Donna: hang on, I’ll handle the diplomacy this time
Donna: *turns to large angry alien*
Donna: hello there you big fat bone-bag. this is My Fist, lemme introduce it to your-
Doctor: do you have any idea what diplomacy is
Aziraphale’s and Crowley’s discussions are interesting in Good Omens simply because their such utterly different approaches to them. Now I really enjoy Crowley’s points but right now I’m focusing on Aziraphale’s side because despite the several years he’s lived on Earth and the books upon books he’s read he falls back on one simple reason for everything that happens.
Ineffability,
And maybe that reason works sometimes. And it certainly does; it leaves just enough wriggle room, just enough doubt, that his opponent can’t definitely say that he’s wrong. After all, in Good Omens God is real even if He hasn’t been seen or heard from in a few millennia. Crowley can’t say that there isn’t a Higher Plan.
But what he does do is learn how to counter-argue the Ineffability reason.
It seems to me that at this point Aziraphale is using the Ineffable Plan as an excuse. It’s like hearing all the churchgoers out there when questioned about God’s existence or why bad things happen to good people they simply reply, ‘You have to take it by faith, that’s all.’ Take it be faith, take it for Ineffability.
Which of course leads to Crowley’s logical rebuttals. That’s the key difference, I think, when looking at their conversations. Aziraphale relies on the possibility of the Ineffable Plan, while Crowley has taken the time to learn how to perceive an argument on all sides and come up with a counter argument for everything the angel says. His reasons make sense, which only highlights how desperate Aziraphale’s Ineffable argument sounds sometimes.
Which just makes it all the more brilliant when he uses the Ineffable argument to run circles around Metatron and Beelzabub later on in the story.
Wriggle room always wins an argument. He must have learned it from Crowley.
The thing I'm most grateful about the DW franchise for is that it has taught me how to FINALLY spell 'twelfth' correctly.
My two year old niece has a cat named Jed, and now all cats she sees she calls 'Jeddies'.
I see Crowley’s ‘you idiot’ and agree it’s utterly heartbreaking...
But I raise you Aziraphale’s pleading, ‘Come with me’, is just as much.
How many times is this tv show going to make me cry, damn it?!?!?!
These guys are brilliant and my favorite Shakespeare to watch. Definitely worth the laughs.
I was looking through my old artwork and stumbled across this. I drew it over ten years ago now. God, her story makes my heart hurt.
M E R R Y C H R I S T M A S
The more I watch Peter Capaldi the more I NEED him to make an appearance on Broadchurch.
Preferably as Alec’s dad. Think of the drama. And the eyebrows. And the loud Scottish angry outbursts.
Chris Chibnall. For God's sake you need to give us a meeting between the Thirteenth Doctor and her daughter Jenny.