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Doctor Whomage
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Doctor Who is a long-running British television series, having run for over sixty years. The Doctor is, of course, the character from the show and so has become a popular target to Homage or parody, especially since the Revival that began during the Turn of the Millennium. Homages or parodies of the character will usually include: Their Cloudcuckoolander nature. A title in place of a name. A Punny Name An English accent, usually RP, although a few doctors have had non-RP accents.Which?Two Doctors have had Northern accents, another two spoke in Scottish accents, and yet another has a Rwandan accent. An outlandish outfit, often combining elements of different Doctors' Iconic Outfits, such as long stripy scarves, multicoloured overcoats, symbol-spangled clothes and bow ties. Asexuality, near-universal fanon for the character for most of the series' run. Parodies commonly mock or subvert this characteristic. A time and/or space ship disguised as a random object, often a telephone boxnote Distinct from the original show's police call box or portable toilet. And of course, it's Bigger on the Inside. A propensity for time and/or space travel using said ship, and if they don't have that, they might use portals that somewhat evoke the door of the classic call box, if their method of travel is specified at all. May include a swirling vortex effect in homage to the show's time vortex. Even the Doctor Who Expanded Universe has a few Expies of the Doctor due to the funkiness of copyright rules for licensed Doctor Who material as explained on its page, not counting other time travelers who the Doctor has inspired. |
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Doctor Who (Titan): Twelfth Doctor has The Doctor finding an In-Universe comic called Time Surgeon loosely based on himself. | |
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Doctor Who (Titan): Twelfth Doctor (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
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The Star Trek Online mission "Sunrise" (which kicks off the game's Temporal Cold War story arc) is packed with Doctor Who references: time traveler Kal Dano arrives from the far future in the game's 25th century present day on a small ship that is Bigger on the Inside, with a roughly circular interior around a cylindrical console at the center. | |
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Viz did a parody called Doctor Poo◊ who travels all over time and space looking for a toilet. | |
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In Deponia Doomsday, a game all about time travel, Rufus ends up in Paradox City, where a diner hosts several time travellers, one of which is a doting, elderly man named Vince. Vince has white, thinned-out, but still fluffy hair and wears a light-grey hoodie, making him visually a combination of the First and Twelfth Doctors. His time machine, the "Retardis", is a green, pear-shaped box with noticeable similarities to German port-a-potties, which is "smaller on the inside". Rufus has to sit on Vince's lap and is noticeably uncomfortable. | |
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The Enterprise episode Future Tense involved the crew finding a Bigger on the Inside spaceship from the future with a dead pilot. This episode was originally intended to be a crossover with Doctor Who or at least of the time machine being shaped like a phonebox as a nod but these were scrapped for copyright reasons. | |
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Carry On Screaming! features Kenneth Williams as "Dr. Watt", who though a mad scientist on the side of evil, claims to be Who's nephew. | |
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Professor Chronotis from Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency is more or less exactly the Doctor — but then, Douglas Adams used his own Doctor Who scripts "City of Death" and "Shada" for inspiration. (Although the character who very roughly maps onto the Doctor's role in "Shada" is Dirk himself.) | |
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Community has the Show Within a Show Inspector Spacetime, which is basically just a bizarro universe copy of Doctor Who. Apparently within the Community universe, Doctor Who does still exist, but only as the less-popular ripoff of Inspector Spacetime. | |
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The Paranoia unproduct Vulture Squadron of Dimension X has a long, extended parody wherein the PCs crash their time machine into a thinly veiled Expy of the TARDIS piloted by an even less thinly veiled Expy of the Fourth Doctor, and then fight even more thinly veiled parodies of Davros, the Cybermen, and the Daleks. The adventure's finale is less a thinly veiled parody of Ghostbusters (1984) and more a carbon copy. | |
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The Time Lords become the Great Houses, who travel in Timeships (TARDISes) and are led by a War King who is clearly the Master. The Homeworld of the Great Houses was formerly defended by artificial beings called "casts" (Shaydes from the Doctor Who Magazine comic strip), and an attempt to produce semi-sentient casts created homicidal maniacs called "babels" (N-Forms from the Eighth Doctor Adventures). | |
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Faction Paradox is a Doctor Who spin-off that had to have the Serial Numbers Filed Off for copyright reasons. A Homeworlder (not Time Lord) called the Evil Renegade rather than the Doctor appears. The corpse of his final regeneration called the Relic is a major MacGuffin. The Time Lords become the Great Houses, who travel in Timeships (TARDISes) and are led by a War King who is clearly the Master. The Homeworld of the Great Houses was formerly defended by artificial beings called "casts" (Shaydes from the Doctor Who Magazine comic strip), and an attempt to produce semi-sentient casts created homicidal maniacs called "babels" (N-Forms from the Eighth Doctor Adventures). |
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Wizard101 has the Professor. This being a game that thrives on pop culture references, a list of similarities would make this entry disproportionately long. | |
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In the Shaun the Sheep movie Farmmageddon'', a clay version of the Fourth Doctor appears coming out of a port-o-potty, only to go back in once a sheep (in a Dalek disguise) goes past. | |
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A brief sketch on Sesame Street had Mando as "Doctor Two," with an Anything Muppet playing his regeneration. | |
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The Muppets Take the O2 had an extended sketch guest starring David Tennant as the Tenth Doctor (replaced by Peter Davison as the Fifth Doctor for the Saturday performance), who used a "regeneration chamber" to turn Link Hogthrob into a series of different Muppet characters portraying all 13 Doctors. | |
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Lady Aesculapius from The 10,000 Dawns is a time-traveling, dimension-traveling alien who changes bodies every time she dies. Her race, The Firmament, are basically Time Lords if they were Guardians of The Multiverse rather than Time Police. | |
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Ben 10: Alien Force and both its Sequel Series Ben 10: Ultimate Alien and Ben 10: Omniverse have Professor Paradox, who is very clearly modeled on the Doctor and falls more into being an Expy than a Captain Ersatz of him, although he has all the hallmarks of the Doctor, and takes inspirations from different regenerations, such as the fact he Doesn't Like Guns. He has a tendency to give out gumballs like how the Fourth Doctor does with jelly babies, his Chrono Navigator resembles a fobwatch like the one the Tenth Doctor carries (later taking the form of a gauntlet like Rassilon's), had his arm cut off like the Tenth Doctor did, and uses the phrase "spoilers" like Eleventh Doctor companion River Song. | |
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The Toon Ace Catalog includes the Ducktor and the Mouseter, The Doctor and The Master as a cartoon duck and mouse, respectively. | |
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Heroes for Hire: has Professor Justin Alphonse Gamble, an energetic, bizarrely dressed fat British man who pops up throughout the time stream, seen combating the Incinerators who wheel around shouting their name at everything. Late of the Time Variance Agency, his mode of conveyance is a disappearing shop which helpfully changes to suit the time period. Clearly based on the Doctor, with probable special emphasis on the Fifth Doctor (the incumbent at the time of Gamble's first appearance, circa 1982). | |
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Tom Davison from PS238 is a time traveller who's named after two of the Doctor Who actors. | |
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Being a British publication, 2000 AD has taken a crack at lampooning the Doctor several times. The Judge Dredd story "Doctor What" features a scientist by the name of Troughton Watt, being merged together with an illegal nano-cloud and a public restroom, granting him the ability to use the toilet to travel through time and begin meddling with it. Unfortunately, the timeline is much less robust than in the original series, and so Judge Dredd takes him down as a criminal. Virtually every name thrown in the story — from an illegal scientist to a pet rat — is after a character from the series, an actor, or a producer. Several catchphrases and common terms such as "companion" and "Geronimo!" are also liberally thrown about. In another story, Dredd arrests a hapless time traveler from the past, whose increasingly mutated and unhinged future selves then attempt to rescue him. In the end, they manage to stop him from travelling in time altogether, and are dressed as various Doctors as they do so. |
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In Milo Murphy's Law, Milo and Sara's favorite show is The Doctor Zone Files. The main character is a Human Alien with a British accent, Time Travel motif, and totally bananas fashion sense. He's got one foot in the future / And one foot in the past / He's got one hand in the present / Or at least in a gift-shaped cast. | |
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The Sarah Jane Adventures had a mysterious unnamed shopkeeper who could teleport and had time portals in the back of his shop. An article in Doctor Who Magazine said it was originally supposed to be The Doctor dropping off baby Sky with Sarah Jane but they used the shopkeeper when they had trouble getting Matt Smith. Notably Russell T. Davies likes to think he's The Corsair, a pirate-themed Time Lord introduced in the Neil Gaiman episode "The Doctor's Wife". | |
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The Sarah Jane Adventures | hasFeature |
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Dragon Magazine issue 100 had a full module called "The City Beyond the Gate", which had the adventurers travel to modern-day (circa 1985) London. Among the random encounters is one where the characters approach a blue police box. A "tall, curly-haired man in a floppy hat and a long scarf" enters, trailed by a woman who says "Doctor, what are we going to do now?" After they enter, the box slowly vanishes. | |
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Mutants & Masterminds: The Tick-Tock Doc of the Freedom City setting is the Doctor if he were a hippie, a Well-Intentioned Extremist and a likable Anti-Villain. His appearance in the Freedom City's Most Wanted source book is very obviously based off David Tennant. The Time Traveler's Codex source book has the "Quantum Alien" as a new character archetype, complete with "Quantum Spanner" that functions as a multitool, scanner and universal remote, "redundant organs", the "Rejuvenation" ability and a "Time Capsule" with the "Dual Size" feature. One of the suggested names is even "Professor When". |
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Unwinder's Tall Comics: In this comic, Barbecue Sauce is reading "some non-canon comic continuations of old, canceled, BBC science fiction shows". We get a closeup of the Professor Bluebottle comic cover, featuring a scientist hero in a goofy white suit, accompanied by two younger companions, squaring off against aliens known as the Dops. | |
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Dungeons & Dragons AD&D 1st Edition module WG7 Castle Greyhawk contained one level that was a parody of other popular roleplaying games of the time. In the room parodying FASA's Doctor Who Roleplaying Game (above) an oblong blue box appears out of nowhere. Out of it appears a halfling dressed like the Fourth Doctor named Professor Why, complete with two "absolutely gorgeous women" and an armored dog named B-9. The professor calls the blue box the CURDIS (Chronically Unable to Reach Destination In Silence). If the PCs enter it, they discover that it is Bigger on the Inside; if they leave in it (which they may do if they fail a save to fall in love with the companions on sight), they're never seen again. | |
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Fallout presents the opportunity to witness the TARDIS in a random encounter. It will warp away as the player approaches, but leaves a Stealth Boy in its wake. | |
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Arthur once featured a dog version of Doctor Who as a Show Within a Show. He was patterned after the Fourth Doctor and traveled around in a blue doghouse that was Bigger on the Inside and had a fairly-accurate central console modeled after the 1983-1989 version. | |
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You're Skitting Me has one sketch known as "Doctor Who Downunder" where one version of the Doctor regenerates into a teenage bogan, with his previous companion Susan now having to put up with his incompetence. He also uses a time travelling bike called a TARDBIS in place of the TARDIS, as well as carrying a Sonic Sausage Roll. | |
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In the Star Trek: Vanguard novel Harbinger, Cervantes Quinn mentions he stole a sonic screwdriver from "a rather daft chap" on Barolia. | |
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Endtown: Aaron Marx, a weirdo who seems unfazed by the apocalypse, has a variety of vaguely defined powers that seems to include dimensional travel, and the author has specifically stated he was modeled after the Second Doctor. | |
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In A Thousand Kisses Deep, Max is a kindly grandfather figure who befriends a young woman named Mia and takes her time travelling through a box shaped time machine (in this case a lift), and when meeting 10 year old Mia joking states that he’s Really 700 Years Old. Hilariously, David Warner did voice the Doctor years earlier in audio dramas while Mia is played by future Thirteenth Doctor Jodie Whittaker. | |
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The Rick and Morty (Oni) comic books have Doctor Tock and Peacock Jones: Professor Tock is a Hero Antagonist who travels through time and space with the mission of arresting those who abuse time and space. He looks like a cross between the First Doctor's elderly appearance with the Sixth Doctor's multicolored clothes, with the Seventh Doctor's hat and umbrella tossed in for good measure. Peacock Jones is an alien adventurer who travels across space in a magic elevator who seeks out female companions to take on adventures. He expects and insists upon earning sexual favors in exchange for taking them on his adventures. If they die, he immediately looks for the next sexy companion and carries on. This is a jab at how most Doctors have had at least one female companion at one point or another to accompany them, and the romantic subtext these relationships have often had in the new series. |
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The Exiles were gathered by the Time Broker, a being who exists beyond time and uses A Form You Are Comfortable With. The form the reader sees is a small balding man wearing outrageous clothing, possibly another reference to a certain Time Lord. | |
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Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_81692f99 | comment |
Star Trek novels; A man with a similar appearance to the Fourth Doctor makes a cameo in Barbara Hambly's novel, Ishmael with a companion being fought over by men implied to be Han Solo, Apollo and Starbuck. In the Star Trek: Vanguard novel Harbinger, Cervantes Quinn mentions he stole a sonic screwdriver from "a rather daft chap" on Barolia. |
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Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_8aa56f55 | comment |
Doctor Omega was a 1906 science fiction novel by French writer Arnould Galopin, and an interesting inversion before being played straight. Inspired by H. G. Wells' novels The War of the Worlds and The First Men in the Moon, it follows the adventures of the eponymous scientist Doctor Omega and two compatriots in the spacecraft Cosmos. In the original novel, Dr. Omega bears a coincidental resemblance to the First Doctor. In 2003, Los Angeles's Black Coat Press published an edition "adapted and retold" by Jean-Marc Lofficier and Randy Lofficier. In addition to other changes, references were added to imply that Doctor Omega was the Doctor from Doctor Who (Jean-Marc had previously written a few Doctor Who non-fiction books for the original series). | |
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Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_8b957d5d | comment |
Life, the Universe and Everything was originally written by Adams as a screenplay titled Doctor Who and the Krikkitmen. Slartibartfast from the original The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy novel shows up with his Starship Bistromath standing in for the TARDIS and fills the role of The Doctor with Arthur and Ford as companions. | |
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Doctor Whomage / int_92c4e485 | type |
Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_92c4e485 | comment |
The titular character of The Minister of Chance, who weirdly enough spun out of an official Doctor Who animation (see above). | |
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Doctor Whomage / int_95bfa795 | type |
Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_95bfa795 | comment |
Though not The Doctor himself, a certain (though legally distinct) Brigadier note Allysande Stuart is a recurring character in Excalibur, the leader of a UK-based government paranormal intelligence agency known as the Weird Happenings Organisation. note A character named Brigadier Alastair Lethbridge-Stewart also appeared in an earlier issue of The Uncanny X-Men (#218), though the two are unrelated, the latter being a straight Shout-Out to the fact that Marvel was publishing Doctor Who comics in the UK at the time. Only the throwaway nature of the reference kept the issue from being Exiled from Continuity. | |
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Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_98d2e5b5 | comment |
One of the patients in Saint Baphomet's in the first Secret Histories novel is a hand that's trying to regrow a new body. It belonged to a Time Agent who accidentally turned himself inside out the last time he regenerated. | |
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Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_9a7088bc | comment |
Gary Seven from the Original Series episode, "Assignment: Earth". He descends from a group of Transplanted Humans and was sent by aliens to protect humanity. Notable for having a similar Magic Tool called a servo that debuted on TV within the same month as The Doctor's Sonic Screwdriver. | |
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Doctor Whomage / int_9eddb2fb | type |
Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_9eddb2fb | comment |
Irredeemable has Qubit. In a comic series where most of the characters are expies of other superheroes and villains, Qubit is an homage to the Tenth Doctor in looks and demeanor. He has Messy Hair and a Badass Longcoat, and is a Non-Action Guy, Science Hero, and Squishy Wizard with the power to create almost any device he imagines if he has some tools to work with. | |
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Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_9f02efb1 | comment |
EverQuest added an NPC into its Seeds of Destruction expansion known as Tavid Dennant. If the nod to the actor isn't obvious enough, the character sends the players on a quest to help find his misplaced multi-colored scarf. He also misplaced a pocket watch that he can't recall who actually gave it to him, but feels it is an important part of him. This is a very specific nod to "The Family of Blood." | |
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Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_a047471e | comment |
The TARDIS materializes in the background of the first episode of Chelmsford 123 with a silhouette of a man who looks like the Fourth Doctor getting out and looking around briefly before getting back in again. | |
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Newt Scamander, the protagonist of Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them and Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald, has enough similarities to the Eleventh incarnation of the Doctor to be called an expy of him: similar haircut and clothes, has a Cloudcuckoolander personality, can't stand still and his briefcase he always has with him is "bigger on the inside", having an entire nature reserve where he keeps and cares for the "fantastic beasts" he discovers and protects from muggles and hunters. Even better — Matt Smith was considered for the role. | |
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Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_a892109f | comment |
FASA's licensed Doctor Who tabletop RPG, which came out in the mid-'80s, encouraged players to create Time Lords other than the Doctor, who would work for the Time Lords' special ops division the Celestial Intervention Agency (already part of the Whoniverse) and have human companions. The flavor text for the base game had a Time Lord named Stan (short for his Gallifreyan name) and an adventure called The Lords of Destiny had stats for the Professor and his companions. | |
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Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_aeaf3d1b | comment |
Sam Tyler from Life on Mars (2006), specifically the Ninth Doctor - a time-traveller, eccentric (by 1973 standards), speaks with a Manchester accent, sports a short haircut and wears a leather jacket. His surname also alludes to Rose Tyler, the Doctor's companion at the time the show originally aired. What a coincidence, then, that his actor, John Simm, would go on to play the Master in Doctor Who. | |
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Doctor Whomage / int_af878412 | type |
Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_af878412 | comment |
Deconstructed in Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania with Kang: he's without a doubt a scientific genius who not only figured out inter-universal travel but built technology that makes him damn near close to a Reality Warper. The problem is that despite his intellect, the complexities of the multiverse and time travel prove too big for him to properly manage, and he’s far too narcissistic to admit it, even when his hubris has led to the destruction of entire timelines. He does seem to think he has better ways of managing the time stream (and He Who Remains shows that it is possible to do so to an extent) but he is seriously lacking any kind of moral fetters to restrain his actions; he will rationalize any mistake or all-out slaughter he commits as The Needs of the Many so that he can continue to live out his delusion that he’s a put-upon Science Hero that just knows better than literally everybody else (even his own alternate counterparts) rather than what he truly is–a dangerously powerful and irresponsible rogue who believes himself The Hero. Coming off less like a Multiversal Messiah and more of a Space Satan. Ironically, this makes him resemble not the Doctor, but instead the Master or Rassilon. | |
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Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_b0cf0ed6 | comment |
Danger Mouse: in "Custard," DM and Penfold and a bug they've retrieved to help alleviate the flood of custard on Earth are in a pink hole. They come across a door; entering it, they emerge on Earth through "a time-traveller's potting shed." "The Hickory Dickory Dock Dilemma " has the heroes in a grandfather clock that takes them through time. They invoke Doctor Who when they find this out. |
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Doctor Whomage / int_b3e81703 | type |
Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_b3e81703 | comment |
Merlin in the space arc of Arthur, King of Time and Space is a time traveling wizard from the lost planet of Avalon whose time machine is accessible from a wooden door that appears in a random wall. It's especially noticeable when he's traveling with Morgan or Nimue. The webcomic's writer/artist, Paul Gadzikowski, is a long-standing Doctor Who fan. | |
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Doctor Whomage / int_bb8d2f1a | type |
Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_bb8d2f1a | comment |
Ford Prefect from The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy can be summed up as the Doctor, if he just didn't care. Douglas Adams (who worked on his first DW script before getting a job as script editor for the show) said he wanted to write a character who would react to a threat to the universe by looking for a party. | |
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The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy | hasFeature |
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Doctor Whomage / int_bcea8f7c | type |
Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_bcea8f7c | comment |
The Tick-Tock Doc of the Freedom City setting is the Doctor if he were a hippie, a Well-Intentioned Extremist and a likable Anti-Villain. His appearance in the Freedom City's Most Wanted source book is very obviously based off David Tennant. | |
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Freedom City (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
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Doctor Whomage / int_c2297a9c | type |
Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_c2297a9c | comment |
The Judge Dredd story "Doctor What" features a scientist by the name of Troughton Watt, being merged together with an illegal nano-cloud and a public restroom, granting him the ability to use the toilet to travel through time and begin meddling with it. Unfortunately, the timeline is much less robust than in the original series, and so Judge Dredd takes him down as a criminal. Virtually every name thrown in the story — from an illegal scientist to a pet rat — is after a character from the series, an actor, or a producer. Several catchphrases and common terms such as "companion" and "Geronimo!" are also liberally thrown about. | |
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Doctor Whomage / int_c3bbb7f7 | type |
Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_c3bbb7f7 | comment |
Although not from a Sci-Fi show, Raymond Reddington from The Blacklist is seen as being an Expy of the First or Sixth Doctor by some Doctor Who fans. The fandom of The Blacklist hasn't apparently noticed. | |
Doctor Whomage / int_c3bbb7f7 | featureApplicability |
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SciFi | hasFeature |
Doctor Whomage / int_c3bbb7f7 | |
Doctor Whomage / int_c4282b71 | type |
Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_c4282b71 | comment |
My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic has Time Turner/Doctor Hooves, who is Ponyville's timekeeper — a nod to the Doctor's role and time travel. However, he's a minor character, and is relegated mainly to cameos. In the fifth season, he gets a single Day in the Limelight episode along with other minor characters, "Slice of Life". | |
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Doctor Whomage / int_c43df4d8 | type |
Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_c43df4d8 | comment |
In a rather bizarre example, an erotic romance novel called The Stranger by Portia da Costa features an expy of the Eighth Doctor. The character named "the Stranger" has the same name as the actor who played Eight (Paul), and is described very similarly, including wearing an Edwardian frock coat and suffering amnesia. The heroine Claudia Marwood shares a surname with Paul McGann's character from Withnail and I (which is also referenced in-story), and speculates whether the Stranger might really be an alien. When Paul recovers his memory he turns out to be a doctor, though it's never more than implied that he's the Doctor. To make matters even weirder, this all merits a sort of Continuity Nod in the Doctor Who Eighth Doctor Adventures novel Father Time: the Doctor mentions spending time in England in 1976 with "a young widow named Claudia". Fandom speculates that "Portia da Costa" might be a pen name for the same author, which would make for a very strange case indeed of Ascended Fanfic. | |
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Doctor Who | hasFeature |
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Doctor Whomage / int_c62995ba | type |
Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_c62995ba | comment |
Child of the Storm's version of Doctor Strange, a nigh-immortal time-traveler, powerful Seer, a brilliant schemer, and a compulsive meddler, who gained many of his powers by contact with the Time Stone and works for the good of all, no matter what it costs him. He's also a Friend to All Children, with a reputation for making pop-culture references, exploiting his powers for his own amusement (often at the expense of those around him), and coming off as a bit of a Cloudcuckoolander, dress sense and all. This leads some to underestimate him, which is usually both their first and last mistake - he's also an arrogant and domineering figure, a ruthless manipulator who has a very well-earned reputation as The Dreaded, a taste for creative punishments, and a very limited capacity for mercy when faced with evil. Throughout the series, he's steadily guiding events to prepare Earth and its heroes to go up against Thanos, often through morally dubious means that lead him to sometimes sadly speculate that he's crossed into He Who Fights Monsters territory. For this reason, he's mentioned in his main counterpart's listings in Magic and Time Lord as the 'Time Lord Victorious' version of the character. Considering that the show is fiction in-universe, and Strange is very (sometimes bitterly) aware of the similarities, it all gets horribly and confusingly meta. |
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Doctor Whomage / int_c7ea10cc | type |
Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_c7ea10cc | comment |
During the Slott/Allred run of the Silver Surfer, he is depicted as basically the Marvel Universe version of the Doctor, complete with hero-worshipping contemporary-Earth everywoman companion. | |
Doctor Whomage / int_c7ea10cc | featureApplicability |
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Silver Surfer (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
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Doctor Whomage / int_ca6a68f1 | type |
Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_ca6a68f1 | comment |
In The Balanced Sword series, one of the enigmatic mentor characters who occasionally show up in the fantasy world of Zarathan is the Wanderer, a mysterious wizard who is known to be centuries old, reputed to be from another world, and has been seen with many different faces. In Phoenix in Shadow, he makes a dramatic entrance with a rhyming Badass Boast that's a direct quotation from a Doctor Who novelty single. | |
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The Balanced Sword | hasFeature |
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Doctor Whomage / int_d2391df6 | type |
Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_d2391df6 | comment |
In The Crew of the Copper-Colored Cupids story The Grand Multiverse Hotel, the Cupids mention they saw a time traveller with a bowtie who had blown up his reality, put it back together again, and later nearly blown it up again by trying to kill Death, referencing the Time Fracture. | |
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The Crew of the Copper-Colored Cupids (Website) | hasFeature |
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Doctor Whomage / int_d4263e4c | type |
Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_d4263e4c | comment |
Dr. Tachyon from Wild Cards. A heroic renegade from a race of haughty aristocratic Human Aliens, known for being a flamboyantly dressed Insufferable Genius Science Hero. Though he's a womanizer where the Doctor is chaste and a bit of a failure while the Doctor is fairly invincible, and his species is known for Organic Technology, not time travel. | |
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Wild Cards | hasFeature |
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Doctor Whomage / int_d69208d2 | type |
Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_d69208d2 | comment |
Codename: Kids Next Door has the Show Within a Show of Doctor Time, Space and the Continuum. It's rather popular among nerds, and the Amish chapter of the KND have to keep it a secret because they're not even supposed to have a TV or electricity to operate. Nothing is actually shown of the show, but dialogue indicates that the main character is a particularly intelligent character. Numbuh 1, Numbuh 4, and most other normal operatives find the show to be insufferable. The nerds will force people to watch it as punishment. | |
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Doctor Whomage / int_d8040caa | type |
Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_d8040caa | comment |
In Space Jam the Nerdlucks watch a basketball game disguised in a coat, hat and oversized scarf as a nod to Tom Baker portraying the Fourth Doctor. | |
Doctor Whomage / int_d8040caa | featureApplicability |
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Space Jam | hasFeature |
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Doctor Whomage / int_de23f447 | type |
Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_de23f447 | comment |
Titus Crow has been compared to The Doctor due to travelling through time and space in the Bigger on the Inside De Marigny's Clock. Brian Lumley argued back that the clock was taken from the H. P. Lovecraft story, "Through the Gates of the Silver Key" where an alien wizard uses a clock as a spaceship. | |
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Titus Crow | hasFeature |
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Doctor Whomage / int_e03940f | type |
Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_e03940f | comment |
The Italian Mickey Mouse story "Mickey Mouse and the Chase between Ages" features Mickey and Goofy meeting during one of their usual time travels a man called "The Engineer" who owns a time travelling schoolbus and is obsessed with bowties and fezzes. The story was originally supposed to be published to coincide with the 50th anniversary of Doctor Who (which explains why the Doctor parody is heavily based on Matt Smith's portrayal), but due to Executive Meddling they didn't manage to publish it in time and came out only four years later. | |
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Doctor Whomage / int_e1886e7a | type |
Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_e1886e7a | comment |
DragonFable has Doctor When, who is practically one giant love letter to The Doctor. His outfit is a combination of the Tenth Doctor's suit and the Eleventh Doctor's bowtie. He travels around in a TARDIS-like phone box called a time-booth that's "smaller on the inside", and uses what looks like the sonic screwdriver as a weapon. When defeated he regenerates into a new form. In Book 3, the Hero decides to simply call him "Doctor" after some punny confusion over his name. | |
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Doctor Whomage / int_e5c5bc22 | type |
Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_e5c5bc22 | comment |
Illuminati University in the GURPS supplement IOU has the College of Temporal Happenstance, Ultimate Lies, and Historical Undertakings (CTHULHU), whose dean is Doctor What7 (the number's because there are seven different versions of him from different parts of the timestream, matching how many incarnations of the Doctor there were at the time of publication). The version(s) in the book's art look like black Fourth Doctors. They use a blue portable toilet with a light on top as their home and office - the Temporally Oscillating Interdimensional Lift with Endochronosynclastic Tendencies, or TOILET for short. | |
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Doctor Whomage / int_ea05d091 | type |
Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_ea05d091 | comment |
EverQuest II features an NPC during the Tinkerfest celebration: a gnome by the name of Professor Andipholitz Whatzzit, more commonly known as Professor What. He wears an unusually long scarf (for a gnome) and is interested in learning history about the city of Ak'Anon from before clockworks took it over. He is accompanied by his companion, Rosealyn, who offers a quest to advance her own studies into history. | |
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EverQuest II / Videogame | hasFeature |
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Doctor Whomage / int_ea4f62db | type |
Doctor Whomage | |
Doctor Whomage / int_ea4f62db | comment |
British Family Guy clone Full English had a future Jamie Oliver in a phonebox time machine. He had shades of Rufus from Bill & Ted in that he helped the teenage protagonists to pass a history exam by taking them at gunpoint to watch various people have sex in the past. | |
Doctor Whomage / int_ea4f62db | featureApplicability |
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Family Guy | hasFeature |
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Doctor Whomage / int_ea603891 | type |
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Calum P Cameron, creator of the Mediochre Q Seth Series, says the titular protagonist is a composite of The Doctor, Indiana Jones and Skulduggery Pleasant. | |
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Iris Wildthyme was originally a Distaff Counterpart parody of The Doctor, who later got Canon Welded into the Doctor Who novels and audio plays as a Time Lady who has a history with The Doctor. Iris sometimes interacts with a man nicknamed El Jefe, a parody of the First Doctor who worked for the Lords Temporal but got bored and stole a wordship. When the "First Meetings" short story was reprinted as When Iris Met Billy he's renamed The Doctor as Magrs was allowed to use names from the Doctor Who franchise. The "In The Sixties" short story had Iris attend a party held by a man called Dr Oho who later takes his guests home in a phonebox. He seemed to be based on the Peter Cushing and Patrick Troughton incarnations of The Doctor. |
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Legends of Tomorrow turns Rip Hunter, who isn’t particularly like or unlike the Doctor in the comics, into one of these. Rip is a renegade Time Master who went on the run and hired various assistants to help him stop Vandal Savage. From Season 2 onwards, his time machine even has a hexagonal console. Funnier still, he's played by Arthur Darvill, who had previously played a companion to the Eleventh Doctor (Rory Williams, to be precise). | |
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In OK K.O.! Let's Be Heroes, Professor Greyman is a flamboyant extraterrestrial scientist who wears a Tom Baker-esque fedora and scarf. However, in a unique twist, he's a grey alien instead of a Human Alien, and his accent is German instead of British. | |
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The New Adventures novel Nightshade has The Doctor meet the lead actor from the titular TV show that Word of God says is a cross between Doctor Who and Quatermass. | |
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