Mr Waites: Difference between revisions
NateBumber (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
|origin = | |origin = | ||
|first = | |first = | ||
|only | |only cs = John Smith and the Common Men (comic story) | ||
|appearances = | |appearances = | ||
|actor = | |actor = | ||
Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
|other voice actor = | |other voice actor = | ||
}}{{you may|Aubrey Waites}} | }}{{you may|Aubrey Waites}} | ||
'''Mr Waites''' was the name given by the [[Eleventh Doctor]] to a [[mind parasite]]. Waites referred to himself as the '''Eternal Ordeal''', the '''Guardian of Sorrow''' and the '''God of Worst Days'''. [[Clara Oswald]] considered the creature to be a "sick, twisted monster". | '''Mr Waites''' was the name given by the [[Eleventh Doctor]] to a [[mind parasite]]. Waites referred to himself as the '''Eternal Ordeal''', the '''Guardian of Sorrow''' and the '''God of Worst Days'''. [[Clara Oswald]] considered the creature to be a "sick, twisted [[monster]]". | ||
Mr Waites used his [[tendril]]s to connect people's minds to his own, as he fed off the "[[hellscape]]" [[dream]]s they created in their minds where the victims visualised "the worst thing [they] could ever imagine". In the Doctor's dream, he lived the life of a coward in a bureaucratic job, where Mr Waites appeared to be a [[human]] boss who promoted the Doctor to [[assistant mediator]] to deal with members of the public the Doctor was unable to help. In Clara's dream, she existed in a world without [[the Doctor]]. The Doctor and Clara were able to escape from their dreams as they knew something was wrong about them. Clara woke the other victims of Mr Waites by removing them from his tendrils, while the Doctor attached Waites' tendril to Waites' mind, destroying him. ([[COMIC]]: | Mr Waites used his [[tendril]]s to connect people's minds to his own, as he fed off the "[[hellscape]]" [[dream]]s they created in their minds where the victims visualised "the worst thing [they] could ever imagine". In the Doctor's dream, he lived the life of a coward in a bureaucratic job, where Mr Waites appeared to be a [[human]] boss who promoted the Doctor to [[assistant mediator]] to deal with members of the public the Doctor was unable to help. In Clara's dream, she existed in a world without [[the Doctor]]. The Doctor and Clara were able to escape from their dreams as they knew something was wrong about them. Clara woke the other victims of Mr Waites by removing them from his tendrils, while the Doctor attached Waites' tendril to Waites' mind, destroying him. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|John Smith and the Common Men (comic story)}}) | ||
== Behind the scenes == | == Behind the scenes == |
Latest revision as of 19:56, 29 March 2024
- You may be looking for Aubrey Waites.
Mr Waites was the name given by the Eleventh Doctor to a mind parasite. Waites referred to himself as the Eternal Ordeal, the Guardian of Sorrow and the God of Worst Days. Clara Oswald considered the creature to be a "sick, twisted monster".
Mr Waites used his tendrils to connect people's minds to his own, as he fed off the "hellscape" dreams they created in their minds where the victims visualised "the worst thing [they] could ever imagine". In the Doctor's dream, he lived the life of a coward in a bureaucratic job, where Mr Waites appeared to be a human boss who promoted the Doctor to assistant mediator to deal with members of the public the Doctor was unable to help. In Clara's dream, she existed in a world without the Doctor. The Doctor and Clara were able to escape from their dreams as they knew something was wrong about them. Clara woke the other victims of Mr Waites by removing them from his tendrils, while the Doctor attached Waites' tendril to Waites' mind, destroying him. (COMIC: John Smith and the Common Men [+]Loading...["John Smith and the Common Men (comic story)"])
Behind the scenes[[edit] | [edit source]]
Mr Waites shares the surname of the Hon. Aubrey Waites, who was mentioned in the television episode "An Unearthly Child" as taking on the stage name "John Smith" when he joined the band John Smith and the Common Men, the story's namesake.