The
above-presented meme posted on Kappit states that the Doctor tends to have more
interesting adventures in cases when he lands in places where he originally was
not supposed to land. This meme is rather incorrect because there are multiple
examples of episodes when even “planned” landing led to absolutely
unpredictable but intriguing chain of events.
While landing on unknown planets or
other locations and subsequent attempts of main characters to resolve
unexpected problems indeed play a significant role in plot of most Doctor
Who episodes, that is not a compulsory part of every episode, and many
episodes have interesting plot despite the absence of this peculiarity. For
instance, in episode, “The End of the World”, the Doctor and Rose successfully
travel to the year 5,000,000,000 to an event dedicated to destruction of Earth
by the expanding Sun. Nevertheless, despite being planned by the Doctor, the
trip still has unexpected consequences as robotic spiders begin to disable main
systems on a space station, threatening to kill everyone.
The necessity of an unplanned
landing as a precondition of an adventure is further denied in episode “Aliens
of London” when the Doctor and Rose arrive back to London to visit Rose's
mother only to discover that aliens murdered and impersonated few members of
British government. This episode demonstrate that even when the Doctor makes
planned trips to seemingly well-familiar and ordinary places, things can get
extremely interesting.
Similar pattern can be observed in
episodes filmed decades ago. For instance, episode, “The Androids of Tara”,
shows that interesting events might occur even when the landing was planned and
main characters managed to stick to their original plan. Indeed, the Doctor and
Romana successfully land on Tara. The Doctor feels so confident in the ease of
obtaining another piece of the “Key to Time” that even decides to go fishing
and allows Romana to go alone to retrieve the missing part. Everything goes as
smoothly as one could only expect, and Romana successfully finds the missing
part of the Key. Nevertheless, such a “perfect” beginning does not prevent the
Doctor and Romana from being dragged into a conflict between legitimate Prince
Reynart and his enemy, Count Grendel.
In conclusion, examples from
different episodes of Doctor Who prove that contrary to what the presented meme
states, the Doctor can experience extremely interesting adventures even when he
lands where he is supposed to and sticks to the original plan because
unexpected events can happen anywhere even in places that seem safe and
familiar.
“Aliens
of London.” Doctor Who. BBC, London. 16 Apr. 2005. Television.
“The
End of The World.” Doctor Who. BBC, London. 2 Apr. 2005. Television.
“The
Androids of Tara.” Doctor Who. BBC, London. 25 Nov. - 16 Dec. 1978.
Television.
“I
don't always land where I'm supposed to. But when I do it's not nearly as
interesting.” kappit.com, n. d. Web. 5 Feb. 2016.

Good job Ahmad. I think read your blogs is a kind of pleasure. No matter your format or your words is wonderful. You made a wonderful pattern for this small essay with Introduction, Body and Conclusion. All of these phases make sense. Actually I have trouble with this topic because I am neither a movie fan nor always watching movies or TV series. I searched all of my memories and finally got Mr. Bean. I don’t know my blog works well or not and I am trying to learn something from you. By the way, very nice work cited.
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ReplyDeleteWell done Ahmed. This does a good job of refuting the argument made in the meme. The structure follows the basic 5 paragraph model as well. There are some minor issues with the citations, but nothing glaring.
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