Tardis-Console
Timelord
Favourite Doctor: Eleven
Favourite Companion: Amy
Posts: 4660
Say it. Everybody does!
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« Reply #80 on: August 09, 2013, 11:11:47 pm » |
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A is for...
Astrid Peth
Astrid Peth was a native of the planet Sto who worked as a waitress aboard the Titanic. For most of her life, Astrid dreamed of seeing other planets. She met the Tenth Doctor when she broke a glass and he offered to help her clean it up. She refused. When he told her he was a stowaway and she offered to get him a drink on the house, he decided to take her on a teleport trip down to Earth
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My Series 6 Ratings (so far): TIA 10/10 | DOTM 10/10 | COTBS 8/10 | TDW 10/10 | TRF 9/10 | TAP 10/10 | AGMGTW 10/10 | LKH 8/10 | NT 4/10 | TGWW 10/10
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Iceman
Global Moderator
Faithful Companion
Favourite Doctor: The Doctor
Favourite Companion: Captain Jack Harkness
Posts: 1617
Hey, it's me!
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« Reply #81 on: August 09, 2013, 11:14:27 pm » |
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B is for.... Boobs. No? Ok. Brian WilliamsBrian Williams was the father of Rory Williams, the father-in-law of Amy Pond, paternal grandfather of River Song, and adoptive paternal grandfather of Anthony Williams. When River married the Eleventh Doctor, he became his grandfather-in-law.
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Nyki
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« Reply #82 on: August 10, 2013, 01:30:54 am » |
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C is for...
Cool
An epithet applied by the Doctor to various items of apparel, including fezes, stetsons and (most of all) bow-ties.
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Saber
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« Reply #83 on: August 10, 2013, 12:49:36 pm » |
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D is for....
Dinosaurs on a Spaceship
Dinosaurs on a Spaceship was the second episode of the seventh series of Doctor Who produced by BBC Wales. With this episode, a member of the Williams family is finally introduced by name, specifically Rory's father. It also showed how much more technologically advanced the Silurians were; they created the Ark to house dinosaurs and some of their species when the Moon was about to align with Earth.
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Iceman
Global Moderator
Faithful Companion
Favourite Doctor: The Doctor
Favourite Companion: Captain Jack Harkness
Posts: 1617
Hey, it's me!
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« Reply #84 on: August 10, 2013, 02:16:42 pm » |
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E is for
Exterminate
It is what the Daleks say a lot, and most likely the last thing you will ever hear.
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Nyki
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« Reply #85 on: August 10, 2013, 02:25:17 pm » |
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F is for...
Fang Rock
A rock off the south coast of England on which a lighthouse is situated. There was a legend about the Beast of Fang Rock, which was said to have previously either killed or driven mad the lighthouse crew. In about 1902, Fang Rock was attacked by a lone Rutan, aiming to create a base on Earth for their war against the Sontarans. In the course of a night, the Rutan killed the three members of the lighthouse crew and the four survivors from a shipwreck, but the Doctor and Leela succeeded in destroying both it and the Rutan mother-ship.
These incidents may have partly inspired Wilfred Gibson's poem Flannan Isle.
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Iceman
Global Moderator
Faithful Companion
Favourite Doctor: The Doctor
Favourite Companion: Captain Jack Harkness
Posts: 1617
Hey, it's me!
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« Reply #86 on: August 10, 2013, 02:27:05 pm » |
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G is for...
Gita Chandra
Gita Chandra was the wife of Haresh Chandra and the mother of Rani Chandra. She ran her own flower shop, called Bloomin' Lovely.
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Peri-Peri
Global Moderator
Destroyer Of Worlds
Favourite Doctor: Five
Favourite Companion: Peri
Posts: 8805
Circular logic will only make you dizzy, Doctor
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« Reply #87 on: August 11, 2013, 12:36:53 pm » |
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H is for...
Horror of Fang Rock
Horror of Fang Rock was the first story of Season 15 of Doctor Who. Graham Williams' three-year stint as producer of the series began with this story. It is the only time that the Rutan Host — the oft-mentioned mortal enemies of the Sontarans — have been depicted in a broadcast television story.
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It eats you, starting with your bottom
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Exterminate
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« Reply #88 on: August 11, 2013, 02:05:12 pm » |
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I is for...
Isomorphic controls
Isomorphic controls could only be operated by one user. One such device was the Master's laser screwdriver. The Tenth Doctor attempted to use it to overpower the Master, only to be ridiculed when he could not. At one point, the Doctor's TARDIS key was also said to be isomorphic.
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Nyki
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« Reply #89 on: August 11, 2013, 09:55:57 pm » |
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J is for...
Jethryk
Jethryk is the rarest and most valuable in the galaxy, and is the means used by two interstellar conmen, Garron and Unstoffe, to "sell" worthless planets to unsuspecting marks. Their attempt to sell the planet Ribos to Graf Vynda-K comes unstuck, though, and it turns out that the jethryk they're using is actually a segment of the Key to Time.
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The Doc
Administrator
Guardian Of Gallifrey
Favourite Doctor: Eleven
Favourite Companion: Donna Noble
Posts: 7316
@TardisSpoilers
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« Reply #90 on: August 12, 2013, 10:06:41 am » |
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K is for...
Kate Stewart
Kate Stewart, born Kate Lethbridge-Stewart and nicknamed "Tiger" by her father, was the daughter of Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart and his first wife Fiona. Like her father, she was also a high ranking member of UNIT
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Now and then, every once in a very long while, every day in a million days, when the wind stands fair and The Doctor comes to call, everybody lives.
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Tardis-Console
Timelord
Favourite Doctor: Eleven
Favourite Companion: Amy
Posts: 4660
Say it. Everybody does!
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« Reply #91 on: August 12, 2013, 02:06:47 pm » |
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L is for...
Let's Kill Hitler
Let's Kill Hitler was the eighth episode in the sixth series of Doctor Who and the first episode in the autumn half. It was, in a sense, the second episode of a two-part story, preceded by A Good Man Goes to War. Much like A Good Man Goes to War, it revealed much about River Song's origins, also dealing with Amy and Rory's childhood and how they became a couple. Additionally, it explained why the Silence had been trying to kill the Doctor.
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My Series 6 Ratings (so far): TIA 10/10 | DOTM 10/10 | COTBS 8/10 | TDW 10/10 | TRF 9/10 | TAP 10/10 | AGMGTW 10/10 | LKH 8/10 | NT 4/10 | TGWW 10/10
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Nyki
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« Reply #92 on: August 12, 2013, 04:25:30 pm » |
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M is for...
Mercy
Mercy is a small town in the American west. Its state is unknown, but it's described as being 200 miles north of the Mexican border, so possibly Texas. In 1870, its population was 81, having a few years earlier taken in the alien doctor Kahler-Jex, who successfully treated an outbreak of cholera and given the town electric lighting.
At that time, a cyborg gunslinger Jex had created as a weapon of war tracks him down and demands Jex be handed over. Jex is protected by the US Marshal Isaac and then by the Doctor and the townspeople, but eventually sacrifices himself to end the danger. Since Isaac has also been killed (reducing the population to 79) the Doctor persuades the Gunslinger to stay on as Marshal, a post he fulfils to this day. Mercy now has no sherrif or police force - just the Gunslinger.
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The Doc
Administrator
Guardian Of Gallifrey
Favourite Doctor: Eleven
Favourite Companion: Donna Noble
Posts: 7316
@TardisSpoilers
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« Reply #93 on: August 13, 2013, 09:00:16 am » |
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N is for...
New Earth
New Earth was the 1st episode of Series Two of the revived Doctor Who, and the middle of the "New Earth" trilogy also containing The End of the World and Gridlock. It featured reappearances of Cassandra O'Brien and the Face of Boe, and introduced a mystery surrounding the Face that would later be a major part of the overall story arc of Series 3. It was also the first BBC Wales episode to be almost entirely set off Earth and beyond Earth orbit.
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Now and then, every once in a very long while, every day in a million days, when the wind stands fair and The Doctor comes to call, everybody lives.
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Nyki
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« Reply #94 on: August 13, 2013, 09:48:40 pm » |
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O is for...
Ogrons
The Ogrons are a race that look a little like a cross between humans and gorillas who live on a planet on the edges of the galaxy. They're strong and tenacious but of very low intelligence and hire themselves out as mercenaries. They've served the Daleks on at least two occasions and seem terrified of them. They also both worship and fear an aggressive monster that lives on their planet.
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Sparky
Earthling
Favourite Doctor: Nine
Favourite Companion: Rose
Posts: 253
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« Reply #95 on: August 14, 2013, 12:17:28 pm » |
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P is for...
Patrick Troughton
Patrick George Troughton (born 25 March 1920 Mill Hill, London, England, UK – died 28 March 1987 Columbus, Georgia, USA) played the Second Doctor from 1966 until 1969.After he was cast, Troughton considered various ways to approach the role, to differentiate his portrayal from Hartnell's amiable-yet-tetchy patriarch. Troughton's early thoughts about how he might play the Doctor included a "tough sea captain" and a piratical "Arabian Knight" figure with a blackface, a grey beard, brass eye-rings and a turban. On "Pebble Mill at One", Troughton stated that this way, when his work on Doctor Who finished he could wash the blackface makeup off, shave his beard, remove the turban and eye-rings and then he would not get typecast because no one would recognise him. Of course this idea was rejected for obvious reasons. Doctor Who co-creator Sydney Newman suggested that the Doctor could be a "cosmic hobo" in the mould of Charlie Chaplin. This was the interpretation eventually chosen.
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Aneurin
Guardian Of Gallifrey
Favourite Doctor: Eleven
Favourite Companion: River
Posts: 5764
Formally River Song
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« Reply #96 on: August 14, 2013, 09:25:12 pm » |
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Q is for...
Quarks
Quarks were the robot slaves of the Dominators' galactic empire. Quarks were cuboid in shape with a sphere on top. Two spikes came from opposite sides of this sphere, with one on top. They were able to use their guns to kill directly, stun, electrocute, communicate and to power up objects.
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Nyki
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« Reply #97 on: August 15, 2013, 12:10:00 am » |
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R is for...
Rills
The Rills are an amonia-breathing species that look vaguely like giant slugs. They are at war with the human-like Drahvins, but are an honourable people who aren't vindictive to their enemies and show willingness to help them when they're in trouble - an attitude the Drahvins don't reciprocate. The Rills employ squat robot servants which they have no specific name for, but which Vicki nicknames Chumblies.
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The Doc
Administrator
Guardian Of Gallifrey
Favourite Doctor: Eleven
Favourite Companion: Donna Noble
Posts: 7316
@TardisSpoilers
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« Reply #98 on: August 15, 2013, 09:16:49 pm » |
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S is for...
Slitheen
The Slitheen were a family of Raxacoricofallapatorian criminals. The Slitheen were rivals and cousins of the Blathereen family, cousins of the Rackateen family and descendants of the Slavereen who were descended from the Changleen family, the earliest descendants of the Huspick Degenerate. They faced off against both the Doctor and Sarah Jane Smith.
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Now and then, every once in a very long while, every day in a million days, when the wind stands fair and The Doctor comes to call, everybody lives.
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Nyki
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« Reply #99 on: August 16, 2013, 02:18:24 am » |
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T is for...
Time Vortex
The Time Vortex is the medium through which a time machine such as the TARDIS moves in between dematerialisation and rematerialisation. Although it's never been clearly explained, the vortex is presumably a five-dimensional "space" that enables the time traveller to take a short-cut between two points of the space-time continuum, and it's home to the Chronovores. The Time Vortex is seen in various versions of the title sequence to Doctor Who.
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