I'm pretty sure it's playing on BBC America on Saturday, March 30, as well, so no bummer!![]()
But BBC America does have artificially inserted commercial breaks, so semi-bummer

I'm pretty sure it's playing on BBC America on Saturday, March 30, as well, so no bummer!![]()
Moffat has repeatedly said that he is targetting the show toward 6-8 year old kids(where have he heard that before?)
So how did we go from the author who brought us "The Empty Child", "Blink", the story in the Library, to, well, series 5?
Moffat has repeatedly said that he is targetting the show toward 6-8 year old kids.
Misquote or not, sabrinathecat is right: The show was getting truly dire during RTD's last years, but after an initial uptick at the top of Moffat's run the writing quality on the show has dropped precipitously again. "Sloppy" and "unfocused" are perhaps the kindest words that could be applied to it; phrases like "incoherent in its schizophrenia" and "mind-numbingly repetitive" would be more accurate. .... It's actually been impressive how much the sheer charisma and talent of the actors has been making up for some truly atrocious scripts, but there's a limit to how much rope I'm willing to feed the show. The 8 episodes remaining in this season is the last opportunity I'm giving Moffat to convince me that the show is still worth spending time on.
So how did we go from the author who brought us "The Empty Child", "Blink", the story in the Library, to, well, series 5?
Nagol said:What I'm finding is I'm beginning to doubt it's real -- not the literal sense, but in way The Prisoner wasn't real. I'm beginning to believe The Doctor is either screamingly insane or at least the last couple of seasons are a visualisation of his last dying hallucination as he dies in the Time War.