#and now the note he write with the statue will be on my corkboard alongside his original drawing of the tattoo he got
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spent the day with my sickass friend mango that's going to Boston in two days, hanging out while he got his tattoo, and just opened the gift he gave me
Bro gave me a little statue of Haephestus alongside a message saying he's the patron of sculptors and artists and he got a lot of these little statuettes in Greece and he was giving some away to his fav profs and I am going to Cry
I am now double glad I made him sit down in my dorm and let me make him some signposts to take to Boston with him [starting with Boston, also adding in the city we both share together and Delos in Greece], so he has something to take with him. Shoutout mango
And in the middle of writing this post I ran back down to take custody of his fav Hiking Stick which I will now keep forever, and I gave him a seashell off my bracelet that I got in Sanibel a long time ago. He's gonna do such a good job in Boston and I am weeping
#.yappin#it was in the high 90s today but it didnt matter because i got to hangout with him#i will bother him nightly and check the weather radar for boston every night before i sleep to tell him to bring an umbrella#and now the note he write with the statue will be on my corkboard alongside his original drawing of the tattoo he got#my eyes keep tryingnto cry cause my friend is gonna be halfway across the country. but i cant stop smiling cause im so happy for him#this is a good day. i hope hearing abt it has made someone feel warm#or cool if its fucking 90 degrees where you are too. i hope the shared love has made you cool down
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The Shared Dalek Universe of the 1960s: A Case Study
In 2011 (a little over ten years ago!), El Sandifer cited my dearly-beloved 1960s Who Annuals as examples of stories which ended up influencing the TV series many years down the line despite making an unrepentant hash of continuity.Â
Her first example is that the Doctor is called Dr. Who, and that he alternates between being from Earth on one page, and not being from Earth three pages later. I would point out that TV was doing much the same thing in those days, and went on flip-flopping basically until Jon Pertwee, so itâs not a terribly good argument to begin with.
However, she spends more time pondering the Daleks of the comics. These Daleks, she notes, are very different from those on television at the time. There are hordes of them, they travel in fleets of saucers, and theyâre ruled by the Emperor. This contradiction, she argues, later fed back into the TV series in the RTD era, when huge fleets of Daleks became the norm and, earlier but still well after the first burst of Annuals, in the form of Patrick Troughton facing a very different Dalek Emperor in The Evil of the Daleks.
In no way do I wish to undermine Sandiferâs ultimate conclusion that âcanonâ in the sense of diegetic consistency is a red herring of little importance, and what matters for any sane definition of âcanonâ is whether a story is referenced at all, not whether itâs contradicted.Â
However.
Having gone back to 1966â˛s The Dalek Outer Space Book, I have made a very startling discovery, in the story entitled The Secret of the Emperor. The rest is after the cut; I will leave you with a delightful panel from this story, showing the âbewilderedâ Dalek Emperor being bullied by knights at the Battle of Agincourt. (This is one of my favourite Doctor Who images ever, and if it doesnât put a smile on your face I am not sure I want to take you seriously.)
So, famously, when he debuted in the comics, the Dalek Emperor was not the giant, static Dalek later shown on television in The Evil of the Daleks and The Bad Wolf of the Ways; instead, he was golden, squat, and had a bulbous head; to house all the ego, one expects.Â
Thus, most people will point at the fact that when the Doctor met âthe Emperorâ in The Evil of the Daleks, he resided in a huge tower-like casing in the Dalek City, as evidence that although ideas received a first treatment in the comics which later made it to screens, no direct continuity was intended; the comicsâ Emperor was an alternate, a first draft, to be discarded once a more definitive TV portrayal emerged.Â
And yet, of course, it is somehow appealing to think of the two as the same Dalek, isnât it? John Peel (Dalek writer voted most likely to be a 19th century Victorian man who stumbled into a time eddy; itâs mostly the remarkable sideburns) spent a lot of time in his Dalek novels establishing the life story of the Dalek Prime, the First Dalek Ever, who transitioned from the globe-headed casing to the towery Evil one and then deeply regretted it, what with the âgetting killed by his own infighting troops with no way to escapeâ.
But this is usually viewed as a retcon. A cute retcon, an admirable retcon even, but a retcon. My good friend and esteemed fellow canon-welder, @rassilon-imprimaturâ, espoused such a view four years ago:
Well, all of this is, if youâll pardon my French, bollocks. John Peel didnât make anything up, except for the snappy name of âthe Dalek Primeâ as a designation for the individual. The Dalek Emperor in Evil of the Daleks was always the Emperor of the 1960s comics, and there is a very good reason for his seemingly-contradictory change of appearance. Whatâs more, I am not talking about murky authorial intent: these are things that the discerning Dalek fan in 1967 was meant to have known.
Let me wind back the clock to 1966. A Dalek master-plan is unfurling, a multi-media agenda spanning several years, more ambitious perhaps than even Time Lord Victorious in its scope; for the ultimate aim of a small cabal of men including David Whitaker, Terry Nation and Brad Ashton is nothing less than spinning the Daleks out of Doctor Who and into their own non-BBC TV show â to be made in America, and in colour, if you please!Â
For over a year now, a Dalek story arc has been running in the pages of TV Century 21, tracking the early rise of the Dalek Empire and its early interactions with 2060s humanity. Though the Daleks encroach over other parts of the book, including the headline stories, the bulk of this story arc comes in the form of weekly one-page comics making up one long serialised history of the Daleks, under the minimalist title of The Daleks.
Also under the solo brand of âThe Daleksâ: Annuals, an exclusive audio story, and, of course, toys. Time for Phase Two. It is time to end the Daleksâ endless confrontations with Dr Who on television, and set the stage for a new status quo able to support the TV series Nation dreams about.Â
Important background: Terry Nation, famously, does not like the Dalek Emperor. Whitaker made him up without consulting Nation, who maintains that the highest rank in the Dalek hierarchy should be the Dalek Supreme. The Emperor was hard to do away with in the comics, since he was basically the protagonist of the TV21 strip, but one imagines Nation was keen to jettison him from the world of the planned TV series.Â
I am speculating, of course, but I picture Nation sitting in his office, pondering the two great thorns in the side of the Independant Daleks Masterplan.Â
Thorn one: the Daleks are entangled with the Doctor both diegetically and symbolically; unless something can be done, the Daleks will remain âthe Doctorâs enemiesâ, and a show where they commit evil and the Doctor fails to show up would ring false with the kids watching. The Daleks must be removed from Doctor Who in a sensational and definitive manner, or the whole enterprise is a nonstarter.
Thorn two: I, Terry Nation, have foolishly allowed David Whitaker to shape the lore of the Daleks, and he has made this Dalek Emperor guy very central to early Dalek history, leading up to the 22nd century Dalek Invasion of Earth that most of the Doctorâs subsequent conflicts with the Daleks have stemmed from. But I do not like the Dalek Emperor. I wish I could get rid of him in my new status quo.Â
âŚâŚâŚâŚAha.
A triumphant Terry Nation adds a post-it note to the ever-widening corkboard representing the multimedia Dalek Masterplan setting up the TV series, which must already include things like âconvince Jean Marsh to come back as Sara Kingdomâ. Notes distilled from this corkboard will form the backbone of The Dalek Outer Space Book, this yearâs Dalek annual, which exists principally to set up the prospective main characters of the new TV series: Sara Kingdom and Agent Mark Seven, of the Space Security Service.Â
The new post-it note reads:
Construe the Daleksâ enmity with the Doctor as a personal enmity between the Doctor and the Emperor, a la Sherlock Holmes and Moriarty. Have the Doctor triumph over the Emperor on TV in a big âeventâ story.Â
Result: the Doctor-vs-Daleks storyline is over; the Emperor is dead; I get everything I ever wanted.Â
(Except maybe a pony.)
Then he phones David Whitaker, smirking all the while like an evil genie preparing to grant a badly-worded wish.Â
âGood news, old chap, Iâve decided you can write a new Dalek story for the BBC, all by yourself. I promise I wonât interfere.â
*confused and delighted David Whitaker noises*
â And you can even bring in that Dalek Emperor of yours. Yes, you heard me!â
*Whitaker enthusiasm intensifies*
âAhhh, but thereâs a catch. The Dalek Emperor must DIE.â
Of course, like all good Faustian bargains, this is irresistible even though it is ruinous and the victim knows it to be ruinous. Whitaker agrees to the scheme. He and Nation begin planning out the events of the great finale of the Dalek-Doctor confrontation, which will hit the screens in 1967 as the mildly racist, but otherwise quite well-loved, âThe Evil of the Daleksâ.Â
Quickly enough, it is decided that Patrick Troughton crouching to berate the short and bubble-headed Golden Emperor would look silly. If the Emperor appears on TV, alongside human performers, then it should tower over them. Besides, this is to be the archvillainous Dalek Emperorâs last stand, and certain traditions must be followed.
Hence another task is added to the bucketlist of the Dalek Outer Space Book: tell the story of how the Emperor transformed from the globe-headed dwarf to some huge and terrible towering form under the Dalek City, for the Doctor to stumble onto later. This rebuilt Emperor may be teased, but must not be truly seen or truly defeated in the book; that would defeat the whole idea.Â
Hence, The Secret of the Emperor, a story which sees the Emperor becoming self-conscious about his own efficiency and letting the Scientist Daleks rebuild his casing from scratch. The final page is a splash panel, a delightfully nonsensical diagram of the mechanical components of the new casing.Â
The almost surreal array of colours and shapes is so arresting as to obscure an important detai. Many have seen this page over and over, and yet still missed it. The recent(ish) âAnatomy of the New Dalek Emperorâ artwork from Time Lord Victorious clearly looked at this page for reference, in spite of the fact that the TLV Emperor is much more inspired by the old Emperor than the rebuilt one.
Let me spell it out for you: look at the Scientist Daleks in the top right and centre-left. Look at them.
The new Emperor is huge.
And what else?Â
That Scientist on the left is plugging huge wires snaking from the wall into the tower-casing.Â
He now resides in the Great Hall of the Dalek City.
The background wall is a weird checkered pattern.
In addition, the following facts are seeded throughout the earlier pages of The Secret of the Emperor.
The point of moving to the new casing was to grant the Emperor increased brain capacity (suitable for concocting masterplans).
He acquired said increased brain capacity to help the Daleks attempt to overcome humanity once and for all.Â
The Emperor has recently had a trautmatic but eye-opening experience with time travel.Â
Ignore the fact that the Emperor was here depicted with what appears to be a still fairly bulbous, and golden, head, and it doesnât take a genius to figure out that this is very, very direct setup for how the Doctor finds the Dalek Emperor in The Evil of the Daleks â tower-like, in an imperial throneroom in the Dalek City, with a checkered wall pattern, planning out a complicated scheme to harness time travel as a means of defeating humanity once and for all!
Yes, the designs donât quite match â but how could the artist behind the visuals of Secret of the Emperor have known precisely what Shawcraft would build, a year later, based on the same basic description by Nation & Whitaker? The parallels far outweigh the minor differences in execution. (Itâs worth noting that elsewhere in the Outer Space Book a different artist drew what was clearly intended to be the Golden Emperor as a large, golden, but normally-proportioned Dalek, so itâs not like the visual descriptions of these scripts were exceedingly preciseâŚ)
The rebuilt Emperor is never seen in the Outer Space Book outside of this âdissectionâ: he is heard throughout The Brain Tappers but kept carefully off-panel, and his new and dangerous new casing is pointedly not destroyed in the storyâs conclusion. Well, of course not. Thatâs what Dr Who is for.
tl;dr: it is not a post hoc retcon, or even a secret, that the round-headed Emperor of the comics became the Dalek Emperor of Evil of the Daleks. A holistic view of the state of Dalek media in 1966-1967 shows that, in fact, it was the whole point that this be the Emperor of the comics; and that the comics had begun setting this up long before Patrick Troughton encountered Edward Waterfield on TV.
And thus, to circle back to Sandiferâs 2011 post, it is not enough to simply say that the âseemingly non-canonâ comics inspired the show down the line. In fact in this instance, what appeared on Doctor Who existed for the benefit of the Daleks spin-off â not vice-versa!
#Daleks#Canon-Welding#Doctor Who#Analysis#Doctor Who Meta#Dalek Emperor#Dalek Prime#The Evil of the Daleks#Terry Nation#David Whitaker#Brad Ashton#The Secret of the Emperor#El Sandifer#Canon#Jacob Black
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