Subject: Oh, it works now (both links), and it's amazing. (nm)
Author:
Posted on: 2013-09-17 13:37:00 UTC
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I, formerly known as AelinTheAmazing, have returned. by
on 2013-09-10 17:25:00 UTC
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First of all, welcome and a toaster to any newbies that I may have missed during my absence. Be careful of the toaster, though. It's liable to shoot anything you put into it right back into your face.
I've just started a new school year, so I haven't had much time to post, but I'll be back more now that things have settled down. I also haven't been posting for various other reasons, which include the reason why I changed my username.
One of those reasons is that I've been trying to catch up on the old seasons of Doctor Who, and it's been taking up a lot of my free time. Therefore, I pose the Whovians of the Board a question:
If you were a Time Lord, what do you think your title would be? (The Doctor, the Master, the Monk, etc., etc.) -
Further Time Lord stories/bios by
on 2013-09-16 12:59:00 UTC
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Bios
Stories
And specifically, there is a new story starring the Pathologist (Kaitlyn, who has so far refused to post), the Archivist (Neshomeh), the Supporter (Storme Hawk) and the Samurai (the Irish Samurai). I'll paste it in for those having trouble with the docs:
Degenerate Regenerate
“He’s dead, Jim - but not as we know it.”
The Supporter exchanged a blank look with the Archivist. “Um… who’s Jim?”
The Pathologist stared at the pair for a moment. “Er. Okay. It doesn’t matter.” She lowered her voice for a moment into a barely-audible mutter: “Primitives. What matters is that he’s dead… only not.”
“You’re going to have to explain that a bit better,” the Archivist suggested. “Because that wasn’t an explanation.”
“Right, right.” The Pathologist ran a hand through her hair. “Okay. You know Christmas?”
“With the eggs and things?” The Archivist frowned. “No, that’s the other one…”
“Trees,” the Supporter supplied. “And presents, and jolly red aliens coming down the chimney.”
“You wouldn’t be ‘jolly’ if you were that morbidly obese,” the Pathologist observed, “but I digress. It’s the trees I’m thinking about. They’re dead, yes?”
“They don’t have to be,” the Archivist pointed out. “That last planet we stopped over at, they grow all their plants in underground pots so they can be moved - I’ve got one back in my rooms-”
“They also killed one of our friends,” the Supporter reminded her, gesturing at the corpse under discussion.
“Oh, yes. And that’s bad. But he’ll get better, right?”
“That’s what I’m trying to discuss,” the Pathologist replied snippily. “A tree can be… no, look, forget the analogy. You remember his plan for getting past the Judoon and their genetic scanner?”
“I remember the Mechanic’s reaction,” the Archivist said with a slight smile. “‘You want to do what to my Chameleon Arch?’ Not that I don’t sympathise…”
“Right,” the Pathologist agreed. “So he partially altered his DNA to match the local inhabitants and fool the scanner.”
“It’s a shame it didn’t work,” the Supporter said, glancing at the body. “It was a really good plan.”
“Yes, except that DNA doesn’t work that way.” The Pathologist frowned. “Or it shouldn’t. But… okay, this next bit is going to sound painfully stupid.”
“Cool!” exclaimed the Archivist. “What? No, sorry, I mean - go ahead.”
The Pathologist took a deep breath. “When the Judoon shot him, the Time Lord part of him died as normal. But the Judoon had safeties on their guns to prevent them killing the locals even accidentally. The gun refused to kill the Arch-implanted part of his DNA - so he’s only half dead. And since regeneration relies on a Time Lord being actually dead, he’s stuck like this.”
“That’s awful!” The Supporter had to take a deep breath after her outburst before continuing. “How can we help him?”
“It should be fairly simple,” the Pathologist shrugged. “Once his Arch transformation is undone, he should be able to regenerate as normal. Only this partial transform didn’t take his memories, and didn’t create a capsule - so we need an intact Chameleon Arch to do it.”
“But the Mechanic took ours apart,” the Archivist pointed out. “Do we have enough time for him to reconstruct it?”
“We don’t need to!” the Supporter realised. “Archivist, you’ve got an Arch in your display room - I remember it!”
The Archivist twitched. “That’s not just a Chameleon Arch,” she pointed out. “That’s the original Arch - the one built by Rassilon himself to-”
“And it can save our friend,” the Pathologist cut her off. “Isn’t that more important?”
“No!” the Archivist wailed, but then sighed. “I suppose. Maybe.”
“Good.” The Pathologist looked at the Supporter. “Do you know where it is?”
“Absolutely,” the Supporter agreed, and dashed off. The small room was left in uncomfortable silence, the two Time Ladies not meeting each other’s gaze, until she returned.
The Archivist winced visibly as the Supporter ran back in, bouncing the Arch off the doorframe. “All right, but I’m setting it up,” she said, taking the device from the other woman. “It’s not that I don’t trust you, but…”
Soon enough, the Chameleon Arch was in place. The Pathologist took her place next to the machine and looked at her colleagues. “Ready?”
“Happy birthday,” the Archivist replied absently, still looking twitchy. The Pathologist shrugged and flicked the switch.
Nothing happened.
“Um…” the Supporter began.
“It’s fine,” the Pathologist assured her. “He’s just dying.”
“Oh, is that all?”
There was a sound from the body on the table - a sort of long sigh. Then, as the trio watched, his skin began to glow with rainbow light, growing more and more intense until they had to shield their eyes. There was a sudden, blinding pulse of light, and then it was over.
The Pathologist was the first to recover. Blinking away the afterimage of the light, she squinted at the newly-regenerated figure on the table. “Human,” she reported. “Apparently perfectly normal. Not sure about the hair, but at least he’s got all his teeth…” She leant forward. “Samurai? Can you hear me?”
“I say,” the Samurai replied, without opening his eyes or moving a muscle, “do you have to be so dashed loud? Some of us are trying to rest, you know.”
“He’s fine,” the Supporter surmised with a sigh of relief.
“I wouldn’t say so,” the Samurai retorted. “I’ve got the most terrible thirst.” He opened one eye, looking around furtively, and then sat jerkily upright. “Would there happen to be such a thing as a cup of tea around here?”
As far as I can track, then, the only Time Lords without stories are the Acoustician, the Analyzer, and the Weirdo. And counting both Librarians, we have a TARDIS crew of fifteen...
hS -
And one last story - 'The Crowded TARDIS' by
on 2013-09-17 10:51:00 UTC
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Featuring, I think, everyone who's offered a name. I'm not sure everyone has spoken lines, but we're all in there...
"Can we get some quiet in here?"
The answer, apparently, was no. The multiple conversations went on, getting louder all the time. The Strategist scowled and looked at the Speaker, who shrugged.
"I can't convince them if they can't hear me," he called over the racket. "The Acoustician might be able to rig something up."
"He's too busy arguing with the Mechanic over whose responsibility the viewscreens are," the Strategist pointed out.
"The Bluejay could probably shut them up - but again, only if they can hear her."
"Precisely." The Strategist frowned around the console room. "The Supporter... well, she'd mean well, I'm sure. Oh, now, I wonder..."
The two Time Lords put their heads together. About a minute later, a new head dropped down from the gantry, fortunately attached to a body.
"Hi!" exclaimed the Weirdo. "Anything good?"
The Strategist did his best to hide a smile. "Actually, yes. We wanted to talk to everyone, but they can't hear us..."
"Oh, that's simple," the Weirdo beamed, and then yelled at the top of her lungs: "Oy! You lot! Daleks!"
The hubbub stopped instantly as the Time Lords looked around frantically. The Strategist nodded his gratitude to the Weirdo and hopped up onto one of the seats.
"Get off that!" the Mechanic yelled. "Do you know how long it takes to build a safe TARDIS ejector seat?"
"I don't plan to break it," the Strategist assured him. "But I need to get your attention, however many of you there are-"
"Fifteen," four voices chorused from around the room, and the two Librarians, the Archivist, and the Analyzer exchanged satisfied looks.
"Or fourteen," the Analyzer went on, "if you subscribe to the belief that the Librarians are the same person."
"Fourteen or fifteen, a TARDIS has a crew of six," the Strategist pointed out. "We have a severe excess of Time Lords."
"Well, some of us aren't exactly permanent crew," the Pathologist pointed out. "If you want me to take my TARDIS and go..."
"You can't!" exclaimed the Alchemist. "Who's going to patch up my burns if you go?"
"And that's a very significant point," the Analyzer put in. "We need everyone in the crew."
"Rubbish!" the Weirdo shouted. "The Artisan? The Acoustician? Four nearly-identical bookworms? The Weirdo?" She blinked. "Wait, that's me. Who needs me? What good am I?" And she burst into tears.
"Oh, don't cry!" the Supporter exclaimed, running over to her. "It's all right, we do need you, you're an invaluable part of the team..."
"Really? Brill!" The Weirdo beamed at her.
Meanwhile, the First Librarian was tapping away at his tablet computer. He beckoned his possible later form over and pointed at something.
"And I resent the implication that I'm unnecessary," the Acoustician put in. "I mean, if you want to go back to the days of never knowing what the away team is up to..."
Now the Second Librarian, nodding in agreement with her counterpart, beckoned the Archivist over. Together they peered at the screen, and then the Archivist scurried off into the depths of the TARDIS.
"Am I allowed to object too?" the Artisan asked. "I mean, yes, in a literal view of our mission statement, I'm not 'necessary'. But what good is helping people if you turn the universe into featureless cold metal along the way? We must be artists, not just soldiers. I might even say, more artists than soldiers."
"Yes, you probably would," the Samurai agreed amiably. "But I must say, that would be jolly bad form. The fact that some of us are skilled with weapons rather than crafts hardly means you should belittle us."
The Archivist returned, carrying a thick book, and passed it to the Second Librarian. The latter flicked through the pages, hunting.
"Personally I'm amazed no-one's mentioned me yet," the Bluejay said, swinging her legs where she sat on the railing. "Aren't I pretty much the definition of a tagalong?"
"Don't lay it on too thick," the Pathologist said dryly. "Besides, even if you were, history - well, fiction - shows that quirky girls 'just along for the ride' solve a significant number of major catastrophes."
The Second Librarian, having found her page, hurried over to the Analyzer and pointed at something. The latter woman frowned, then raised her eyebrow. The Librarian whispered something in her ear.
"I think the real issue isn't 'useless in isolation'," said the Mechanic. "It's redundancy. We have - sorry, Acoustician - two engineers, four information junkies, two diplomats, three fighters... how many of each do we actually need?"
"As many as we can get," the Supporter said firmly. "What's the alternative - telling people to pack their bags and get lost?"
"If necessary," the Mechanic shrugged. "If a part is unnecessary, discard it."
The Analyzer, still frowning at the book, crossed the room to the Speaker. She ran her finger down the page, demonstrating something to him, then entered into a whispered conversation.
"You can't talk about people as parts, though," the Bluejay said, uncharacteristically serious. "They're - we're - people, with our own hopes and dreams, our own feelings and desires, our own-"
"I don't know," the First Librarian cut in. "I think we can all be defined pretty quickly. As someone said, I'm a bookworm, the Mechanic is an engineer, and you're a-"
"Manic Pixie Dream Girl?" the Pathologist suggested. "But she's right - even if you can define us in one word, that doesn't say everything about us."
"That's a bit metaphysical for you, isn't it?" the Artisan asked. "I thought you were pretty down on all that 'messy emotional business'."
"Emotional?" the Pathologist asked, bemused. "I was talking about genetics."
"Enough of this," the Strategist cut in, silencing the hubbub. "The key point here is that- yes, what is it?"
The Speaker had tapped his shoulder, and the Strategist leant down to listen. After a few moments he stood again, and shrugged.
"Apparently," he said, "a study by the United Universities of Raxacoricofallapatorius has conclusively demonstrated that, when it comes to starship crews, a larger, more varied team is always preferable. I'm quite surprised, I will admit, but the Analyzer says the proof is undeniable."
"Well, that settles it, then," the Alchemist said, grinning. "You have to let me start up my trans-temporal replication experiments again."
"I said 'crew'," the Strategist pointed out wearily, "not 'hideous abominations that should be time-locked and forgotten'."
"True enough," the Alchemist mused, "but on the other hand..."
"Don't even," the Pathologist cut in. "Remember I know where the sedatives are..." -
Well done by
on 2013-09-18 00:52:00 UTC
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An excellent addition to the Time Lord chronicles. I know I am invested in these characters, at least somewhat, and an interested in seeing more from them. I think this weekend, if I have time, I will write out some of the Speaker's backstory, probably up to recruitment into the team in his second generation. No promises mind you...
As cool as this story was, I personally subscribe to the belief that all 15 are not present on the TARDIS at one time. The crew is more of a small community of Time Lords that will follow the Strategist whenever he needs something done, and act as resources when needed, but otherwise are left to their own devices. I see the Speaker mostly staying on the main TARDIS, as he has nothing else better to do, and the Strategist always needs a diplomat (or a charmer). As for the others, I cannot speak for them, but I would think the seven from the first story are pretty much the group that stays on the ship most of the time. However, fifteen Time Lords stuck together in a giant box is great potential for humor, as well as constantly having a ready expedition team... Whatever, it can be however anybody thinks it should be. -
Brilliant. ^.^ by
on 2013-09-17 16:57:00 UTC
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This can only go amazing and hilarious places.
BTW, the characterization of the Archivist in "Degenerate Regenerate" is eerily spot-on for me. I spent a good minute giggling at "Cool! ... What? No, sorry, I mean - go ahead." As Phobos will attest, I have a bad habit of making verbal responses even when I'm not fully paying attention (lost in thought, trying to read something at the same time, etc.), which results in not-infrequent moments pretty much exactly like that one. Phobos has gotten me to accidentally agree to all sorts of things. ^_^;
Also, I think she would be all over delineating and possibly diagramming each person's exact role in the crew. Duty rosters and job descriptions and mission statements and otherwise making clear who is supposed to be doing what (and how, and why) at any given time is essential to the orderly and efficient operation of any sufficiently complex enterprise, and fifteen Time Lords and Ladies in a box together is about as complicated as it gets. Also, people might want to know that sort of thing in the future, so keeping records of it is good for posterity!
~Neshomeh -
I feel like the Archivist and the Analyzer... by
on 2013-09-18 21:55:00 UTC
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...should be friends. They seem to have a similar way of looking at things - if I understand correctly, it's looking at all the small details to see how they make up the big picture. And having lots of random trivia in their minds. And reading. And sometimes mixing up common responses. I swear I've done "Happy Birthday!" "You too!" before. Though the Archivist seems much more about recording things, while the Analyzer likes studying the universe just because it's all so very interesting.
Oh, and as to the hair - it's the progression of hair throughout my life, the current incarnation being the closest to my current self. Make of that what you will. -
Not a Whovian, but... by
on 2013-09-15 02:07:00 UTC
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I think I'll be the Analyzer. And doing regenerations sounds fun.
General Traits:
The thing that always stays the same about the Analyzer is her ability to think deeply about things. She tries to come at problems from new angles and enjoys exploring the complexities of the universe.
The First Analyzer:
This incarnation is very happy. She likes bright colors and smiles a lot (when not thinking). However, she's only happy as long as no one questions her thinking. She's convinced she's right about everything, and tends to disrespect authority. This alienates people, so she values the friends she makes and clings to them, not trying to make more. She died in an accident that claimed the lives of her only friends.
The Second Analyzer
This incarnation reaps the consequences from her last self's arrogance, and has difficulty making friends, retreating into her thoughts and reading most of the time. She's shy and reclusive, but still resents being ordered to do anything. She died in an accident involving an earthquake and poorly-constructed bookshelves.
The Third Analyzer (current regeneration)
This incarnation is much more friendly than her last two, though she dislikes small talk and formalities and can come off a bit brusque at times. She's decided to apply her way of thinking to solving the problems of the universe, getting involved in multiple causes for equality. On multiple planets. She can get overwhelmed easily, but at the same time sees the universe in a very rich, detailed way. -
I like the progression of the hair. by
on 2013-09-17 16:59:00 UTC
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It seems to transition from straight to curly. Was that deliberate?
~Neshomeh -
Me? A Time Lord? by
on 2013-09-14 19:16:00 UTC
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I'd be the most irresponsible, destructive Time Lord ever.
'Cause of that, I'd probably be known as the Weirdo. -
Hmmm.... by
on 2013-09-14 00:12:00 UTC
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Welcome back! *dodges toast*
I'd say if I were a Time Lord I would be either the Engineer (which makes it sound waaaaay too much like Miss Saigon) or perhaps The Scholar. (The Acoustician, while technically accurate for my day job, perhaps doesn't have quite the ring to it).
Elcalion, having to think up of regenerations now -
Re: Hmmm.... by
on 2013-09-14 20:07:00 UTC
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'The Acoustician' is the awesomest Time Lord name ever. You should use that.
-
Time Lord me. by
on 2013-09-13 00:37:00 UTC
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Scary thought, very scary thought.
The best title for me would probably be something like The Supporter. It's what I do, generally I'll support an idea one of my friends has, if we're playing games I'm generally the support for the team, and so on and so on. -
Had to do this - a short Time Lord sketch. by
on 2013-09-11 16:40:00 UTC
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The Mechanic stuck his head out from behind a hatch and pushed his goggles up onto his forehead. "All fixed," he said. "Well, moderately fixed."
"You're making me twitchy," the Librarian muttered, not glancing up from his book. "Would it hurt you to at least look at the manual?"
"Where's the fun in that?" the Mechanic sniffed. "I mean, really - doing things by the book? That's so dull."
"That's right!" the Artisan piped up, scrambling down a ladder from the upper gallery. "Running a TARDIS is an art, not some complicated science! You have to feel your way through it. If you don't love your TARDIS, you-"
"Oh, spare me." The Alchemist walked into the console room, white coat billowing behind him. "All this 'art and science are totally separate' business - the trick is to synthesise them. Logic and emotion aren't antithetical, no matter what Doctor Spock says."
"That's Mister Spock," the Librarian pointed out, "or if you want to get technical, Science Officer Spock. At least until he became Ambassador Spock, and-"
"Yes, yes." The Alchemist tapped a button on the console and peered at the screen. "The stabilisers are still reading as down..."
"Really? Let me see." The Mechanic frowned at the data printout, then pulled a large rubber mallet from his toolbelt and tapped the screen sharply. "That should do it."
"Great!" exclaimed the Bluejay from where she perched on the railing. "So are we ready to go?"
"Not until the Betrayer gets here," the Librarian pointed out.
"You really shouldn't call him that," the Speaker chided him, standing up at last from his position by the main doors. "It's exceptionally rude to refuse to use the name someone has chosen in favour of an insulting epithet."
"Well, if he didn't betray people all the time..." the Artisan put in, but trailed off in the face of the Speaker's gaze.
"I ask you," the Speaker went on, "each of you - how would you feel if you were known by invented nicknames? If people kept calling you 'the Flighty'," he nodded at the Bluejay, "or 'the Erratic'," to the Mechanic, "or 'the Explosive'," to the Alchemist.
"Well, speaking for myself, I wouldn't mind-" the Alchemist began. Then one of the doors swung open, and the Strategist strode in. He was, as usual, dressed all in black, and already scowling.
"Well?" he asked in the sudden silence. "What are we waiting for?"
"A TARDIS requires a crew of six," the Librarian pointed out. "You were absent."
"I was planning," the Strategist corrected, "and you already have six crew members here."
"Oh, I'm just along for the ride," the Bluejay called chirpily. "Don't mind me."
"Hm." The Strategist crossed to the console and took his place in front of one of the six segments, standing next to the Alchemist and the Mechanic. "But I am here now," he pointed out. "So, I ask again - what are we waiting for?"
I've tried to give everyone personalities suggested by their names. Actual accuracy to real life not guaranteed.
(Also, these characters are really fun to work with. If you don't believe me, try it yourself!)
hS -
Yes. by
on 2013-09-13 16:42:00 UTC
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I am totally just along for the ride. I'll also be singing badly and mimicking everyone's voices first chance I get.
"Flighty," pfft, yes. All the yes. There is so much yes in this whole thing. -
The Alchemist(s) - A Short Biography(/ies) by
on 2013-09-13 09:03:00 UTC
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The First Alchemist
This incarnation still used his given name. He spent his entire life on Gallifrey as a theoretical exotic chemist, basically achieving nothing of significance, before finally dying at the hands of Something Bad out of Gallifrey's past.
The Second Alchemist
This is the 'darkest' Alchemist. He devoted himself to studying the deep, dark history of Gallifrey and the universe, and adopted the use-name 'Alchemist', cutting off all ties with his former life. His studies led him into conflict with Time Lord society, and he eventually fled off-world to continue his investigations. He died in the heart of a cloud of toxic gas, which he had released in attempting to unlock an ancient sealed tomb.
The Third Alchemist (The Chemist)
This incarnation completely abandoned his former interests, even amending his name slightly to become 'the Chemist'. He was a firm believer in rigorous experimentation and logic as the only ways to solve a problem. He spent his time travelling the universe, having adventures and righting wrongs, possibly - although he never admitted it - in an effort to atone for his prior self's darker deeds. This is the version who took Lise Meitner as a Companion. He eventually died at the hands of a mob on a wildly xenophobic world.
The Fourth Alchemist
This incarnation is one of the shortest-lived Time Lord incarnations on record, and the only non-'human' regeneration of the Alchemist. He lived for about forty-eight hours, constantly on the run, before the authorities of the same world as his prior self died on caught him and had him put down.
The Fifth Alchemist
This incarnation began her (yes, her) life in mortal danger from the same mob as Alchemists III and IV had been killed by. She re-adopted the Alchemist name almost instantly, and used her twelve hour 'invulnerability' grace period after regenerating to build herself a working matter transmuter, then created a large quantity of explosives and blasted her way free. She was the 'mad scientist' incarnation, frequently throwing caution to the wind in favour of improvising wildly with high technology and complex (and highly explosive) chemistry. She continued the 'righting wrongs' theme of the Third Alchemist, but rarely took long-term Companions. Ultimately she died on an alternate, Steampunk Earth while attempting to thwart an army of clockwork men.
The Sixth Alchemist
This is the current incarnation, and adopted the steampunk aesthetic of his 'birth' world. Through coincidence or design, his appearence is very similar to his third self, though his methods rely more on intuition than careful analysis. He still invents things on the fly, like his Fifth incarnation, but they tend towards chemical concoctions rather than machines and explosives.
I would actually love to do this for all our Time Lords, but the appearances might be a bit tricky... ;)
hS -
I consent. by
on 2013-09-13 23:44:00 UTC
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I give you full permission to use the Artisan. I have created some different incarnations, but I'm a bit unsure how to share/post them. I'm still a newbie and figuring out how to work the board.
If it's alright with you, I'd like to design the Artisan. As for the biography, do whatever you like. I'm still a bit unsure about how many incarnations the Artisan has. I guess four is alright. Now, if you excuse me, I need to design.
Oh, and could you please tell me how to post/share the avatars? Sorry, newbie problems... -
Syntax by
on 2013-09-14 20:09:00 UTC
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This Board uses HTML code. Here's the info you're looking for.
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Do you require aid? by
on 2013-09-13 11:27:00 UTC
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One sharp-dressed Librarian, at y'service. -
That is fantastic. by
on 2013-09-13 12:00:00 UTC
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The First Librarian
This incarnation began life on Gallifrey. He passed through the Time Lord Academy, and seemed content to live out his lives as a researcher into the Matrix - until, out of the blue, he went rogue, fleeing from Gallifrey and taking the name 'the Librarian'. He is highly skilled with most computer systems, and capable of drawing out the most tenuous details with relative ease. Ultimately, it is suspected that he will die under the influence of a powerful anasthetic, leaving his second incarnation with no memory of him (although this, obviously, cannot be confirmed).
The Second Librarian
This incarnation - or, possibly, distinct individual - shares much of the First Librarian's skills. She tends to use books rather than computers, and has an almost eidetic memory - if it's in one of her books, she can find it for you. Her skills at synthesis are not as good, but working together, the two Librarians can tell you essentially anything you want to know.
(Desdendelle - thanks! That is a fantastic image; much better than some of mine, and fits the theme nicely too)
(Impossible - if you want to either create a 'you' on TekTek or provide a description [at least hair-eye-skin, and as many details of clothing as you like], I can add her to the file)
(And anyone else - the same applies! I'm having too much fun to stop now. ;) I've already come up with prior regenerations for several of you...)
hS -
I bestow upon you full permission and a TekTek. by
on 2013-09-14 22:24:00 UTC
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As long as I can use the Librarian for myself as well, of course.
Now have a Second Librarian and some more biographical details, aside from the biography she's already got.
(Yes, she is overly fond of cats, and yes, that is a quill she's holding - more specifically a quantum quill, her equivalent of a sonic.)
The number of books she has read have led to her gaining a superb vocabulary and a vast repertoire of mostly useless facts, making her extremely annoying to play trivia games with. She can also be dreadfully sarcastic and is easily distracted by a favorite book or interesting object. This has led to any spaces empty of books being filled with piles of knickknacks ranging from a cheap kaleidoscope to a Raxacoricofallapatorian claw. Most of her time is spent bouncing around time and space, chronicling everything she experiences in a futile attempt to finish her magnum opus, The Narrative of Existence. -
Make it! by
on 2013-09-13 17:43:00 UTC
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I give you full permission to make and use the Speaker. Assuming that I can keep him to use as well.
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I leave you full freedom. by
on 2013-09-13 17:37:00 UTC
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Also because I still don't quite understand TekTek.... as shown by the fact that I use Go Fetch instead.
-
Since we're playing with TekTek... by
on 2013-09-13 17:23:00 UTC
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I love TekTek. ^_^
My Time Lord name would (of course) be the Archivist. She may have more than one regeneration, but you'd be hard-pressed to tell what any of them really look like, considering...
~Neshomeh -
Regenerations. by
on 2013-09-13 22:04:00 UTC
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The First Archivist
The First Archivist was the requisite fashion-impaired one. She was more of a collector than anything else, and would pick up anything that happened to strike her fancy—books, pretty rocks, shells, cool words (such as "archivist," for instance), hats, silver spoons, etc. Her focus changed frequently, and old collections, though neatly organized, would be abandoned to gather dust on their shelves. Still, throwing anything out would be unthinkable. You never know when you might want it! She met her end in an unfortunate accident involving ten thousand spoons, when all she needed to save herself was a knife.
The Second Archivist
The Second Archivist was completely different from the first. Controlling, strict, and impatient, she had no use for anything that didn't directly contribute to the greater whole of her designs, including people, which she regarded purely as resources for the getting of more information. She would play the social game as long as she needed to keep herself in their good graces, but once she got what she wanted, it was over; they'd never hear from her again. She died friendless and with a knife in her back, when she'd finally spurned and offended the wrong people.
The Third Archivist
The Third Archivist is the current one, and by far the most balanced. She's a dotty but harmless hermit who rarely emerges from her lair, which is filled with books, papers, various digital media storage, and tea. When she does appear, it's often to exclaim over a "new" discovery or an "exciting" system of organization she's come up with. Systems are what she does best, and unlike her previous regenerations, it's the intricate order and interconnectedness of things that interests her more than the actual nodes of information in any given system (though understanding the nodes is crucial to understanding the system as a whole). She's friendly enough, but often gets her social conventions and associated stock responses mixed up.
"Happy Christmas, Archivist!" - "Oh, yes! Gesundheit!"
(Feel free to change the backstories, hS. You can probably come up with something more fitting and Whovian than I can. ^_^ )
~Neshomeh -
I'm working on The Strategist by
on 2013-09-13 17:06:00 UTC
Reply
He'll have 7 regenerations, and I currently only have the last 3 made, if you have any for him.
-Phobos -
What I have so far by
on 2013-09-13 18:59:00 UTC
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The Strategist V
This incarnation of The Strategist is not one for planning ahead of time. He prefers to make all of his plans on the fly, and he is very good at it. He is an energetic people person and a pacifist. He met his end when his opponent forced him to choose between his companion and himself. He sacrificed himself and regenerated.
The Strategist VI - The Betrayer
Gone are the bright colors and the warmth of the Fifth Strategist. The Time Lord, who would go on to earn the name The Betrayer, favors stark black and white clothing and masquerade masks. Unlike his his predecessor, he carries a weapon: a single-shot pistol. He says, "If I need more than one shot, I've done something very wrong." One thing he has in common with his previous incarnation is that he has charm in spades. However, what he has in charm, he lacks in empathy. He is not afraid to use those around him as pawns in his plans. He was, possibly, the most ingenious of the regenerations. His death was the result of his last, great betrayal. He betrayed himself to his death and, like so many before him, he never saw it coming.
The Strategist VII
The demise of The Betrayer resulted in his regeneration into a more sober individual, who is less personable and more prone to scowling. He shares his previous self's penchant for black clothing, though he tends to look a bit like a vaudevillian magician. He takes the long view of events, and his plans reflect those long sighted calculations. He still carries the stigma of The Betrayer with him, but he no longer carries a weapon. -
What I have so far (for everyone). by
on 2013-09-13 19:07:00 UTC
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Is behind this handy link.
Obviously my version of the Strategist (who has four incarnations) will need some editing to fit with yours. Actually, in theory he could just slot in as versions 1-4... we'll see.
Anyway, the list is under vague expansion, and will have pictures added as and when. Comments, criticisms and corrections are more than welcome!
hS -
Oh, BTW by
on 2013-09-15 14:51:00 UTC
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I am planning to use First Librarian as an Agent at some point in the future, but you can use him for your sketches. I've a feeling they'll be awesome.
-
Your link doesn't show me anything by
on 2013-09-14 12:44:00 UTC
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Do I need a Google Docs account?
-
Um, you shouldn't do. by
on 2013-09-16 10:50:00 UTC
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If you're still having trouble, this should definitely work. It does seem to throw the images around a bit, though.
hS -
Oh, it works now (both links), and it's amazing. (nm) by
on 2013-09-17 13:37:00 UTC
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-
Re: What I have so far (for everyone). by
on 2013-09-13 21:14:00 UTC
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Interesting. I like the idea that the Speaker was a bit of a con artist in his first incarnation, especially in contrast to his second incarnation. I imagine his theme song would be "With a Flair" from Bedknobs and Broomsticks.
Later, I think I will write a story in his first incarnation, detailing some of his personal life and why the Master killed him. I mean, other then the Master was bored and the Speaker was the closest one to zap. Perhaps he tried to scam the Master and it just about worked, but when the Master caught on...
One question I have, and this is for everyone: When and why did they all come together in a team? I personally think the Speaker joined in his second incarnation, the Strategist recruiting him for some plan of his. The Speaker knew he was part of some plan, but the cause was important enough to him. What that cause was, I have no idea, I'll leave that for the others to decide. -
First Librarian... by
on 2013-09-13 21:25:00 UTC
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That's easy, really. He's after the Riddle of the Osirians, and The Strategist has a hint as to where The Librarian can find an ancient terminal containing info pertaining to the Riddle.
-
Re: What I have so far (for everyone). by
on 2013-09-13 21:10:00 UTC
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I wish I could take part in the fun here, but whenever I try and come up with a Time Lord name, it comes up as something ridiculous and not really connected with my personality at all. I tried for a while, but I knew it wasn't going to work after I just went off into tangential aspects of my personality and started trying to match them with words that were fun to say out loud.
By the way, the First Speaker is described as an "illisionist". You're probably going to want to fix that. -
Interesting by
on 2013-09-13 19:22:00 UTC
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The first and second incarnations should work fine. I especially like the games aspect of the second one. Your third and fourth seem to actually be my sixth and seventh, just told from a slightly different angle. There are definitely pieces of your fourth that I would incorporate into my seventh. In fact, I think it would read like this:
The demise of The Betrayer resulted in his regeneration into a more sober individual, who is less personable and more prone to scowling. He shares his previous self's penchant for black clothing, though he tends to look a bit like a vaudevillian magician. He is a gifted forward planner. Given enough time and information, he is capable of coming up with a plan to accomplish any goal you care to name. He works closely with the Speaker and the two Librarians to direct the team's actions. He is still willing to sacrifice his allies at need, and will mislead and manipulate them in order to accomplish this, but his detailed plans always include ways to rescue them or otherwise repair the damage. -
That's roughly what I was thinking. by
on 2013-09-13 19:35:00 UTC
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We both went for 'he did more betraying in his previous incarnation, but he's a bit better now'. ;) I've taken your 'Seven' combined description, and I'm cobbling together Six and Three into one now. It's coming out longer than a lot of the others, but that's mostly because you've described the clothes, which I don't tend to do.
'Gone are the bright colors and the warmth of the Fifth Strategist. The Time Lord, the only incarnation to embrace the nickname of ‘the Betrayer’, favors stark black and white clothing and masquerade masks. Unlike his his predecessor, he carries a weapon: a single-shot pistol. He says, "If I need more than one shot, I've done something very wrong." One thing he has in common with his previous incarnation is that he has charm in spades. However, what he has in charm, he lacks in empathy. This incarnation was a ruthless schemer, and possibly the most ingenious of the regenerations. He created loose plans, but was capable of altering and updating them on the fly. His goal in every situation was utter dominance - whatever group or individual he faced, he would not rest until they were either completely powerless or dead. He was willing to sacrifice everything to his goals, including friends, allies, and the space-time continuum - and, ultimately, his own life, in his last, great betrayal.'
Like I say - long, but the first half is stuff I didn't cover in my versions.
Of course, this leaves Three and Four as mysteries...
hS
hS -
I like it by
on 2013-09-13 19:52:00 UTC
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I think you've done an excellent job integrating our two interpretations of the character. Also, I believe (and I think you agree) it is important that he not be as bad as before. Otherwise, no one in the crew would trust him (not that they all trust him now, his past being what it is).
-Phobos -
An edited version & 'The Two Librarians' by
on 2013-09-12 10:21:00 UTC
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The Mechanic stuck his head out from behind a hatch and pushed his goggles up onto his forehead. "All fixed," he said. "Well, moderately fixed."
"You're making me twitchy," the Librarian muttered, not glancing up from his tablet computer. "Would it hurt you to at least look at the manual?"
"I had to construct a whole new temporal transfer junction and bypass the entire neutron flow system to get her working again," the Mechanic pointed out. "I'm writing the manual. This isn't a repair job – by the time I'm through, this TARDIS will be a whole new ship."
"And where's the fun in reading the manual, anyway?" the Artisan piped up, scrambling down a ladder from the upper gallery. "Running a TARDIS is an art, not some complicated science! You have to feel your way through it. If you don't love your TARDIS, you-"
"Oh, spare me." The Alchemist walked into the console room, white coat billowing behind him. "All this 'art and science are totally separate' business - the trick is to synthesise them. Logic and emotion aren't antithetical, no matter what Doctor Spock says."
"That's Mister Spock," the Librarian corrected, "or if you want to get technical, Science Officer Spock. At least until he became Ambassador Spock, and-"
"Yes, yes." The Alchemist tapped a button on the console and peered at the screen. "The stabilisers are still reading as down..."
"Really? Let me see." The Mechanic frowned at the data printout, then pulled a large rubber mallet from his toolbelt and tapped the screen sharply. "That should do it."
"Great!" exclaimed the Bluejay from where she perched on the railing. "So are we ready to go?"
"Not until the Betrayer gets here," the Librarian informed her.
"You really shouldn't call him that," the Speaker chided him, standing up at last from his position by the main doors. "It's exceptionally rude to refuse to use the name someone has chosen in favour of an insulting epithet."
"Oh, not more preaching!" the Bluejay protested. "I thought you got over this when you regenerated!"
"This is important," the Speaker told her. "I know what it's like to be forcibly given a nickname-"
"Well, they're accurate," the Artisan put in. "You like to give presentations, he betrays people all the time…" She trailed off in the face of the Speaker's glare.
"I ask you," the Speaker said, looking around the console room, "each of you - how would you feel if no-one would use your chosen name? If people kept calling you 'the Flighty'," he nodded at the Bluejay, "or 'the Oil-stained'," to the Mechanic, "or 'the Explosive'," to the Alchemist.
"Well, speaking for myself, I wouldn't mind-" the Alchemist began. Then one of the doors swung open, and the Strategist strode in. He was, as usual, dressed all in black, and already scowling.
"Well?" he asked in the sudden silence. "What are we waiting for?"
"A TARDIS requires a crew of six," the Librarian pointed out. "You were absent."
"I was planning," the Strategist corrected, "and you already have six crew members here."
"Oh, I'm just along for the ride," the Bluejay called chirpily. "Don't mind me."
"Hm." The Strategist crossed to the console and took his place in front of one of the six segments, standing next to the Alchemist and the Mechanic. "But I am here now," he pointed out. "So, I ask again - what are we waiting for?"
And later on…
The Librarian walked the corridors of the TARDIS, scowling at his computer, trying yet again to pin down the solution to the Riddle of the Osirians. So absorbed was he that he failed to notice the other person in the corridor until he walked into her. Books went flying everywhere, and the Time Lord was barely able to catch himself in time.
"My books!" exclaimed the women he had run into, scrambling to collect them all. She straightened up and glared at the Librarian. "Why don't you look where you're going?"
"Why don't you?" the Librarian retorted. "I'm hardly the only one who can be held responsible here."
"No, but you had the most choice," the woman said, flicking a hand at his computer (and nearly losing her stack of books again). "I can barely see round this lot at all – you just had to stop working for half a minute until you got where you were headed!"
"… fair enough," the Librarian agreed. "I apologise. The Librarian, by the way."
The woman looked puzzled. "Yes? What of it?"
"That's me," the Librarian clarified.
The woman snorted. "Don't be ridiculous," she said. "I'm the Librarian. Now who are you really?"
"But I'm the Librarian," the (male) Librarian protested. "You can't steal my name!"
"I'm stealing your name?" the (female) Librarian exclaimed. "More like the other way round! Look at you – you're still on your first body!"
"Due to careful preservation of myself against danger, yes," the male said. Then he frowned, as a horrible thought began to dawn on him. "You don't think…?"
"No." The female shook her head. "No, that's ridiculous. Unthinkable."
"Absurd," the male supplied. "Inconceivable."
"Nonsensical," the female agreed. "To think that I could regenerate from-"
"That I could regenerate into-"
"Someone like you!" they finished together.
The male glared at the female, who returned the expression with equal distaste. "But no," he said at last. "Surely you'd remember if you'd ever been… well, me."
"Surely," she replied, but looked uncertain. "Except… well, there was a bit of trouble with my regeneration, actually. I was dead for a bit too long, and my memories… aren't what they used to be."
"That's awful!" the male Librarian exclaimed. "Losing your memories - that's like… like…"
"Like the burning of the Library of Alexandria," the female supplied. "I know. I've been trying to get them back, but nothing seems to work."
The First Librarian frowned and peered at his tablet. "You know," he said slowly, "I've been working on this riddle… the Riddle of the Osirians. And it seems to have something to do with memory…"
The Second Librarian's eyebrows rose. "The Osirians?" she repeated. "I have a book on them here somewhere – maybe it will help. Is there a table nearby…?"
Two notes:
-I'm not making a statement that the two Librarians are the same person - but I'm also not ruling it out. These characters are presumably not the same as any hypothetical PPC agents by the same names.
-I hope I've got everyone's gender right! This applies across both stories, naturally.
hS -
Nicely done, that was really fun to read! by
on 2013-09-13 18:59:00 UTC
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You managed to give all the characters a decent amount of screentime, and I think you did a really good job of characterising them. They all have clearly distinct personalities, which is most impressive considering how few lines they get each.
I particularly like the Mechanic's reply of 'I'm writing the manual.' - I've worked on jobs before where it's felt like I'm doing just that.
As for what my Timelord name would be... I have no idea, so may not be joining in. 'The Engineer' would probably step on the Mechanic's toes as far as characterisation goes, and I currently can't think of anything else ('The Samurai' sounds far to pretentious for me to even consider). -
So perfect. by
on 2013-09-12 17:02:00 UTC
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In terms of accuracy, this is me all over.
And I find it quite amusing that you had the female Librarian mention the burning of the Library of Alexandria, because the last monologue that I did for my Theatre class focused mostly on that (it was from the play Arcadia, for anyone who's curious). -
Heh, that's great! by
on 2013-09-12 00:49:00 UTC
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As for the accuracy, yeah, I am often the diplomat amongst my friends. While the Speaker seems to be a little more...how do I put this...professional (?) then I am usually, I could definitely see myself saying something along those lines. I say that because it seems like he is constantly in the middle of a speech whenever he opens his mouth. Nice for characterization, but not my own personality, per-se. However, hanging in the shadows by the door, rather then standing with the group, is definitely something I have/would do.
You know, I kinda want to see more from these guys. It seems like an interesting group, and following their adventures through the universe would be cool. I'm not sure if I would write the next installment, but it would be nice. Perhaps the people who these Time Lords are based off of could be the beta readers for their next story, and insert little personality quirks that the other authors would not know about? Just a thought. -
A few responses. by
on 2013-09-12 09:43:00 UTC
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There's a couple of reasons the Speaker might not match you exactly in this scene:
-This could be one of his hangups. Perhaps people occasionally call him 'the Presenter', which he thinks sounds like some sort of tawdry entertainer, not an accomplished giver-of-presentations like him. So he's not always ready with a speech - just in this instance.
-Alternately, it could be a feature of this particular regeneration. Perhaps this version is rather preachy, while the previous iteration simply liked to lay things out in a clear spoken format before making a plan.
Actually, I think that version of the Speaker would get on well with the Strategist, since they both centre around careful planning. Maybe this version should regenerate soon...
The problem with getting the people they're based on to beta is that, well, there's seven - no, eight, if we include Impossible - people involved so far, and could be more coming. I've always been exceptionally lucky with betas, but that's pushing it a bit far.
On the other hand... I'm quite capable of rewriting based on comments here for now. Actually, I've just figured a way to tweak the Speaker to fit your comments... updated version coming soon.
hS -
Actual Accuracy... by
on 2013-09-12 00:11:00 UTC
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You were pretty accurate. I'm not always "by the book" so to speak. This is somewhat with my crocheting. I read the pattern to get an idea of the shape and then I do whatever I like. The results are usually nice, though there are some times where the end product looks terrible.
I like the way how you wrote the Artisan. The little "Art" verses "Science" spat was a lovely touch. I might try to write a short sketch. Good job. -
"Actual accuracy to real life not guaranteed." by
on 2013-09-11 21:34:00 UTC
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(Yes, I stole Sergio's title. So what?)
Actually, pretty accurate, just replace 'book' with 'computer' half of the time. That said, I'm really tempted to pair this Librarian guy with Agent!Des - I'm planning on retiring Anebrin, since it feels I haven't had reasons enough to make him an Elf rather than just another guy, and he feels... flat. That said, I am planning on having the pair's next mission go wrong... -
This is an incredibly funny coincidence. by
on 2013-09-11 22:02:00 UTC
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Since I've been plotting my Permission request, I've been thinking about a pair of Time Lord agents, and one of them was going to be named (yes, you guessed it) the Librarian.
On the same note, I wonder what the protocol is around Time Lord names - is it possible for two of them to have the same title? -
Something to consider... by
on 2013-09-11 22:23:00 UTC
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There are, currently, 7 Time Lords (thought only 4 are naturally Time Lords and not all of them are active) in the organization. This is not to say that you shouldn't go ahead with your plan. I am just putting the information out there about the state of affairs in HQ, where it deals with time-locked races that have very famous "last of their kind" figures.
If you decide to go ahead with these agents, you will want to carefully consider how they managed to escape the fate of the rest of their people.
-Phobos -
Pretty accurate for me, actually. by
on 2013-09-11 18:56:00 UTC
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I like the balance that the characters have here. There are natural alliances and rivalries between the various characters, which you've used very well. The Art vs Science alignments being the most clearly identifiable.
In the modified DnD Alignment system that I use (just replace 'Good vs Evil' with 'Selfless vs Selfish' and you're there), I see the characters breaking down like this:
Lawful Selfless: The Speaker
Lawful Neutral: The Librarian
Lawful Selfish: N/A
Neutral Selfless: The Bluejay
True Neutral: The Alchemist
Neutral Selfish: The Strategist
Chaotic Selfless: The Mechanic
Chaotic Neutral: The Artisan
Chaotic Selfish: N/A
So, the group skews toward the Selfless, overall, and is fairly balanced on the 'Law vs Chaos' scale. Not a bad group, in my opinion. Plenty of room for differing points of view, and interpersonal conflict. There is also room for both a Lawful Selfish villain as well as a Chaotic Selfish one.
-Phobos, over-analyzing things since 1986 -
"Actual accuracy to real life not guaranteed"? by
on 2013-09-11 18:34:00 UTC
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Considering that The Mechanic doesn't use manuals while real life me not only likes to double-check, but it is pretty much REQUIRED by aviation legislation...
Besides, as I said I am qualified to build aircraft while The Mechanic repairs stuff. Building and repairing are completely different things in aviation
But enough nitpicking. This piece was great! -
Oh, I don't know... by
on 2013-09-11 19:51:00 UTC
Reply
(Okay, that's the third time that subject line's appeared in this thread...)
Have you ever tried repairing a TARDIS? Judging by Nine through Eleven's console rooms, 'repair' is a synonym for 'make something new to compensate for the breakdown'.
And there is a TARDIS manual... but I don't think it bears much resemblance to reality any more.
hS
"It's not supposed to make that noise - you leave the brakes on." -
Re: I, formerly known as AelinTheAmazing, have returned. by
on 2013-09-11 15:59:00 UTC
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Well, my Time Lord name could be the title that my friends gave me several years back. However, The Betraying Betrayer Who Betrays just doesn't roll off the tongue.
Maybe something to better represent my many and varied artistic endeavors? How about The Bard? That's a good one, right?
Huh?
What do you mean it's already taken?
Well you tell that Shakespeare guy to give someone else a turn!
Ugh, fine.
In that case, I have to go with The Strategist. Plans and plots are my thing. I make simple plans, complicated plans, cartoonishly over-complicated plans, whatever. I like strategy games (Diplomacy being a personal favorite). I like plotting the destruction of civilization as we know it (according to my 7th grade history teacher [not joking]). So, yeah, The Strategist sounds good to me.
-Phobos, who earned the title "The Betraying Betrayer Who Betrays" in a game of Diplomacy -
Oh, I don't know. by
on 2013-09-11 16:18:00 UTC
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I kind of like the idea of a Time Lord who chooses to go by 'The Betrayer'. Of course, the way to make that into a good story is for him to be a good guy. Yes, the Betrayer will make promises he has no intention of keeping, sell out people who think they're his friends, and invite alien species down onto helpless planets - but his lies are to manipulate people into doing what needs doing, he abandons his friends to protect them (even if that means they get captured - a prison cell is a pretty safe place!), and the aliens would have come anyway - this way, he can control the situation.
hS -
Ooh, a good question. by
on 2013-09-11 13:19:00 UTC
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I think, going by the conversation further down the Board, I would have to be 'The Chemist'. Or, no, even better - 'The Alchemist'.
Of course, if you delve into the annals of PPC Board History, I was occasionally known as Elf Boy or Monk Boy... but let's go with the modern version.
And for my 'requisit famous companion', a la Morgan's friends Amelia and Fred, I choose Lise Meitner. Yes, she's a physicist rather than a chemist, but as long as I don't have to deal with any biologists, I'm equal-opportunity. ;)
hS -
Re: Ooh, a good question. by
on 2013-09-12 08:09:00 UTC
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I am always insanely happy when I hear of other people who think Lise Meitner is awesome. :D
-
Ooh... by
on 2013-09-11 00:44:00 UTC
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Hello there! Nice to meet you? Another Whovian? I'm starting an OFU for Doctor Who, if you like to join or contribute any agents, please contact me a kittythekatty@gmail.com
Anywho, Time Lord name...Hm, I guess the Artisan? I draw, paint, crochet, craft, write, etc...
What would your title be? -
Oh, I don't know. by
on 2013-09-11 17:14:00 UTC
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Since I started watching Who I've been thinking about this, and for most of it I've been considering the Librarian (same as Desdendelle - I was wondering if anyone else would say that) who may end up being one of my future agents.
The Clever One might also do, because if anyone wanted to summon me, they would have to say, "Call the Clever One!" or "Where is the Clever One?" and I would be like "I'm here, and thank you, I think I am rather intelligent."
On a similar note, what if a Time Lord, theoretically, was named the Dalek?
"Dalek? WHERE? RUN AWAY!"
"No, not a Dalek, THE Dalek."
"Not HER again!" -
Welcome back! by
on 2013-09-10 22:01:00 UTC
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My name as a Time Lord... Uhm, it might be a bit cheap but it would probably be "The Turbo", 'cause I'm quite of a car and aircraft enthusiast. Or maybe "The Mechanic"? After all, I just got my helicopter building degree.
-
Welcome Back! by
on 2013-09-10 21:01:00 UTC
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As a welcome-back gift I give you a cup of Elysian Tea - this one won't try to eat you!
That said, to answer your question: if I were a Time Lord, my title would be, probably, 'The Librarian', due to the focus on books and knowledge my life seems to have. -
Hello! by
on 2013-09-10 20:58:00 UTC
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First, welcome back. I think I remember you, but it has been a while.
Now, for your question. I think I would be The Speaker or The Presenter. I am very well known for my voice and presenting abilities among my friends, and I know that my future carrier will involve this to an extent. The ironic part is that one-on-one conversation is much harder for me then speaking to a crowd. Strange, but there you have it. -
Welcome back! by
on 2013-09-10 18:21:00 UTC
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The Doctor Who was worth it.
In response to your question, I think that if I was a Time Lord, my title (if I had one) would be The Bluejay. My reasoning for this is a bit long-winded and includes a friend's story featuring me and some other real-life friends, so I won't get into it.