Without spoiling anything, Toshiko will see her fair share of
interracial action too...

On Oct 29, 7:34 pm, Michael <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Short answer: Yes, maybe. Longer answer: They are suggesting a color-
> blind, gender-blind, species-blind utopian ideal.
>
> On Oct 29, 1:27 pm, "Steve Timko" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > At the risk of sounding racially insenstive, I have a question about the
> > three interracial couples I've seen on Dr. Who and Torchwood so far.
> > On Dr. Who, Rose was white and Mickey was black. No problem with that
> > casting (or any of these) and I think the actor who played Mickey did a
> > great job. Couldn't have picked anyone better.
> > Also on Dr. Who, on the bride Christmas episode, the bride was white and her
> > groom was black. I guess she comes back in later episodes (I haven't watched
> > that far yet) and I found it curious that they gave her a black groom.
> > Again, nothing wrong with that. Interracial couples are not that common
> > among people I know and work with.
> > And last night I saw the Cyberwoman episode of Torchwood. A white boyfriend
> > and a black (and very hot) cyberwoman.
> > So while I applaud the show creators for giving meaningful roles to
> > non-whites, I'm wondering if there's a bigger goal here with all the
> > interracial coupling. Dr. Who implies in the the first season that Capt.
> > Jack Harkness is pan-sexual, talking about how when humans progress they
> > breed with all kinds of species. Are the interracial themes an indicator of
> > the step in that direction?
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