he was going to die and that was going to sort of start the whole thing through the new colonist. So I thought that was really good, you know, and the revelation that the little locket that the doctor had picked up from the arboretum or whatever, had a picture of him in it. Like, I thought that was great. But the episode relied on steadfast being a massive idiot for a start, didn't it? Like he's just going to go and fire on the things, even though he has to know that the entire colony is made out of them. You know, or only the shepherds knew that. That seems unlikely. Well, if he said tech medic, then he would know how to deal with these. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. That doesn't make any sense. And then the doctor just presses to solve the plot button and he presses it and it works. And then like, is there something political going on here? Because I think it's pretty thin. Because the doctor says, like every slave class in history, the Vardia, beginning to have ideas of their own. And so the doctor wipes their memories. so that the human beings and Lavardi are on equal footing and so they have to collaborate in the new colony. Do you know what I mean? So it's better for human beings to not have slaves, but they should have people they can collaborate with. But I don't know. Yeah, I, I, that's the thing I have a big problem with in this episode is the fact that they rely on a reset button to save the day because they've written themselves into a corner, probably. And these ascension beings and you've wiped their memories. Oh, the doctor does that all the time. No, I just I don't know. I just find that... Ask Noor Khan. Well, I mean, if they were human beings and they he wiped their memories and that would be problematic, right? Just because they're robots. They're sentient robots, like you are literally robbing them of their identity. But and the mere fact that they consider themselves under threat and they're going to retaliate, a rabid dog behaves like that. Do you know what I mean? Or a rat. Like, you know, so we've decided they're sentient, okay, because he looks at the emoji that are playing across its face and it's, so it's defending itself. All right, like, that's okay, but I'm not sure that's completely sold. And then we wipe them memories. I don't know No, so I didn't take it as I'm being sentuent at the start. I thought that maybe it happened after he reset them because I just thought it was bad programming that we talk about them not understanding the human way. They were actually trying to help. They thought they were helping by eradicating the sadness would stop other people from being sad. So it was more like a programming fault. So then when you wipe their memory. So that was where I was like, it wasn't quite clear as to where that was going. There is a line in that 1st scene where Kezia says who programmed this, like they shouldn't be behaving like that, who programmed this. So the idea that they've they've wandered off their programming or that they've learned to behave in this way without being programmed is there, I think. Does it make it cension? no, that's right. It's not quite, it's not quite salt enough, I think, is the problem with that. Yeah, like it's fair in the 1st scene, but it, it's not threaded through the pot enough and it doesn't quite hang together at the end with the, you know, they've developed sentence. That's why they're trying to kill you now, even though they were killing you before for your own good. Now they want to kill you because they think you're a bastard. You're a threat. I guess they just ran out of time with the plot as well because they spent so much time at the start developing the relationship with the doctor and all of that and the introducing the issue that I guess it was kind of a, and then they woke up. Yeah, like I have to say that I don't mind that too much because I did find the stuff with a doctor and Bill at the beginning. So much more interesting than what ended up happening. And so I don't think giving more of it to that plot. Like, I think they've deliberately, when Doctor Who restarts, I think it kind of attempts to tell a four-part story very quickly in 45 minutes and because TV has sped up and because we can afford to have more scenes, they're quite successful, I think, most of the time. But here we've decided to have the thinnest possible kind of science fiction plot going on, something that can be resolved by the doctor with the Sonic screwdriver in a 2nd at the end to give us time to meet Bill and the doctor properly. And I think that's a good decision. And, you know, like I could compare it to the end of the world where it's an insurance scam and the doctor solves it by reversing a teleporter and yelling at someone and that's really all that happens. So it's another one that where the plot isn't so interesting as the setting and the relationships between the 2 leads. It's a strange mix of thin sci-fi plot and high concept sci-fi ideas. Yeah. Yeah, I like it for the ideas. Yeah. And that's okay, I think. Probably. Some beautiful visuals. Do you know what I mean? Some interesting ideas, but essentially a plot that is, you know the we press the kill, so you take button and go on our way. I mean, admittedly, in my job, that's what I have to do. Anyways, I've got this really terrible problem with my computer. I know it's cliche, but you need to restart your computer. You need to turn it off and on again. And the problem goes away. I think we do have, as a sort of Bob Baker, Dave Martin problem of we have all these ideas, and how long do we have? Really about 25 minutes. Well, 15 minutes. Yeah. You know what? It's kind of like, I can see what they're going for. I don't come away from this feeling. that the ideas don't work. It's just like, oh, I think I think you just needed to workshop that a little bit more. And I think I think maybe it's the whole thing that Colin Baker talks about in his interpretation of the character in that the doctor does what's right and that's not necessarily pleasant or nice. And, you know, if there had been a little discussion between the doctor and Bill saying, you know, was it right to white their memories and the doctor just says, well, it's either that or everybody dies and this way everyone has a chance to start from square one and grow together because I think there's an implication that when Kezi is like, who programmed this? Okay, so no one's keeping an eye on these robots. You know, no one is supporting them asking them what they want. And now we're left with the situation at the end where it's like well, you've got no choice but to work together to ask what the robots want and to realise that they are more than what you created. I don't think it quite lands that. But sometimes I quite like a story where I'm able to go, oh, but that means, and da, da, da, da. sometimes it frustrates me to do that. But I'm less frustrated with this one than I am with some others. Don't you think the sequel is they come back to the planet and all of the humans are slaving away for their emoji bot overlords in a feudal system of, you know, renting a class, robots, exploiting everyone? Okay, big finish. Okay, well, it's funny you should mention that because the ship is called Erewhon. Yes. which is an anagram of nowhere, but it comes from a satirical novel by Samuel Beckett in the late 1800s, which was a satire of what a utopia would look like with Victorian values. And one and one of the inversions it does is people who are criminal or perform criminal acts are treated as ill. They're given treatment. They're given therapy, da da da, which I'm not denigrating that but people who are actually ill, who have sicknesses, illnesses. They are treated like criminals and locked away. And it's kind of like, oh, well, this is for the good of society because, you know, the criminals don't have any illness. It's not contagious, so we can treat them. But you're ill and you're contagious, so we're locking you away. And that was another, that was another germ of an idea from Frank Cottrell Boy. So it's kind of like, I feel like the idea of in the forest of the night was quite flawed and led to quite a flawed product, in my opinion. Whereas this one Frank's just like, I'm throwing everything at the wall. I tend to think that in the forest of the night is a bit better than this, and I think it's because the stakes are high, and it's because of that moment where Clara tells the doctor to go. You know, thank you very much for everything, but you can go now. We're saving you. And I think the, you know, in this sort of weird, very weird story. We get a sort of strange examination of the relationship between Clara and the doctor. I just can't hate that, I think. Right, I'm gonna say something controversial. I think that space babies, it does a better job than this, of introducing the world of Doctor Who to a new companion. Um, because... Don't tell Simon. Because, like, this has no characters in it either. Do you know what I mean? You've got Mina Anwar, you've got steadfast and praiseworthy, uh in space babies, uh, you have um, the nurse and you have Eric and Poppy. I think space babies, is more kind of, like, I like the sort of stately emptiness of the 1st 20 minutes of, you know, of smile, but it's not much like what Doctor Who is like, whereas we get a very straightforward base under siege story, I think, in space babies. It just happens to disguise the fact of how trad it is by having the main guest cast all be babies. This is the reason, like the reason you think that's better than this, I think this is better than that, because it does something different from what Doctor Who Often does with introducing companions, it's trying something different. like a lot of this season. Moffatt's been there, done that over and over again. And he's trying to do something different. I know this is not written by him, but obviously it's influenced quite a lot by his ideas for the shape of the season. doing something different with the new companion. I think makes this a lot more interesting. That's probably fair. That's fair. I just think it's sort of, Lord, it fails in a way that space babies does it because space babies is being made by Russell, who's written heaps of Doctor Who episodes and kind of knows what he's doing, I think. With this one, I enjoyed seeing Capaldi having fun. Like, I, he, that's the doctor I wanted to see after all those seasons of Matt Smith and the complicated storylines and all of that. and then having the impossible girl, Clara, and I was a bit disappointed going into that. But this kind of, it was just fun seeing him having fun and having a bit of a smile and he does that throughout that, I think this season. Um, yeah. I think we get the 1st kind of genuine, like a real proper Capaldi smile and remember that Clara used to tell him not to do that. Like, you just don't do that, please, unless they give you permission, sort of thing, like, don't do the smart. But the big smile where he and Bill kind of confront the robots. I think he's really great. I, you know, yeah. Yeah. And he's wearing his chill outfit too, isn't he? He's got a sort of red t-shirt and a hoodie and stuff. Like he is properly relaxed. Wait, isn't it in his very 1st episode? He talks about angry having angry eyebrows? Would you notice his emoji, the badge emoji has big eyebrows on it? Well, be the snow, that's all the time we have for this week. We'll be back next week for an important lesson about interacting with white supremacists in thin ice. In the meantime, you can find us wherever you get your podcasts and you can keep up with us on our website, flight through entirety.com, where you'll find our social media links, as well as links to all of our other podcasts, including our other Doctor Who podcasts, 500-year diary, and the 2nd grade and bountiful human empire. Bell, where can people find you? Okay, well, Brendan and I do a podcast called the BJBJ Game Show and so you can find that on all good places that you find the podcast, and then we've got some websites that Brendan will tell you about. Yep, so we're active on most social medias of choice, and most podcatchers of choice, and you can find that by searching for BJ AYBJ Game Show, and our most recent episodes are on the Talos principle, which took a very long time to play, far longer than we anticipated, and lost in play, which was delightful and took a lot less time. perfect. That's brilliant. Until next time, maybe you should consider buying your phone a nice new case for Christmas. Thank you very much for listening and good night. Good night. Good night. Ta-ta. That was Flight through Entirety, starring Nathan Bottomley, BJ Hobbs, Brendan Jones, and James Selwood. Theme arrangement by Cameron Lamb. This episode, Happy to Be There, was recorded on the 4th of August 2024 and released on the 22nd of September. If you missed us earlier this year, you'll be happy to learn that back in May, we completed a season of a new Doctor Who podcast called 500 year diary. So if you enjoy this sort of thing, and, of course, you do, head over to 500yearDiary.com and check it out. So, space babies or, um, smile, Brendan. I think I'm going to say smile. Not because I dislike space babies in any way. But no, I think I'm just going to say smile because I love that opening half hour of them wandering around by themselves. But something that I don't hear talked about much with space babies is as well as, you know, introducing the new companion to space travel and time travel. Something it does at the end is give the doctor a very obvious opportunity to go, oh, okay, this is, this is who I am and this is what I do because space babies has the doctor saving the monster. Just, you know, just like what happens here. You know, the doctor saves the emoji bots and arguably with space babies, the doctor doesn't have to change anyone's nature in order to save them. So that's possibly one area where there's been character growth since this one, you know, the doctor doesn't have to change the nature, he just has to understand the nature of the relationship. Um, and would I give up 5 minutes of Peter Capaldi and Pearl Mackey wandering around Spain for um, for a, a tighter resolution? No, I agree. No, no, I don't think I would. I don't think I would. It could have been more interesting. Yeah, look, I mean, it could have been it could have been better. I think it could have been better, but it's not the focus of the episode and he's just like, let's press the button and get this over with and that's a bit disappointing, but it's not the 1st Doctor Who story to do that, to be fair. Would it have been more interesting if they had never met the human colonists? Literally, like, they worked the entire pot out and saved the day and then revived them at last. And revive them and say, bye, we sorted out that problem for you just leaving the town. I agree with that. Yeah. If it had been just about those 2 for that whole episode, except for that very beginning, yeah, I think that would have been quite interesting. Yeah. It's hard to do, isn't it, without kind of manufacturing conflict between the 2 of them? Like, um, but I think people overstate how important conflict is to drama, I guess. And I do think that what ends up happening is it's the moment where she realises who he is, what his job is, and then decides to join him. I guess that creates the development, doesn't it? I mean, I, I, like I would have been sad to lose Mina Anwar at the beginning, but I absolutely don't give a shit about, about steadfast or praiseworthy at all. Very non-characters. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, yeah. certainly less interesting than Eric and Poppy. for sure. I think it's why, like, um, you talk about space babies and this one. I like the beginning, like I like this one with the character development, but I like space babies, I think, because just with the the topic of society saying you've got to have kids and encouraging people to have kids and not giving them a choice of whether they and not supporting them. Yeah, and then there's all these babies born with no support in the, like they just go, oh, it's born now and walk away from it. Yeah, yeah. I think that's why... Yeah, it does, it really does say that, doesn't it? I also, I like the idea too that, you know, both of our leads are abandoned children. And so the 1st adventure they have together by amazing coincidence is the spaceship that's run by abandoned babies. You know what I mean? Which kind of, which like the, it undermines it being too overwrought because the abandoned babies are so fun. Do you know what I mean? Because... I'm just impressed with how they did all that, with the animation and the hearts roaming around and they remote control. Yeah, I think they did. They had a lot of the 3D modelled like young kids. The kids that were doing the voices were... Emotion capture reference, weren't they? Emotionally controlled capture. And then mapped onto the baby's faces. I actually think it works pretty well. I mean, it is very uncanny Valley. It's supposed to be. I mean, because babies are weird. That's the other thing about babies is babies are weird and off putting and they sh everywhere and they snot. They're covered in snot. All of that stuff was brought up in the episode. Do you know what I mean? Just how weirded I've put it in. That Doctor Who is puerile. It's child. One of my favourite moments is Eric, with this little toy sword going down to confront the monster, which I just think is absolutely adorable because we tell babies what brave boys they are or brave girls and stuff. You know. I'm going to go and have a word with that nasty talking.
