Rather than give the audiences a lecture, the writers have developed a simple shorthand for these temporal mechanics, with the Doctor offhandedly dismissing things as being a bit " timey-wimey." The phrase was apparently coined by David Tennant's Tenth Doctor in the classic episode "Blink," and in "The Day of the Doctor" Matt Smith used it as well - much to the disgust of John Hurt's War Doctor. Pack your sonic screwdrivers and your Jelly Babies.
You want me to believe that after Steve was done replacing the Infinity Stones (and Mjolnir) in time, he decided to jump farther back than 1970 rather than going forward. Are you goddamn serious Where the fuck does that year come into play So, fine, okay. Theyve had fans using SaveTheDay on Facebook Twitter and Instagram and then with the magic of the Time Vortex those posts and tweets are used to create a. It's usually used as a plot device, explaining how the Doctor wanders between different worlds and time periods, but every now and again a story shines a light on the temporal mechanics. Openers Shikhar Dhawan and Shubman Gill struck fluent unbeaten half-centuries as India raced to a crushing 10-wicket victory over Zimbabwe in their first One-Day International at the Harare Sports Grounds on Thursday. Also, Markus said, There are 2 Steve Rogers’ from 1948 to now.
Timey 2 wimey twitter commentary series#
The longest-running science-fiction TV series in the world, Doctor Who has been dabbling with time travel since 1963. Quite rightly, these rules are meant to be broken, because these are stories, not essays in temporal physics. In part, that's because time travel is purely theoretical, with no real-world analogue, and as a result every film and TV series that deals with it has to develop their own rules. Time travel is hard, and precious few franchises handle it consistently. This is why Im extremely vocal about this Johnny Depp. A Titan Comics tie-in explains the real origin of Doctor Who's "Timey-wimey" catchphrase.