Jump to content

Rodney McKay: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
Line 88: Line 88:
During the season, he was shot twice. The first time in "[[Sateda]]" when a villager fired an arrow into his [[Gluteus Maximus]] and in "[[Phantoms (Stargate Atlantis)|Phantoms]]", when Sheppard was hallucinating that McKay was an Afghan Taliban soldier. However, he seemed to recover from both traumas.
During the season, he was shot twice. The first time in "[[Sateda]]" when a villager fired an arrow into his [[Gluteus Maximus]] and in "[[Phantoms (Stargate Atlantis)|Phantoms]]", when Sheppard was hallucinating that McKay was an Afghan Taliban soldier. However, he seemed to recover from both traumas.


==== Season 4 ====
==== Season 4 ====Spoiler Warning

There will be an episode in the fourth season involving his sister, Jeannie Miller, only this time, she's gets kidnapped "[[Miller's Crossing (Stargate Atlantis)|Miller's Crossing]]"
In the Season opener "[[Adrift(Stargate Atlantis)Adrift]]" McKay discovers that the city's shield is


== Alternate timelines ==
== Alternate timelines ==

Revision as of 18:10, 2 December 2007

Template:Stargate character Dr. Meredith Rodney McKay (a.k.a. Rodney McKay) is a fictional character in the science fiction television series Stargate Atlantis played by David Hewlett. The first appearance of this character was in the Stargate SG-1 episode "48 Hours".

The following information is to be taken in context of the Stargate SG-1 universe, a fictional setting based on a popular franchise. For more on this franchise, see Stargate.

The character of McKay is a Canadian, although, in the Stargate universe, he works for the United States Air Force as an expert on astrophysics, naqahdah, Ancient technology and the Stargate system.

Biography

The character of McKay has a sister, named Jeannie Miller. Though the McKays are similar in intellect, his sister is by far less arrogant and more adept at social situations. In her first appearance in the series, Jeannie (played by David Hewlett's real-life sister Kate Hewlett) stated that "Rodney's" first name was actually "Meredith", (and that she calls him "Mer" for short). "Rodney" is apparently his middle name.[1] As mentioned above, Jeannie is, like her brother, very intelligent (she is portrayed as having a great deal of understanding in both high-level mathematics and theoretical physics.[2]) Additionally, he used to have a dog—which ran away while he was younger—and parents who blamed McKay for their problems.

As a child, he wanted to be a pianist. At age 12 he was told by a piano instructor that his playing was "clinical", and as a result gave up his musical studies, deciding that science would make the best use of his talents. McKay was a genius even when he was young, evidenced by the fact that he built a model atomic bomb for his grade six science fair. Though it was not a functioning bomb, the CIA still took interest, and after a six hour long interview, he was hired for an unspecified intelligence job.

On Earth, he has a cat and an apartment, which he resided in while working for the USAF.[3]

McKay and the USAF

Prior to McKay's first appearance in SG-1 it was explained that McKay was stationed at the Area 51 facility, which is within the domain of Nellis Air Force Base, McKay became one of the premier experts on the Stargate outside of the Stargate Command. During this time, he discovered that Samantha Carter's dialing program ignored 220 of 400 signals given by the Stargate during a dialing sequence (Although given his later mistakes about other Stargate-related matters the reliability of this statement is questionable). In his first appearance in the series, he was ordered to help Samantha Carter recover Teal'c (who was stored as information in the Stargate at the time after an accident at the other end caused the gate to shut down before Teal'c could rematerialise). It was his assessment that the energy that stored Teal'c's pattern would have succumbed to entropy in a 48 hour time period, and thus, it was impossible to save the SG-1 member after that period. Eventually McKay was proven wrong about how Teal'c's pattern was stored, and he was subsequently reassigned to Russia where he was to oversee the transfer and development of the naqahdah generator technology, much to his chagrin.[4]

Some time later, McKay was assigned to help the SGC when Anubis was attacking the Stargate itself by sending a harmonic energy pulse to overload the gate. After attempting to send a severe electromagnetic pulse through the gate, McKay and Carter ran out of options—until Jonas Quinn gave them the idea of getting the gate out of Cheyenne Mountain and sending it through hyperspace.[5]

During his time with the USAF, he was on a team that perfected a means of digital data compression that allowed a large sum of data (such as mission reports, and high quality audio and video) to be transmitted in an extremely short period of time.[2]

McKay and the Atlantis expedition

Season 1

Two years later, McKay was sent to Antarctica, where a small Ancient outpost was discovered by Colonel Jack O'Neill in "Lost City, Part 2". After the discovery of Atlantis's location in the Pegasus Galaxy, McKay was assigned to Dr. Elizabeth Weir's expedition to Atlantis, where he serves as chief scientific adviser. He became the expedition's leading expert on the Ancients, and was assigned to a team consisting of Major John Sheppard, Teyla Emmagan and Lieutenant Aiden Ford.[3]

Though he comes across as pompous and rude at times, he has proven himself to be courageous in the face of danger and a dedicated member of the expedition. He has also shown that he has a capacity for change, having evolved considerably throughout his time spent on Atlantis and less insistent that he alone knows everything about a particular topic. A particular characteristic that others have noticed is his propensity to come up with his most brilliant ideas while under threat of death and/or impending doom. Acerbic tongue aside, he is close to the people he works with, having referred to them as a surrogate family in a message to his sister Jeannie.[2]

By his own admission, he has always envied Samantha Carter's aptitude for being more creative and for having a 'sixth sense' when it comes to problem solving, but it seems that Rodney McKay's experience on Atlantis will eventually put the two scientists on equal footing.

McKay was born without the ATA gene (a lack which bothered him a lot), and volunteered to be the first human trial for Dr. Beckett's gene therapy. It was a success and now he has an artificial ATA gene of his own. The first thing he used it with was an invulnerability shield device they had found in a lab. He tested it by letting Major Sheppard shoot him in the leg and throw him off a balcony, (both of which did not harm him, thanks to the shield). Unfortunately, he discovered that he couldn't remove it—and could neither eat nor drink through it, creating the very real possibility that he would die from dehydration. Dr. Weir hypothesized that, unconsciously, Rodney was afraid of the situation he was now in, and was thus subconsciously preventing the shield from deactivating. After Jinto unknowingly let loose an energy creature, they found the device the Ancients trapped it in. Weir said Rodney should be the one trying to get it back in since the shield was protecting him. In that moment, the shield (expectedly) popped off. Afterwards, they tried to send the energy being through the Stargate to a barren world, using a naqahdah generator as a lure, but the creature sucked the energy out the MALP carrying it. McKay finally put the shield back on, walked into the energy being and threw the generator through the gate. The creature followed it out of Atlantis.[6]

When Major Sheppard and Teyla discovered an enormous storm heading Atlantis' way, McKay discovered a way to power Atlantis' shield using lightning strikes from the same storm that seemed poised to destroy Atlantis.[7]

McKay went with Sheppard, Dr. Brendan Gall and Dr. Abrams to investigate an Ancient weapon satellite Gall discovered in the Atlantis solar system, about 15 hours away from the city by Puddle Jumper. Once there, they discovered a very weak Wraith distress signal and McKay and Sheppard convinced Dr. Weir to let them investigate. Even if the signal was probably 10,000 years old, any scientific and military knowledge they might find may be useful.

Down in the planet, they found the ship mostly intact. Unluckily, there was a survivor, a 10,000-years-old Wraith that had survived by draining his own people, and was almost invulnerable. This "Super-Wraith" attacked Dr. Abrams and Dr. Gall when they were alone, draining Abrams to an empty husk and leaving Gall a very old and fragile man. When Major Sheppard went outside to confront the Wraith, he left McKay behind to take care of Gall. McKay was torn between staying with him and going to help Sheppard. Gall told him he had changed these last months and he no longer was the same man as before and he used the gun Rodney had given him to defend himself to kill himself, so Rodney could go and help Sheppard. Rodney managed to help Sheppard and give them both enough time so rescue could arrive.[8]

While checking the city with a group of scientists and marines after the storm, several scientists started to fall dead without a known cause. They finally found out a lethal nanomachine had been let free after one Atlantean lab was damaged by the storm. McKay figured out a way to disable the nanomachine using an electromagnetic pulse. When the EMP machine in his lab didn't work, Major Sheppard got the idea of using an overloaded naqahdah generator instead to generate the pulse.[9]

After discovering the Wraith hiveships were on their way to Atlantis, he devised a means of opening the Atlantis gate to Earth, by networking the expedition's naqahdah generators, for long enough to send back information in a highly compressed digital format to the SGC detailing the events leading up to the impending Wraith assault on Atlantis. Though running on very little sleep by this time given his attempts to come up with a solution to the impending Wraith invasion, he recorded a lengthy (and often rambling) video letter to people he cared about deeply, even if he didn't show it, such as Samantha Carter and Jeannie.[2]

With the Wraith close, McKay went with Dr. Grodin and Lt. Miller to the Ancient's weapons array satellite discovered in The Defiant One. McKay was forced to use a space suit to reconfigure the satellite from the exterior. Unfortunately, the new configuration meant that Grodin got trapped inside the satellite while McKay and Miller where outside in the Puddle Jumper. They managed to destroy one of the hiveships with the satellite, but McKay and Miller were unable to rescue Grodin before the Wraith destroyed the satellite, killing him.[10]

Season 2

After the timely arrival of the Daedalus, Col. Steven Caldwell beamed the ZPM down with two marines, to ensure the ZPM's safe arrival and installation. En route to the ZPM room, they were waylaid by two Wraith, leaving McKay to deal with one himself. After a spontaneous show of courage on McKay's part, the remaining Wraith was eliminated by Teyla, who escorted McKay the rest of the way. McKay's first attempt at powering the shield was a failure, but the second succeeded in time to save Atlantis from a kamikaze attack. Later, he and Dr. Zelenka implemented Major Sheppard's idea to hide the city so the Wraith would leave thinking it had been destroyed. By substituting a Puddle Jumper's cloak for Atlantis' shield and detonating a nuclear warhead above the city, the Wraith armada departed, fooled into believing Atlantis had been completely obliterated.[11]

While scouting a new planet, Dr. McKay and Lt. Laura Cadman were captured by a Wraith dart. Col. Sheppard ordered the dart to be shot down, but McKay and Cadman were trapped inside the dart's teleportation device. Dr. Zelenka managed to extract only McKay, since there was not enough power to extract them both. By accident, Cadman's mind became trapped also inside McKay's body, and only he could hear her. After some embarrassing incidents, the Wraith transporter was finally repaired and Cadman was restored to her proper body, but not before sharing a passionate kiss with Dr. Beckett.[12]

While looking for a race called the Dorandans they found in the Ancient database, McKay and his team found an experimental Ancient power generator, called Project Arcturus. McKay thought he could make it work where the Ancients had failed, even after one scientist died during a test. With Col. Sheppard's backing, they returned to the planet. Zelenka found out why the Ancients had abandoned the technology, but McKay refused to listen to him, assuring both Weir and Sheppard that he could do it. But, in the end, it overloaded, destroying 5/6th's of a solar system. McKay told Sheppard he hoped he could earn his trust back and Sheppard answered that it might take a while, but that he was sure Rodney could do it if he really wanted to.[13]

During the mid-season two parter, he was held prisoner by two of Lt Ford's men whilst the rest of his team were on a mission to destroy a Hive ship. McKay wanted to escape, so he injected himself with a large amount of the Wraith Enzyme, which he used to heroicly knock out the guards, whilst saying 'That's what happens when you back a brilliant scientist into a corner'. He goes back to Atlantis, where he went under withdrawal cold-turkey style (Due to the lack of any more Wraith enzyme samples that could be used to wean him off it more gradually). He made a miraculous recovery (probably, pointed out by Beckett, because of his stubborness).

McKay revealed that he "toked" marijuana in college once, with disastrous consequences. He did not elaborate.[14]

In the second half of the season, he was test flying a Jumper after it was 'shot down' (presumably the same Jumper that was shot down by inhabitants of 'the Island' in the episode 'Condemned') when one of the engines failed and crash landed onto the Lantean Ocean. It was rapidly sinking to the ocean floor. While thinking of a way out, he was hallucinating Samantha Carter, who told Rodney to use whatever power of the jumper is left for him to survive, because Dr Zelenka and Lt Col Shepperd was thinking a way on how to rescue him. However, McKay ignored Carter's advice and thought of a way to get out of the ocean. Carter tried to slow him down, even by being McKay's fantasy. That didn't work and McKay used up most of the remaining power to try and get out of the water, which didn't work. McKay also discovers that whilst he was transmitting the weak distress signal, it attracted the attention of a Lantean sea creature (later to be called by the Lanteans as 'Flagisalis', or just simply 'Whale'). The 'whale' was actually the reason on how Zelenka and Shepperd managed to have found McKay before the Jumper took on too much water after landing on the bottom.

In the episode 'The Long Goodbye' McKay claims that he is in charge should Weir and Sheppard be unavailable. However, when both Weir and Sheppard were taken over by entities posing as a supposidly loving couple, then tried to kill each other, it was actually Col Caldwell that took command. McKay, although doesn't say it, might not trust Caldwell because he was actually host to a Goa'uld in a previous episode. However, when the situation was handled. Weir told Caldwell that 'McKay said you did a good job'.

In the season finale, McKay was part of an 'alliance' between the Atlantis expedition and a Wraith hive ship, who wanted to use Beckett's Retrovirus they used on a Wraith the expedition called 'Michael' as an alternative food source for them. However, the alliance was a ruse for the Wraith to get to Earth. He and Ronon, who were in the hive ship got stunned and when he awoken in a caccoon he was visably horrified when a Wraith told McKay that they were heading to Earth.

Season 3

Whilst held prisoner on a Hive ship, he keeps going on about what might happen to him and to say how he would be responsible for the destruction of his home planet. However Ronon, who was also prisoner broke himself and McKay free. Ronon manages to convince him that if they're as good as dead, then the Wraith should go down with them. When he was working on a way to destroy the ship be overloading the engines, they were rescued by Sheppard, and 'Michael' because the Daedalus and the Orion were launching an attack against the Hive ship. He was retrieved and when the Daedalus was running out of oxygen, he along with 'Michael' planned to beam in the Retrovirus to the Hive ship and they would have more air.

While attempting to resurrect Project Arcturus, McKay enlists the help of his sister, Jeanie, who happens to be just as smart as McKay. Though there is obvious friction in their relationship, McKay manages to reconcile his differences with his sister.

While testing the new "gate bridge" that he and Carter devised, live Ancients were found, who reclaimed Atlantis and asked the expedition to leave, allowing General Jack O'Neill and Richard Woolsey to remain as liaisons. McKay was reassigned to Area 51, but upon learning that the Asurans had taken Atlantis, McKay joined Sheppard, Weir, and Beckett in hijacking a puddle jumper, and picking up Ronon and Teyla on the way, succeeded in retaking the city.[15]

In the episode 'Tao of Rodney' he and a team that includes Dr Zelenka was searching around the flooded parts of the city after the Replicator occupation of Atlantis when he stepped into a machine and a zap of energy surrounded him. There appears to be no affetcs on him of any kind, after given a medical examination. However, along the course of the episode he suddenly appears to have superpowers, including drastically improved hearing, telekinetic abilities, reading minds and even improved his intelligence. However, whilst reading what the machine can do to humans, Weir and Shepperd informs McKay that the machine was originally designed so that people can ascend. If McKay doesn't learn how to ascend, he could die.

McKay uses Shepperd's help to help him ascend (Sheppard having previously spent time with a group of humans trying to master the secrets of ascension). McKay worked out the the EEG reading has to be between 0.1-0.9hz and that his brain has to reach 96% of use to ascend. However, whilst meditating, he quickly realises that he can't reach the required EEG reading. He decides to better use his time working out a new form of advanced Mathematics and even plans on having a hyperdrive engine on a Puddle Jumper (which would come to use early on in the next season). After finding out that he can choose to descend again and be back to normal. However upon further meditation, he still can't reach the requirements for a human to ascend,and suffers a near fatal seizure.

In the infirmary, McKay then starts to accept his possible death and was told by Shepperd to empty his thoughts. His EEG reading went down. However, before ascending, he manages to send Dr Beckett a message on how to undo what is done to him. is sent back to the machine and by using McKay's old DNA, manages to bring McKay back to his normal self. in the end of the episode he learns that he doesn't remember how he worked out his new advanced Math.

He was very broken up about Beckett's death in Sunday showing that he actually cared about him. McKay was one of Beckett's pallbears along with Sheppard, Ronon, Zelenka, Dr. Cole and Major Lorne and he was the one to tell Beckett's mother that her son had died (probably because the two were revealed to in fact be best friends) and was comforted at the end of the episode by what appeared to be Beckett's spirit.

During the season, he was shot twice. The first time in "Sateda" when a villager fired an arrow into his Gluteus Maximus and in "Phantoms", when Sheppard was hallucinating that McKay was an Afghan Taliban soldier. However, he seemed to recover from both traumas.

==== Season 4 ====Spoiler Warning

In the Season opener "Adrift(Stargate Atlantis)Adrift" McKay discovers that the city's shield is

Alternate timelines

There are four known alternate-timeline versions of McKay:

  • In the episode "Before I Sleep", Rodney McKay stayed behind on the newly discovered Atlantis to attempt to open the bay doors of the Puddle Jumper bay. He drowned as the control room of Atlantis became submerged. The alternate-timeline Elizabeth Weir calls him "heroic" for giving his life on the chance that the city and the expedition might be saved.[16]
  • In Stargate SG-1's eighth season finale, "Moebius", the alternate McKay was the lead scientist on the project that dealt with experimenting on the modified "time-jumping" puddle jumper. In that reality, he bore a strong resemblance to the initial incarnation of the character in "48 Hours", wearing a T-shirt with "Mr. Fantastic" emblazoned across the chest, exhibiting extreme sarcasm and arrogance, and just like in his initial SG-1 appearance trying to win the affection of Dr. Samantha Carter through insults and sexual harassment. In a reference to the premiere episode of Atlantis, he succeeded in naming the Ancient ship a "gateship", to the confusion of Daniel Jackson and Jack O'Neill. From the audience's perspective this is the second time he has tried to name the ship Gateship One and been met with a lukewarm response; with an air of defeat he remarks: "Well, I thought it was clever". Interestingly, in the episode "The Return (Part 2)", the Asurans refer to the puddle jumper Sheppard and his team use to assault the city as "The Gateship".[17] In another reference to Atlantis Rodney says about the Stargate "I'm certainly glad it's not me going through that thing!", whereas in Atlantis he very frequently travels through the Stargate. This version of McKay was not allergic to citrus, describing lemon chicken as his favorite food—another reference to "48 Hours", in which McKay describes lemon chicken as a deadly poison which would kill him with one bite.[18]
  • In the episode McKay and Mrs. Miller, an alternate Rodney McKay transported himself to our universe via matter bridge created by a resurrected Project Arcturus. Unlike the normal McKay, this alternate McKay is far more outgoing and social, able to quickly befriend most of the Atlantis staff; he says that the staff in his universe calls him "Rod". It's not made entirely clear whether he is at the same mental level as the normal McKay, however, and John Sheppard describes him as "annoying", clearly confused by the difference in behavior between the two McKays. He tells Atlantis that he was sent to warn them that the resurrected Project Arcturus was slowly destroying his universe. Once the Atlantis team agrees to close the matter bridge and shut down the project, he beams himself back to his own universe. It is unknown whether he survived the journey or not, though the normal universe Rodney held the bridge together a few extra seconds to give him a very good chance of surviving. Doing this, however, caused their ZPM to be completely depleted.
  • In Stargate SG-1's tenth season episode, The Road Not Taken, the alternate Rodney McKay is a wealthy high-tech industrialist. His occupation involves - in his words - the "buying and selling of companies", with much of his income acquired through defense contracts. Major Lorne describes him as a "dot-com millionaire smart-ass", subsequently asking if he was also a "jerk" in another universe. Rodney was also married to - and later divorced from - Major Samantha Carter. At the end of the episode, he is reluctantly persuaded to join the SGC as Special Advisor to the President. This version of McKay wears glasses.

Personality

McKay is one of the most arrogant and condescending personalities present within the franchise as a whole. He claims being the smartest in the city (he identified as a Mensa member, even of an unofficial chapter in Atlantis) and thus being singled out among his peers. He frequently verbally abuses his peers and often degrades those he is working with as stupid or idiotic.

Despite his irritating demeanor, however, almost everyone on the Atlantis expedition is either friends or in friendly relations with him. He's also apparently able to keep steady relationships although he is slightly socially awkward. John Sheppard usually shows full trust in him and his teammate Ronon Dex has admitted that he likes McKay for the simple fact that he is able to speak his mind so freely and simply. In fact, in the episode Tao of Rodney Elizabeth Weir states that she and the members of Rodney's team love him, which Sheppard, in his own way ("In the way a friend feels about another friend"), seems to confirm. Although McKay enjoys deriding medicine as voodoo and fake science, he considered Carson Beckett to be "the closest thing to a best friend" he ever had.

Despite his shortcomings, McKay has shown acts of amazing heroism as early as the first few episodes of the show, ranging from taking the initiative to throw a naquadah generator through the stargate in order to lure a creature of floating energy out of the city, against all odds (referred to by Sheppard as a "Hail Mary" on his part) to evacuating entire populations from planets about to be destroyed. Also in the Defiant One he was torn between staying with a dying man or going to help the outmatched Sheppard. The man (Dr. Brendan Gall) told him that he has changed from the beginning and to go but he refused to leave until Gall (already dying) killed himself. He saved Sheppard from the Wraith and the combined efforts of the two and a Puddle Jumper finally took it down for good. He often provides comic relief in addition to his considerable technological expertise and his ability to find solutions in situations of immenent death have been used against him several times to get him motivated (and they worked every time).

He is a hypochondriac, claiming to suffer under, among others, hypoglycemia and allergy against bees[8] as well as citrus fruits, which interacts nicely with his rather strange eating habits. (In addition to eating rather large amounts of food, he enjoys veal, MREs, hospital food, and airplane food (although he regrets he can't get seconds).) While playing what he thought was an Ancient game, McKay inadvertently forced the people of Geldar to despise anything made of citrus and made them believe that "even the sunlight is dangerous" (see below). He even studied medical science himself, but stopped because the many informations on the human body made him diagnose too many diseases on himself.

An obsession with protecting his fair skin led him to creating his own personal mix of SPF 100 sunblock, which didn't keep him from wearing a radiation suit on a planet with admittedly high solar radiation values.

McKay has a predilection for women with short blond hair—particularly Samantha Carter. He named the above mentioned people of Geldar after a blond girl he once dated. He even advised their women to wear their hair that way.

McKay is also known for repeatedly snapping his fingers several times at once. He often does it when he either gets a sudden idea, or to get somebody's attention.

The fact that McKay is Canadian is also frequently the source of jokes. General O'Neill is initially confused when he refers to the ZPM as a "zed-pee-em", the letter "zed" being the British-Canadian pronunciation of "zee". Sheppard and McKay have also traded insults back and forth over nationality in the past as a form of friendly rivalry.

References

  1. ^ "McKay and Mrs. Miller". Stargate Atlantis. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  2. ^ a b c d "Letters from Pegasus". Stargate Atlantis. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  3. ^ a b "Rising". Stargate Atlantis. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  4. ^ "48 Hours". Stargate SG-1. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  5. ^ "Redemption". Stargate SG-1. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  6. ^ "Hide and Seek". Stargate Atlantis. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  7. ^ "The Storm". Stargate Atlantis. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  8. ^ a b "The Defiant One". Stargate Atlantis. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  9. ^ "Hot Zone". Stargate Atlantis. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  10. ^ "The Siege, Part 1". Stargate Atlantis. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  11. ^ "The Siege, Part 3". Stargate Atlantis. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  12. ^ "Duet". Stargate Atlantis. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  13. ^ "Trinity". Stargate Atlantis. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  14. ^ "The Lost Boys". Stargate Atlantis. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  15. ^ "The Return". Stargate Atlantis. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  16. ^ "Before I Sleep". Stargate Atlantis. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  17. ^ "The Return". Stargate Atlantis. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  18. ^ "Moebius". Stargate SG-1. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |episodelink= ignored (|episode-link= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)

Template:Stargate Atlantis Regulars Template:Recurring characters on Stargate SG-1