Gushing About Characters You Like (Sugar Wiki)/Live-Action TV

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.


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Characters from Live Action TV that are just that... totally... Awesome.

Star Trek

  • Oh, "Hell NO"!! A list of gushing-worthy characters begins with Captain James Tiberius Kirk, commander of the United Starship Enterprise. Every American male, scratch, every male born after 1960 has wanted to be Captain Kirk. Some like me live their lives hoping to be a quarter as Badass as he was/is. In fact, Kirk has probably influenced some aspect of everybody else on this list. Attractive? Hell, the Green-Skinned Space Babe wants him! Tough? How does inspiring fear and resentment from the Klingons work for you? Smart? The man made a cannon from scratch!
    • He was so badass, he travelled back in time and became a Crazy Awesome attorney who goes by the name Denny Crane.
      • And in his spare time, he makes the world a better place by helping folks get better travel rates by using Priceline.com.
    • How do you follow up an act of such unvarnished badass that was James T. Kirk? You get Captain Jean-Luc Picard, that's how. The man makes Shakespeare sound smoother than silk, makes Earl Grey look like the drink of kings, has manners surpassed only by his unflinching courage and is one of the Trope Codifiers of being A Father to His Men. And he has some of the most classic lines in any timeline.
    • Hello, how about Bones? Charisma so thick you could cut it, and absurdly pretty with gorgeous baby blues to boot.
    • No love for Spock? He can knock someone out without punching them! He can communicate with whales! He does that thing with his eyebrows. He's always calm in an emergency. His place on this list is only logical.
  • What, am I the only (other) one who adores Spock?
    • You Are Not Alone. But we can't forget the awesomeness that is his friend-though-he'd-never-admit-it Dr. McCoy. Or the magnificent Captain Picard.
    • Or Sulu. He seems to be the most cheerful one, he picks up a new hobby on every shore leave, and he mysteriously managed to sire a daughter at some mysterious time with some mysterious woman.
      • So seconded with Sulu. I realized how awesome he really is in Amok Time when he started riffing on what was going on (Spock going into Pon Farr, necessitating the crew to disobey a direct Starfleet order to get him back to Vulcan, and the decision-making process led Sulu and Chekov to have to change course several times). Basically, the fact that his attitude in the face of a Mate or Die situation is "I don't know what the fuck's going on, I just fly this thing" makes him hilarious and awesome. Oh, and George Takei is the man.
        • Thirding the Sulu love. He's a jack of all trades and a total badass. And is pretty much the walking definition of sexy voices. And yes, George Takei is freaking awesome - this is a guy who spent part of his childhood in a concentration camp for Japanese Americans during World War II. The fact that he is such a positive, good-humored, gracious and humanistic person after experiencing machine gun turrets and barb wire fences when he was a boy, and then growing up in a time when homosexuality was not remotely accepted, is frankly awe-inspiring.
    • I'd like to put my chips in for Pavel Andreavich Chekov, who's adorable and hilarious.
  • Worf, Son of Mogh. When TV producers want Proud Warrior Race Guy done right, they follow this guy.
    • What really won me over was Worf's stone-cold refusal to give the mortally wounded Romulan a blood transfusion. It might not have been the noble choice that the other Starfleet boy scouts would've made, but Worf's dedication to his own personal code blows everybody else out the water. Keep in mind, even though he has no problem watching a Romulan die, he's willing to do if Picard orders him to do so.
    • And how many characters, or even real people, actually practice what they preach? Worf is pretty much the only character who consistently lives up to his people's ideals. Worf is the definition of honor.
  • Jadzia. An amiable woman who can be friends with everyone, can handle technological equipment, live with Klingons, and almost be able to face Worf with a Batlith.
  • I'll put in a vote for Data. He's an inspiration to the awkward geeks among us who are looking for a way to fit in. He also gets a high number of moments of awesome, heartwarming, and even funny throughout his career, even before he has his emotion chip installed so he can appreciate these moments himself.
  • Now that Data's already been mentioned, am I the only one who wants to gush about Barclay? Seriously brilliant and awesome.
  • Julian Bashir. Brilliant, compassionate, adventurous, it's hard not to like him. He's just so eager to make everyone smile and lend a helping hand, willing to go to the ends of the galaxy for his friends. He stands up to spy masters and world leaders, can hold his own in a firefight, and still sleeps with his teddy bear! Be still my beating heart.
    • I never thought unbridled rage would bring me to Sugar Wiki, but I have to praise Louise Fletcher for her incredible job as Kai Winn. She plays a smug, sanctimonious mega-bitch, to the fucking hilt. It's blatantly obvious that Ms. Fletcher is rolling around glorying in her hammy, bitchy evilness like a cat in a field of catnip.
    • Sisko. Captain Benjamin Lafayette. The celestial fuckin' prophets checked out ALL of time and space and determined that that dude was the only Starfleet officer badass enough to be their emissary. My case is rested.
    • A shout-out for Kira Nerys. Next to Spock, the best XO in Trekdom, hands down!
      • Seconded. Good backstory that actually fits the character, plenty of character development, and... oh, did I mention COMPLETE AND UTTER BADASS?
        • Thirded. Easily Trek's most complex, endearing, fierce, adorable, loving, fearless, faithful, gorgeous, tender, fiery, well-developed, well-rounded character to date, and Nana Visitor's performance is equalled by no one. No one, although there are plenty who come pretty damn close.
    • Gul Dukat, Magnificent Bastard incarnate and perhaps the greatest villain in sci-fi... including Darth Vader. Let's see. He is to the Bajorans what Hitler is to Jews. Then he releases all the prisoners of a secret prison camp. Then he uses an orphan to try to bring down a political adversary. Then we learn that Dukat put Odo in charge of station security because of respect. Then we find out he's a devoted family man. When a computer program of his nearly kills the senior staff of the station, he arrives to save the day... but finds out his second-in-command modified the program to take out Dukat if he left in a crisis. When he's helping Sisko chase down a rogue starship, his biggest regret is that he's missing his son's 11th birthday. When Sisko proves that Bajorans were able to reach Cardassia in an antique design solar-sail ship, refuting a tenet of Cardassian superiority, Dukat greets him with fireworks. Then he switched sides on his government, following the new leaders after a coup, only to be stripped of rank, privilege, and family when his half-Bajoran daughter came to light (oh, and he nearly killed her). Following that, he gets the Cardassians to join the Dominion, conquers Deep Space Nine, gets booted, alienates his daughter only to see her die in front of him. And THEN he goes crazy... Everything up to this point has been the work of a rational, albeit twisted mind. He starts to hallucinate, swears vengeance on Bajor as a whole and Sisko in particular, turns to Bajoran heretical teachings and kills Jadzia Dax. Finally, he disguises himself as a Bajoran, seduces their religious leader, and uses his heretical powers to summon the Prophet's nemesis and get himself and Sisko thrown into the fiery depths. In a show characterized by darkness and character development, Gul Dukat stands out. Hell, even Ronald D. Moore said "I don't think of him as being completely evil... But there is a "critical mass", if you will, where the dark deeds attributed to one person become so overwhelming that they swamp all the redeeming characteristics." That's right - the guy who did everything listed above isn't completely evil. Hats off to you, Star Trek.
    • While on the subject of Magnificent Bastard Cardassians, I feel that it is my duty to mention Garak, who must be the poster child for this trope. This guy is awesome.
      • Seconded!
    • An entire Star Trek section and nobody mentions Odo? Or Quark? Watching Quark made the entire Ferengi race awesome. As for Odo, he's the first character I've seen since Data who can be so badass yet so adorable at the same time.
      • Quark? What about his family? Lovable Genius Ditz Rom and their awesome Moogie, the Man Behind the Man for the Grand Nagus and the epitome of a profitable Ferengi.
  • Seven of Nine. Ms. Fanservice, huh? Sure that's where it starts, but then comes Hidden Depths, Deadpan Snarkery, and general awesomeness.
    • The Doctor. A great comedic character and a great dramatic character, sometimes in the same episode. He may be obnoxious and arrogant, but deep down he absolutely loves his crew and would sacrifice himself for their sake with little thought. Ironic that an Artificial Human should seem like one of the show's most realistic people.
  • When confronted with an area of space where you are likely to be attacked at every turn by either the Borg or Species 8472, what does Captain Janeway do? Turn around, as her first mate suggests? No, she forms AN ALLIANCE WITH THE BORG, takes the fight to 8472, out-backstabs the Borg and sails away with one of the drones. A few seasons later, she goes face-to-face with the Borg Queen to regain said drone. Janeway is definitely my favorite character in Voyager.

Buffyverse

  • Wesley Wyndham-Price, starting with the Season 1 episode "The Ring", where he nails a guy's hand to the wall with a crossbow bolt and twists it until the guy gives him the information to save his best friend. He may not always make the right choices, but his character ranges from the silly comic relief to the darkest character on the show without missing a beat, complex, intriguing, and nuanced, and he may well be one of the single best cases of Character Development ever to grace the small screen.
    • SECONDED! Wesley is easily one of the most complex and compelling characters in the Buffyverse, and THAT is saying something!
    • Cordelia Chase, anyone? A snarky bee-yotch with a heart of gold. What's not to like? I try to forget the Character Derailment of Season 4 of Angel and remember her as she was before.
    • Angel himself is one of the best heroes I have ever seen. Despite the world being against him, having an evil law firm in his face all the time, and not being able to be with the woman he loves, he hasn't given up or run away. He does what is right, and is prepared to sacrifice himself to save another. That's what a true hero is.
      • Angel is awesome, good side and evil side. Just in very, very different ways.
    • Doyle. Half-demon coward turned hero. I cried for a week after he died.
    • I really, REALLY love Fred. She's smart, she's cute, she can rattle off fifteen words a second ... what's not to like? Not to mention how she doesn't let being struck in Pylea for five years a slave bring her down, and becomes a valuable member of the team. I went from wanting to give her a hug in comfort, to practically worshipping the very ground she treads on because she's Just. That. AWESOME!
      • I wish to second all of this, and add that it's the first time I've found a character who reminds me of myself on TV.
      • I like Fred, too. It sucks that Whedon killed her off.
  • Spike is always entertaining and sexy. Even when he did his Heel Face Turn and had a chip in his head, he was still hilarious and cool. Yes, there are some moments in Season 6 that we'd like to forget, but over all he's a really fun character. And when he crossed over to Angel, he and Angel had great chemistry that made for some great Abbott and Costello antics, as shown in "The Girl in Question." Even though things got weird in Season 5 where the plot was concerned, their moments together make me wish the show had not been canceled for no reason. Oh, and the scene where he wrestles Puppet!Angel in "Smile Time" made my younger brother laugh for 20 minutes straight, qualifying as a Crowning Moment of Funny.
    • Xander and his complete normal-ness amongst his friends combined with the fact that he still fights along side them gave me, an Unlucky Everydude, the strength to keep going so many times.
      • It's easy to miss this if you're not paying attention, but Xander is totally brave in every episode (except when it comes to his engagement). No wonder he was the Heart part of SuperBuffy.
    • I can't believe nobody's mentioned Buffy herself yet! She's cute, funny, flawed, but likable all while being the freaking slayer!
      • Seconded. Buffy rarely gets the credit she deserves. She moves beyond the Designated Hero role that many lean towards.
    • Ah, Faith. And Drusilla. Need I say more?
      • Sorry, but more does need to be said about Faith. Come on, the Dark Slayer herself?? Willing to walk on the road of redemption even after being told by Angel that she might never get there? And played by the indescribable hotness that is Eliza Dushku? Win, win, WIN!!!
      • Total and absolute agreement on this! The Dark Slayer fighting her evil tendencies to try to atone for her sins - in other words, the female version of Angel? And even more agreement on the hotness that is Eliza Dushku. One of my saddest days was when it became official that there would be no Faith spinoff. Ah, what might have been.......
    • Willow. The one fictional character I wished really existed.
    • Oz. He never said much, but every word was hilarious.
    • Anya. The Dance of Capitalist Superiority.
    • The Mayor may just be my favorite villain from anything ever.
    • Cordelia. Freakin. Chase. Bitch! Snarky, smart, caring, beautiful and totally Badass.
    • Screw you fandom, Dawn is awesome! She's cute, loving, funny, smart, surprisingly Badass and has issues up to her neck. What's not to love?
      • Totally. I always thought she was really cute.
      • Have to agree, Michelle Trachtenberg is practically synonamous with "Pretty Girl".
    • Glory is epic and awesome in every way possible. No questions.
    • Tara! It's is phsyically impossible not to love Tara. She's just so damn nice. Not many actresses can pull off nice without being boring, but Amber Benson managed. Throw on a pile of Woobie and you've got the most likeable character the world has ever seen.
    • No Giles yet? Intelligent, witty, badass, and played by one hell of an actor.
    • Jenny Calendar doesn't get NEARLY enough love. Everyone's favourite techno-pagan is smart, beautiful, witty and charming. She wraps Giles around her little finger (she took him on a date to a Monster Truck rally!) and has some brilliant snarky lines, plus a cool backstory. Not only that, but she also stays to help even after the whole group ostracises her, and it's only through her efforts that Angel gets his soul back. She was just a fantastic character who died too soon in a brutal and tragic way.

Other Shows

  • I hate all of you for not putting Robert Goren on this list before I got here. A genius, compassionate to women and victims, but if you are a villain he is the bastard who will make you give yourself up of your own free will. Do not mess with him.
  • I heart Det. Lennie Briscoe and Lt. Anita van Buren, but especially Lennie. Dare to disagree with me, Law and Order fans.
    • Not taking that dare. Hasn't been a detective on that show or any spin-off that could match Briscoe for being Made of Cool.
  • Tracey Kibre of Law and Order Trial By Jury. The woman has a smile that will make you melt, a glare that will kill you and more intelligence in her pinkie finger than all of Mensa. Combined. Oh, and she's played by Bebe Neuwirth, gorgeous Eerie Pale-Skinned Brunette extraordinaire.
  • Gaius Baltar. Without doubt one of the most complex and compelling characters on television. A narcissistic genius, occasionally suave but normally adorably squirrelly as a result of his fractured mental state, his journey through the series has been one of the high points of an already damn good show. He acts as a catalyst for momentous events just by existing and manages to reach almost Magnificent Bastard levels of awesome in how often he manages to reemerge from a seemingly catastrophic situation with new power and status, as well. On top of this his deeply, deeply flawed nature never changes despite excellent Character Development that has seen him seeking redemption, sincerely, and actually becoming a better person despite remaining true to his original depiction at heart, which I love. He has many of the funniest moments of a dark series and pulls off a full range of despairing, triumphant and other emotions throughout. Marvelously portrayed (with a sexy accent if you are in to that kind of thing) and totally believable you can't help but love this man despite his monstrous crimes and egotism.
    • Baltar is the guy you love to hate. He has pulled so much shit off in the series despite starting it off by betraying humanity to the Cylons that you can't help but admire him and enjoy his character, even if you want to put a bullet in his brain.
    • And then there's Starbuck, who's maybe the most human person I have ever seen on television. Complex, emotional, flawed, badass and huggable at the same time.
      • She managed to pilot a Cylon raider by her lonesome. That made me totally love her.
    • How has the Admiral not been mentioned? ADAMA FTW!!
    • Saul Motherfrakkin' Tigh too.
    • President Laura Roslin, Madame Airlock herself. Forty-third in line of succession, she kicks ass and takes names, and, oh yes, will airlock your ass. How many teachers do you know that can not only survive the end of the world, but beat terminal breast cancer enough to serve two terms? And should you shoot her boyfriend? She will be COMING. FOR. ALL. OF. YOU.
      • Seconded. She is one of my favorite tv characters of all time.
      • It was definitely not the Cylon's lucky day when this woman became president.
    • And she does all of this while remaining an incredibly human character.
    • I would like to nominate Sharon and Helo Agathon, who kick ass and have one of the few relationships that doesn't deteriorate over the course of the show.
      • The commenters on Mark Watches named them The Fighting Agathons.
    • Really, most of the characters on this show were made of awesome, purely by way of the INCREDIBLE writing.
  • Dr. Cox from Scrubs. He's like the most badass, most Woobie-ish and funniest character in the show. And most importantly: No. character. ever makes such hilarious, colorful and overly long rants. Apart from being funny, he's the most emotionally compelling character in the show. Y'know, there's a reason why "My Screwup" and "My Lunch" are the most popular and highest rated episodes.
    • There's also The Janitor. Highest laugh per minute ratio of any character ever. All around awesome.
    • Aw, come on, how come everybody overlooks JD? Okay, there was all that character derailment in the later seasons, but he's still sensitive, imaginative, geeky, smart and goofy. Cloudcoocoolanders around the world probably rejoiced that one of their own was for once not a supporting character.
    • All the women characters kick arse. Elliot for her relatable neuroses, Carla for refusing to take crap from anyone and Jordan for being one of the most snarkiest sneakiest women ever on tv ever....and that's just the first level of the awesome of their characters in the show.
  • Joel Robinson, Tom Servo and Crow T Robot
    • And Michael J. Nelson, Dr. Forrester, TV's Frank, Pearl, and Gypsy.
  • Mork. Mork Mork Mork Mork... I know what you're thinking, "Oh, Mork's pretty funny, but he's not really awesome.". Let's see... Not only is he funny, he's sweet, he's kind, he's lovable, he's cute... and if you mess with Mindy, he will pwn your ass, giving awesome one-liners as he does so.
  • Sylar. In a series plagued by inconsistent characterization and walking Idiot Balls, it's refreshing to see character that just kills For the Evulz and doesn't give a damn about anything. Yes, he was in danger of decaying in Volume 3, but he bounced back spectacularly in the end.
    • Hiro is a brilliant, disturbingly accurate portrayal of what would happen if a troper ever gained superpowers. Why bemoan how you've been Blessed with Suck when you can spend your time (pun very much intended) forming Stable Time Loops?
    • Parkman deserves some serious credit, especially as of season three. How does he react to his powers and all the craziness that's going on? Not by angsting, or pondering what his destiny is, but just by using them as best he can to help people. And he does a pretty good job of it.
    • Claude Rains is an awesome Trickster Mentor and Cynical Mentor, but he's also amazing in his own right. He's cynical, sarcastic, and misanthropic, but you know he has a good reason for it. While the all of the other characters on the show have straightforward motives, Claude's are unknown. What's his real reason for helping Peter? Does he really want to be a mentor, deep down? Is he attracted to Peter? Or was he just bored? His enigmatic nature made him cool, and Christopher Eccleston gives him life with an incredible subtlety that is quite rare on Heroes.
  • Delenn. The woman is beautiful, smart, incredibly tough, sweet, willing to do almost anything to help those in need, and, at the age of something like 150, showed up on the set of a show questioning her late husband's decisions to chew their asses out. The lady ROCKS!
    • Delenn is a very strange case. I am very strongly drawn by her charisma—she is beautiful and incredibly tough and she can be intelligent and sweet—but she is also very deeply flawed in ways that are difficult to ignore. On one hand she's a bitch to people who are important to her. On the other hand, her facade conceals a timid, insecure, and at times naive person with very limited self confidence. I am repulsed by these negative traits and yet—irrationally—Delenn is still my favourite fictional character by far.
      • To be fair, all Babylon 5 characters are flawed - they wouldn't be as complex if they weren't. None of them are black and white, and while she's one of the whitest she's manipulative and evasive like most Minbari. Her insecurity seems to come from her new human side and the fact both humans and Minbari are suspicious of her - I don't think it's repulsive, it gives her depth. Delenn is wonderful (even if she did get a bit too love-interesty later on), and you can thank Mira Furlan for a lot of her charisma - she could have been annoying in the hands of a lesser actress.
      • Londo Mollari. How can such a bombastic Large Ham party animal turn out to be such an eloquent walking tragedy? And how is he still awesome when it's all his own doing??
  • Dr. House. Not just because he's extremely attractive for a middle-aged, crippled, drug addicted jerk but because he's just so awesome. He's hilarious, he's too fricking clever for his own good, he says things that make you want to slap him, he's over the top, he annoys everyone around him but then the bastard switches on a dime and makes you either want to cry or want to squeeze him until he pops because he can be adorable, romantic, cheesy, noble, heartbreaking and... you get the point. It's no wonder why so many people cried during his limbo-bus scene with Amber.
    • Wilson, Wilson, Wilson. Where do I begin? He's OTT, he's adorable, he's gorgeous, he's a snarky sweetheart and his meddling, manipulative, slutty ways makes me love him all the more.
      • This one acknowleges the description above and concurs on Wilson's awesomness.
      • Oh Wilson, I liked you back in season one when you were Only Sane Man, but now I know you're as fucked up as everyone else, my devotion to you knows no bounds.
    • Eric Foreman. It's difficult to get a Black character on television who isn't the Proud Warrior Race Guy, the Ethnic Scrappy, or the Magical Negro. But then you get Foreman!!! He's so Badass, he will open tell House the fuck off while everyone else cowers in fear. And he gets the girls, even the bisexual ones (go Thirteen!!) All this, and yeah, he's probably at least as smart as House himself. Foreman for President!
  • Juken Sentai Gekiranger: Rio the Black Lion. Powerful, menacing and evil, but also honourable. Wipes the floor with the Gekirangers more than once, but also willing to join up with them if a third-party threat rears its ugly head.
  • Dean Winchester is the best Sad Clown ever created. Never before has a character induced so much laughter and so many tears on his own, sometimes within the same episode.
    • And Sam, of course. A sweet, sensitive guy who is willing to do ANYTHING for his brother and is a total Badass to boot. He made some bad choices, but that only makes him even more sympathetic.
    • Castiel. He's a soldier of heaven, and he started out cold and stern, but he's changed into an angel who's slowly gaining emotions, to the point that he chose saving the world over the orders of Heaven. An angel who chose Earth over Heaven. His growing affection for Sam and Dean is also very adorable to watch.
    • BOBBY! SINGER! Seriously, the guy goes through more shit than anyone except the brothers themselves - killing his possessed wife, becoming crippled - and even with all the pain he feels, he REFUSES to allow it to define him. And he's the father-figure Sam and Dean really need! It'll be a sad day in HELL if they ever kill him off permanently. He's not afraid to call anyone out- not even the angels!
    • Oh, and Azazel. Yeah, he's a mighty-evil son of a bitch, but he created a big, complex plan to bring back Lucifer that spanned decades - and succeeded! Creepy as heck too - Fredric Lehne was PERFECTLY cast, so much that they SCRAPPED the idea of him routinely changing hosts. Plus the actor was BLIND while playing him. Just ... seriously, the character is that awesome. Thrown into hindsight now especially, considering what a whiny little brat Lucifer turned out to be.
    • Gabriel. He only made a handful of appearances, but between the snark, his slightly manipulative but oddly well-meaning personality, he's brilliant. And if you tilt your head, you can actually see how he was Good All Along. And never has a death inspired so much heartbreak. Well, except Sam and Dean.
    • Don't forget Lucifer, largely because of the seductive, predatory way Mark Pellegrino plays him.
  • River Tam. A definitive woobie whose fragile mixture of adorable childishness and broken madness is done so perfectly, making this wonderfully helpless teenage girl you just want to hug and tell her everything is going to be okay. And then, she flips around with combination of intelligence, mind over matter, and raw asskicking, and proves that no power in the 'verse can stop her. Squee.
    • Malcolm Reynolds, meanwhile, makes repeatedly injuring a defenceless and prostrate opponent hilarious, kicking a bound man into an engine intake awesome, and wears incredibly tight pants.
    • Jayne Cobb. Thuggery, Obfuscating Stupidity, badassery, firepower, sweatiness, earthy sex appeal and big arms.
    • Kaylee is possibly the most adorable petty criminal ever. And an awesome mechanic, too.
      • More has to be said. Some call her The Heart of the ship, and not without reason. She's so adorably nice, friendly and welcoming, it's almost unbelievable in a rather dark setting. Sometimes she might come off as slightly unsophisticated, but is very intelligent and sometimes hilarious, and it shows. She also manages to look Badass despite not being able to hurt a fly if her life depends on it. She's the joy, the funny, and the heart. She's the fairest lady in all of the 'Verse. She brings warmth when all else is dark. Kaylee Frye is awesome.
    • Wash is hilarious and wacky, a great husband, and surprisingly often the voice of reason. And when he wants to be, pretty badass.
    • Zoe! Beautiful, a loving wife, tough as nails, smart, and a great balance to her husband.
    • Simon Tam. Not only is he kind enough to actually hug River and tell her everything is going to be okay, but he can swing all the way to calculating criminal mastermind if she's in danger! Best big brother in the 'Verse.
    • Oh I agree and I am a big brother so perhaps it takes one to know one. Simon has a curious but appealing combination that could combine tenderness, rationality, and even occasional bits of ferocity that one would never expect from so gentle a person. He was tremendously brave(sometimes a "Sensitive Guy" is also a "Manly Man") and generous, but he had a subtle undercurrent of Knight Templar Big Brother that had just enough of a hint of a dark side to make him human. He made a tremendous sacrifice and stuck to it throughout but at the same time he never seemed so good as to be intimidating. He was a very decent person but also one you might like to meet someday. And he is believable enough to make me wonder if I have ever met someone like him.
    • Inara manages to be at the same time elegant, snarky, and cunning as a vixen. She's the classiest whore space hooker ever.
    • Between "special hell" and the line about kneecaps, not to mention the entire scene regarding his hair, I'd say Book is pretty awesome as well.
      • I love that every single character from Firefly has been nominated as Most Awesome. That is spectacular.
        • Apart from River's feet. (Oh wait, now they have.)
  • From Nobuta wo Produce, Akira. He's just so goddamn crazy and adorable, you can't help but love him. He's on a permanent soymilk high, and has no regard whatsoever for personal space, but at the same time, he always, always puts his friends first, and has morals that he refuses to compromise (he will kick your ass if you hit a girl). Not to mention he pulled off the cutest love confession ever to the girl he loves. Unfortunately, he yells out the confession when she wasn't there because he thought he wasn't worthy to love her
  • I'd like to nominate the following Muppets: Kermit the Frog, Fozzie Bear, Rowlf, Scooter, the Electric Mayhem Band, and Waldorf and Statler. Big Bird, Oscar the Grouch, Ernie and Bert, Cookie Monster, Mr. Snuffleupagus (Snuffy), Barkley, Herry, Telly, Grover, and Kermit the Frog (he's so awesome that he gets TWO mentions).
    • What, no love for the Count?
  • Cameron. Come on, do I need to say anything else?
    • Seconded. Cameron is just about the the most Moe walking death machine that I have ever seen. And yes, I am including Lucy from Elfen Lied into that calculation.
    • Thirded. I will also admit to feeling so sorry for her. She's supposed to be the Emotionless Girl, so why do I keep wanting to hug her and tell her everything's going to be okay?
    • Fourthed (is that even allowed?) Hey, here's an idea for a cast: Eliza (Faith) Dushku, Amy (Fred) Acker and Summer (Cameron) Glau ...... nah, on second thought, the universe couldn't handle that much Awesome!!!
    • Also John Henry. If this is the face of Skynet, I say "bring on judgement day." I will enjoy his Warhammer painting, Bionicle playing death camps.
      • And his interactions with Savannah are just about the most heartwarming part of the show.
    • And while we're on the topic: Catherine Weaver. It's a crying shame that the series got canceled before we could learn more about her character.
    • T:SCCC had a lot of interesting characters. Cameron has been covered, extensively. John had some really good moments (and probably would have had more if Fox hadn't pushed the love triangle instead). It's very interesting to see the beginnings of the messiah figure he would be and the how much that cost him. The last few episodes especially showcased both to great extent. Sarah herself worked well too. Of all the sequels, it probably captured the tension between the Ax Crazy Knight Templar side and the more compassionate side. Maybe I'm just a sucker for exploring the darker side of heroism.
  • The Swedish Chef is so adorable and one of the most unique explorations of Carnivore Confusion. He's so jolly and friendly towards his potential meals, even especially when trying to cook them while they're still alive. His "chicken in the basket" sketch is one of the best.
  • Ah, original KITT. Why does no one but me understand how awesome you are?
    • Someone else does.
    • You are not alone. KITT is the most endearing machine ever, and there are a lot of endearing machines out there.
  • Of all the fine and foxy boyfriends the ladies of Sex and the City may have had over the years, Miranda's husband Steve Brady is my ultimate dream man. He's adorable in a down to earth way, sweet, funny, and the perfect foil for someone as emotionally guarded as Miranda. I absolutely love him, I love watching them interact, and he's just one of those guys a woman is extremely lucky to have in their lives.
  • Jefferson D'Arcy from Married... with Children. What's that you say? A TV series Growing the Beard with Ted McGinley in the main cast? Probably just a coincidence, but Jefferson is still cool in my book. He definitely makes a better foil for Marcy (Al Bundy's Sitcom Arch Nemesis) than her uptight banker ex-husband Steve Rhoades, simply because he's just as fun-loving as Al is when the wife's not around.
    • Al Bundy, the lovable bastard. NO MA'AM forever!
  • My childhood hero is MacGyver. Because he is awesome ... no other words suffice.
  • Major Charles Emmerson Winchester III, a legitimately different replacement character after five seasons of Frank Burns, fit snugly between Jerkass and Jerk with a Heart of Gold, able to keep up with obnoxious tentmate Hawkeye, call out Hawk's Lancer B.J.'s tricks, deal with Klinger, Igor, Zale, and Rizzo,, aggravate Col. Potter, and Major Houlihan, and even foil Col. Flagg.
    • Father Mulchahy. His Crowning Moments blow everyone else out of the water, he manages to keep up his job in a thouroughly unreligious community when it's a wonder he can even stay sane at the 4077th.
    • There are few characters from M*A*S*H I do not like. Including Frank. This is partly because they dragged the show on so long they had ample opportunity to explore all of their personalities, inside and out. But, these analyzations did make for some of the best episodes. On the whole, I am particularly fond of Hawkeye, because even if he hadn't been placed in a hellish situation for 3 years, his mind still would have been going a million miles an hour, and still would have been slightly nuts. And I relate to that rambly intellectualness.
      • Agreed. I am compelled to watch every rerun of M*A*S*H that comes on TV almost exclusively thanks to the Hawkeye-BJ duo. They complement each other so well. The more relaxed BJ, who sympathizes with the victims of the war and is disgusted by its unrelenting horror and stupidity but is also able to distance himself (the few times he does break down, its usually in response to something that happened back home, like the episode where he learns his daughter thought Radar was her daddy, which made me cry so hard). Compared to Hawkeye, who is extremely sensitive and passionate and too smart for his own good, unable to separate himself from whatever is happening around him, dwelling on it and feeling it so much he drives himself insane. I've watched that episode "Hawkeye" (essentially a half-hour non-stop soliloquy) lord knows how many times and I still find it interesting! On a similar note, I also find the Margaret character compelling. A break away from the sexist norm, she's the fiercest and proudest character on the show. I only wish she didn't shriek at everyone so much (even normal talking from her sounds like screaming)!
    • Radar - from the beginning, he's the guy holding the camp together through wheeling and dealing with other clerks. His ability to know what people will say is also entertaining.
  • Agent Sarah Walker from Chuck. She's smart, she's tough and she's really really really really really really really really really really really really really hot.
    • Not enough reallys above. Seriously, have you ever seen this woman???
      • Y'know what? She might be so damned sexy, but let's face it, Sarah is by far one of the best examples of an Action Girl on a television program to date. She just kicks so much ass.
    • John Casey from Chuck. Can say worlds with a well-placed grunt. Badass, great comic moments, armed to the teeth and smoking hot!
      • I remember coming around to the "John Casey is awesome" train in a season 2 episode (the name of which eludes me at the moment) where Casey manages to catch the two fleeing bad guys, recover the money they were running off with, and get back to a train station in time to shoot the third bad guy and save Chuck, who was held at gunpoint. All in about two minutes. Witness his greatness and tremble!
      • People, what's wrong with you? What about Chuck himself? Fulcrum agents show up to kill him and his only worry, he doesn't want his sister's wedding ruined. A loyal Woobie, who still managed to kick major ass.
        • And his best friend, Morgan Grimes. And Jeffster, and Anna, and Ellie, and Captain Awesome....damn, this whole show of full of gush-worthy characters.
        • BIG MIKE!!
    • Volkoff, Volkoff, Volkoff, Volkoff.
  • Everyone on 30 Rock is awesome, really, but Liz Lemon deserves a special shout-out for being one of the few female characters on television real women can actually relate to. Even when she does something crazy, we know we would have to cover our faces in embarrassment because we've probably been there, if not for the fact that she's so hilarious that instead we're just laughing our asses off.
  • Aeryn Sun from Farscape. A beautiful, totally Badass woman who gives us the greatest and most nuanced Defrosting the Ice Queen stories I have ever seen. She's also totally, totally Badass.
    • Let's not forget her sometimes crazy but always awesome husband John Crichton and, on the other end of the scale, Magnificent Bastard Scorpius. Actually, pretty much everyone on Farscape was pretty amazing at one time or another.
  • Michael Westen jumped out of a helicopter and into my heart.
    • Sam Axe. Because his Obfuscating Stupidity is more awesome than yours, because he told Michael and Fiona NOT to save him when he was captured, because he blew up Madeline's house with Christmas tree lights, and because hey, smooth is smooth, baby. Proof positive that spies never retire.

"Buckle up, rookie. Try not to bleed on the upholstery."

    • Fiona. The Axe Crazy arms dealer is just awesome. She's loyal, and manages to be funny, awesome, scary, and incredibly competent all at once, and her relationship with Michael is believable. It's also touching and sad all at once, and a sub-plot. Fiona is also wonderfully unsubtle, and prefers the direct approach and bigger explosions.
  • Mason from Dead Like Me. Despite being a drug dealer/petty thief and (more often than not) under the influence, he's an all-around likeable guy. Fun, a teensy bit weird, a big brother to George, sweet to his crush Daisy and (almost) unwaveringly friendly to everyone else.
    • Also, George, whose angst doesn't come across as Wangst, whose snipes are genuinely snarky, who actually bothers to think things though and is a surprisingly loyal and conscientous member of her team despite being the youngest.
    • Rube. He may seem a bit tough and occasionally seems to lack understanding (he's way to hard on George sometimes), but at his best he is an amazing father figure with incredible insight and knows just the right thing to say when someone's feeling under the weather or flat out depressed, he's fun to be around on the occasions he lightens up, and is the only person I know of who is a snob about Greasy Spoon food.
    • Everyone from this show, really. Of course the idea and show of Dead Like Me is good itself, but I am fully convinced the unusually strong characters are what makes the show so great.
  • Adelle DeWitt. It would take me quite a while to explain all the reasons, but: Fencing suit.
    • Topher Brink. His job is rather morally horrible, but he's just downright adorable.
    • Victor. No matter how thoroughly you overwrite his personality, he still wants to save the day and get the girl. It's like his libido is a Determinator.
      • I think we should take a minute here to mention Victor's actor, Enver Gjokai. He's brilliant in mimicry while still playing Victor as his own character.
    • Alpha solidly punches basic TV Tropes logic in the scrotum when he proves that you can be a Complete Monster and a Magnificent Bastard at the same time, in a single goddamn episode.
    • Claire. She's a huge mess of quiet damage, self-loathing, hatred, and fear of the world. She's never cracked a genuine smile during the entire show, only a few bitter, angry, self-mocking ones, and yet she's the one who most cares for the Dolls, and one of the moral voices of reason, but she doesn't even have a choice, because she was literally programmed that way. Oh, and she's completely aware of this fact, and doesn't want the programming to be undone, because then her personality would "die." She drove the point home that the Dollhouse isn't just killing [only temporarily - in theory] the original personalities, they also murdered every single imprint they ever made.
    • Bennett. I think perhaps I love her a little more than is healthy (especially because she only appeared in three episodes) but...I just can't help it. She's a socially awkward genius who was so happy when someone finally paid attention to her that she perceived Caroline's leaving her behind as rejection. (Is it bad that I can understand that?) Plus, it's Summer Glau, do I need to say anything else?
  • Sir Humphrey Appleby, Magnificent Bastard and master of Sesquipedalian Loquaciousness from Yes Minister. His speeches alone would make me fall in love in him!
  • Jack Bauer is A FEDERAL AGENT! And a REALLY BADASS ONE! With INTERESTING DEVELOPMENT! And has A LOT OF BAD SHIT HAPPEN TO HIM! And he's GENERALLY AWESOME IN ALL THINGS! DAMMIT!
    • President David Palmer. If every American politician was one-third the man he was, this country would have to rename itself the USA; United States of Awesome!
    • Without David Palmer, we might not have had president Barack Obama. He was that awesome that he is credited for America voting in the first African president.
    • Totally agreed about both of them, but Aaron Pierce deserves a nomination as well.
  • The lack of Pushing Daisies characters in this page bugs me. For me, every character in that series. Especially Ned, Chuck, Emerson and the Charles sisters.
    • Not Olive? But yes, I agree. They're all great. Special mention for me must go to Ned, who hits just the right balance between kind, romantic, dashing hero and repressed, neurotic weirdo, coming out thoroughly sympathetic almost every time, and Chuck, who's sweet, adorably bouncy (her "oooh, like protoplasm or melted crucifixes?" line from Girth must be one of the most adorable things I've ever heard, and she seems like the kind of person who would use the word "swell" unironically) and unashamedly intellectual, with enough of a dark side to make her very three-dimensional.
  • Veronica Mars and Logan Echolls, full stop.
  • Every main character on How I Met Your Mother. Every.Single.One.
    • Seconded. Besides the awesomeness incarnate called Barney, there's Lily, who combines snarkiness, a potty mouth, a feisty attitude and a fair amount of geekiness with feminity; Robin, whose personality is rarely assigned to female characters; and Ted, who may not be as interesting as the rest but is still lovable. And together they make up a cozy, domestic bunch.
      • Don't forget Marshall, who's pretty much the perfect guy - sweet, caring, funny, snarky, adorable, smart, and the best friend you'll ever have. Not to mention it's impossible to be sad around him.
  • Dr. Sheldon Cooper for the win!
  • Arnold Vinick is sufficiently awesome that I'd gladly drop my day job and move to the US in Real Life were he running for President. For that matter, I'd do the same with Alan Alda if I trusted him to stay in character for eight years.
    • No love for Jed Bartlet? Come on, people. It would make no constitutional sense in the slightest, but him and David Palmer should be elected co-Presidents on the Awesome ticket.
      • There isn't a single non-fictional person in the universe who doesn't adore Jed Bartlet. Not even Republicans.
    • Aw, hell, no. The West Wing gushing begins with Claudia Jean "C.J." Cregg, Deadpan Snarker and Cute Clumsy Girl extraordinaire. There is a reason Allison Janney won four Emmys, people - she played C.J. exquisitely through all seven seasons and no matter what John Wells did to her or what Emmy-bait episodes she got stuck in, Janney sold her every single moment of every single episode. From "Is there anything I can say other than 'The President rode his bicycle into a tree'?" and "The crackers, Danny!" to "Oh me-oh, oh my-oh, Oh, Cleveland, Ohi-o!" and right on through "Frank Hollis wants me to take ten billion dollars to go and fix the world," and "Yeah. Something," C.J. was always beautifully, exquisitely, gorgeously C.J.
    • Leo freaking McGarry. The whole world's going to hell because the President's been shot, who do you trust to run the country? Leo. Best Chief of Staff ever. The man behind "Let Bartlet Be Bartlet", who fell down seven times but got up eight, who was an alcoholic because his father was one too, who taught us that sometimes, you're the man in the hole, and sometimes, you're the guy that jumps in.
    • Toby Ziegler is a beautiful, beautiful man. He's prickly, and arrogant, and almost always pissed off, yes. But it's because he believes so deeply in his lofty, near-unreachable ideals about the good that government can do for its people that when everyone around him is playing politics and compromising instead of going for the money shot and doing the absolute best thing for the greatest number of people, he is offended on behalf of humanity. He's the picture of what politicians should be in the very best universe.
  • Clayton Webb from Jag. He was an important CIA officer that is always involving the characters in his schemes. He was cold and unemotional and given that he plays chess with peoples lives that is understandable. He has something of a rapier wit which kind of goes with that. He is something of a Well-Intentioned Extremist but never QUITE crosses the Moral Event Horizon(he can come close) He is however incorruptable, and He is an example of a heroic Chessmaster. As it turns out, he has a heart of gold and is willing to go to bat for his friends and even to put Honor Before Reason. He is the sort of person that would be hard to understand in real life and indeed on TV, but he is a very good character.
  • I had a revelation.....the best part of Stargate SG-1 wasn't listening to the treasure trove of Deadpan Snarking that was Colonel Jack O'Neill. It wasn't the intelligent, smoking hot Colonel Carter. It wasn't the fact that Daniel Jackson was an unabashed idealist. It wasn't Teal'c's perfectly timed "Indeed"'s. It wasn't watching the Large Ham Go'uald get punked repeatedly. It wasn't the Genre Savviness. It was.......General George Hammond!!! Awesome just seemed to drip off the screen during any scene with him in it. And he did it without a single shred of ham. I am so sad that Don S. Davis is gone and so too is General Hammond. Take care, Hammond Of Texas.
    • The entire SG-1 team (at least the original) were Crowning Characters Of Awesome in their own right. O'Neill has got to be one of the wittiest characters ever, Daniel Jackson's pure goodness and anthropologic and cultural wisdom, Teal'c's sheer badass-ness, Carter's Techno Babble and competence...
      • Oh, agreed, and I would add Daniel's completely-believable transformation from nerd to badass over the series. Except that he's still pretty much a sweet nerd, he's just badass now. And that's awesome.
        • Don't forget the more minor characters! Siler for getting beaten up so often and never complaining. Walter for his adorable sweater and glasses, heck, for being named after Radar from M* A* S* H* and living up to the name. Also Bra'tac. A cute old guy who can beat up almost any of the main characters. And don't forget Doc Fraiser, especially because of her heroic death. And Ba'al: The most lovable Goa'uld ever. He actually has some semblance of sanity and a sense of humor.
      • Vala Mal Doran. She's just so quirky and spunky. She's also determined, and an incredibly nuanced character behind her cheerful theif persona. Her character development is believable, and her introductory scene was HILARIOUS! She doesn't let her dark past bother her, and is one of the funniest characters after Jack O'Neill's sad, sad promotion. Also, seconding Ba'al, with his being a Magnificent Bastard and Affably Evil and pulling it off perfectly. And seconding Daniel Jackson's character development. Watch a season one episode, and then an episode from season ten, you'll be horribly confused and gaping at his badassery and sarcasm, and how he blends it with being a nerdy nice guy who'd rather talk it out. Watch all the episodes, it makes perfect sense.
    • What makes Teal'c soooooooooo damn cool is the fact that he isn't trying to be funny like O'Neill, or smart like Jackson or Carter. He's being dead - fucking - serious. He says the deepest things when you least expect them, so matter of fact. Consider, after Merlin dies, Ba'al is able to speak again, now that Merlin's spell keeping him silent is broken. Teal'c's deadpan response, "Yet another reason to mourn his [Merlin's] passing." You can't buy priceless quotes like that. And if he wasn't bad enough, when wannabe Proud Warrior Race Guy Ronon got too big for his britches, Teal'c fought him one on one to a draw. A draw because if he really wanted to, Ronon's dreds would've been used to mop floors.
  • I'm the only one who thought Lt. Colonel Cam Mitchell was just really cool??
    • NO, YOU ARE NOT. Gorgeous, super laid back but willing to risk everything to save his teammates (and, you know, the GALAXY), always full of proverbs and life lessons from his grandmother, and just generally an excellent example of Colonel Badass? My hero.
  • John Locke is one of the most wonderfully messed-up characters on television today. His arc can best be described as Badass Decay and tragic You Suck done right.
    • Ben Linus: a consistantly fascinating Magnificent Bastard. For a lot of fans, he's the only reason to watch the show. It helps that the writers know when to show his highs and his lows as a character, and his remorse over his daughter's death takes him out of cut-and-dry villain territory.
    • Sayid Jarrah: super Woobie, all of his girlfriends die, a candidate to replace Jacob, not to mention total eye-candy, and an excellent portrayal of a Middle-Eastern character. Also the totally adorable and usually funny Charlie Pace.
    • Sayid Jarrah is far and away the best character in Lost, and sadly underrated. I never got over the pain of seeing him sacrifice himself to give the other candidates a chance, and then his death being completely overshadowed by Sun and Jin's death scene. From the very beginning of the series, he's shown himself to be one of the most sensible, capable survivors on the island, not to mention being completely badass (he snapped a man's neck with his thighs!) and downright gorgeous.
    • Richard is also one of the nicely crafted characters. They managed to play the mysteries surrounding him fairly well, and he's just the right ammount of Genre Savvy (will almost always listen to what someone has to say, even if it's "I came from the future to be your ruler", courtesy of a time-skipping John Locke).
    • Charlie Pace is hands down one of my favorite TV characters EVER. His wit, his dedication to Claire and Aaron, his struggles and successes and losses and god fucking damnit why did he have to die? I have never sobbed so much at the death of any other character...ever.
    • DESMOND HUME. No words necessary.
      • Can I say a few anyways? Desmond filled the gap in my soul after Charlie died. And pretty much no one can deny that he had the best freaking love story on the entire show—his love for Penny was pure and epic and a real driving force, and what finally got the Oceanic Six off the island. Not to mention his constant Woobieness and how he called everyone brother in his hot Scottish accent. Desmond's the man!
  • Gil Grissom. The coolest forensic guy ever.
    • Calleigh Duquesne. Please, someone, sack Horatio.
    • I'm going to add my fave NY character on here, Ms. Stella Bonasera. She's tough and gets the job done, but she also cares about her colleagues.
    • From the original CSI: Greg Sanders. Metal-head spikey-haired lab tech anyone?
  • Stella Goodman. One cool lady.
  • John Munch: Everybody's favorite Jewish Deadpan Snarker who still manages to get some of the best lines and tearjerkers.
    • Hear, hear. There is no Munch like Original Flavor Munch.
    • You gotta love Munch for not taking any crap and telling it like it is.
  • Mitchell has definitely screwed up his share and more...but he fights literally every minute to stay clean, will happily fight or intimidate just about anything, and is really pretty good to look at. When he begs George to kill him in the S3 finale, because he knows he can't stay clean indefinitely the audience is stuck in the position of totally agreeing with him, and still not wanting him to do it. He does.

George: I'm doing this because I love you
Mitchell: I know.

    • Nina, from the same show. Sticks to her principles no matter what, even when they could get her and hers killed. And having worked with drunks in A&E for two years, she doesn't take any crap from anybody. Watch her tear the social worker to shreds in The Longest Day, getting her so turned around she thinks letting Nina is doing her a favour when Nina lets her off with no investiagation. She basically just rocks.
      • And then there's the episode where she bails George out of prison in the same way, while they're both turning into werewolves. And she disguises her intense pain (a heart attack, kidney failure, breaking bones, etc) as her being annoyed with the guards.
    • Annie is just fantastic. She's sweet, she's friendly, and while she's a bit ditzy and childish, it's endearing and fun. She cares about her friends and enjoys taking care of them. She gives her best effort in whatever she tries, from helping ghosts communicate through a medium to having a sex life with Mitchell to helping a detective solve a murder case. She's not afraid to call Mitchell out on his being an ass, and is just a great person period. And she was awesome throughout all of the episode where they infiltrate the werewolf cage fight.
  • No love for the most awesome bunch of profilers and one of the best Nakamas ever, the BAU? Let's start with Team Mom Aaron Hotchner, who has stoically faced down serial killers, psychopaths, and crazies of all kinds and still manages to try and make it work with his four-year-old son.
    • Let's continue with Dave Rossi, bestselling author and instructor at Quantico. If you're lucky, you go to prison after he makes you confess. If you're not, you wind up on the instructional videos he shows to his classes.
    • And I have to include Oracle of Quantico Penelope Garcia. When you can hack the DOD in your sleep and still manage to hit on your hotass coworker well enough to make his eyes cross, you've got skills.
      • I must agree that Garcia is amazing. She provides the light side to an otherwise dark show. Plus, she has the best lines ever.
    • And who could forget Spencer Reid, the Hollywood Nerd Woobie with a Dark and Troubled Past. Whether he's figuring out something no one else could using his Eidetic Memory or talking a gun out of an UnSub's hands without firing a shot, the entire series just begs me to take him home and feed him soup. Or give him a big, giant hug. Or make out with him for hours and hours. You know a character is awesome when he was originally supposed to be a secondary character (notice he stands near the back in the title screen lineup) but arguably ended up getting more Story Arcs than anyone else in the series. I mean, did you see his face when he looked in the mirror during his spell of drug abuse?
      • Or when he woke up in the hospital after being poisoned with anthrax and asked for jello?
      • The sheer joy he displayed when performing his 'physics magic' for Garcia, Prentiss and JJ?
      • Or how about when he became so determined to save Adam/Amanda because after all Tobias Hankel had put him through, he still felt bad for him? I'm sorry, rest of gushing fanbase, but we're getting married someday.
  • Any Arrested Development character. Ever. Especially GOB ("Illusions Dad, you don't have time for my Illusions!") and Maeby ("Marry me.")
    • And Tobias! "I just Blue myself", come on!
    • Lucille is the perfect Evil Matriarch! "I don't understand the question and I won't respond to it!"
  • Stargate Atlantis: There are two characters that make Stargate Atlantis. Doctor Rodney McKay, the most awesome Insufferable Genius jerk with quite some Character Development... And "Todd" the Wraith. Seriously, this guy is what a Magnificent Bastard is.
    • How about Carson Beckett? You'd be hard pressed to find a sweeter, gentler character in fiction. And he has a Scottish accent to boot! Honorable mentions go to Sheppard for his general awesomness, slightly rebellious attitude and being almost as smart as McKay. Also Teyla for being so sweet and tough at the same time, and Ronon for being badass and able to pull off dread-locks pretty well.
  • I'm not really a fan of any the characters from Stargate Universe. From the whiny Camille, to Rush and Telford who're trying to be Magnificent Bastards and coming off more like straight a-holes. But...for reasons I can't explain, I just love Colonel Young. Maybe because he strikes me as what a real US military guy might be like. He knows he's not cut out for the job he's in, but he sucks it up and gets the job done anyway. I really feel like all his screw-ups in the 1st season finale are just setting the stage for him to come back hard with awesomeness.
    • Eli Wallace. In the beginning, he was a socially awkward nerd. In the end, he flew Destiny through a fucking blue supergiant! Then casually strolls off to save Park. And in the end, he chooses to stay behind. Even Insufferable Genius Rush admits that Eli is basically smarter than him. And this is without slipping into insufferableness himself, he remains his humble self all the time.
  • Alex Krycek is such a badass. You're never too sure what side he's on, but you can guarantee he'll be awesome regardless.
    • Hell, Mulder and Scully are too awesome to not cause fans to explode in fangirly nuttiness every time they do a rewatch.
    • And then there's the Lone Gunmen.
  • YMMV on the quality of the show itself, but Demetri Noh is such an engaging and interesting character. He's a Deadpan Snarker, he has a ton of angst (knowing that he's going to be murdered in less than six months) that sends him straight into Woobie territory, he has an extremely touching relationship with his fiancee, and he sings a mean karaoke.
  • I happen to have some Power Rangers characters I like.
    • From the original series, I kinda like Trini. Don't get me wrong, I'm not one who thinks that first = best, but there is something about her that makes her likeable. A strong female character, a great fighter, and cool and collected.
    • From my personal favorite season, there is Carter Grayson. Say what you will about him and his fighting ability, he was a rather interesting Red Ranger. Saved by Captain Mitchell at a young age, and it inspired him to be a hero for others; his personality; and his brave actions—especially in the finale. And let's not get into his portrayer...it'll be saved for another time.
    • And from Power Rangers Mystic Force, I like Koragg. I know that it's weird that I like a villain (Or is he?), but he was very noble (not defeating the Rangers every time he has them on the ropes) and a good fighter. And I like his voice!
  • Bones Lance Sweets even though he's mocked by everyone, his assesments are usually spot-on; he's very loyal to Booth and Brennan, he's kind, smart, dorky and totally in love with Daisy. He lived through a horrible childhood but was adopted and because of that he believes people can be truly saved. He's adorable and awesome.
    • Seconded. Sweets is the embodiment of Adorkable. He's a former child prodigy who loves his job, adores his girlfriend and has pretty much adopted Booth and Brennan as Parental Substitutes. Plus, he's a huge geek and considers profiling for the Squint Squad exciting field work.
    • How about the ENTIRE cast of Bones? Seriously. Brennan is incredibly endearing with her social awkwardness, Booth is handsome and brave and strong, Angela and Hodgins are just plain wonderful, Zack and the rotating Squinterns are all equally Adorkable and fun, Cam is absolutely loveable, even lesser characters like Caroline Julian are a special treat. And the chemistry between the entire cast is really excellent...they all just fit so well together, making a perfectly dysfunctional family.
  • Sookie Stackhouse. Cleolinda Jones sums her up perfectly: "50% grandmother, 50% teenage girl". And manages to have a remarkable grip on her powers without getting too angsty about it. And say want you want of her relationship with Bill; they're adorable together, m'kay?
  • Three words: Leroy Jethro Gibbs. A father figure to his crew, a master of Perp Sweating, a former Marine sniper, and emphasizes the importance of basic intuitive detective skills when solving cases. Not to mention he has good taste in women.
    • Abby is an awesome, perky, happy goth who sleeps in a coffin sometimes and is one of the few, few people in the world who can joke around with Gibbs. She's also one of the few, few people in the world who can kill you and leave absolutely no trace of forensic evidence.
    • Agent Timothy McGee. A brave, kind, adorkable special agent who writes novels in his spare time?
    • Ah, Ziva. Main character love interest, beautiful singer, attractive, kickass, mysterious past, unusual name, assassin, unusual name, cute "flaw" of misunderstanding expressions—emotionally damaged, uses her sexuality like a weapon (early on, at least), has a broken family, distant, cutthroat in protecting loved ones—you're like a character who was kicked out of the land of Mary-Sues as a baby to be raised by wolves.
  • Wilberforce Claybourne Humphries rocks. He's funny, nice, and always has interesting adventures to talk about. I love it when he dresses up. And any time he says "I'm free!" or "Our Aida!"
  • I love Vince Noir from The Mighty Boosh. He's funny, charming, handsome, funny, handsome, treats women like gold, is a raving bisexual, has the best fashion sense I have EVER seen, has a smile that makes everyone, regardless of gender, absolutely melt, and has no sense of reality, exactly like previously mentioned troper. May have something to do with the fact that Noel Fielding. He dressed up as a freaking jazz spirit and looked like sex. I could go on all day.
    • I have to second this. He's just so damn cheery, it's impossible to be in a bad mood when he's on screen (much like wearing a poncho). That, and I can't get through a single episode without pointing out at least one article of clothing of his we either both share, or I want. And I'm a GIRL. He (and Noel, to the same extent) are one of my partial fashion inspirations. I can't say I always have the courage dress quite as flamboyant as he, but he's always on my mind when I try to have a little fun with my daily outfits.
  • Ashes to Ashes really has to begin and end with some love for Gene Hunt, who manages three Crowning Moments of Awesome in the pilot alone, and just keeps racking them up as he goes on. He could arguably be the personification of Refuge in Audacity - see "trick with the pool table, the". Under the Jerkass exterior, he loves his team, every single one of them, and keeps his city (both of them) safe.
  • Alright, I have to say it: Jack McCoy from the original Law and Order series. He was snarky, scrupulous, and a bit of a jerkass but despite his many flaws he had an unwavering commitment to the law and his passionate closing arguments give me chills. It is a sign of my nerdiness that his jerkass legal technobabble is my favorite part of the show.
  • Alan Shore from The Practice and Boston Legal. He's very psychologically complex, has both Badass and Woobie moments, and has one of the most touching Heterosexual Life Partner/friend-ships ever portrayed on television with his apparent polar opposite Denny Crane. He'd die for his moral principles and will do delightfully legally questionable things to stick to them. He delivers really awesome if Anvilicious closing arguments. And best of all, next to every episode ends with him and Denny contemplating philosophical subjects, trying to get to the bottom of their own fucked-upness, or having general male bonding moments. I'll never get tired of that guy.
  • Cal Lightman from Lie to Me. He's very clever, very snarky, cool under pressure and so very good at running gambits on everyone. Plus he has that sexy British accent.
    • Also, Eli Loker. He is also very smart, and very, very funny. He's not above manipulating other characters when it suits him, but he's still just so sweet that you can't help but want to forgive him, And his adorable curly hair does not hurt at all.
    • Doctor Gillian Foster, Cal's partner in crime. Sexy, sensible, and oh, by the way, pulled a long con on Cal for seven years, playing Mama Bear to a daughter that she didn't even know at the time. Gillian's only just begun to reach her potential as a brilliant character.
  • Oh come on, we've got to give some props to Dr. Huang from Law and Order Special Victims Unit. Because he's just...so...so...sexy? Yeah, sexy. I don't know. This is the same troper that wrote the entry for Spencer Reid, so maybe I just have a thing for FBI criminal psychiatrists.
  • Sue Sylvester Anybody? Seriously. How often do you see a combine stone-cold Magnificent Bitch with some of the best lines the show has to offer with a side of humanity usually only reserved for the main cast? Not only that, but her behaviour and character development has completley avoided the annoying reset button that happens all the time to the other characters. Awesome.
    • On that note, Kurt fucking Hummel. For real. Yeah, the guy has his issues. But I completely resent the assertion that he never got called on his manipulations. He didn't need to - he was the one who got bit in the arse by all his scheming, while everyone else got something great out of it, and he knows it, too. And he really is a sweetheart. Not to mention that Chris Colfer is easily the best actor in the cast, with the possible exception of Jane Lynch. Kurt is just so beautifully real it amazes me.
      • Kurt is one of the best characters on TV. He is the first real network portrayal of a gay teenage boy struggling for acceptance, and oh my goodness, it really is done so well. Special mention to Blaine Anderson, who receives a lot of unwarranted hate, but in my opinion is incredibly brave and caring.
      • Not to mention one of the only characters to avert Aesop Amnesia. Talk about character development!
    • Don't forget Santana. She can be a bitch but is freaking hilarous.
    • Mercedes Jones. Sassy Black Woman? Absolutely. But there's more to Mercedes than just the diva; a loyal friend to Kurt and Quinn, a no-bullshit force for change in the club, and a singer who reminds us that there's more than Rachel Berry in the world.
  • Community's study group needs to be on this page. All seven of them, always there for each other or others, whether it's playing D&D, fighting zombies or participating in some Christmassy delusion.
    • No love for Duncan? He's the most Adorkable British drunkard I've ever witnessed on television.
    • Oh Abed... sweet, strange, supremely confident, meta, mysterious-eyed Abed. Let me love you.
  • Flynn of Power Rangers RPM. God I loved his Day in The Limelight episode showing how as a kid he always wanted to become a hero and how he was never appreciated for doing the right thing before he became a Ranger. Then he takes out a bunch of mooks with his post-transformation sequence explosion. Not to mention I loved his accent.
  • Dr. K, also from Power Rangers RPM. Fridge cannon? Check. Killer violin? Check. Diabetic sweet tooth? Check and double check. Dr. K was truly the Crazy Awesome one of the season. Although younger than the rest of the cast, she comes up with the technology used to fight the season's Big Bad. She also gets some of the series' funniest moments, including her infamous reaction to whenever anyone even comes close to referring to the suits' material as spandex. But Dr. K really shines in her Day in The Limelight episode, not only for her tragic backstory filled with pure Nightmare Fuel, but also Olivia Tennet's moving portrayal of her character's varied emotions. (Did I mention that both Dr. K and her actress are really adorable?) She also gets the most unique character development of the entire Power Rangers franchise, acting coldly towards the Ranger Series Operators at first, but embracing all of them (including Ziggy!) as her family at the end—all the while dealing with the repercussions of her mistakes. I loved the entire cast of RPM, but Olivia Tennet was the absolute best actor of the series cast, and one of the best actors in the long-running franchise. She really made the character and the story of Dr. K come alive.
  • "Howlin' Mad" Murdock. Is he an accurate portrayal of PTSD? No. Is he hilarious, entertaining, interesting, and Crazy Awesome? Yes. In a show that was built on such a predictable formula, he was the unpredictable part of the show—he could respond to something humorously, seriously, or somewhere in between, and he got the A-Team out of a bad fix more than once. Plus, he can fly anything. Even when he's temporarily blinded.
  • Vyvyan from The Young Ones is the most awesome character in any sitcom ever. Period. Pretty much all of the main cast in that show can claim their characters to be the high points of their careers, but this applies most to Adrian Edmondson. There's no practically no point of comparison, certainly not in Bottom or any of Edmondson's other later works. See this.
    • Mike. Unflappable in the face of danger, completely unsurprisable, more than able to think circles around the other flatmates, always out for a quick buck, and just witty in general. He set up a roller disco in Rick's room while he was in the bathroom. An unexploded atomic bomb crashes into their house and his intial reaction is to sell it to foreign governments. Being sane is a pretty big plus in The Young Ones-verse, but to be Genre Savvy enough to use the craziness to your advantage puts him over the top.
  • Chuck Taggart from Odyssey 5. Pretty much everything he does or says is TV Tropes Made of Win Archive. After the Earth implodes and the Odyssey crew gets sent 5 years back through time to try and stop it his favourite pastimes continue to be washing his car, doing his crossword puzzles, the occasional headbutt with Kurt and stealing moon rocks from secure NASA facilities. Exhibit A: How Chuck Taggart orders his coffee.
  • Two words: SABRINA SPELLMAN.
  • Cat and Jade from Victorious. Now, every character in that show is pretty awesome in their own way, but Cat and Jade reach Character Depth unheard of in a Nickelodeon show.
    • Cat is hilarious and adorable; you're practically guaranteed to like her from the very first moment you see her. Initially, she seems like "the ditzy one", but as the show goes on, you come to suspect that there are things we aren't seeing. She's aggressively childish, gets upset at even the most innocent of statements and can never seem to keep a mood for more than two minutes... Personally, I believe it's all an act, a refusal to grow up. Or perhaps she's seriously messed up in the head. Either way, I cannot wait to see where they'll take it.
    • Jade is, without a doubt, the deepest character currently on Nick. In the pilot, she seems like just "the mean girl". But then there's the dynamic between her and Beck, the unlikely friendship she has with Cat, the recurring dreams she can't tell us about, the way she defaults to hate regarding just about everything... There's definitely more than just being mean. A lot more. Like with Cat, I cannot wait to see her character explored in greater depth.
      • After, Tori Goes Platinum ... OH MY GOD ALL THE JADE FEELS. She's just so layered and Liz Gillies is incredible and pulls it all off so well - keeping up the facade, but still letting Jade's vulnerability shine through. I can't believe she's a character on a Nickelodeon show - she's better written, acted, and more compelling than any other character on television I've stumbled across. (And on a shallow note, she's incredibly incredibly gorgeous and I want her entire wardrobe. And oh my god can she sing).
  • Detective Kate Beckett is, in the words of the creators themselves, practically a superhero. A savvy, tough woman who's seen the darker side of life but hasn't let it break her and did I mention heart-stoppingly gorgeous?
    • Castle himself, for that matter. Starts off as a bit of a Jerkass, and definitely a guy with a bit of a Peter Pan complex, but under it he's brave and loyal, and he's willing to step back to see the woman he loves be happy. Also he's a Papa Bear and that won me over from the get-go.
      • But you're forgetting the some of the best things about Castle! He's Fun Personified. He's One of Us. He's a freaking Shipper! He's Genre Savvy from being a writer and he keeps the show light-hearted and a barrel of laughs. Unless you mess with his daughter, mother, or Beckett.
      • Castle is the reason this show stands out for me. In an era of overly dark, angsty dramas (mostly police ones, but even medical ones) with Jerkass protagonists and constant hints of melancholy, the fact that Castle is a likeable Nice Guy who personifies Angst? What Angst? (which nearly no one else does these days) and keeps the tone lighthearted is what makes the show. Not that I don't like Bones, House MD or The Mentalist, but it's the nature of this one character - and his interactions with those around him - that make this show stand out, in a good way.
    • Oh, and Alexis, who is a teenager and somehow the only sensible person in her family, but still wonderfully snarky and independent.
    • I have a soft spot for Ryan. Lovely bromance with Esposito, has his moments of awesome - "Knockdown" in particular. And he's just so ridiculously adorkable.
  • The Wire is filled to the brim with amazing characters, but the one who stands out the most is, of course, everyone's favorite Badass Longcoat wearing, shotgun slinging, catchy-tune whistling gunslinger, Omar Little. Seriously, the guy's an unbelievable badass, who makes his living robbing drug dealers. The fact that he also happens to be incredibly deep, intelligent, well-written, and a gay character who isn't a stereotype (!), however, is what truly earns him a mention.
    • There's also the sorta-main character, Jimmy McNulty. He's a hard-drinking, loud-mouthed, and kind of arrogant Cowboy Cop asshole, but he's such a well-written, entertaining, and extremely likable asshole that you can't help but keep your eyes on him whenever he's on screen.
    • Of course Cedric Daniels, the conflicted Reasonable Authority Figure who has the utterly unenviable job of having to oversee the narcotics investigation in the face of crooked politicians, unhelpful superiors, and Cowboy Cops like McNulty is very likeable and compelling as well.
    • The characters on The Wire are generally well-written and are definitely not flat characters. As the show progresses, the characters progress, too. Some become better people. Others become worse.
  • Jamie Reagan in Blue Bloods . He is so adorably idealistic and such a sympathetic character.
    • Frank too. He wears his authority in such a dignified way whether at home or at work.
  • Far past time for Alias to be on here.
  • Alex Mack. The Naive Everygirl who could turn into a puddle, tried to stop her hometown's dangerous chemical plant and had an awesome assortment of hats. A great Nickelodeon Nineties character.
  • No love for Leverage? Everyone is awesome. EVERYONE. My personal favorites are Parker (brilliant thief, more than a little crazy, great character arc as she learns to care about people, and oh yeah, gorgeous) and Eliot (extremely badass, gourmet chef, cranky but protective, way smarter than people give him credit for, and played by the insanely hot Christian Kane). But then there's Nate and Sophie and Hardison, and even secondary characters like Sterling and Maggie. All worthy of being gushed over.
  • Betty Slocomb, "Captain" Stephen Peacock, Dick Lucas, Shirley Brahms, and best of all Wilberforce Clayborn Humphries. All fun, catty, loveable, and never tiring to watch.
  • Ambassador Deleen on Babylon 5. She has so much charisma and knows how to inspire people. She has splendid virtues, and sometimes shocking faults. You can tell she is an emotional and passionate person but she keeps that bottled up behind a mask of regal grace.
    • Lennier. He is so devoted and tries so hard to be heroic even when he doesn't look or feel heroic. He serves faithfully for years and hardly asks anything in return. And he has a dry, unassertive personality that every once in awhile will awaken. And he just reminds me of me.
      • That was mean what the writer did to him. He had to be gotten rid of, but I would have had Lennier die heroically defending Delenn. Who cares if it's a cliche?
  • Leslie Knope from Parks and Recreation. She's just this perfect ball of happiness and positivity and sunshine, and she loves her friends, and she's really good at her job, and she's not afraid to look like a doofus, and she's just so wonderful. No wonder Ben is totally in love with her (even though she doesn't seem to notice).
  • Hikaru, the Sixth Ranger from Mahou Sentai Magiranger. Like just about every Sixth Ranger, he is introduced as being a total badass who practically waltzes his way through battle, and like just about every Sixth Ranger, he is subjected to the Worf Effect to show how dire things have truly become. But! Unlike other Sixth Rangers before him, Hikaru is actually affected by his defeats and begins to suffer considerable doubts in his abilities while keeping up a strong front for the others, thereby deconstructing the trope. and then he overcomes his doubts, becoming a greater warrior for it.
  • Lionel Luthor. Say what you want about Lex, or any other Superman villain, he was THE villain of the show. He's the Trope Codifier for Magnificent Bastard, and a wonderfully complex villain with believable motivations, who doesn't use his substantial Freudian Excuse, as well, an excuse, and whose Heel Face Turn was actually believable. I miss him so.
    • Come to think of it, Major Zod too. No one quite hams it up the way he does. He was one of the first seasonal villains to not be just another Lionel rip-off, instead focussing on his abilities as a Badass military commander and Classic Villain. He shone at it.
  • This scene from the first season of the Canadian series Slings and Arrows is one of the many, many reasons Geoffrey Tennant absolutely bursts with awesome.
  • Frank and Mike of American Pickers. Their enthusiasm for what they do is infectious, and they're very fair wheelers and dealers. They can get the most crotchety men, men who may rarely speak to even their neighbors, to like them.
  • I absolutely love Dave Lister from Red Dwarf. He's messy, crass and sarcastic, but I'd be damned if he isn't also hilarious, charming and optimistic (considering his circumstances). Plus, I'm a bit of a sucker for the baby face and Scouse accent.
    • Holly, at least Norman Lovett's version, if only by virtue of the fact that he got most of the best lines. The practical joke about Lister's three-million-year-old sausage covering the Earth never fails to crack me up, nor does his opening narrations. Also, one word: Queeg.
  • Did I seriously just read through this whole page with no mention of Special Agent Dale Cooper?
  • Walter. Bishop. Television has been without a genuine, honest-to-God Crazy Awesome Mad Scientist for far too long.
  • Captain Marvelous from Kaizoku Sentai Gokaiger, his name alone already make him very cool. He's also very, very badass and Hot-Blooded in the most awesome way possible. Also a big fan of the Indy Ploy and would make good drinking buddies with Kamina
  • OK, I might be alone in this but Len, from Kamen Rider Dragon Knight. He goes from not wanting any help and trying to steal Kit’s deck, to accepting Kit as a fellow rider and close friend. Once he starts to trust other, he tries to keep them safe, but he has very little leadership experience, so it's not easy. When he loses a teammate, he takes the lost hard, and it’s when he loses someone that his rage comes out. When his girlfriend, Kase (who is also a Ventaran Rider) is vented, he makes Strike (whose got a nice body count and had nearly beaten him before) need some new pants. It also doesn’t hurt that he uses a rapier, which just is epic.
  • Thomas Cromwell on The Tudors. For all that he's King Henry's go-to guy for getting nasty work done (like framing Anne Boleyn for adultery), Cromwell himself is not evil or sadistic. He lacks the blatant cruelty of several other prominent schemers (Thomas Boleyn, Edward Seymour, Henry himself at times) and genuinely believes in his Reformation. He's technically cast in a villain role, but he never goes after a person just because he doesn't like them, which can't be said for, well, anyone else in the main cast. (Except for Jane Seymour and Katherine Parr, maybe.) And even if you hated him, you cannot say he deserved to die the way he did.
    • Anne Stanhope as well. She's a minor character, an utter bitch, but damn is she fun to watch. She has some fantastic lines in seasons 3 and 4, a Pet the Dog moment in the second last episode of season 4, and gives the feared Bishop Gardiner a much-deserved verbal smackdown (with a nice dash of blackmail) in the series finale.
  • Barbara Havers. Barbara Havers, Barbara Havers, Barbara mother-effing Havers. Jesus. What is not awesome about this character?? She's so adorable it's insane, and so broken and lonely and strong and vulnerable and human all at once, and never has a more exquisite story of Character Development been put to film. Ever. She's so gloriously insecure, such a beautiful disaster, so real and well-rounded and three-dimensional it's unreal. She's no saint but she's got a heart of pure, solid gold and you just want to scoop her up and cuddle her and make all the horrible things that have ever happened to her go away. This is a woman who will throw herself in front of a bullet for a stranger and cold-cock a guy on the head with a rock to save a child, this is a woman who will let her heartbroken partner sleep on her sofa when he just can't go home and does her best to help him fix things with his wife when she's blatantly in love with him herself. She giver her all to everything she does and never holds back, she pushes people away because she's scared to trust but she'll say "You resign, I resign" because she is loyal to the very end. She'll lie about having an affair with her partner to save his butt even on their first case when all she wants is to get rid of him, and she'll admit when she's wrong but she's so very human and stubborn, she'll outwit someone who tries to drug her to sleep and she'll go to the wire to save her partner. Her loyalty, her passion, her vulnerability, her flaws and her incredible heart - they make her the most captivating character ever to hit television. She's perfect in her imperfections, and I adore her beyond all reason.
  • My long distance dedication goes out to the Solomon Family, formerly of Rutherford, Ohio. Hell, let's include all the crazy people they met over the years too. Never has a Sitcom family given me so much comfort viewing or have been so close to my line of thinking! <Does the salute>
  • Malcolm Tucker. Malcolm Tucker, Malcolm Tucker, Malcolm Tucker. Like Nicola, you just can't help being seduced by his scary charm, his highly entertaining baroque swearing, and his infamous bollockings. His dedication to the job is tremendous - there's not a person in Whitehall you'd want more in a crisis than Malcolm. Remember, Tucker's law always applies, and don't TOUCH the scarf, it's Paul Smith!
  • From Doctor Who:
    • The Doctor himself. Older than any human could ever be, and yet still learning, he is the core of the show. He's funny and serious and crazier than crazy but he will make you run in terror if you cross him. He's smart enough to save all of reality, and yet still knows the pain of loving and losing.
    • Sarah Jane Smith, full stop. Snarky, determined, smart, and brave enough to face down the destruction of her planet without a weapon, she was so awesome they had to give her her own show.
    • Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart. Dude punched out the Master, not to mention the countless times he fought to protect Earth.
    • Ace. Totally Radical teenager? Check. Anarchist extraordinaire? Double check. And she beat up a Dalek with a baseball bat.
    • How could you leave out Captain Jack Harkness? He's sexy and no matter what gender/race/species you are, you're definitely in with a chance. And River Song, who is one of the best Doctor Who characters in a long time.
    • Donna Nobel. Not in love with the Doctor like his last two companions. Mocks the very thought of it more than once. Not willing to assume he's right all the time. Ready to defy the laws of Time in order to save Pompeii and when that failed, put aside all pride and begged the Doctor to save just one person. Used her insane temping skill to stop a genocidal war, figure out the clue that stopped the Sontaran invasion of earth, and shut down the Daleks and Davros. Threw herself in front of a truck on the off chance that there might be a better world waiting and saved 27 planets. The universe had been wating for The Doctor-Donna.
  • Sherlock Holmes from Sherlock Anti-Hero, Deadpan Snarker, Badass Longcoat, Tall, Dark and Snarky... The list could go on for miles!
  • No love for Rome? Starting with Caesar who is a Magnificent Bastard; sexy and often naked Mark Antony; bad boy with a heart Titus Pullo and the stoic Lucius Vorenus. The series is full of great characters. One of my friends even has a thing for the 'little goatee man'.

  1. "Thank goodness you're above all that, then", anyone?