Yates and Jo’s Bunsen Burner Tension
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Yates prepares army cocoa using the Doctor's Bunsen burner, prompting a lighthearted exchange with Jo about potentially overstepping boundaries while she attempts to contact Mister Campbell.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Frustrated yet resolute, balancing professional duty with a quiet defiance of Yates’ dismissive attitude. Her internal tension is palpable as she asserts her presence in the lab, even after being overlooked.
Jo Grant stands near the Bunsen burner, watching Yates prepare cocoa without the Doctor’s permission. She voices her concern about using the Doctor’s equipment, then attempts to contact Mister Campbell for supplies, her tone shifting from cautious objection to determined independence. After Yates leaves, she remains in the lab, her focus lingering on the burner’s heat near the plastic doll—a detail that will later prove critical. Her actions reflect her growing confidence in navigating UNIT’s protocols and her role as the Doctor’s assistant.
- • To uphold the Doctor’s authority by questioning Yates’ use of his equipment.
- • To secure necessary supplies (via Mister Campbell) to support the lab’s operations, demonstrating her initiative.
- • The Doctor’s equipment should be used with respect and permission, reflecting his scientific rigor.
- • Her role in UNIT extends beyond assistance—she is a capable operator who can take independent action when needed.
Simmering frustration with a veneer of casual dismissiveness. His actions betray a deeper dissatisfaction with his role in UNIT, particularly his perceived lack of agency when the Doctor is absent.
Captain Yates, visibly frustrated, ignites the Doctor’s Bunsen burner to heat a piece of metal for cocoa, brushing off Jo’s objection with a sarcastic remark about the Doctor’s absence. His body language—leaning over the burner, adjusting the tripod—suggests a mix of defiance and restlessness. He leaves abruptly after Jo points out his confinement, his exit underscoring his resentment of being sidelined. The burner’s flame, though mundane, becomes a symbol of his challenge to the Doctor’s authority, foreshadowing the Auton doll’s activation.
- • To assert his independence by using the Doctor’s equipment despite Jo’s objection, reclaiming a sense of control.
- • To vent his frustration about being ‘stuck’ at the base, highlighting his desire for active field duty.
- • The Doctor’s frequent absences leave UNIT understaffed and inefficient, justifying his defiance of protocols.
- • His military rank and experience entitle him to make operational decisions, even if they conflict with the Doctor’s preferences.
Not directly observable, but inferred as harried or overwhelmed given the urgency of Jo’s call and his unavailability.
Mister Campbell is referenced but not present in the scene. Jo attempts to contact him via phone to requisition supplies, but he is unavailable, leaving her to ‘hang on’ for his return. His absence highlights the lab’s logistical challenges and the strain on UNIT’s resources during the Auton crisis. While not physically involved, his role as the gatekeeper of scientific supplies is critical to the lab’s functionality and the characters’ ability to respond to the Nestene threat.
- • To manage UNIT’s scientific supply chain efficiently, ensuring the Doctor and team have the resources they need.
- • To respond promptly to requests, though the current crisis may be testing his capacity.
- • His role is vital to UNIT’s mission, even if it means being stretched thin during emergencies.
- • Protocols for supply requisition must be followed, though Jo’s persistence suggests flexibility may be needed.
The Doctor is absent from the scene but looms large as the focal point of Yates’ and Jo’s conflict. His …
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Doctor’s Bunsen burner is the focal point of this event, serving as both a practical tool and a symbolic battleground. Yates ignites it to heat a piece of metal for cocoa, dismissing Jo’s objection and asserting his autonomy. The burner’s flame, though mundane, becomes a catalyst for tension, as its heat inadvertently activates the Nestene plastic doll. Its dual role—as a source of comfort (cocoa) and a trigger for disaster—highlights the story’s theme of how ordinary actions can have extraordinary, often dangerous, consequences. The burner’s steady blue flame also mirrors the simmering frustrations of the characters, particularly Yates’ resentment and Jo’s growing defiance.
The Doctor’s UNIT Laboratory Telephone is referenced indirectly as Jo attempts to contact Mister Campbell for supplies. Though not the central object in this event, the phone symbolizes the lab’s reliance on external support and the bureaucratic hurdles of requisitioning equipment. Its ringtone and Jo’s frustrated wait (‘Will he be long?’) underscore the tension between immediate needs and institutional delays, particularly as the Auton threat looms. The phone’s unanswered state mirrors the broader theme of UNIT’s strained resources and the characters’ isolation in the face of the Nestene Consciousness.
The Doctor’s Nestene Plastic Doll sits ominously on the lab table, its featureless plastic surface belying its lethal potential. Though not directly interacted with in this event, its presence is critical: the Bunsen burner’s heat—intended for cocoa—subtly activates its Nestene mechanism, setting the stage for its violent transformation. The doll’s proximity to the burner creates a narrative tension, where a mundane act (heating cocoa) inadvertently triggers a catastrophic event. Its role as a catalyst for the Auton attack underscores the theme of hidden dangers and the fragility of human control in the face of alien technology.
The Doctor’s Laboratory Tripod serves as a functional support for Yates’ piece of metal over the Bunsen burner, but its role extends beyond practicality. The tripod’s three-legged structure mirrors the unstable dynamics in the lab—Yates, Jo, and the Doctor’s absent authority form a precarious triangle of tension. Its presence also highlights the lab’s dual purpose: a space for scientific precision (the tripod’s steady hold) and interpersonal conflict (the heat it conducts toward the doll). The tripod’s metal frame, warmed by the burner, becomes an indirect participant in the doll’s activation, symbolizing how even inanimate objects are complicit in the unfolding crisis.
Yates’ piece of metal is a mundane tool repurposed for heating cocoa, but its placement over the Bunsen burner’s flame creates a chain reaction of consequences. The metal’s slow warming process symbolizes the gradual escalation of tensions in the lab—Yates’ frustration, Jo’s defiance, and the unspoken power struggle with the Doctor. While the metal itself is unremarkable, its role in conducting heat to the burner’s flame foreshadows the doll’s activation, where an ordinary object (the metal) becomes part of a lethal mechanism. Its presence underscores the story’s theme of how small, seemingly insignificant actions can have large-scale repercussions.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The UNIT Laboratory is a pressure cooker of scientific urgency and interpersonal conflict, its cluttered benches and precise equipment reflecting the dual demands of alien threats and military bureaucracy. In this event, the lab becomes a stage for Yates’ defiance and Jo’s growing independence, as the Bunsen burner’s flame—intended for cocoa—casts a literal and metaphorical heat over their exchange. The lab’s confined space amplifies the tension, with the plastic doll’s presence on the table serving as a silent witness to the characters’ frustrations. The lab’s role as both a sanctuary for the Doctor’s experiments and a battleground for UNIT’s internal dynamics is underscored by the burner’s heat, which blurs the line between comfort and danger.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
UNIT’s presence in this event is felt through its institutional protocols, supply chains, and the power dynamics between its members. Yates’ defiance of the Doctor’s authority—by using his Bunsen burner without permission—challenges UNIT’s chain of command, while Jo’s attempt to contact Mister Campbell to requisition supplies highlights the organization’s reliance on logistical support. The lab itself, as a UNIT-controlled space, becomes a microcosm of the organization’s struggles: balancing military efficiency with scientific improvisation, and maintaining authority amid crises. The plastic doll’s latent threat also reflects UNIT’s vulnerability to alien infiltration, where even mundane objects can become weapons.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Yates making cocoa with the Bunsen burner provides the heat source that activates the doll, leading to its attack on Jo. While in the lab, Yates prepares cocoa using the Doctor's Bunsen burner, which inadvertently activates the doll through heat, causing it to attack Jo."
Yates destroys Auton doll attacking JoThemes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Key Dialogue
"YATES: Until you've had a mug of army cocoa, you just haven't lived."
"JO: You know, I don't think the Doctor would approve of that."
"YATES: What?"
"JO: Making free with his Bunsen burner. Hello? Scientific supplies section? I'd like to speak to Mister Campbell please."
"YATES: Then he shouldn't go gallivanting off leaving me stuck here."
"JO: What about me? I'm stuck here too, you know."