gytrash:

River takes matters into her own hands and says, I’ll bring him back. It’s predestined. She sort of thinks, well, that’s it. That’s my man, and I believe it. I believe it’s true. ~ Steven Moffat

gytrash:

River takes matters into her own hands and says, I’ll bring him back. It’s predestined. She sort of thinks, well, that’s it. That’s my man, and I believe it. I believe it’s true. ~ Steven Moffat

In very fun and interesting ways…The big thing with the Doctor is that he thinks he’s…intruded for too long. Each time he tries to extricate himself, there’s another complexity that means that he can’t. Suddenly, she’s married. Her husband-to-be is dead, then he’s suddenly back again, he’s on their honeymoon, he’s dating their daughter. It’s complex and that’s what he’s always thinking: When is he going to get his exit? He has an exit strategy for all of these relationships, including Rose, whom he loved so much, because he knows he can’t hang around, he’s going to cause too much damage. In one of the upcoming episodes, he sits in this room and says, “I can’t keep doing this to them.” It’s too much, it’s too deadly.

Steven Moffat

(via angsturbatecate)


I always think of the Doctor, bizarrely, as the more human one. Because he’s sort of like, in my mind, an angel who aspires to be human. Whereas Sherlock Holmes is a human being who aspires to be a god.
- Steven Moffat

I always think of the Doctor, bizarrely, as the more human one. Because he’s sort of like, in my mind, an angel who aspires to be human. Whereas Sherlock Holmes is a human being who aspires to be a god.

- Steven Moffat

The BBC is guilty - and it’s frequently accused of this - of being too self-critical. Not the worst quality. Imagine if that light went out. Once the BBC goes, if it ever does, there will be nothing else like it ever again. There will just be Murdochs, and people like Murdoch. It will be horrible. How self-critical do we imagine Rupert Murdoch is? Or David Cameron, for that matter? Or Jeremy Hunt?
As self-critical as Mark Thompson [the BBC Director-General] and his BBC is, all they’re doing is trying to hold themselves to an unreasonably high standard. They try to make amends at every turn. That’s an incredible heart for a nation to have. You might think that’s foolish, you might think it’s unwise, but do you think it’s bad? Do you want rid of it?
We all criticise the BBC in the way that we all criticise someone we’ve lived with for a very long while. It’s not the first date anymore. It’s not even the first decade. It’s a long term relationship, and some of the romantic flush has gone… but we would all be weaker and smaller without it.
‘Doctor Who’ might just be the “most BBC show” that the BBC has ever made. It looks ridiculous, and yet it’s genius. The character of the Doctor seems like a madman, and yet he’s brilliant. The Doctor is what a madman looks like to an idiot, just as the BBC looks like a ramshackle, insane organisation, if you’re a twit. If you’re not, it looks like the most extraordinary place, the most extraordinary opportunity…
Nobody smirks when I say that the BBC might just be the soul of the nation, more so than any other institution, more so than parliament, more so than church. We place more faith in the BBC. It is magnificent. It holds everybody else to a higher standard just because it’s there - and I don’t think we’d know how to be British without it.

- Steven Moffat

(via iwantabadger)

the tardis turns into a girl, beat that for the doctor’s dream day!
— steven moffat (via fangirlsanonymous)
Reblogged from Fangirls Anonymous
lucasparaizo:

“If the TARDIS was a woman, he’d be very happy, wouldn’t he?”
Moffat was so funny on Confidential 6x04

lucasparaizo:

“If the TARDIS was a woman, he’d be very happy, wouldn’t he?”

Moffat was so funny on Confidential 6x04

His Doctor is, in the nicest possible way, completely unhinged. You think he might just forget to diffuse the bomb because he saw a nice butterfly.

Steven Moffat, talking about Matt Smith.

(via matt-smith-)

Maybe this isn’t new but it is my view: Doctor Who is a fairy tale – not sci-fi, not fantasy but properly a fairy tale. And I don’t mean Disney-style where the endings are changed and everyone lives.


Doctor Who is how we warn our children that there are people in the world who want to eat them.

— Steven Moffat (via triskaidecagon)
Children have a relationship with the Doctor that is really quite intense and personal. And they have a creative response to Doctor Who that I think is unprecedented. Children don’t just watch this the way they’d watch Hannah Montana or Wizards of Waverly Place. They actually make up their own monsters, make up their own costumes, design their own TARDISes. Some days—in extreme, slightly psychotic cases—they grow up and start running the show.

Steven Moffat, The Sound of Young America (via likeflint) (via triskaidecagon) (via awkwardzuko) (via thegallifreyian)

Examples: Moffat himself, David Tennant, Neil Gaiman. Can I be next? Hahaha!

(via circus-of-fancies)

Reblogged from Circus of Fancies
  • Q: Is there much difference between writing the Doctor and writing Sherlock Holmes?
  • Steven Moffat: I think the Doctor is more human. I think he's more playful, and more ordinary and more distractable. They are sort of opposite. The Doctor is an alien, a remote outsider, who aspires to be one of us. He likes playing around with us. And Sherlock Holmes aspires to be a Time Lord. I don't know how they'd get on with each other.