I'm not a fan of the current Dr Who season.
Season premiere had lame aliens, weak special effects, and did very little for the greater story arc of the season. The bicycle thing was super cringy. And I couldn't understand half of what was said because of thick accents. Also, we apparently have three companions this season, and none of them are fun or interesting in any way.
Second episode was utterly predictable. 5 minutes in I called everything that unfolded over the rest of the episode. And why is the new TARDIS a giant beehive?
Notably, on
Rotten tomatoes 95% of critics are in favor however only 63% of the audience is positive. My guess is that no critic would be willing to ruin their own career by saying they didn't enjoy it, and thus getting bombed on social media about it.
I'm not sold on the concept. The main question I'd have is whether this is going to hit the core demographic that they think it will. My take on this sort of thing is that looking across 50 years worth of television and movies gives a pretty good idea of the types of things that are actually popular with women and hitting those points pretty much ensures you have a hit - that's behind things like
Twilight and
50 Shades' success. Meanwhile, women will also tune into to see a cute guy or two doing adventures, and guys will also watch as well which explains the phenomenal success with women of things like Supernatural or all those detective shows, despite, or perhaps
because of their male lead characters.
However, a small subset of women - the
9% of women who identify as feminists on the UK suveys think they know better than the 91% of women what those women
should like, so they push for "agendas" in media that's
already popular with women. Hey, maybe think for a moment that if only 9% of women identify with your ideas, and a particular show is already popular with women, then changing it in accordance with your statistically unpopular ideas might just backfire and turn more women off the show?