kingdomofrains:

saviltride:

louie-t-seth:

Nine: no rose paradoxes are serious stuff DONT TOUCH THE BABY
Ten: okay fine we can have a few but be careful okay
Eleven: FREE PARADOXES FOR EVERYBODY HERE YOU GO AMY HERE YOU GO RORY FOUR FOR YOU RIVER SONG YOU GO RIVER SONG

And before that, we had Eight, who was like ‘well, I guess one little paradox won’t hurt…wait no, wait that’s not right oh shiZAGREUS ZAGREUS ZAGREUS ZAGREUS BYE EVERYONE I’M GOING TO AN ALTERNATE UNIVERSE’

OH MY GOD

(Source: egg-rolls)

doctorwho:

BBC Doctor Who Blog - A Beginner’s Guide to the Doctors

As the Doctor himself said on Trenzalore, he’s had loads of bodies. That’s because the Doctor is a Time Lord, and Time Lords have the ability to regenerate their bodies when they’re worn out or dying. This means that his old body transforms into a new one, along with a new appearance and persona – a brand new Doctor! But underneath these surface changes, he’s still the same man, the same hero and adventurer.

The series finale gave us glimpses of many Doctors, including the very first - that was the white-haired figure that Clara spoke to at the beginning of the episode. We saw the ‘impossible girl’ interrupt him as he was about to steal a TARDIS, advising him to take the time machine that he still travels in today. The Second Doctor was the man wearing a big, furry coat and the Third was behind the wheel of his trusty old car, Bessie. It’s clear that every Doctor has a distinctive look – tall and handsome, short and impish, old, young… All different! But what’s more exciting is their unique personalities and eccentricities - you can read more by following the links below. You’ll see that the Doctor has always been a hero, but in different ways in different times.

The guide shows the Doctors - click on any of them and you’ll be taken to a page that gives you the low down on that particular Doctor. What they were like, who they travelled with and what caused them to regenerate. If you want to find out more, simply follow the links to their stories and you’ll discover some brilliant clips from their adventures, galleries, fact files and much more. We’ll be adding much more in the coming months, but for now, here’s a guide to the greatest hero of them all: The Doctor….

Read now: BBC Doctor Who Blog - A Beginner’s Guide to the Doctors

Typical that in an episode which draws on a whole bunch of different EDA’s ideas, Lawrence is the only guy whose name is getting brought up. :-)

Just for the record, Lance Parkin was the one who first suggested that there may have been other incarnations of this person who didn’t use the name “Doctor”. “The Room With No Doors” was built around the idea that the Doctors would find what the seventh Doctor did so reprehensible that they’d lock himself away in his own memory. And in “Unnatural History” the Doctor’s lifeline becomes a scar woven through space and time, which the villain — dressed as a Victorian undertaker — is going to attempt to use to rewrite his life, until the Doctor’s companion (who he’s met before in a different version) saves the day by leaping into it at the cost of her own existence.

Stephen Graves had to point it out to us — we didn’t even spot it ourselves. Now Kate and I are whooping with laughter! We’re extremely flattered…

Cheers,
Jon Blum

Jon Blum posting on Gallifrey Base about The Name Of The Doctor - http://gallifreybase.com/forum/showpost.php?p=6843631&postcount=71 (via finalowen)

Introduction

womenofclassicwho:

[NOTE: Currently, this is considered a draft. If I make any significant changes, I’ll probably delete and repost to prevent confusion.]

The stereotypes of the women of Classic Who are many: they only exist to scream, twist their ankles, ask stupid questions, get rescued by the Doctor, and so on. It’s been written about and parroted so much that it’s generally accepted at face value to be true. And to an extent, it is true, because Classic Who on the whole is sexist, but it’s also a gross oversimplification. For every time a companion screams or twists her ankle, she also does something brave, or clever, or compassionate, something that shows that she’s just as capable as the titular Time Lord.

Women of Classic Who’s goal is twofold. First, we want to examine the feminist aspects of Classic Who: the ways female characters succeed in overcoming and even on occasion subvert the expectations we have of Classic Who companions. Second, we want to celebrate these moments. There will be meta, of course, but hopefully there will also be photosets and gifsets (with or without commentary) and quotes (from the show itself or from the people involved with it), a mix of original content and reblogs.

Rose is open, honest, heartfelt, to the point of being selfish, wonderfully selfish. Martha is clever, calm, but rarely says what she’s really thinking. Donna is blunt, precise, unfiltered, but with a big heart beneath all the banter. […] If Rose can be selfish, then her finest moments will come when she’s selfless. If Martha keeps quiet, then her moments of revelation — like her goodbye to the Doctor — make her fly. Donna is magnificently self-centred — not selfish, but she pivots everything around herself, as we all do — so when she opens up and hears the Ood song, or begs for Caecilius’ family to be saved, then she’s wonderful.
Russell T. Davies, The Writer’s Tale (via doctormaster)

(Source: thegirlwithmanynames)

  • Track Name

    Doctor Who Suite

  • Album

    TARDIS - EP

  • Artist

    Aviators

doctorwho-music:

darkenedflamex:

This is medley of Doctor Who theme songs by the band The Aviators. They normally do music based around My Little Pony, but sometimes branch off into other areas, such as this instance. The Aviators is worth listening to, even if you are not a Brony.

I will post the other two songs from the EP soon.

-Darkie

This group need more views pass it on.

Such an EPIC version of I Am The Doctor. Really great work.

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