List of fictional atheists and agnostics: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Content deleted Content added
Top2bottom (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
|||
Line 141: | Line 141: | ||
==S== |
==S== |
||
*[[Setsuna F. Seiei]], the primary protagonist of the show ''[[Gundam 00]]''. |
*[[Setsuna F. Seiei]], the primary protagonist of the show ''[[Gundam 00]]''. |
||
*Ted Strayer, an [[Non-player character|NPC]] living in Rivet City in the video game ''[[Fallout 3]]''.<ref>http:// |
*Ted Strayer, an [[Non-player character|NPC]] living in Rivet City in the video game ''[[Fallout 3]]''.<ref>http://www.falloutwiki.com/Ted_Strayer</ref> |
||
*Terrence Sweetwater, a character in ''[[Battlefield: Bad Company]]'' and ''[[Battlefield: Bad Company 2]]'' |
*Terrence Sweetwater, a character in ''[[Battlefield: Bad Company]]'' and ''[[Battlefield: Bad Company 2]]'' |
||
*Winston Smith, the protagonist of George Orwell's 1984 |
*Winston Smith, the protagonist of George Orwell's 1984 |
Revision as of 04:35, 25 January 2012
![]() | This article's factual accuracy is disputed. (May 2010) |
![]() | The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's general notability guideline. (February 2010) |
Film and television characters
A
- Nicholas Angel (played by Simon Pegg), from the British action comedy film Hot Fuzz[1]
- Eleanor Ann Arroway (played by Jodie Foster), from the science fiction film Contact[2]
- Jonathan Ames (played by Jason Schwartzman), from the show Bored to Death
B
- Ken Barlow (played by William Roache), from the long-running British soap opera Coronation Street[3]
- Temperance Brennan (played by Emily Deschanel), from the American drama television series Bones[4]
- Karen Brockman (played by Ramona Marquez, from Outnumbered
- Jake Brockman (played by Tyger Drew-Honey), from the show Outnumbered
- Cleveland Brown, Jr. from Family Guy and The Cleveland Show, though he states his aversion for the term "atheist".
- Ruth Buggs (played by Kristen Wiig), from the film Paul
C
- Allison Cameron (played by Jennifer Morrison), from the Emmy and Peabody-winning American medical drama House
- Brenda Chenowith (played by Rachel Griffiths), from the show Six Feet Under
- Sheldon Cooper (played by Jim Parsons), from the show The Big Bang Theory
- Perry Cox (played by John C. McGinley), from the comedy-drama television series Scrubs[5]
D
- Donnie Darko (played by Jake Gyllenhaal), from the film Donnie Darko
- Sally Draper (played by Kiernan Shipka), from the show Mad Men
- Tyler Durden, played by Brad Pitt from the film Fight Club
- Debbie Gallagher (played by Rebecca Ryan) from the British TV series Shameless.
- Dr. Manhattan (played by Billy Crudup) from the graphic novel and film Watchmen[6]
G
- Liam Gallagher (played by Liam Gallagher) from the British band Oasis.
- Ronnie Gardocki (played by David Rees Snell), from the American drama series The Shield
- Michael Garibaldi (played by Jerry Doyle), from the American science fiction series Babylon 5
- Clive Gollings (played by Nick Frost), from the film Paul
- Brian Griffin (voiced by Seth MacFarlane), from the show Family Guy
H
- Laine Billings Hanson (played by Joan Allen), from the political thriller The Contender[7]
- Ben Harper (played by Robert Lindsay), from the British comedy show My Family
- Madeline "Maddie" Hayes (played by Cybill Shepherd), from the American television series Moonlighting[8]
- Gregory House (played by Hugh Laurie), from the Emmy and Peabody-winning American medical drama House[9]
- Kurt Hummel (played by Chris Colfer), from the show Glee
J
- Patrick Jane, the titular character from the American detective show The Mentalist
- Sid Jenkins (played by Mike Bailey, from the British TV show, Skins
K
- Billy Keikeya (played by Paul Campbell), from the science fiction television series Battlestar Galactica[10]
L
- Gabe Lewis (played by Zach Woods), from the show The Office
- Jen Lindley (played by Michelle Williams), from the American primetime television drama Dawson's Creek[11]
- Märta Lundberg (played by Ingrid Thulin), from the film Winter Light
M
- Oscar Martinez (played by Oscar Nunez), from the show The Office
- Andy Millman (played by Ricky Gervais), from the BAFTA, Golden Globe and Emmy-winning British television sitcom Extras[12]
- Dexter Morgan (played by Michael C. Hall), from the show Dexter
- Daria Morgendorffer (played by Tracy Grandstaff), from the shows Beavis and Butt-Head and Daria
O
- Maxxie Oliver (played by Mitch Hewer), from the British TV show, Skins
P
- Paul (played by Seth Rogen), from the film Paul
- Britta Perry (played by Gillian Jacobs), from the American comedy-drama television series Community[13]
- Daniel Plainview, played by Daniel Day-Lewis from the film There Will Be Blood
R
- Dennis Reynolds (played by Glenn Howerton), from the show It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia
- Malcolm Reynolds (played by Nathan Fillion), from the show Firefly and the film Serenity
S
- Sara Sidle (played by Jorja Fox), from CSI[14]
- Lisa Simpson, (played by Yeardley Smith), from the animated television series The Simpsons.
- Hayley Smith (played by Rachael MacFarlane), from the comedy series American Dad!
- Roger Smith (played by Seth MacFarlane), from the comedy series American Dad!
- Michael Stivic and his wife Gloria Stivic from the TV comedy All in the Family
- Effy Stonem (played by Kaya Scodelario), from the British TV series Skins
- Tony Stonem (played by Nicholas Hoult), from the British TV series Skins
- Neil Sutherland (played by Blake Harrison, from the British comedy TV series The Inbetweeners
T
- Tara Thornton from the TV show True Blood.
W
- Lindsay Weir (played by Linda Cardellini), from the American comedy-drama television series Freaks and Geeks[15]
- Graeme Willy (played by Simon Pegg), from the film Paul
- Jeff Winger (played by Joel McHale) from the American television series Community[16]
- Cristina Yang (played by Sandra Oh), from the medical drama Grey's Anatomy[17]
Literature and video games
A
- Aaron the Moor, villain in Shakespeare's Titus Andronicus.
- Anarky (a.k.a Lonnie Machin), an ambiguous superhero/villain in publications of DC Comics.[18]
C
Phillip Carey, the protagonist in the novel Of Human Bondage, by W Somerset Maugham
- Holden Caulfield, the protagonist in the novel The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger.[19]
D
- Savage Dragon, superhero who stars in his eponymous series from Image Comics.[20]
- Tyler Durden, from the novel Fight Club
E
- Edward Elric, the main character in the Fullmetal Alchemist universe.[21]
- Eragon Shadeslayer, from the Inheritance Cycle.
F
- Cliff Fittir, supporting character in Star Ocean 3.
- Flynn, Blackhawk pilot in Battlefield: Bad Company 2
G
- Booster Gold (a.k.a. Michael Jon Carter), a superhero in publications from DC Comics.[22]
- Brian Griffin a talking dog from Family Guy
I
- Iron Man (a.k.a. Anthony Edward "Tony" Stark), a superhero in the Marvel Comics Universe.[23]
L
- David Lurie, protagonist of the novel Disgrace.
- Lestat de Lioncourt, main character in most of The Vampire Chronicles by Anne Rice.
- Lex Luthor, archenemy of Superman.
M
- John Marston, protagonist of the video game Red Dead Redemption
- Terry McCaleb, a former FBI agent featured in Michael Connelly's 1998 novel Blood Work.
- Mister Terrific (a.k.a. Michael Holt), a superhero in the DC Comics Universe.[24]
R
- Joe Rose, protagonist of the novel Enduring Love
- David Rain, protagonist of the novel The Fire Within
- Andrew Ryan, antagonist in BioShock, created Rapture partially as a refuge from a world consumed by religion.
S
- Setsuna F. Seiei, the primary protagonist of the show Gundam 00.
- Ted Strayer, an NPC living in Rivet City in the video game Fallout 3.[25]
- Terrence Sweetwater, a character in Battlefield: Bad Company and Battlefield: Bad Company 2
- Winston Smith, the protagonist of George Orwell's 1984
Y
- Gertrude Yorkes, deceased, the daughter of time-traveling criminals from Runaways.
- Heero Yuy, the primary protagonist of the show Gundam Wing.
References
- ^ Movie review: Hot Fuzz
- ^ Contact (1997)
- ^ "Corrie comments spark complaints". BBC News. 2009-04-15. Retrieved 2010-05-08.
- ^ Bones Season 1
- ^ "My No Good Reason", Scrubs, ABC, March 22, 2007
- ^ In Chapter IV reveals that he doesn't think there is a God
- ^ The Contender (2000): FILM REVIEW; Those Strange Bedfellows Haunt a Politician
- ^ TV Character Bios: Madeline Hayes
- ^ Playing Godless
- ^ Billy Keikeya Biography
- ^ Dawson's Crock
- ^ Background Chatter: Ricky Gervais’s hilarious Extras
- ^ Short Lived Series With Passion Makes For Best Possible DVD Release
- ^ [1]
- ^ Short Lived Series With Passion Makes For Best Possible DVD Release
- ^ Community: "Comparative Religion"
- ^ "Grandma Got Run Over By a Reindeer," Grey's Anatomy, ABC, December 11, 2005
- ^ Kraft, Gary S. (1997-04-08). "Holy Penis Collapsor Batman! DC Publishes The First Zonpower Comic Book!?!?!". GoComics.com. Archived from the original on 1998-02-18. Retrieved 1998-02-18.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|accessdate=
(help)Alan Grant (w), Norm Breyfogle (p), Josef Rubinstein (i). "Metamorphosis, Part One: Does a Dog Have a Buddha Nature?" Anarky, vol. 1, no. 1, p. 20/5 (May 1, 1997). DC Comics. - ^ Salinger, Jerome (1951). The Catcher in the Rye. p. 130.
- ^ Erik Larsen. The Savage Dragon #31
- ^ Atheist Superheroes, villains, and other characters
- ^ Justice League International Annual #2
- ^ Ching, Albert (2011-02-18). "Matt Fraction Takes IRON MAN From #500 to FEAR ITSELF". Newsarama. Retrieved 2011-07-27.
- ^ Infinite Crisis # 5, pg. 1
- ^ http://www.falloutwiki.com/Ted_Strayer