Character Name: The Doctor
Username: Allons-y
Character Picture:

Character Gender: male
Fandom: Doctor Who
Fandom Description: Aliens, crime fighting, drama, etc (?)
Job: History etc.
Job experience: Time Traveler
Title: Just the Doctor
Character Description (Physical and Personality): He wears a suit under his long tan overcoat and wears converse of any color, mostly red, and sometimes wears his glasses. He styles his hair in many ways, but mostly its spiked.
The Tenth Doctor generally displays a light-hearted, talkative, easy-going, witty, and cheeky manner, but nurses profound anger, regret, and vulnerability beneath his more glib exterior. In "School Reunion", he acknowledges that he is less merciful than he used to be and has stuck to his "one warning" code, always giving quarter but punishing his enemies if they persist in their hostilities. He is quick to anger at the perception of injustice. When Prime Minister Harriet Jones destroys the retreating Sycorax ship against his wishes, he ruins her political career in retribution. In "The Waters of Mars", he goes so far as to declare himself above the laws of time, although there are catastrophic consequences as a result.
In his more level-headed moments, though, the Doctor feels profound regret for the many deaths in which he had a hand. (The Moment even describes him as "the man who regrets" in "The Day of the Doctor.") In "Journey's End", he has a flashback of those who have died instead of/for him, including Astrid Peth, Jenny, Luke Rattigan, Lynda Moss, and the hostess from "Midnight". He often shows mercy even to his most irredeemable foes, offering Davros the chance to escape the destruction of the Dalek mothership and insisting on giving a Sontaran general the chance to escape with his life even though he knows a Sontaran would never retreat. The Tenth Doctor's declaration that he is "so sorry" for what he must do is a leitmotif throughout the series. In "The Doctor's Daughter" he explains to his daughter Jenny how "killing...infects [you] and once it does you'll never get rid of it."
Loneliness is the Tenth Doctor's most persistent personal demon: His relationship with various companions is always short-lived and often ends in tragedy. The survivor's guilt of his previous incarnation now takes the form of extreme isolation and a sense of melancholy at being the last of his kind. Even the apparent death of his arch-enemy The Master engenders grief, and in fact the Master elects to die rather than save his own life by regenerating simply to spite the Doctor. In "School Reunion", he says that the long lifespan of the Time Lords is a curse, because while his human companions someday leave him and eventually die, he continues to live. While they may spend the rest of their lives with him, he is unable to do so in turn. In "The End of Time", he ultimately ends up regenerating in the TARDIS alone, despite visits to all of his past companions as he tries to stave off the inevitable regeneration for as long as possible.
The Tenth Doctor has a tendency to babble, mixing apparent nonsense with vital information, sometimes acting erratically to put his enemies off-guard. In "The Christmas Invasion" and "Tooth and Claw", he is surprised at his own unintentional rudeness when making disparaging remarks, and Jack Harkness, after reuniting with the Doctor, notes that his "new regeneration (is) kinda cheeky".[16] He has a tendency to use technobabble to describe scientific concepts before substituting it with a simpler, analogous explanation, such as his description of non-linear temporal physics as "a big ball of wibbly wobbly, timey wimey stuff".[17] He changes moods often, from mania to anger to nonchalance, and uses this as a form of reverse psychology.
The Tenth Doctor is openly fond of mankind and in awe of their tenacity and curiosity, a trait previously exhibited by his fourth incarnation. In "The Impossible Planet", he hugs the leader of an Earth expedition for daring to explore a planet orbiting a black hole merely "because it was there". In "The Age of Steel", he describes human beings as both brilliant and stupid in the same sentence while arguing the necessity of emotions with the Cyber-Controller. Conversely, this makes his expectations rather high and his anger when he feels humanity has let him down quite severe. Indeed, his confidence in the human race becomes far less pronounced in later series, and at the end of "Midnight" he is left speechless after witnessing the steps humans can become willing to take when placed in a threatening situation, as he is almost killed by a panicky group of people who turn on him. The Tenth Doctor stands out for his love of humanity and its popular culture, including television, Harry Potter, and the film "The Lion King."
More than any previous incarnation, the Tenth Doctor serves as a romantic leading man. His relationship with Rose becomes one of obviously mutual but unacknowledged love, and he has several flagrant, whirlwind romances with historical figures like Madame de Pompadour and Queen Elizabeth I (the latter of whom he actually marries, albeit somewhat unintentionally). In "School Reunion", Sarah Jane Smith all but confesses that she had been in love with him all along. Martha Jones runs off with the Doctor in Series 3 largely because of an obvious attraction to him, but her feelings remain unrequited due to his lingering preoccupation with Rose. On the other hand, he expressly singles out Donna as a new travelling companion precisely because they have no romantic chemistry, although after he is forced to leave Donna on Earth with her memory wiped of all their adventures, he later acknowledges the emotional fall-out of this tragedy as a heartbreak. When he is poisoned in "The Unicorn and the Wasp" and asks Donna to give him a shock of some kind, kissing him proves to be so out-of-character for her that it is sufficient to trigger the detox process. Despite his constant heartache, the Tenth Doctor's qualities as a romantic lead remain one of his defining characteristics as a consistently well-dressed, traditionally handsome performer, engaging in such pageantry as sword fighting villains and riding to the rescue on a white horse in classic swashbuckling fashion.
The Tenth Doctor speaks with an Estuary English accent, rather than the Greater Manchester accent (Christopher Eccleston's own accent) that the Ninth Doctor used, the Received Pronunciation of most earlier Doctors, or Tennant's natural Scottish English. David Tennant told SFX magazine in 2006 that Russell T Davies had asked him to drop his natural Scottish accent, because he felt "we'd like to not go for another obvious regional accent, because I suppose they'd done that".[18] In a 23 December interview on BBC Radio 1, Tennant explained that a line had been scripted for the Christmas special explaining that the newly regenerated Doctor had imprinted on Rose Tyler's accent, "like a chick hatching from an egg", but the line was cut from the final episode. The Tenth Doctor uses an American Appalachian accent in "The Christmas Invasion", and a Highland Scottish accent in "Tooth and Claw."
Much as the Ninth Doctor frequently declared things "Fantastic!", this Doctor has also favoured certain phrases on various occasions, such as "Brilliant!", "oh yes!" (used in an exuberant fashion, often when he has successfully done something), "molto bene" (Italian for "very well"), "I'm sorry, I'm so sorry", and the French command "Allons-y" ("Let's go") as his exclamation. He often clarifies his own mistakes by beginning with an elongated "Well..."
Both Tennant and his character express particular affection for Peter Davison's Fifth Doctor character and imitated much of Davison's style. The pair co-starred In the 2007 Children in Need special, "Time Crash" where their respective incarnations reflect on the commonalities of their mode and adventures. The Tenth admits to the Fifth that he was the Tenth's favourite past incarnation.
Short Character History: He is a Time Traveler, last of the Time Lords, at least he thinks, and he loves Rose Tyler
Pet: was K-9
Pet history: idk
(Sorry, the personally is soooooo long)