"For the first time, he heard something that he knew to be music. He heard people singing. Behind him, across vast distances of space and time, from the place he had left, he thought he heard music too.

...But perhaps, it was only an echo."



- Lois Lowry,
The Giver, Ch. 23

“What if we had ideas that could think for themselves?
What if one day our dreams no longer needed us?
When these things occur and are held to be true, the time will be upon us
The time of angels”

Doctor Who 5x04 - The Time of Angels

I'm not weird, I'm just very awkward

When you're a kid, they tell you it's all 'Grow up. Get a job. Get married. Get a house. Have a kid, and that's it.' But the truth is, the world is so much stranger than that. It's so much darker. And so much madder. And so much better.


Midget small, ultra blonde hair, blue eyed and fidgety.
I'm not weird, I'm just very awkward. The worst part of being as awkward as i am is that i know I'm doing it. I know I'm being irrationally awkward but i can't stop, it's something i swear that's been hardwired in me since birth!

If anything i'm a reader.
Weddings, school trips, family outings, family meals, birthday's and what have you, my mum would have to search and question me before such events. Because if she didn't, then the book would be hidden inside some pocket or other and as soon as whatever it was got under way i'd be found in a corner reading. That's just who i was. I'm not weird, i'm just very very awkward, i have suffered my whole life from being misunderstood, but I would have suffered a hell of a lot more if i had been understood....

-&-
Now back to the present, i'm 16 years old and slightly grazing the tiny height of 4ft 10 (yes, midget) i'm attending collage... And well lets just say it's rare now for me not to have at least a small book with me wherever i may go.
---

I will eventually grow up and live a life people approve of....(maybe) =P

Stephanie x


Sunday 27 December 2009

As David Tennant leaves the Tardis




Who's the greatest doctor of them all?
As David Tennant leaves the Tardis, there'll be tears before bedtime..

And so, the end is near for David Tennant as Doctor Who. He's fought the Daleks and seen off the Master and will be sadly missed by his legions of fans. Now, as he is about to face his biggest intergalactic challenge yet, he prepares to leave the series with a bang - and his own sonic screwdriver.

David Tennant may stand accused of being a big softie, but the reason for all the emotion is quite simply that the 38-year-old Scot, born David John McDonald in West Lothian, has, by common consent, been the greatest Doctor in the world's longest running television sci-fi series.

Nor will he be leaving the Tardis with a whimper. The first of a two-part final is scheduled for Christmas Day in the evening with the return of his archenemy, The Master, who is in a ferociously bad mood since being shot dead at the end of the episode Last Of The Time Lords in 2007.

Greater secrecy surrounds this Christmas special than does the origins of the universe, but last month a Children In Need trailer revealed that we can expect trouble after Tennant is summoned to the snowy planet of the Ood - a species of alien who (appropriately for Christmas) sports a turkeyish toggle on
the lower part of their face.

Final countdown: David Tennant, as the Doctor, receives a warning from the Ood
Doctors of the Eighties: Peter Davidson, Colin Baker, Sylvester McCoy and Paul McGann

Still, Davison was the Doctor Tennant grew up with, the inspiration for the 'brainy' specs he pulls out when faced with a knotty problem.

Davison even recalls that when he filmed the Time Crash episode with Tennant in 2007: 'He was a little in awe of me because I was "his" Doctor and I was a little in awe of him because he's such a great actor.'

After that, with the best will in the world, Doctor Who suffered an identity crisis with Colin Baker (1984-86) and Sylvester McCoy (1987-89). But by then the franchise was as wobbly as its low-budget sets. Not even Paul McGann, star of cult film Withnail & I, could raise much kudos for the Doctor in the 1996 film.

And yet, as everyone knows, Doctor Who can always regenerate. Many were sceptical before its relaunch in 2005, especially with Davies, a script writer known only for Channel Four's late-night series Queer As Folk.

But when Christopher Eccleston (2005) appeared with It-girl of the day Billie Piper it was clear that the Doctor had moved on and foresworn polystyrene monsters.

What we got in David Tennant, from 2006, was a combination of all of the best of all the previous Doctors. Thoughtful, scatty, intense, witty, boyish, vain, bookish, youthful and hip all rolled into one.

And Tennant treasures his time in the Tardis. 'I got to do so many more things than I ever imagined. Hanging off things, being blown up, being made up to look nine million years old. It was continually surprising.

'You see the impact the show has and the enthusiasm people have, but until you're in the middle you don't realise how all consuming it is. It's been an incredible time, a real privilege, actually, to be at the centre of something that attracts so much love and attention.


Modern day: Christopher Eccleston, David Tennant and newcomer Matt Smith
Stephanie x

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