12th Doctor - Peter Capaldi


The Twelfth Doctor is an incarnation of the Doctor, the protagonist of the long-running BBC television science fiction programme Doctor Who. He is portrayed by Scottish actor Peter Capaldi. Within the series' narrative, the Doctor is a time travelling, humanoid alien from a race known as the Time Lords. When the Doctor is critically injured, he can regenerate his body, and in doing so gain a new physical appearance, and with it a distinct new personality; this plot mechanism has allowed the Doctor to be portrayed by a series of actors over the decades since the programme's inception in 1963.

Capaldi made his first, very brief appearance as the Doctor in the show's fiftieth anniversary special "The Day of the Doctor" (2013), as one of the thirteen incarnations of the Doctor who are summoned to save Gallifrey from destruction. Capaldi's first full appearance was at the end of the Christmas special "The Time of the Doctor".  He will be accompanied in the eighth series by incumbent companion Clara Oswald (Jenna Coleman).

Info from Wikipedia

Monsters - The Headless Monks

uh..he has no head!

Now why someone would want to belong to an order called the Headless Monks and be surprised when the main requirement is to NOT have your head...is beyond me...

wiki says:
The Headless Monks are a religious order that can be converted from any humanoid species by the removal of the head. They wear cloaks with hoods draped over where their head should be, giving the impression that they still have a head. Under the hood, the skin is tied into a tight knot where the head has been cut away; however, most outsiders are unaware of this, because except under very special circumstances, one incurs a penalty of death if they ever see under the hood. The monks are endowed with the ability to throw lightning from their hands. They were first mentioned in "The Time of Angels", but did not appear until "A Good Man Goes To War".

Monsters - Hath

Hath Soldier

Yet another misunderstood monster from Doctor Who.  Seems as though us humans are so damn quick to identify something as being threatening..sheesh...

wiki says:

The Hath are aliens that appear as tall, roughly humanoid creatures with fish-like heads, who can breathe in air via the employment of apparatus fitted to their faces that incorporates a canister of green liquid. They are intelligent, emotional creatures – one formed a friendship with Martha Jones, and saved her life at the cost of its own. They seem sentient and while they do not speak a language intelligible to humans, the two races planned to colonize the planet Messaline together. However, they later turned on each other – before their eventual reconciliation, thanks to the Doctor's intervention.
The Monster Files feature states that the Hath joined and assisted early human space colonisation.
The Hath returned for an appearance in the second part of The End of Time, where they are seen in an alien bar, and they are seen briefly in "The Eleventh Hour" in a clip illustrating the Doctor's role as protector of the Earth, suggesting that they have visited the planet at some point prior to 2010.

Monsters - The Ood

Ood
One of my favorite monsters on Doctor Who...They were unwilling pawns when I first was introduced to them and have now come to love them...their song was soooo sad...

From Wiki (of course):

The Ood first appear as a slave race to humanity, performing menial tasks, and one person states in the episode that every human has an Ood servant, although it is not clear whether he is speaking literally or facetiously. In their debut story "The Impossible Planet", it is established that the Ood offer themselves for servitude willingly, having no goals of their own except to be given orders and to serve. It is also claimed that they cannot look after themselves, and if they do not receive orders, they pine away and die. However, mention is made, by a scientist working at an Ood factory, of a group called the "Friends of the Ood", also known as FOTO, who are apparently lobbying for Ood freedom.
According to the Official Doctor Who Annual 2007, the Ood live on a planet in the Horsehead Nebula where they were governed by a Hive Mind but it was destroyed by Human colonists. The monster book Creatures and Demons, published in 2007, elaborates that the Ood came from the "Ood Sphere", close to the "Sense Sphere" planet, home to the Sensorites, who share a similarity with the Ood, both mentally and physically. With no hive mind the Ood offered themselves to the Human colonists and became a slave race.
When encountered by the Tenth Doctor and Rose Tyler in "The Impossible Planet", a large number of Ood accompanied a human-led expeditionary force on the planet Krop Tor, orbiting a black hole. The empathic nature of the Ood seemed to make them susceptible to psychic possession by the Beast, who formed the Ood on the base into his "Legion". While possessed, the Ood killed two human security guards by throwing their translation spheres at them and using them to electrocute them to death.
The Ood were defeated when Danny Bartok, the expedition member in charge of them, broadcast a telepathic flare which reduced their field to "Basic Zero", creating a "brainstorm" which caused them to collapse. However, the telepathic field began to reassert itself after a time. When Krop Tor was sucked into the black hole, the Doctor was unable to save any of the Ood on the base who had been freed of the Beast's control, and all of them perished. The Ood were listed as having died with honors along with the rest of the base personnel killed.
On the return of the Ood in the 2008 episode "Planet of the Ood",[3] it was revealed that they are not born to serve but are an enslaved race, with the translation spheres actually replacing their hind brain which had contained their individual personalities. The Doctor aids and successfully frees the race by releasing the main Ood brain, which links all Ood with a telepathic link. Before this time, it had been sequestered from the Ood for 200 years by Ood Operations, the corporation that processed the Ood slaves. Over that time the brain adapted, allowing it to influence the Ood's actions. It made some Ood feral and vengeful while directing another to genetically re-engineer the head of the slave trading company into an Ood. Once the Hive brain was freed, the Oods' song could be heard throughout the Human Empire, by Ood and Human alike. After this, all Ood were freed and sent back to the planet of the Ood. As they parted from the Doctor, Ood Sigma prophesied that the Doctor's "song" was soon coming to an end.
Ood Sigma returns as part of the 2009–2010 specials in the episode "The Waters of Mars", where he appears after the Doctor's conversation with Adelaide Brooke. The Doctor then asks him whether this is his death, at which point the Ood disappears.[4] The Ood, including Ood Sigma appear in the subsequent, two-part story The End of Time. In this story, the Doctor discovers that the Ood's civilization has advanced rapidly, gaining the ability to see, and project themselves, through Time. The Ood reveal that this is a consequence of Time "bleeding", alluding to the events that were to follow in the Doctor's relative future which would threaten to destroy Time. At the end of Part Two, Ood Sigma appears again to the Doctor as he begins to succumb to the effects of radiation poisoning. He comforts the Doctor by telling him that "the Universe will sing you to your sleep" and that "this song is ending, but the story never ends". This helps the Doctor muster enough strength to make it to the TARDIS and set a course before he regenerates into the Eleventh Doctor.
A singular Ood referred to as "Nephew" appeared in the 2011 episode, "The Doctor's Wife", under the influence of an entity called House. It is killed when the Doctor and Idris land a makeshift TARDIS on it, atomizing it. After it dies the Doctor remarks, "Another Ood I failed to save", in reference to his previous encounters. Nephew's eyes glowed green as opposed to red.
A scene cut from A Good Man Goes to War would have seen the Doctor meeting up with Ood Sigma again. Russell T Davies is still credited at the end for the scene despite it being cut.

Appearances

Series 2 (2006)
"The Impossible Planet"
"The Satan Pit"
Series 4 (2008)
"Planet of the Ood"
Specials (2009–10)
"The Waters of Mars"
The End of Time
Series 6 (2011)
"The Doctor's Wife"
"Death is the Only Answer"
Series 7 (2012)
"Pond Life"[5]

References

1^ TARDIS, Doctor Who Adventure Games – The game says that the Ood have no vocal cords
2^ "Planet of the Ood". Doctor Who. season 4.2. series 4. 19 April 2008.
3^ "Return Of The Ood". Doctor Who News. BBC. 25 July 2007. Retrieved 26 July 2007.
4^ Anders, Charlie Jane (2 March 2009). "The Comeback That Brings The Doctor To His Knees". io9. Gawker Media. Retrieved 8 April 2009.
5^ "WATCH: ‘Doctor Who: Pond Life’ Part 4: An Ood Day at Chez Pond". Anglophenia. BBC America. 30 August 2012. Retrieved 1 September 2012.

11th Doctor Companions

Character/Actor: Amy Pond/Karen Gillan
Character/Actor: Rory Williams/Arthur Darvill
Character/Actor: River Song/Alex Kingston
Character/Actor: Craig Owens/James Corden
Character/Actor: Clara Oswald/Jenna Coleman

^ Gillan's cousin, Caitlin Blackwood, plays a young Amy (as Amelia) in "The Eleventh Hour", "The Big Bang", "Let's Kill Hitler", "The God Complex", and "The Angels Take Manhattan". Unlike the other child actors who have portrayed younger versions of established companions, Blackwood initiated the role of Amelia/Amy and continued to portray her in recurring appearances, finally closing out the character instead of the adult Karen Gillan doing so.
^ A younger Rory is played by Ezekiel Wigglesworth in "Let's Kill Hitler".
^ Earlier incarnations of River (as Melody Pond) are played by Sydney Wade in "The Impossible Astronaut" / "Day of the Moon" and Nina Toussaint-White in "Let's Kill Hitler", with a younger version of the latter regeneration played by Maya Glace-Green in the same episode.
^ River first appears alongside the Tenth Doctor in "Silence in the Library" / "Forest of the Dead", introduced as a companion from his relative future who calls the Doctor to her aid. Progressively younger versions of River subsequently summon the Eleventh Doctor in "The Time of Angels" / "Flesh and Stone" and "The Pandorica Opens" / "The Big Bang", before the future Doctor summons her to his death in "The Impossible Astronaut".
^ River refuses the offer to travel in the TARDIS in "Day of the Moon", but has repeatedly referred to several occasions in the Doctor's future and her past where they have travelled together. She returns as a companion in "A Good Man Goes to War", "Let's Kill Hitler" and "The Wedding of River Song", at various times in her personal timeline, and also appears in "Closing Time", "First Night", "Last Night", and "The Angels Take Manhattan". She agrees to travel with him in the "The Angels Take Manhattan" but not on an on-going basis.
^ Craig first appears in "The Lodger", and acts as the Doctor's companion in the absence of Amy and Rory in "Closing Time".
^River refuses the Doctor's offer to travel with her permanently in "Day of the Moon". She subsequently features as a companion in "A Good Man Goes to War", "Let's Kill Hitler" and "The Wedding of River Song", and also appears in "Closing Time". She later appears in "The Angels Take Manhattan" and "The Name of the Doctor".
^ Sophie Downham appears as young Clara in the prequel to "The Bells of Saint John" and "The Name of the Doctor".
^ Coleman first appeared as Oswin Oswald in "Asylum of the Daleks", a character who shares several characteristics with Clara, and who is revealed in "The Name of the Doctor" to be an echo of Clara, created when Clara jumped into the Doctor's time-stream to defeat the Great Intelligence. Clara dies at the conclusion of "The Snowmen", before a third iteration of the character joins the Doctor permanently in "The Bells of Saint John". "The Name of the Doctor" sees Clara enter the Doctor's personal timeline, splintering herself across time and accounting for her earlier appearances.
^ Clara continues traveling with the Doctor following his regeneration in "The Time of the Doctor".





info from WikiPedia

Who Dat Who?

Well Dr, Who will be back in action and I will be there with bells on to see what unfolds...
Therefore, in prepartion for the event of his second coming...well 11th I suppose...I will be endulging in some Dr. Who Marathoning. Granted BBC America had it's own, but I would rather have no commercials. Soooo, in keeping my public safe, I will not divuldge how I will be getting the said episodes. :-)

What is your favorite Dr. Who moment... as it partains to the 11th doctor?

Sonic Screwdriver

The sonic screwdriver is tool in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who and its spinoffs. Its most common function is to operate virtually any lock, mechanical or electronic. It has also been used for repairing equipment. Like the TARDIS, it has become one of the icons of the program and is closely associated with the Doctor.

Some of the uses in the new series include: repairing electronic equipment; detecting, intercepting and sending signals; remotely operating the TARDIS; burning, cutting, or igniting substances; fusing metal; scanning and identifying substances; amplifying or augmenting sound; modifying mobile phones to enable "universal roaming”; disabling alien disguises. It is sometimes used to disassemble robotic enemies or turn other objects into weapons. In "The Long Game", "The Parting of the Ways" and "Utopia" it is used to operate the TARDIS controls remotely; when the Doctor attempts to counteract the Master's theft of the TARDIS, it is used to limit the TARDIS' destination. In "Doomsday", the Doctor states that the sonic screwdriver does not kill, wound or maim; however, it is sometimes brandished in a threatening manner, such as in "The Christmas Invasion", "The Runaway Bride", "The Lazarus Experiment", The Infinite Quest and The Impossible Planet. In "World War Three", when confronted by a group of Slitheen, the Doctor threatens to "triplicate the flammability" of a bottle of port wine with the sonic screwdriver, though one of the Slitheen realises he is bluffing.