mickey smith

my mickey smith appreciation post.

withabigyellowtruck:

fatimagic:

I’ve been meaning to write this one up for a long time, and now’s as good a time as any, I suppose.

First and foremost, I this post isn’t in response to any Mickey hate, per se, but rather to the seemingly few people in the Doctor Who fandom who actually care that Mickey Smith exists. People always go on and on about Rory, and how he rose from being a dorky third wheel in a sense, to an ass-kicking hero. And don’t get me wrong, I love Rory to pieces, but Mickey’s story arc, which followed the same basic template, barely seems to get any recognition from the fandom at all.

Now, I use the term “basic template” very loosely for a big reason that I’ll get to in a moment. The obvious, and more minor reason being that Rory is not a “copy” of Mickey. I believe that they are two very different characters with two different lives tat followed similar paths, especially in the beginning of their stories.

Like Rory (his arguably more popular counterpart), Mickey grew up very close with his female best friend and her family. The two friends eventually developed feelings for each other and began dating. However, when the Doctor stepped into their lives, both Mickey and Rory suddenly became the “third wheel” in their Team TARDIS, always seemingly under appreciated and labeled as “the tin dog.”

But here’s the big difference between Mickey and Rory that I referred to earlier. Rory knew that he would always have Amy. At one point or another, he knew that he had something worth fighting for. Yes, Rose is arguably worth fighting for, but Mickey was never the one that Rose had faith in. He was never the one that Rose wanted to save her. Amy always wanted Rory to be her hero, but for Rose, it was always the Doctor. This is where his and Rory’s paths differ.

Rory always had a connection to the Doctor through Amy, and the two were always friends. Yes, there were times when he thought the Doctor threatened his relationship with Amy, but nothing ever came to pass regarding that. In Mickey’s case, the threat was real, at least on Rose’s end during Nine’s tenure. To Nine, he was always “Mickey the idiot”—that dunce who always follows Rose around. Even the writers made a point to paint Mickey in that light at first. We weren’t supposed to care about him, and we especially weren’t supposed to like him.

All Mickey’s life, people walked away from him—his father, his emotionally unstable mother, and now Rose. His ties to her were being irreparably severed, and the Doctor was kicking him while he was down. While he did have his grandmother, he had to care for her during the majority of his adult life. He played the role of the caretaker, while Rory never really had to.

Then, out of nowhere, this random big-eared “Doctor” comes into Rose’s life, and the woman who he had come to love since he was a child was now feeling the same thing overnight—but for another man. Hell, Rose’s traveling (albeit unintentionally) got him accused of her murder at one point! Jackie and everyone he knew might have turned on him for a whole year.

But did he sever his ties to his childhood friend? Nope. He remained loyal to her constantly. Even when he realized he never had a chance with Rose and started dating other people (which she blasted him for), he continued to love and support her and Jackie, and he would eventually earn the Doctor’s love and respect, as well.

During his relatively short time as a companion, Mickey found his place in the universe, where Rory had arguably always known his, deep down. When he was flung into a world where he had to face an alternate version of himself, he chose to stay and fight the Cybermen, against everybody’s expectations. And he stayed for his grandmother, the one family member who never left him, and whom he’d lost in our dimension. He didn’t have to (hell, Rose was willing to leave her family behind multiple times), but he did, without a second thought.

And then, after all that, Mickey came back to help the world—again, twice, at that. He never ended his friendships with Rose, the Doctor, or Jackie, and he finally found true love with another one of the Doctor’s companions. He finally became someone’s hero—Martha’s hero. Not to mention he’s now kicking alien ass and defending the earth with her.

Mickey and Rory are far from the same character, and each are amazing characters in their own right.

That said, Mickey deserves just as much love from this fandom as Rory gets.

I… wow.  Thank you.

Ten years ago to the day, I started writing a Doctor Who fanfic called Turn of the Earth. I even made a whole lot of graphics/covers/etc for it, as fanfic writers did back then. You can see one up there; sadly it’s easily the best of the bunch.

Turn of the Earth was a gloriously jumbled affair about Mickey Smith and the briefly mentioned (in Boomtown) new girlfriend of his: Trisha Delaney. This fic was running concurrent to the actual series, so as Mickey got drawn further and further into the Doctor’s world, Trisha (who wasn’t even introduced til Part 3) took over as protagonist.

I loved Trisha so much. Russell T Davies, the writer of Boomtown, didn’t really have a lot to say about her. Just a brief description via Rose: “She’s nice. She’s a bit…big.” Mickey’s reaction was “She lost weight!” so I wondered if he actually liked this Trisha, and I decided he did. But what was she like? Why did she lose weight? What did she think of Rose? Did she feel like a rebound? And so on.

I don’t suppose Trisha meant more than a throwaway line to Russell T Davies, a quick plot device to show how far apart Rose and Mickey had grown (there’s even a cut line from The Parting of the Ways where Rose asks “How’s Trisha?” and Mickey says “Don’t care”) but once I started writing her, she meant the world to me. So did the people around her: Shareen Costello (another throwaway name you might remember from the series), her father, her mother, her brothers, her neighbours, and of course Mickey and Jackie. I wanted the Powell Estate and the people there to have lives, because (fairly or unfairly) I never really got the feeling Russell T Davies thought much of it or them.

I don’t know if I did or didn’t manage it, but I did give at least Trisha and Shareen lives, I think. They saw the world end – the Battle of Canary Wharf affected everyone, after all – but they survived. And they built a friendship that I think is actually the heart of the entire story, even though that wasn’t the intention at the beginning.

Stories about the people left behind on Earth while the adventure carries on someplace else are my favourite stories. (That’s probably why I latched onto Mickey so hard to begin with.) What does it mean, to be involved in the story, but have no control over it? Even now, watching the current series of Doctor Who, I wonder about Trisha and what she’s doing while the Cybermen invade, the dead rise, monsters stalk the street and so on. Canonically, Clara Oswald lives on the Powell Estate now. In my head, her and Trisha have met at least once, and liked each other. Shareen, who became a journalist in my story, has interviewed her at least once regarding UNIT. And they all lived happily ever after. No, they really did.

Turn of the Earth is on AO3 now (although obviously if you clicked the other link you’ll have seen that.) I thought it deserved to be there with my other ‘good’ fic. It didn’t even need much editing, to my surprise. Seventeen-year-old me apparently knew what she was doing. The only thing I took out was any reference at all to Trisha’s weight as a negative.

I like World War 3 Mickey who’s awesome and not mocked but also it’s okay that he wants to stay on Earh and he doesn’t need a large gun to fight back.

doctorwhyyy:

I had to rewatch it hehe but I agree anon, Mickey was so brave, protected Jackie and saved the Earth. He was awesome! And its very cool that he decided to stay on Earth, I mean, I get it, nothing wrong with it. still awesome.

image

I love this fanart!

burntlikethesun:

sarah531:

[tenth doctor voice] I love all my companions equally! Rose Tyler, Donna Noble, and *looks at smudged writing on hand* murta jumes

nah.

jack harkness would be more appropriate seeing as he’s the only one ten shows disdain for. he loves martha and is at her beck and call so…

I mildly disagree (letter to follow) but if I’d included the male companions, the poor soul with the misspelled name would have been Mickey, no question.

abossycontrolfreak:

Pick your favourite character(s) in Doctor Who and tell me your favourite episode for them. Not the episode that they’re in that you love the most, but the episode you love the most for them. And then tell me why it’s your favourite!

(And then I will maybe/probably rewatch some of the episodes to get a new insight into the characters you guys love)

I think people have done most of my other favourites already, so I’m gonna go with-

Mickey

World War 3. I was tempted to go with Rise of the Cybermen, but World War 3

Well, it brings up one of the best parts of Mickey’s story: his relationship with Jackie. Jackie’s spent a year calling him a murderer and harassing him. They don’t like each other at all. But Mickey saves her anyway, comforts her, tells her to run while he holds the Siltheen off-

Long before Series Two, Mickey was a goddamn hero! Well worthy of the Doctor’s admiration, even before the whole thing with the hacking and the missile. And he also quite thoroughly demonstrated that he was absolutely no idiot-

– not that that mattered. >:(

Anyway, yes, Mickey is a guy brave and selfless enough to defend to the death a woman who hates him, and I wish he got more credit for it!

Fictional characters who shaped my life (not in any order): Mickey Smith

I never had much interest in Doctor Who, but I watched the premiere of Rose in March 2005 anyway. There had been so much advertising about it, it was impossible to miss. (Doctor Who is big business in Britain). One of the adverts featured Rose talking to us, the audience, about her life. “Should I stay here with my mum, my job, my boyfriend, or should I go off with the Doctor and have adventures?” The answer was obvious. But when I actually watched the show, I saw Mickey and thought, “Oh, that must be the boyfriend. He seems nice. I hope he doesn’t get hurt too much.”

Well-

I’ll be the first to admit that Mickey wasn’t a good boyfriend in Rose, not at all. He was self-centered and unmotivated and cowardly – but he wasn’t a bad person, I could tell, so I worried rather more about his wellbeing than I suspect I was supposed to. As Rose and Nine ran gleefully past Big Ben with Mickey still in mortal danger, I remember turning to my dad and asking, “Wait, don’t they care about Ricky or Nicky or whatever his name is?” Heh.

I still don’t know if we were particularly meant to care about Mickey in Series One, or at least the first half of Series One, but I cared about him terribly. I think I wrote the first ever fanfiction with him as the main character (I posted it just before Aliens of London, but I could be wrong on that.) and after that I kept writing, story after story after story. Something about the idea of being the one left behind, the one who totally fucked up their Call To Adventure, massively appealed to me. It still does, in fact. Mickey grew into his Hero’s Journey, but I appreciated that it took him so much time, and that he had so many very human fuck-ups along the way.

Almost ten years on and Mickey’s almost forgotten, even among Doctor Who fans. I don’t think he deserves that, I think he was geniunely one of the best people, companions or not, we ever saw on the show. Think about it- Jackie Tyler spends a year harassing him: Mickey risks his life to save hers, then becomes her best friend. The Doctor spends a good long time calling him ‘the idiot’: Mickey steadfastly ignores him and even becomes his friend too. (Which is more than I would have done, frankly.)

When people ask me who my first Doctor Who Companion was, I say Rose, because, well, the show I came to love opened with her episode. She was a very good and very worthwhile hero. But Mickey Smith, in all his non-heroic, human glory- he was my first companion.