Forum:Who counts as a companion?

Obviously, there's no official definition of companion, and there's no way we're going to come up with any definition here that isn't at least somewhat vague, but it would be nice to have some kind of semi-official discussion that people can refer to, and maybe a place to discuss whether people count.

The article List of companions has a section for "disputed companions", but that doesn't really help. That just means we need to draw _two_ lines, one between disputed and official and another between disputed and not at all. Some of the people on this list seem pretty questionable. Is Borusa or Rodan really any more of a companion than, say, Ida Scott? Why is Adelaide Brooke more of a companion than Jackson Lake? Just because Sarah Jane's companions and Jack's team appear on Doctor Who, does that make them companions of the Doctor? And so on.

While we're at it, it would also be nice to have some guidelines for what it takes to add a companion. It seems like you need (at least) the following steps: Anything else? --Falcotron 07:13, May 23, 2010 (UTC)
 * Add the category and template for the appropriate Doctor to their page.
 * Add them to the template.
 * Add them to List of companions, either in the top section or in the disputed section, as appropriate.
 * If they're not disputed, add them to the set of pictures at the top of Companion.

One more issue: includes, with one exception, all, and only, companions of non-canonical Doctors, not companions from non-canonical appearances of canonical Doctors. For example, the robot Master and Alison from Shalka are included, but Claudia Sermbezis's character from the Extras special and the kid from A Fix with Sontarans aren't. The one exception is The Viewer (who CzechOut has, I think rightly, argued needs to be deleted). (I don't mean that the viewer himself needs to be deleted--if you kill all the golfers, they're gonna lock you up--but rather the article.) --Falcotron 07:52, May 23, 2010 (UTC)


 * I suppose my suggestion would be that we should recognize a few classes of companion. A full-time companion would be one who travels (by which I mean in the TARDIS) with the Doctor for a whole series, or at least for the majority of the episodes in the series. Here we would have the likes of Susan, Romana, Sarah Jane, Ace, Rose, Martha, Donna, Amy, etc. A part-time or recurring companion would be one who travels with the Doctor for a short time only, or travels with the Doctor intermittently. Captain Jack Harkness, River Song, and Mickey come most immediately to mind. A one-off or temporary companion would be one who travels with the Doctor for just one or two stories, like Kamelion, Grace, Adam, Adelaide, Wilf, and Nasreen Chaudhry. This definition could probably be expanded to companions whose names are listed in the title sequence, like Astrid Peth and Jackson Lake. You might be able to create a fourth category for people who assist the Doctor and are invited (implicitly or explicitly) to travel in the TARDIS, but are unable to do so, like Sara Kingdom and Lynda Moss, or merge it with the previous category. It's not a perfect system by any means, but the present system lumps together companions who stuck around for years, like Rose and Sarah Jane, with one-off companions who didn't even see inside the TARDIS, like Astrid and Sara Kingdom. That's no good, is it? --Kudzu1 16:22, May 23, 2010 (UTC)
 * Let's just be strict. If someone did not travel in the TARDIS for at least two stories, we should not count them as a companion, and also include people explicitly stated to be companions by the BBC. The latter category includes Christina, Astrid, Wilf, Adelaide, Sara, and I think the UNIT people. If we list everyone who helped the Doctor or took a brief ride in the TARDIS, that would basically make the term companion meaningless. --Golden Monkey 19:07, May 23, 2010 (UTC)