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Lucky Day tackles the modern misinformation crisis in grand fashion, but doesn't make the most of its characters.
This review contains full spoilers for Doctor Who season 2, episode 4, "Lucky Day." "Lucky Day" marks a notable shift in Season 2: It’s the first episode without Russell T Davies credited as a ...
At some point, Ruby crosses paths with the hunky Conrad Ward (Jonah Hauer King), a podcaster (potentially? Though this is ...
However, we should have paid attention to his actions as a child when he first met the Doctor. The phrase "lucky day" might be more unfortunately ironic than it seems at first. The child was desperate ...
Imagine then, my delighted surprise when “Lucky Day” doesn’t just get its politics right, but it does so with molotov cocktails in hand. It’s 2007 and the Doctor and Belinda land in London ...
Test your Doctor Who knowledge and play the fourth of our weekly quizzes recapping each episode. How much do you remember about episode four, Lucky Day?
Lucky Day' brought back Ruby Sunday to give her the work-life balance from hell: horrifying monsters *and* a shitty boyfriend. Lots of things can be terrifying on Doctor Who. Monsters, of course ...
"Lucky Day" is where the arc of the season comes into focus with nonlinear timey-wimey and a political edge. Doctor Who: Lucky Day is streaming on Disney+ outside the UK. Adi Tantimedh is a ...
"Lucky Day" lulls you into thinking this is another typical Davies episode of Doctor Who – Ruby misses traveling with The Doctor and finds herself at odds trying to live life on Earth without him.
Now we have, er, Ruby Sunday on a podcast. But of course, Lucky Day isn't really about Ruby Sunday, it's about how her time with the Doctor (and her personal trauma) are weaponised by online ...