Humphryes established The BabelColour Channel on YouTube on 10 August 2006, focusing entirely on
Doctor Who content. His final upload was in March 2018, followed by a three-year hiatus. He has announced that he is currently working on new YouTube content for release in 2022/2023. Seventy-four videos are currently available, which have accrued 10 million views (as of September 2020). The
Houston Press asserted: "BabelColour is one of the top producers of on-line video content. His work is almost unrivaled in popularity", and three have been the monthly recommendations in
SFX Magazine. Two of his videos were listed in the "Top Ten Doctor Who Videos on YouTube" by
The Stage, while he was nominated by
Digital Spy in its article "8 Most Amazing Fan Videos on YouTube", and the
Houston Press cited Humphryes as one of "5 Fans Who Do Doctor Who Better than the BBC". His memorial tribute to
Nicholas Courtney was shared by
The Guardian, and his Christmas tribute was included in the
Metro's article "8 things we'd like to see in the Doctor Who Christmas Special". His "Every Doctor Who Story" video and updates have over 1.6 million views and received recommendations from the
io9 website,
BBC America,
BuzzFeed,
The Verge,
Nerdist.com and
Screen Rant amongst many others. in September 2017, the
Radio Times ran a feature on the appearance of
Steven Moffat in Humphryes' 11th Anniversary YouTube upload – a story which was widely covered by other news sites, including
NME,
IMDb,
Digital Spy,
GamesRadar, and
Screen Rant and recommended in
Doctor Who Magazine issue 517 (November 2017). His YouTube videos have included contributions from
Doctor Who producers
Steven Moffat and
Philip Hinchcliffe, impressionist and comedian
Jon Culshaw, the actors
John Levene,
Nicholas Briggs and
Nathan Head, director
Graeme Harper, producer
George Gallaccio, former
Doctor Who Magazine editors
Clayton Hickman and
Tom Spilsbury, writers and historians
David J. Howe and
Richard Bignell, producer and presenter
Christel Dee and the voice artists
Jacob Dudman, John Guilor and Jonathon Carley.
The Ten Doctors Between 2009 and 2015 Humphryes uploaded a four-part
web series entitled
The Ten Doctors. It was an unofficial Doctor Who drama incorporating re-edited archival material from TV shows and movies connected by newly recorded dialogue and special effects. Episode three was premièred at the "Armada Con 23" Doctor Who Convention before its on-line release. The trailers and episodes have exceeded 950,000 views on YouTube. The web series has been recommended by
SFX Magazine and the Doctor Who Fan Club of Australia. Humphryes has been interviewed about the project a number of times, including in the
Houston Press and the on-line magazine
Theta Morbius Times (Issue 1; 2010), with the opening episode being nominated as one of the "8 Most Amazing Fan Videos on YouTube" by
Digital Spy. The series has since been made private.
The Timeless Doctors Originally conceived as a re-imagining of his 4-part web-serial
The Ten Doctors, Humphryes began work on the venture in 2019, under the title of
The Ten Doctors Re-Imagined. This title was changed the following year to
The Timeless Doctors, with the scope of the production expanding from its original premise into a brand new 150-minute
Fan film. Its extended cast list includes
Nicholas Briggs as the voice of the
Daleks, impressionist and comedian
Jon Culshaw as the
Third Doctor, actor John Guilor (reprising his role as the
First Doctor from the BBC's 50th-anniversary story
The Day of the Doctor), Jonathon Carley as
the War Doctor (a role he portrays for
Big Finish Productions), as well as three former members of the Doctor Who production team: producers
Philip Hinchcliffe and
George Gallaccio with the director
Graeme Harper (all reprising their roles as
The Doctor from the 1976
Doctor Who serial
The Brain of Morbius). The production's four trailers were recommended in
Doctor Who Magazine issue 546 (January 2020), issue 573 (February 2022), issue 577 (June 2022) and issue 591 (July 2023), and the 2021 Doctor Who fiction anthology
Forgotten Lives, edited by Philip Purser-Hallard, promoted the forthcoming fan-film by way of the book's afterword. The project's use of AI
upscaling prompted the inclusion of Humphryes in an article on
neural networking by
Digital Trends.
The Almost Doctors In 2017, at the suggestion of actor and screenwriter
Mark Gatiss, Humphryes created a two-part web series entitled "The Almost Doctors". It incorporated newly recorded voice work by Jonathon Carley and
Jacob Dudman to chronicle the list of actors shortlisted for the role of Doctor Who in the 1960s and '70s. The series employed a combination of editing, CGI and video compositing techniques to lift actors from archive film and place them into contemporary episodes of
Doctor Who. In June 2017 the BBC's
AfterShow promoted the series, referring to Humphryes as a "colourisation and compositing legend", Episode one was also recommended as a monthly pick in
Doctor Who Magazine issue 514 and episode two was recommended in
Doctor Who Magazine issue 512.
Webcast In April 2020, Humphryes was thanked in the credits of two
Doctor Who lockdown webcasts – firstly a special 13-minute
The Sarah Jane Adventures minisode entitled "
Farewell, Sarah Jane", billed by its writer,
Russell T Davies, as "The final Sarah Jane Adventure", and also in a sequel to "
The Girl in the Fireplace", which was entitled "Pompadour", starring
Sophia Myles and written by
Steven Moffat. ==Television appearances==