Where Every Scroll is a New Adventure
Cooking something up for a ninerose ficđŤŁ
THIS IS BEAUTIFUL âźď¸âźď¸BELONGS IN A MUSEM âźď¸âźď¸âźď¸âźď¸
the colours in this looked a lot better on my tablet...
The fact that he did this before sending her off, he thought this would be his last chance to even give her a forehead kissđđđ
This kiss
"A companion piece."
Yeah
they are so butch4femme coded. this is girls kissing. this is wlw this is my tragic yuri
ninerose <3
Happy Birthday Christopher Eccleston!
Ever since I found the theory that the 9th Doctors leather jacket used to belong to Fitz I can't help but imagine senerios where Jack mistakes a confused Fitz for The Doctor because he recognized that leather jacket.
Day Twenty-Two: Scariest Moment
Oh, a scariest moment that I like is the Gas Mask Zombies' cliffhanger in The Empty Child
(Remember when everyone was obsessed with these like 10 years ago?xD - I'mma do this, and I implore you to do so... And tag me in it so I can be nosy? Probably reblog them too lol)
Preferably Pictured Answers :)
Day One: Favourite Classic Doctor
Day Two: Favourite New Who Doctor
Day Three: Favourite Classic Story
Day Four: Favourite New Who Episode
Day Five: Favourite Writer
Day Six: Favourite Male Companion
Day Seven: Favourite Female Companion
Day Eight: Favourite piece of music
Day Nine: Saddest Moment
Day Ten: Favourite Spin Off
Day Eleven: Favourite Dalek Story
Day Twelve: Favourite Monster (Not villian, so any monster goes)
Day Thirteen: Favourite Villain
Day Fourteen: Favourite Master
Day Fifteen: Favourite Cyberman story
Day Sixteen: Favourite Friendship
Day Seventeen: Favourite Tardis Team
Day Eighteen: Favourite One Time Character
Day Nineteen: Favourite Quote
Day Twenty: Favourite Tardis interior
Day Twenty One: Write 'Doctor Who' in your handwriting and post it
Day Twenty Two: Scariest Moment
Day Twenty Three: Two Classic companion outfits you love
Day Twenty Four: Two New Who companion outfits you love
Day Twenty Five: What is your favourite regeneration
Day Twenty Six: Favourite planet
Day Twenty Seven: Your favourite sonic screwdriver
Day Twenty Eight: Favourite Christmas episode
Day Twenty Nine: Favourite companion's family member
Day Thirty: An episode/story you don't think is spoken about enough
(Enjoy)
Humans, Gods, and the Timelord caught between them:
AKA the beautifully optimistic view of humanity by a Time Lord
Nine says he would make a very bad God. Ten says a Time Lord with too much power would become vengeful.
Theyâre both right.
Time Lords are alluded to as very uncaring, very aloof people. By the Time War, they are apparently just as bad as the Daleks. The Doctor runs from them for a reason.
Because when they are Gods they are terrifying. But the Doctorâs terror always stems from too much emotion rather than too little. The end of Dalek is Nineâs darkest moment. He holds a gun on Rose while she is showing mercy because of the traumatic loss of Gallifrey.
Loss makes Ten in particularâŚfrightening. After losing Rose he nearly commits genocide again in the Runaway Bride.
The moment of Godlike arrogance in âChristmas Invasionâ where he changes the known future of Harriet Jonesâ tenure has devastating consequences, allowing the Master to come to power. Itâs a great reminder of what happens when the Doctor is given too much power.
The Time Lord Victorious is terrifying because it is the Doctor losing everything over and over after rebuilding himself twice.
For the first time, the Doctor feels like he is owed something.
But what is also terrifying is just how human the selfishness is.
âââââ
Of course there are moments when they are presented as Godlike that are purely heroic.
Tenâs in particular stand out against his almost unnerving humanity.
I love his âIâm the Doctorâ speech in Voyage of the Damned. Itâs clearly him doing the equivalent of psyching himself up before a game, because nothing he says is going to mean anything to the people heâs protecting. Itâs a short, simple moment holding so much weight.
Nine has a wonderful way of pointing out the best of humanity to help Rose discover space to find empowerment, just as Ten does for Donna. Nine does it for the couple in Fatherâs Day. Thereâs a wistful, non-malicious envy in his reaction to the magically mundane story of how the couple in the church met.
Ten takes this wistfulness and runs with it. Thereâs something so beautiful and so deeply tragic that he is the Doctor who chooses shoes meant specifically for running.
Thereâs this sense with Ten that he not only loves humanity, but desires to be human. From embracing certain forms of domesticity, to the devastating way he processes grief.
Obviously, he knows when he is weird, he also just doesnât care about social niceties. However, he might be a genius, but he doesnât understand every intricate detail of human experience.
Although itâs usually called out for comedy, itâs best utilized for drama.
Nine has that beautiful âIt was scared!â moment.
Sometimes itâs given less focus, and simply slipped into dialogue.
Nine calls humans stupid apes in high stress situations, and apparently he insults species when heâs upset. Even Ten, who is known to love humanity, also pretty regularly disparages them. In his first appearance he calls us monsters. He makes one-off comments disparaging humans in Rise of the Cyberman, Army of Ghosts, 42, Human Nature. and the Poison Sky.
Planet of the Ood is one of the rarer times that he goes out of his way to highlight human cruelty to Donna.
ââââ
Series 3 has lot of interesting moments.
In âSmith and Jonesâ he has a long scene which he (intentionally) pretends to be human. He creates this domestic fantasy where heâs got a wife and a home where he brings people round for dinner. Even more interesting is that this is his suggestion to âhelpâ the villain appear more human.
In Human Nature we see the Doctor literally become a human. He falls in love and allows himself to be a product of the times. His moments of heroism are supposed to be the Doctor leaking through, but are passed over off as âordinary humans being capable of extraordinary thingsâ. He also allows himself to be swept up by the environment as opposed to standing against it as the Doctor would. John Smithâs incredibly horrible treatment of Martha being the prime example.*
His stoic and remorseless punishment of the Family contrasts with his mostly sweet human persona. He tries to convince Joan that heâs capable of the same love and compassion but she disagrees. I agree with her, I think John Smith and The Doctor both want to be in love, John just didnât have all the emotional inhibitions that the Doctor does.
She also points out the Doctorâs failure to account for possible casualties just so he doesnât have to have more death on his conscious. Once again, I agree, this was a massive oversight on his part.
ââââ
Midnight. This episode is genius for so many reasons. It is the Doctorâs most dire misunderstanding of humanity, as well as the Doctorâs most personal look at being on the receiving end of humanityâs worse impulses. He begins socializing like a normal, if enthusiastic person. But once the mystery beginsâŚit is the best, most subtle example of the Doctorâs pathological need to understand things and his tendency to assume authority over others. Only this time he goes too far. His leadership turns to hubris. So many times, he goads people into risking their life to sate his curiosity. He knows humans are curious and takes advantage.
He keeps talking to the entity but declares no one else should. Part of it is that human bit, curious and wanting to help a possessed Skye who he bonded with earlier by talking about missing Rose. The rules keep changing though, and even he is scared. They call him out for his hubris, while growing increasingly paranoid, especially when discovering heâs not human. He gets frustrated at the descent into the worst of humanity and without thinking, he snaps âbecause Iâm clever!â
He knows what heâs done so impulsively: thrown away the last bit of goodwill he had. He canât talk his way out anymore.
And this is the most alone and most afraid the Doctor has ever been. Itâs the most horrific near-death encounter for him: his inability to be enough like the humans he loves brings the absolute worst out of them.
âââââ
The Doctor says that it something human to believe two contradictory things at once.
The Doctor, ironically enough, believes two contradictory things about humans.
He believes, at least when disappointed in them or in his lowest points, that humans are monsters. (Itâs the reason Fourteen gives that randomly cynical speech in The Giggle. It isnât all humanity he believes this of. Heâs talking to himself because heâs mid breakdown. Heâs not 10, heâs softer and more splintered).
But he doesnât believe that. Not really.
âI was made homelessâŚand there was the Earth.â - Voyage of the Damned
Thereâs a reason that the Doctor who has all of time and space always returns to Earth.
In the End of Time, Ten and Wilf have a scene where they sit and talk about their relationship and war and Time Lords.
And the Doctor tells Wilf heâd be proud to be his son.
Itâs the Doctorâs most intensely vulnerable moment. He is so terrified that he agrees to carry a gun. (He also does this to make Wilf feel better. This is the last era that I feel understands how The Doctor feels about guns. It makes sense to the character and the arc heâs on at this point and this point only. He doesnât even use it and ultimately wonât do anything against the enemies heâs facing).
This scene strips down the Doctor like no other scene. And itâs in this scene that the Doctor tells us the only thing you need to know in the end about how he sees humans. How for all he says otherwise, humans are the beings he sees as aspirational, the ones he, a Time Lord, looks up to.
Wilf says, âWe must look like insects to you.â
Ten smiles tearful but genuine. He shakes his head slightly. And he says:
âI think youâre like giants.â
Regeneration and Identity
I really l like way Christmas Invasion presents regeneration and how Rose and Ten in-universe seem to understand.
Harriet Jones says that Ten is âabsolutely the same manâ. Rose does not agree despite being in the scene.
She agrees that 10 is the Doctor, butâŚnot the same. She still loves him and sees the fundamental values being retained but she sees them as different.
She unequivocally says âyouâre so differentâ. Sheâs beaming when she says it, clearly not missing Nine but rather mystified by Ten. Itâs so subtle, (and a lot comes from Billieâs delivery) but even after accepting it, there is something alien about the process lingering.
Itâs why I donât fault her for being upset by the potential regeneration in Journeyâs End, itâs the same reason we all are sad to see a Doctor go.
Because the fundamental character traits that we love will be there (you knowâŚhopefully) but everything else will change. Their personalities and the ways they interact with the universe and the way they see themselves all changes. All the quirks and eccentricities that make up the characterization specific to one incarnation of the Doctor as a character, which are what we latch onto change.
We may like who gets tagged, whoever is now âitâ. But thereâs still a friend weâll miss.
This Doctor wears pinstripes and trainers, instead of leather and combat boots. He willingly wears a paper crown.
He is domestic in a way Nine would never be. He doesnât tempt Rose from a family dinner, he joins her at one of his own volition, then relishes in it while wearing a paper crown.
I do think this works particularly well here, because it feels like a character arc. It helps Ten feel like an actual extension of Nine. I think this why that it works for them to have the same TARDIS and first companion. It makes the change easier.
Nine was reminded of the beauty of living through Rose and humanity, and reminded ordinary humans that there was no such thing. I love the moment he has with the couple in Fatherâs Day for this reason.
Ten, in concept and practice, takes this love for humanity and runs with it. (Sometimes way too far depending on the writer. But thatâs another meta). Heâs more open with his feelings while still being deeply, deeply repressed.
Arguably, I think thereâs a moment he tries to learn from his mistakes with Rose. He tries to relay the happy memory of Christmas dinner to Donna before it becomes something else heâs lost. All of her other attempts at connection are shut down.
Later, heâs able to find some respite with Donna in series 4. Heâs able to live with his grief and heal for a bit. And he gives Donna a chance to realize that thereâs no such thing as an ordinary human.
Then he has to take it all away. All of the edges Donna had softened out, the self-confidence she built up so she didnât need to scream at the world to feel heard. Gone.
His best friend, just like the love of his life. Gone. And this time itâs like never happened at all.
Itâs the last important arc before Time Lord Victorious for a reason.
(itâs honestly more thematically satisfying to go straight to Waters of Mars after series 4)
Itâs why he comes to see regeneration as dying.
Itâs how we get from âAll I did was changeâ in Born Again, to âItâs like dying.â in the of End of Time
He just watched the identity of his best friend be ripped from her. Plus he feels emotions with more humanity than any incarnation. He feels the fear of identity loss like a human fears mortality.
(This was also before the Doctor had been given more regenerations, and post-war he was burning through them, and was over half through them, so thereâs an added layer there)
I never for a second felt he was âthrowing a tantrumâ in Journeyâs End.
I hate when people, including the in universe 11th doctor, say that Ten is vain.
I mean he is. Sometimes itâs done for laughs, but he is arrogant too. Usually itâs well-meaning. He does have more knowledge than anyone and wants to use that to help.
He might be a genius, but he doesnât understand every intricate detail of human experience. And to be fair, 11 is talking about the metacrisis, but even before Donnaâs fate, Ten has begun to project the human fear of death heâs adopted along with all the other emotions onto regeneration.
Journeyâs End is the end of a vanity trip. He is stripped down and deeply, deeply scared. And he is allowed to be. And he can react in an intense, emotional way.
There is no hesitation between the knocks and the resignation falling across his face.
There is no doubt what heâs going to sacrifice for Wilf no matter how afraid he is.
Because as intensely as Ten feels fear, it is nothing to how much he loves.
Itâs a popular fan theory that Ten is a regeneration made for Rose. I have mixed feelings about the idea that heâs âincompleteâ without her.
Thereâs also something kind of sweet about Nine wanting to become the pretty boy he thinks she likes or (if allowing himself to be self-loathing) deserves. Itâs only sweet because he literally has to change.
The Stone Rose novel confirms that Tenâs accent in-universe specifically came from Rose. Itâs a less extreme version of him being made entirely for her. Plus, itâs a cool sci-fi exploration of how humans pick up accents after long, continuous exposure. A very alien way to retain a quirk of human nature.
Thereâs something nearly Shakespearean and so acutely human about Tenâs arc. He loves, loses, grieves, heals, and makes new connections. He moves from âI exist for Roseâ to âI miss Rose and wish I could exist with her but Iâm also allowing myself to care about these other people.â Then he loses them. It drives him to unthinkable darkness, and by the time he claws his way into the light, it is time for him to die.
Is that arc any more impactful if heâs literally created for someone?
I donât know.
How Regeneration informs character
Christmas Invasion is off for Rose because the man she loves, the only person she knows that thinks sheâs fantastic explodes in front of her with a really vague explanation after she wakes up from passing out with her memories missing. She is scared at first because she reasonably assumes that this could be a threat. Sheâs encountered malevolent shapeshifters and dangerous teleportation rays fairly recently.
And now, thereâs this younger, flirty, seemingly happier man promising that he remembers everything, that swears heâs same man. Except this too-good-to-be-true man whispers seductively as he grabs her hand, and smiles like Casanova, and gives her the impression that he definitely dances and wants to with her.
Nine wouldnât do any of this even if she wished he would, but she knew he loved her, thought of her more highly than anyone she ever met. He loved her so much that a Dalek felt it.
Sheâs beginning to believe him but then he passes out.
âThe proper Doctor would save usâ is a weird thing to say about someone who woke up from a coma because you whispered help me. Itâs not a weird thing to say about someone who less than twelve hours ago didnât need to be asked to save people. (Obviously Rose still hasnât been told what regeneration sickness is because Nine gives a really vague explanation as itâs happening and Ten does explain it but not how to help him because he has ADHD and canât focus even to literally save his life)
This is also Rose learning the lesson that the Doctor is not a perfect hero in a practical way. She has by now learned about the Time War, about what he did, witnessed his dark rage in Dalek. But now sheâs seeing him physically vulnerable, having to take him down off the pedestal in a different way.
Heâs getting worse and aliens are invading and she doesnât know how to help him. She tries running away and saving the people she cares most for (which still includes him) but that fails. She then tries to use what information sheâs picked up even if it costs her life. Thereâs always been a hero in Rose. She risked life in Rose, Dalek, Parting of the Ways and World War III, she does the same now.
Then the Doctor returns and saves the world, with the same fierce protectiveness as Nine. And she doesnât have a smidge of doubt.
It used to bother me that he yelled at her for giving up on him, but in all fairness âCan you change back?â Probably deeply hurt his feelings, even if itâs hilarious now in 2023.
But sheâs leaving out an important part of the question.
Sheâs asking, âCan you turn back into the person who thinks I actually have worth? Who I know wants me?â
In the end of the Episode, she admits that her concern was that he wouldnât want her anymore.
It isnât until he gives explicit verbal confirmation that he still wants her to travel with him (something he hadnât done before) that she relaxes. (Ironically this is how the love confessions go for them too).
Because of Good Omens brain rot, Iâve been doing a Ninth/Tenth Doctor rewatch. And I was reminded of something I started to notice when I did my first ever rewatch.
The jokey attitude Rose has in the face of danger is a trait she shares with the Doctor, but itâs not something she picks up from him.
In Aliens of London/ World War III, Harriet chides her for making jokingly says something to the effect of how the Slitheenâs compression field works as a kind of weight loss program. This is the first time itâs ever been called out, but itâs not actually the first time sheâs done it.
In the first episode, while the Doctor is explaining the living plastic she makes a wry comment about all of the breast implants coming to life. Sheâs only known the Doctor for a few hours at this point. It goes completely unremarked on, but itâs there.
She does it in the Empty Child when Jack catches her in his transmat beam. Her voice is literally shaking in this one, both from physical exertion and terror.
The thing is, I think itâs a coping mechanism. I think Rose has learned to bury her fear behind snarky remarks and jokes, one she probably picked up to deal with her life on the estates, to deal with being belittled, to deal with her abusive ex.
The first time I really came to this conclusion was while watching Tooth and Claw for the second time.
During the episode, Ten and Rose have this little bet running to see if she can get Queen Victoria to say her âwe are not amusedâ line. Every time Rose does it, she is giggling.
Until she says it after the werewolf (this is a really strange episode even for DWâŚ) attacks.
After taking a second to be relieved at being alive, her face kind of drops, her eyes widen and glaze over a little bit. The line âI bet youâre not amusedâ is rushed out of her mouth and significantly quieter than she was a minute ago. The delivery is uncharacteristically monotone until the little emphasis she puts on the end.
She does this weird almost-smile like sheâs going to laugh even though she is patently not smiling. She does this small little head shake, her arms are tense.
Itâs a really unsettling moment, and it was this performance by Billie Piper is what made me start thinking about this.
Queen Victoria yells at her, and Rose immediately apologizes, wonât even make eye contact with anyone. She curls in and turns away a bit.
This moment always bothered me and it took me a few watches to really articulate why.
Rose is scared.
I didnât see it immediately because Rose displays fear in so many ways.
When she fears someone she cares about is going to leave her, (usually itâs the Doctor), Rose will lash out. This happens in Fatherâs Day, School Reunion, and Girl in the Fireplace. (The last one is so justified. Sheâs way more compassionate than I wouldâve been at the end of that episode). She also does this Fear Her (when Nina Sosanyaâs character continually refuses to watch her possessed daughter)
Other times, sheâs able to turn her fear into action. She does this in her very first episode, the series 1 finale, the Cyberman two-parter, the Satan Pit two-parter, and earlier in Tooth and Claw.
Sometimes, she runs. In Christmas Invasion, she is facing a world-ending threat without the Doctor for the first time. She canât do the heart of the Tardis trick again without ripping a hole in the universe.
Many times sheâll turn to the Doctor or her mother (who does her best but doesnât always say the right thing)
But sometimes she makes a snarky comment or tells a joke to convince herself and maybe others that it will be okay.
She uses jokes for this specific reason to cheer up the Doctor in the Satan Pit.
Because Rose is compassionate. To Raffalo, to Gwenyth, to the Empty Child, to Jack. To Cassandra and Flora and Elton. She even tries to comfort Reinette, who is condescending towards her and who the Doctor repeatedly abandons her for because she regrets antagonizing Sarah Jane last episode. (I mean Sarah Jane was kind of mean too despite being a grown woman and Rose only being in her early twenties).
Itâs the final confirmation the Doctor needs to realize sheâs possessed on New Earth.
She will allow the Doctor to sacrifice her without question to save people and shows compassion to a Dalek both before she knows what it is and after it proves to be capable of changing.
She will drop everything for her mother despite whatever disagreements they have, will bend the universe to keep her father from dying alone.
She will literally sacrifice herself and stare into raw time to save the Doctor.
A lot of people think that Roseâs character in s2 is not as interesting. While thatâs true, I think itâs more to do with the lack of interactions between her and Ten that arenât about their romance. Nine and Rose have interactions that challenge each otherâs morality. (Dalek, End of the World, Fathers Day, Unquiet Dead). On the rare occasions that Ten and Rose clash, itâs over jealousy brought on by Roseâs fear of being forgotten and Tenâs fear of committing, or feels like itâs in the shadow of his behavior with Reinette. Ironically, itâs their debate in Fear Her (a not great episode) that is one of the more interesting exchange of views that they have.
I wouldnât completely agree that Rose loses her compassion in the second season. I think some of her more toxic pre-existing traits are just brought to the surface. And her protectiveness does become selfish.
But series 2 dumps a lot on Roseâs shoulders.
Tenâs weird hot and cold demeanor is probably emotionally taxing too. She has a lot of inferiority issues, probably because of how sheâs been treated by her mother and others in her life. She frequently reiterates that she doesnât matter. You can see how much it means to her when Nine earnestly admits she saved his life in response to her nervous teasing and posturing. And you can see how crushed she is when he calls her stupid in a moment of anger in Fatherâs day. (An event that is partially his fault because he didnât explain the rules to Rose until afterwards) He immediately apologizes. (He does have that weird flirtation with Lynda but that is dropped just as abruptly as it starts).
The Tenth Doctor has this deeply frustrating set of episodes in series two where he is utterly awful to watch, and itâs after this that the relationship becomes the shallow, unhealthy, codependent one people remember. (I will expand on this in another post)
But itâs not even necessarily because of the Doctor that itâs hard for her. She says in Parting of the Ways that it wasnât even the adventures she loved, it was him showing her a better way of life.
The adventures, the death, those are what wear her down the same way they wear down Ten.
She is, at one point, told by literal Satan that she is going to die imminently.
No matter how cheerful an episode begins, the loss always brings something melancholic out of Rose, but also someone desperate to hold onto the person she loves and carve out some sort of hope for a future. Impossible Planet does this really well with the little exchange about getting a mortgage. You can tell both of them find the idea appealing, or would if the Tardis was on call for the occasional weekend trip and weekly visit to Jackie. Because Ten likes Jackie, likes having a family.
Because deep down what these two want is each other and to rest. Not stop, they never could do that entirely. Thatâs why, I think TenToo works well in Empire of the Wolf (I donât think itâs handled well in the actual show). Because they are still having new adventures with their daughter, just smaller ones.
So while Rose does have her flaws (selfishness, jealousy, a coping mechanism that is not always in the best taste). But sheâs 19, sheâs human. Sheâs allowed to and -as a character in a piece of media- should have flaws. I think they are what make a fundamentally brave and compassionate character feel like a real person. They make her more compelling.
(I want to do a later meta on Mickey, because Rose couldâve handled that better, but I also have issues with early Mickey. And it ties into some other stuffâŚso later meta.)
weâve all heard of twink death to dilf birth but i raise you dilf death to twink birth
Chirstopher Eccleston as 9
I miss the world before AI image generation
Secondly, I also miss the world where AI image generation was just incoherent blobs and obvious fakes
Thirdly, I miss when I had a spark in my eye
I love this so much đđđ
I just want you all to know that this is my opinion and i'm writing a review in which i am terrible at.
(EXCLUDING THE WAR AND FUGITIVE DOCTORS)
4th Place: Thirteenth Doctor
In my opinion tho, Jodie isn't to blame but the writers are. After seeing Flux, She kinda has some character development from what I see.
3rd Place: Ninth Doctor
Overall a very underrated Doctor, from what I heard many people seem to skip Nine and it's really sad because if Eccleston had a terrible performance then the show would've been canceled.
2nd Place: Twelfth Doctor
Yeah you might hate me, but honestly tho I quite like how he changed overall in his story, in S8 he's like anti emotional and then before he regenerates he hugs his two best friends for the last time.
At first I didn't like him at the start of S8 but at the end of S8 he's starting to grew on me, when S9 came in he had this cool uncle like personality that I found funny, and when S10 came that's when he's in his like full form.
Overall my opinion on him in a nutshell: S8 was like meh, in S9 I like him in some parts (Especially Heaven Sent), and in S10 you're one of the GOATs
1st Place: Tenth and Eleventh Doctors
To those who know about this account and this user, you already know about it.
To put it simply they're the Doctors that made me love Doctor Who. Smith introduced me since I watched him previously in The Crown, and Tennant made me love the show even more.
For Tenth, he's a practically a balanced guy, you did something wrong then you DID do something wrong, his love for pretty much everything, his personality, and his story arc.
He is the Time Lord Victorious.
For Eleventh, he's the emotional relief that the show needed after the overall drama of 10th's story arc, his child-like personality, he's like 10 without the romantic side, He really is a madman with a box.
So there it is, my terrible review/ranking of the New Who Doctors (excluding the War and Fugitive Doctors).
Again to clarify, this is overall my opinion.
Favorite Doctor Who quotes
Other people want Doctor Who to go back to it's roots by having the Doctor be a white man. I want Doctor Who to go back to it's roots by having the Doctor tell a Dalek to kill itself. We are not the same.
I wonât judge you based on your looks but I will however judge you based on your pjo cabin, toh coven, hp house, mbti personality type, favourite doctor, favourite season of ahs, favourite skam character, favourite tua character, favourite greek myth, favourite life series member, favourite book, favourite movie, favourite tv show, and favourite music artist.