#baker peter
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Baker Peter just thought the cute older man who visited so frequently to his shop was just there to indulge in his sweet tooth when he was really there for Peter. Unfortunately each time he went there he couldn't manage to bring up the courage to ask Peter out and instead just kept ordering various cakes and sweet treats instead
Sweet tooth for @starkerfestivals Flufftober
#starker#sweet tooth#SFFlufftober24#baker peter#customer tony#moodboard#my moodboard#starkerfestivalsevents
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Wolfstar :
Remus and Sirius’ flat is a come and go house. Almost all their friends have a key to the flat. And sometimes someone will crash on their couch without warning them.
One night, after a late date night who ended at 2am, they find the door of the flat locked and impossible to open. They knock but no one answers. So, Remus just decids they should take a hotel so they can sleep and take care of it the next day.
Sirius is outraged, she complains a lot « we’ve been kicked out of our own flat Moony ! During a date night !! It’s homophobic !! We should have just sleep on the porch so whoever decided to KICKED US out of our OWN flat feels sorry for us ! ». Remus who is very much not sleeping on the porch just shakes his head with fondness and take his girlfriend’s hand.
The next day, after a breakfast in bed to appease Sirius, they return to the flat and a hungover Peter who had forgot to take his key out of the door is the one to opening to them. « Traitor !! » screams Sirius while pointing at Peter.
Peter is feeling so guilty about it that for a month, every morning, he bakes Sirius her favourite pastries (it’s pain au raisin).
#wolfstar#peter pettigrew#remus lupin#sirius black#marauders#genderfluid sirius going by she/her today#Baker peter#Remus is the reasonable one#Peter is a traitor all the time but sometimes it’s funny and not deadly#it happens in real life#My cousin got locked out of the house and slept at my place so she wouldn't have to sleep in her car.
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I smile like an idiot when I see my man, who’s not my man, on my television screen.
#steve harrington x reader#eddie munson x reader#lalo salamanca x reader#nacho varga x reader#daryl dixon x reader#rick grimes x reader#harvey specter x reader#mike ross x reader#peter parker#pedro pascal x reader#joel miller x reader#peeta mellark x reader#finnick odair x reader#steve rogers x reader#bucky barnes x reader#dean winchester x reader#sam winchester x reader#din djarin x reader#javier pena x reader#ransom thrombey x reader#spencer reid x reader#diego hargreaves x reader#marcus baker x reader#daniel larusso x reader#miguel diaz x reader#roman roy x reader#robby keene x reader#eli hawk moskowitz
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God, I love Doctor Who. Where else are you going to get end credits as bananas as these?
#these are three consecutive slides btw#in case you were wondering#doctor who#the power of the doctor#jodie whittaker#david tennant#david bradley#colin baker#peter davison#paul mcgann#sylvester mccoy#jo martin
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this will always be the greatest moment in the history of doctor who documentaries tbh
#personal crap#doctor who#classic who#fifth doctor#peter davison#fourth doctor#tom baker#the best part is tom embellishes things a lot but we all know he's telling the truth about this#tbh since i first saw this documentary like a decade ago this has lived rent free in my head
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Parallels
#Doctor Who#The Five(ish) Doctors Reboot#The Devil's Chord#Fifteenth Doctor#Peter Davison#Colin Baker#Sylvester McCoy#also I guess for symmetry#Fifth Doctor#Sixth Doctor#Seventh Doctor#Ncuti Gatwa#video#anyway watching Five(ish) Doctors Reboot is so weird now#as someone who has worked at BBC Roath Lock multiple times#(as an extra if you're wondering)#recognising the reception; hallways etc.
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An Old News Article About A Whovian Named Peter Capaldi
#3rd doctor#jon pertwee#4th doctor#tom baker#12th doctor#peter capaldi#sarah jane smith#elisabeth sladen#classic who#doctor who
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Oh you like my hatred for the military industrial complex? Thanks, I got it from doctor who.

#doctor who fandom#dw#military industrial complex#the doctor#david tennant#tom baker#ncuti!doctor#ninth doctor#villengard#doctor who#rose#peter capaldi#12th doctor#christopher eccleston
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Robert Peter Baker
The Kiss, 1910
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(1/2) More text posts as promised!! So glad you guys liked the last ones <3
#doctor who#8th doctor#4th doctor#classic who#twelfth doctor#the master#doctor who spoilers#missy doctor who#twissy#eighth doctor#fourth doctor#tardis#tom baker#peter capaldi#paul mcgann#charley pollard
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The Doctor Wearing Red Velvet



Technically not the doctor but it's David Tennant so

#doctor who#15th doctor#12th doctor#3rd doctor#nuwho#classic who#6th doctor#10th doctor#peter capaldi#david tennant#jon pertwee#colin baker
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#fourth doctor#tom baker#4th doctor#fifth doctor#peter davison#5th doctor#sixth doctor#colin baker#6th doctor#eighth doctor#paul mcgann#8th doctor#doctor who#classic who#classic doctor who#doctor who memes
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20 Versions of Sherlock Holmes Ranked from Most to Least Likely to Set a Building on Fire in a Fit of Rage







#had to get creative after the 10-image limit#hope this looks good!#i spent a while on it hehe#sherlock holmes#versions of sherlock holmes#dr. watson#elementary#jonny lee miller#yuko takeuchi#miss sherlock#benedict cumberbatch#bbc sherlock#christopher plummer#murder by decree#basil of baker street#the great mouse detective#peter cushing#the hound of the baskervilles#jeremy brett#granada sherlock#granada holmes#yekaterina vasilyeva#my dearly beloved detective#basil rathbone#40s cinema#henry lloyd hughes#the irregulars#michael pennington#the return of sherlock holmes#robert downey jr
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A Different Kind of Queen of Crime- five ways that Dorothy L Sayers changed the way we see Sherlock Holmes
For my first Holmesian post- a crossover with one of my more usual subjects on my other blog! For when one is talking about Sherlock Holmes, in particular Sherlock Holmes scholarship, there are nor many more pivotal names than Dorothy L Sayers. Sure, Christopher Morley may have had a greater impact on Sherlockian culture, and Richard Lancelyn Green on Holmesian scholarship, to name only a few- but Sayers's contributions to scholarship and "the game" were early and underratedly pivotal.
If you're a Sherlock Holmes fan who is unfamiliar with Sayers's influence, or a Sayers fan who had no idea she had any interest in Holmes, keep reading! (And if you're a Sherlock Holmes fan who wants to know what I think about Sayers, check out her tag on my main blog, @o-uncle-newt. Or, more to the point, just read her fantastic books.)
There's a great compilation of Sayers's writing and lecturing on the topic of Holmes called Sayers on Holmes (published by the Mythopoeic Press in 2001), though some of her essays are also available in her collection Unpopular Opinions, which is where I first encountered them. It's not THAT extensive, and it's from an era in which Sherlock Holmes scholarship, such as it was, was still very much nascent. While a lot may have happened since Sayers was writing and talking about Holmes, she got there early and she made an immediate impact- and here's how:
She helped create and define Sherlockian scholarship: Don't take this from me, take it from the legendary Richard Lancelyn Green! At a joint conference of the Sherlock Holmes Society and Dorothy L Sayers Society, he said that "Dorothy L. Sayers understood better than anyone before her the way of playing the game and her Sherlockian scholarship gave credibility and humor to this intellectual pursuit. Her standing as an authority on the art of detective fiction and as a major practitioner invigorated the scholarship, and her...Holmesian research is the benchmark by which other works are judged. It would be fair to say, as Watson said of Irene Adler, that for Sherlockians she is the woman and that …she 'eclipses and predominates the whole of her sex.'" We'll go into a bit more detail on some specific examples below, but one important one is that, as Green notes, Sayers was not only a mystery writer but an acknowledged authority on mystery fiction, whose (magisterial) introduction to The Omnibus of Crime, a then-groundbreaking history of the genre of mystery fiction, included a highly regarded section on the influence of Holmes on mystery fiction. She was able to write not just literate detective stories but literate critiques of others' stories and the genre (as collected in the excellent volume Taking Detective Stories Seriously), and as such, the writing she did on Holmes was well received.
She cofounded the (original iteration of) the Sherlock Holmes Society of London: While the current iteration of the Society lists itself as having been founded in 1951, a previous iteration existed through the 1930s, founded as a response to the creation of the Baker Street Irregulars in New York and run by a similar concept- the meeting of Sherlock Holmes fans every so often for dinner at a restaurant. Sayers, who seems to have been much more clubbable than Mycroft Holmes, helped run the Detection Club on corresponding lines as well. (Fun fact, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle was invited to be the first president of the Detection Club! However, he refused on grounds of poor health and, either right before or right after he died, the Detection Club met for the first time with GK Chesterton as president.) While the 1930s society didn't last, and Sayers didn't decide to join the newly reconstituted club in 1951, her presence from the beginning was key to the establishment of Holmesian scholarship.
She helped define The Game: Sayers didn't invent The Game, as the use of Higher Criticism in the study of Sherlock Holmes came to be called. (The Game now often refers to something a bit broader than that, but it's a pretty solid working definition to say that it is the study of Holmes stories as though they took place in, and can be reconciled with, our world.) Her friend Father Ronald Knox largely invented it almost by accident- as Sayers described it, he wrote that first essay "with the aim of showing that, by those methods [Higher Criticism], one could disintegrate a modern classic as speciously as a certain school of critics have endeavoured to disintegrate the Bible." This exercise backfired, as instead of finding this analysis of Holmes stories silly, people found it compelling and engaging- and this style of Sherlockian writing lives on to this day in multiple journals. Sayers, with her interest in religious scholarship as well as Holmes, was well equipped to both understand Knox's original motivations as well as to carry on in the spirit in which further Game players would take his work, as we'll see. She also wrote the line that would come to define the tone used in The Game- that it "must be played as solemnly as a county cricket match at Lord's; the slightest touch of extravagance or burlesque ruins the atmosphere." While comedic takes on The Game would never vanish, her establishment of tone has lingered, and pretty much any in-depth explanation of The Game will include her insightful comment.
Some of Sayers's ideas became definitional: Here's a question- what's John Watson's middle name? If you said "Hamish," guess what- you should be thanking Dorothy L Sayers. (When this middle name was used for Watson in the BBC Sherlock episode The Sign of Three, articles explaining its use generally didn't bother to credit her, instead saying that "some believe" or a variation on that.) She was the one who speculated that the reason why a) Watson's middle initial is H and b) Mary Morstan Watson calls Watson "James" instead of "John" in one story is because Watson's middle name is Hamish, a Scottish variant of James, with Mary's use of James being an intimate pet name based on this nickname. It's as credible as any other explanation for that question, but more than that it became by far the most popular middle name for Watson used in fan media. Others of Sayers's ideas include that Watson only ever married twice, with his comments about experience with women over four continents being just a lot of bluster and him really being a faithful romantic who married the first woman he really fell for (the aim of this essay being to demolish HW Bell's theory of a marriage to an unknown woman between Mary Morstan and the unnamed woman Watson married in 1903, mentioned by Holmes in The Blanched Soldier); that Holmes attended Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge (she denied that he could have attended Oxford, having gone there herself- fascinatingly, Holmesians who went to Cambridge usually assert that he attended Oxford! Conan Doyle of course attended neither school); and reconciling dates in canon (making the case that one cannot base a claim for Watson's mixing up on dates on poor handwriting as demonstrated in canonical documents, as it is clear from the similarity of different handwriting samples from different people/stories that they were written, presumably transcribed for publication purposes, by a copyist).
She wrote one of the only good Holmes pastiches: Okay, fine, I'm unusually anti-pastiche, and genuinely do like very few of them, but this is one that I love- and even more than that, it's even a Wimsey crossover! On January 8 1954, to commemorate the occasion of Holmes's 100th birthday (because, of course, he was born on January 6 1854- Sayers was more in favor of an 1853 birthdate but thought 1854 was acceptable), the BBC commissioned a bunch of pieces for the radio, including one by Sayers. You can read it here (with thanks to @copperbadge for posting it, it's shockingly hard to find online), and I think you'll agree it's adorable. The idea of Holmes and Wimsey living in the same world is wonderful, the way she makes it work is impeccable, and it's clearly done with so much love. Also you get baby Peter, which is just incredibly sweet!
I got into Dorothy L Sayers, in the long run, because I loved Sherlock Holmes from childhood and that later launched me into early and golden age mysteries- but it was discovering Sayers that brought me back full force into the world of Holmes. Just an awesome lady.
#hm holmes quotes from shakespeare's twelfth night a lot#he must have an affinity for the play.#sherlock holmes#john watson#john hamish watson#holmes#acd holmes#sherlock holmes canon#sherlockiana#the game#watsonian#biblical higher criticism#dorothy l sayers#lord peter wimsey#ronald knox#sayers on holmes#so why was sherlock holmes born on january 6?#if you think you know why#no it's stupider than that#so this guy christopher morley who basically invented sherlockian scholarly fandom#as in he started the baker street irregulars which is the org from which pretty much all other scholarly fan societies got inspiration#was like “hm”#“holmes sure does quote from twelfth night a lot”#“he must have an affinity for the play.”#“and why would he have an affinity for the play? because the twelfth night (jan 6) is his birthday.”#and so it has remained ever since#making clear the advantages of being first
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i truly do not gaf, i love the second doctor and his stupid little recorder.

look at this time lord and his damn fool flute. insane.
#doctor who#dw#second doctor#patrick troughton#brigadier alistair gordon lethbridge stewart#brigadier lethbridge stewart#nicholas courtney#classic who#fourth doctor#tom baker#tenth doctor#david tennant#twelfth doctor#peter capaldi
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DOCTOR WHO - CLASSIC + MOVIE DOCTORS
- William Hartnell - 1963-1966
- Patrick Troughton - 1966-1969
- Jon Pertwee - 1970-1974
- Tom Baker - 1974-1981
- Peter Davison - 1981-1984
- Colin Baker - 1984-1986
- Sylvester McCoy - 1987-1989, 1996
- Paul McGann - 1996, 2013
#doctor who#classic doctor who#doccy whomst#first doctor#1st doctor#second doctor#2nd doctor#third doctor#3rd doctor#fourth doctor#4th doctor#fifth doctor#5th doctor#sixth doctor#6th doctor#seventh doctor#7th doctor#eighth doctor#8th doctor#tardis#william hartnell#patrick troughton#jon pertwee#tom baker#peter davison#colin baker#sylvester mccoy#paul mcgann
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