Suicide: Difference between revisions
Snivystorm (talk | contribs) (Expanding to include latest episode) Tag: sourceedit |
|||
(51 intermediate revisions by 25 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{wikipediainfo}} | {{wikipediainfo}} | ||
{{first pic|Dalek Suicide Bomber.jpg|A [[Dalek]] suicide bomber. ([[TV]]: | {{first pic|Dalek Suicide Bomber.jpg|A [[Dalek]] suicide bomber. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Destiny of the Daleks (TV story)}})}} | ||
'''Suicide''' was the act of killing of one's self. | '''Suicide''' was the act of killing of one's self. If it was done for the benefit of others, it was a form of [[self-sacrifice]]. | ||
Many [[robot]]s, such as [[K9]] and the [[Pain-Maker]], were built with a [[self-destruct]] function. This usually resulted in an explosion. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Regeneration (TV story)}}, {{cs|Robot Gladiators (TV story)}}, {{cs|Hound of the Korven (TV story)}}) [[Cyborg]]s such as [[Dalek]]s could also self-destruct. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Remembrance of the Daleks (TV story)}}, {{cs|Dalek (TV story)}}, {{cs|Asylum of the Daleks (TV story)}}, [[COMIC]]: {{cs|Extermination of the Daleks (comic story)}}) | |||
In [[ | == History == | ||
In [[1507]], [[First victim|an unnamed human]] committed suicide after [[Barbara Wright]] stopped his sacrificial ceremony. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Aztecs (TV story)}}) | |||
In [[ | In [[1580]], the [[Saturnyn]] calling herself [[Rosanna Calvierri]] committed suicide after the [[Eleventh Doctor]] defeated her plan to save her people. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Vampires of Venice (TV story)}}) | ||
In [[ | In [[1851]], [[Thomas Brewster]]'s mother committed suicide by throwing herself into the [[River Thames]]. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Haunting of Thomas Brewster (audio story)}}) | ||
In [[ | In [[1856]] of an [[alternate timeline]], [[Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart]] attempted suicide by shooting himself in the head, but survived and his wounds healed almost instantly due to having been granted [[immortality]]. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|My Own Private Wolfgang (audio story)}}) | ||
On [[27 July]] [[1890]], [[Vincent van Gogh]] committed suicide by shooting himself. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Vincent van Gogh (short story)}}) | |||
In [[ | In [[1898]], [[Gordon Seavers]] committed suicide after [[Richard Harries]] blackmailed him. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Banquo Legacy (novel)}}) | ||
In [[July]] [[1915]], [[Haiti]]an [[President]] [[Jean Vilbrun Guillame Sam]] committed suicide rather than be assassinated by General [[Bobo]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|White Darkness (novel)}}) | |||
In an [[alternate timeline]] in [[1930]], [[Edith Thompson]] committed suicide because [[Charlotte Pollard|Charley Pollard]] died in the crash of the [[R101]]. This created a paradox, as Charley had not died, but had been saved by the [[Eighth Doctor]]. The paradox was resolved when the Doctor talked Edith out of suicide. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Chimes of Midnight (audio story)}}) | |||
In | In [[1938]], after being relentlessly chased by [[Weeping Angel]]s determined to imprison him in [[Winter Quay]] for the rest of his life to feed off his time energy, [[Rory Williams]] decided to commit suicide by jumping off the building in order to create a [[temporal paradox]] and kill the Angels. His wife [[Amy Pond]] joined him and the plan worked: all but one Weeping Angel were killed and the negating of the [[alternate timeline]] restored them to life in a [[2012]] [[New York City]] [[graveyard]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Angels Take Manhattan (TV story)}}) | ||
On [[3 September]] [[1939]], [[Cecelia Pollard]], knowing she would be regarded as a traitor by the British or an amusement by the Nazis, committed suicide in [[Munich]]. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|A Blind Eye (audio story)}}) | |||
After being implicated in a plot to remove [[Adolf Hitler]], Field Marshal [[Erwin Rommel]] committed suicide to save his family. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|The Instruments of War (comic story)}}) | |||
On [[30 April]] [[1945]], Hitler committed suicide at the end of [[World War II]] rather than face capture or defeat. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Shadow in the Glass (novel)}}) | |||
In the [[1950s]], [[Alan Turing]] committed suicide after being hounded out of academia by [[Professor]] [[Jeffrey Broderick]]. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Artificial Intelligence (audio story)}}) | |||
[[ | In [[November]] [[1963]], at the end of the [[Shoreditch Incident]], the [[Black Dalek Leader|Supreme Dalek]] [[self-destruct]]ed when the [[Seventh Doctor]] revealed that [[Skaro]] was destroyed. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Remembrance of the Daleks (TV story)}}) | ||
In [[March]] [[1965]], Lady [[Catherine Waverly]] seemingly committed suicide due to her guilt over murdering her husband Commodore [[Charles Waverly]] less than a week earlier. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Manhunt (CM audio story)}}) | |||
In [[ | In the late [[1960s]], [[Margaret Bridgeman]] committed suicide after [[euthanasia|euthanasing]] her vegetative husband; both deeds were done with the use of [[sleeping pill]]s. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Invasion of the Cat-People (novel)}}) | ||
In [[1977]], unable to move after looking into the eyes of the [[Fendahl]] core, [[Maximillian Stael]] committed suicide in the cellars of [[Fetch Priory]] rather than be transformed into Fendahleen. The [[Fourth Doctor]] passed him a gun from the nearby [[altar]] to assist him in this. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Image of the Fendahl (TV story)}}) | |||
On [[31 December]] [[1999]], [[Alex Hopkins]] committed suicide after killing the rest of the [[Torchwood Three]] team, having used [[Last of Erebus|Object 1]] to see a vision of the [[21st century]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Fragments (TV story)}}) | |||
[[Evelyn Smythe]] received a suicide letter from her student [[Sally (Doctor Who and the Pirates)|Sally]]. She had the [[Sixth Doctor]] take her back in time to prevent this. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Doctor Who and the Pirates (audio story)}}) | |||
On [[30 March]] [[2006]], [[Agatha Ellis]] committed suicide. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Curtain Call (short story)}}) | |||
[[Suzie Costello]] committed suicide after her crimes were exposed. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Everything Changes (TV story)}}) | |||
[[ | In [[2008]] [[Colin Acres Junior]] committed suicide, fearing that [[Torchwood Three|Torchwood]] wanted to conduct experiments on him. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Mrs Acres (short story)}}) | ||
[[John Ellis]] committed suicide after being displaced from [[1953]] and learning that his family was gone. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Out of Time (TV story)}}) | |||
Following his [[Jessica Pugh|wife's]] death, [[Robert Pugh]] considered suicide on multiple occasions, including with a razor in the shower and by taking pills. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|More Than This (audio story)}}) | |||
[[ | In [[2008]], after being fatally wounded by a gunshot from [[Lucy Saxon]], {{Simm}} consciously refused to regenerate, realising that doing so would lead him to being eternally imprisoned by the Doctor in his TARDIS. As such, he died in the Doctor's arms. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Last of the Time Lords (TV story)}}) | ||
[[Owen Harper]] attempted suicide in the [[2000s]] by drowning after the [[resurrection gauntlet]] was used to bring him back, reducing him to a [[zombie]]-like state. He later talked [[Maggie Hopley]] out of her attempt to suicide. ([[TV]]: {{cs|A Day in the Death (TV story)}}) | |||
By [[2009]], suicide rates rose, the evidence for the existence of [[alien]]s leading to crises of faith. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Children of Earth: Day One (TV story)}}) | |||
[[John Frobisher]] committed suicide after killing his wife and children to spare themselves from [[the 456]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Children of Earth: Day Five (TV story)}}) | |||
After [[Miracle Day]], in which people on Earth ceased to die, suicide became impossible, but some people became 'inventive', finding ways to get as close to death as possible. For example, the [[45 Club]] believed that jumping from 45 floors up or higher was the only guaranteed way to lose [[consciousness]] forever. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Middle Men (TV story)}}) | |||
In | In [[2012]], [[Metaltron|a Dalek]], which, after the [[Last Great Time War]], the [[Ninth Doctor]] believed to be the last of its kind at the time, self-destructed when it was mutated by [[human]] [[DNA]] from [[Rose Tyler]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Dalek (TV story)}}) | ||
[[ | [[Etoine]], a [[Zygon]] who had been posing as a human, committed suicide after his alien nature was exposed. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Zygon Inversion (TV story)}}) | ||
In | In [[2017]], the virtual [[Shadow World]] contained the ''[[Veritas (text)|Veritas]]''. Everyone who read it appeared to go mad and commit suicide. The [[Twelfth Doctor (Shadow World)|duplicate Twelfth Doctor]] of the Shadow World discovered that the document actually contained evidence that their entire world was a virtual creation, and a tool for the [[Monk (species)|Monk]]s to better take over the "real" world. As a result, people who read the ''Veritas'' chose to kill themselves due to a combination of despair at realising they were "not real", and to "save the (real) world" by making the simulation inaccurate and thus rendering it useless to the Monks. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Extremis (TV story)}}) | ||
In | In [[2019]], [[Woman (Broken Bonds)|an agent]] of [[Beltane (organisation)|Beltane]] who had been captured by [[P.R.O.B.E.]] swallowed a poisonous pill, killing herself, to avoid being interrogated by [[Tasha Williams]] and potentially jeopardising the surviving Beltane members' plans. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Broken Bonds (audio story)}}) | ||
In the [[ | In the [[22nd century]], a group of Daleks on Earth initiated [[self-destruct]]ion after the [[Tenth Doctor]] used a [[proton cannon]] to make them intangible. ([[COMIC]]: {{cs|Extermination of the Daleks (comic story)}}) | ||
On [[Világ]], [[Dr]] [[Andrew Szabó]] committed suicide after confessing his crimes. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Thicker Than Water (audio story)}}) | |||
[[Terrin Blakely|Terrin]] and [[Alyst Blakely]] committed suicide by ejecting themselves out of the airlock of their ship to keep the information they had on the [[Cradle of the Gods]] safe from the Daleks. They were later recreated by the Cradle and the mind of their daughter [[Jenibeth Blakely|Jenibeth]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Dalek Generation (novel)}}) | |||
In a [[parallel universe]], | On the [[Dalek Asylum]], a Dalek committed suicide in order to try to kill the Doctor as its weapons were disabled. The Doctor reversed the Dalek into a number of its own kind and it killed them instead in the blast. Later, [[Oswin Oswald]] effectively committed suicide after learning of her conversion into a Dalek by lowering the Asylum's force field so the [[Parliament of the Daleks]] could destroy it and then not leaving while the Asylum was destroyed. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Asylum of the Daleks (TV story)}}) | ||
In the [[far future]], [[Xana (Dragonfire)|Xana]] committed suicide to avoid being arrested and tried for her crimes. Three thousand years later, her lover [[Kane (Dragonfire)|Kane]] committed suicide after the [[Seventh Doctor]] revealed that his home planet [[Proamon]] had been destroyed in a [[supernova]], leaving no one on whom he could take his revenge. ([[TV]]: {{cs|Dragonfire (TV story)}}) | |||
In the far future, [[Cordo]] attempted suicide because he could not afford to pay [[The Company (The Sun Makers)|the Company]]'s [[tax]]es, but was stopped by the [[Fourth Doctor]] and [[Leela]]. ([[TV]]: {{cs|The Sun Makers (TV story)}}) | |||
At the [[end of the universe]], the inhabitants of the [[Institute of Time]] committed suicide after seeing what the [[universe]] had come to. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The End (short story)}}) | |||
On [[Gryben]], [[Nepenthe]] committed suicide after losing the [[Timonic Fusion Device]]. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Weapon of Choice (audio story)}}) | |||
In the [[Divergent Universe]], the [[Eighth Doctor]] stated that he didn't consider himself suicidal, and then proceeded to kill himself. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Last (audio story)}}) | |||
In a [[parallel universe (Exile)|parallel universe]], [[Previous Doctor (Exile)|the Doctor]] committed suicide by jumping off a pylon to escape the [[Time Lord (Exile)|Time Lords]], causing him to [[Regeneration|regenerate]] into a [[The Doctor (Exile)|female incarnation]]. ([[AUDIO]]: {{cs|Exile (audio story)}}) | |||
In an alternate reality, [[Panda]] committed suicide by slitting his [[throat]], and in another alternate reality, he jumped out of a [[window]] in a block of [[flat]]s. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Framed (short story)}}) | |||
[[Category:Mental health]] | [[Category:Mental health]] | ||
[[Category:Murder and homicide]] | [[Category:Murder and homicide]] | ||
[[Category:Psychology from the real world]] |
Latest revision as of 20:15, 16 December 2024
Suicide was the act of killing of one's self. If it was done for the benefit of others, it was a form of self-sacrifice.
Many robots, such as K9 and the Pain-Maker, were built with a self-destruct function. This usually resulted in an explosion. (TV: Regeneration [+]Loading...["Regeneration (TV story)"], Robot Gladiators [+]Loading...["Robot Gladiators (TV story)"], Hound of the Korven [+]Loading...["Hound of the Korven (TV story)"]) Cyborgs such as Daleks could also self-destruct. (TV: Remembrance of the Daleks [+]Loading...["Remembrance of the Daleks (TV story)"], Dalek [+]Loading...["Dalek (TV story)"], Asylum of the Daleks [+]Loading...["Asylum of the Daleks (TV story)"], COMIC: Extermination of the Daleks [+]Loading...["Extermination of the Daleks (comic story)"])
History[[edit] | [edit source]]
In 1507, an unnamed human committed suicide after Barbara Wright stopped his sacrificial ceremony. (TV: The Aztecs [+]Loading...["The Aztecs (TV story)"])
In 1580, the Saturnyn calling herself Rosanna Calvierri committed suicide after the Eleventh Doctor defeated her plan to save her people. (TV: The Vampires of Venice [+]Loading...["The Vampires of Venice (TV story)"])
In 1851, Thomas Brewster's mother committed suicide by throwing herself into the River Thames. (AUDIO: The Haunting of Thomas Brewster [+]Loading...["The Haunting of Thomas Brewster (audio story)"])
In 1856 of an alternate timeline, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart attempted suicide by shooting himself in the head, but survived and his wounds healed almost instantly due to having been granted immortality. (AUDIO: My Own Private Wolfgang [+]Loading...["My Own Private Wolfgang (audio story)"])
On 27 July 1890, Vincent van Gogh committed suicide by shooting himself. (PROSE: Vincent van Gogh [+]Loading...["Vincent van Gogh (short story)"])
In 1898, Gordon Seavers committed suicide after Richard Harries blackmailed him. (PROSE: The Banquo Legacy [+]Loading...["The Banquo Legacy (novel)"])
In July 1915, Haitian President Jean Vilbrun Guillame Sam committed suicide rather than be assassinated by General Bobo. (PROSE: White Darkness [+]Loading...["White Darkness (novel)"])
In an alternate timeline in 1930, Edith Thompson committed suicide because Charley Pollard died in the crash of the R101. This created a paradox, as Charley had not died, but had been saved by the Eighth Doctor. The paradox was resolved when the Doctor talked Edith out of suicide. (AUDIO: The Chimes of Midnight [+]Loading...["The Chimes of Midnight (audio story)"])
In 1938, after being relentlessly chased by Weeping Angels determined to imprison him in Winter Quay for the rest of his life to feed off his time energy, Rory Williams decided to commit suicide by jumping off the building in order to create a temporal paradox and kill the Angels. His wife Amy Pond joined him and the plan worked: all but one Weeping Angel were killed and the negating of the alternate timeline restored them to life in a 2012 New York City graveyard. (TV: The Angels Take Manhattan [+]Loading...["The Angels Take Manhattan (TV story)"])
On 3 September 1939, Cecelia Pollard, knowing she would be regarded as a traitor by the British or an amusement by the Nazis, committed suicide in Munich. (AUDIO: A Blind Eye [+]Loading...["A Blind Eye (audio story)"])
After being implicated in a plot to remove Adolf Hitler, Field Marshal Erwin Rommel committed suicide to save his family. (COMIC: The Instruments of War [+]Loading...["The Instruments of War (comic story)"])
On 30 April 1945, Hitler committed suicide at the end of World War II rather than face capture or defeat. (PROSE: The Shadow in the Glass [+]Loading...["The Shadow in the Glass (novel)"])
In the 1950s, Alan Turing committed suicide after being hounded out of academia by Professor Jeffrey Broderick. (AUDIO: Artificial Intelligence [+]Loading...["Artificial Intelligence (audio story)"])
In November 1963, at the end of the Shoreditch Incident, the Supreme Dalek self-destructed when the Seventh Doctor revealed that Skaro was destroyed. (TV: Remembrance of the Daleks [+]Loading...["Remembrance of the Daleks (TV story)"])
In March 1965, Lady Catherine Waverly seemingly committed suicide due to her guilt over murdering her husband Commodore Charles Waverly less than a week earlier. (AUDIO: Manhunt [+]Loading...["Manhunt (CM audio story)"])
In the late 1960s, Margaret Bridgeman committed suicide after euthanasing her vegetative husband; both deeds were done with the use of sleeping pills. (PROSE: Invasion of the Cat-People [+]Loading...["Invasion of the Cat-People (novel)"])
In 1977, unable to move after looking into the eyes of the Fendahl core, Maximillian Stael committed suicide in the cellars of Fetch Priory rather than be transformed into Fendahleen. The Fourth Doctor passed him a gun from the nearby altar to assist him in this. (TV: Image of the Fendahl [+]Loading...["Image of the Fendahl (TV story)"])
On 31 December 1999, Alex Hopkins committed suicide after killing the rest of the Torchwood Three team, having used Object 1 to see a vision of the 21st century. (TV: Fragments [+]Loading...["Fragments (TV story)"])
Evelyn Smythe received a suicide letter from her student Sally. She had the Sixth Doctor take her back in time to prevent this. (AUDIO: Doctor Who and the Pirates [+]Loading...["Doctor Who and the Pirates (audio story)"])
On 30 March 2006, Agatha Ellis committed suicide. (PROSE: Curtain Call [+]Loading...["Curtain Call (short story)"])
Suzie Costello committed suicide after her crimes were exposed. (TV: Everything Changes [+]Loading...["Everything Changes (TV story)"])
In 2008 Colin Acres Junior committed suicide, fearing that Torchwood wanted to conduct experiments on him. (PROSE: Mrs Acres [+]Loading...["Mrs Acres (short story)"])
John Ellis committed suicide after being displaced from 1953 and learning that his family was gone. (TV: Out of Time [+]Loading...["Out of Time (TV story)"])
Following his wife's death, Robert Pugh considered suicide on multiple occasions, including with a razor in the shower and by taking pills. (AUDIO: More Than This [+]Loading...["More Than This (audio story)"])
In 2008, after being fatally wounded by a gunshot from Lucy Saxon, the Saxon Master consciously refused to regenerate, realising that doing so would lead him to being eternally imprisoned by the Doctor in his TARDIS. As such, he died in the Doctor's arms. (TV: Last of the Time Lords [+]Loading...["Last of the Time Lords (TV story)"])
Owen Harper attempted suicide in the 2000s by drowning after the resurrection gauntlet was used to bring him back, reducing him to a zombie-like state. He later talked Maggie Hopley out of her attempt to suicide. (TV: A Day in the Death [+]Loading...["A Day in the Death (TV story)"])
By 2009, suicide rates rose, the evidence for the existence of aliens leading to crises of faith. (TV: Children of Earth: Day One [+]Loading...["Children of Earth: Day One (TV story)"])
John Frobisher committed suicide after killing his wife and children to spare themselves from the 456. (TV: Children of Earth: Day Five [+]Loading...["Children of Earth: Day Five (TV story)"])
After Miracle Day, in which people on Earth ceased to die, suicide became impossible, but some people became 'inventive', finding ways to get as close to death as possible. For example, the 45 Club believed that jumping from 45 floors up or higher was the only guaranteed way to lose consciousness forever. (TV: The Middle Men [+]Loading...["The Middle Men (TV story)"])
In 2012, a Dalek, which, after the Last Great Time War, the Ninth Doctor believed to be the last of its kind at the time, self-destructed when it was mutated by human DNA from Rose Tyler. (TV: Dalek [+]Loading...["Dalek (TV story)"])
Etoine, a Zygon who had been posing as a human, committed suicide after his alien nature was exposed. (TV: The Zygon Inversion [+]Loading...["The Zygon Inversion (TV story)"])
In 2017, the virtual Shadow World contained the Veritas. Everyone who read it appeared to go mad and commit suicide. The duplicate Twelfth Doctor of the Shadow World discovered that the document actually contained evidence that their entire world was a virtual creation, and a tool for the Monks to better take over the "real" world. As a result, people who read the Veritas chose to kill themselves due to a combination of despair at realising they were "not real", and to "save the (real) world" by making the simulation inaccurate and thus rendering it useless to the Monks. (TV: Extremis [+]Loading...["Extremis (TV story)"])
In 2019, an agent of Beltane who had been captured by P.R.O.B.E. swallowed a poisonous pill, killing herself, to avoid being interrogated by Tasha Williams and potentially jeopardising the surviving Beltane members' plans. (AUDIO: Broken Bonds [+]Loading...["Broken Bonds (audio story)"])
In the 22nd century, a group of Daleks on Earth initiated self-destruction after the Tenth Doctor used a proton cannon to make them intangible. (COMIC: Extermination of the Daleks [+]Loading...["Extermination of the Daleks (comic story)"])
On Világ, Dr Andrew Szabó committed suicide after confessing his crimes. (AUDIO: Thicker Than Water [+]Loading...["Thicker Than Water (audio story)"])
Terrin and Alyst Blakely committed suicide by ejecting themselves out of the airlock of their ship to keep the information they had on the Cradle of the Gods safe from the Daleks. They were later recreated by the Cradle and the mind of their daughter Jenibeth. (PROSE: The Dalek Generation [+]Loading...["The Dalek Generation (novel)"])
On the Dalek Asylum, a Dalek committed suicide in order to try to kill the Doctor as its weapons were disabled. The Doctor reversed the Dalek into a number of its own kind and it killed them instead in the blast. Later, Oswin Oswald effectively committed suicide after learning of her conversion into a Dalek by lowering the Asylum's force field so the Parliament of the Daleks could destroy it and then not leaving while the Asylum was destroyed. (TV: Asylum of the Daleks [+]Loading...["Asylum of the Daleks (TV story)"])
In the far future, Xana committed suicide to avoid being arrested and tried for her crimes. Three thousand years later, her lover Kane committed suicide after the Seventh Doctor revealed that his home planet Proamon had been destroyed in a supernova, leaving no one on whom he could take his revenge. (TV: Dragonfire [+]Loading...["Dragonfire (TV story)"])
In the far future, Cordo attempted suicide because he could not afford to pay the Company's taxes, but was stopped by the Fourth Doctor and Leela. (TV: The Sun Makers [+]Loading...["The Sun Makers (TV story)"])
At the end of the universe, the inhabitants of the Institute of Time committed suicide after seeing what the universe had come to. (PROSE: The End [+]Loading...["The End (short story)"])
On Gryben, Nepenthe committed suicide after losing the Timonic Fusion Device. (AUDIO: Weapon of Choice [+]Loading...["Weapon of Choice (audio story)"])
In the Divergent Universe, the Eighth Doctor stated that he didn't consider himself suicidal, and then proceeded to kill himself. (AUDIO: The Last [+]Loading...["The Last (audio story)"])
In a parallel universe, the Doctor committed suicide by jumping off a pylon to escape the Time Lords, causing him to regenerate into a female incarnation. (AUDIO: Exile [+]Loading...["Exile (audio story)"])
In an alternate reality, Panda committed suicide by slitting his throat, and in another alternate reality, he jumped out of a window in a block of flats. (PROSE: Framed [+]Loading...["Framed (short story)"])