Doakes

Joe Blow

The average man or person. Primarily heard in US. Obviously this issue is going to resonate with some special interest groups, but do you really think Joe Blow will care? We can't hire any Joe Blow as our spokesperson. We need someone recognizable, who the public already likes.
See also: blow, joe

Joe Doakes

An average guy. ("Joe Blow" is more commonly used to mean the same.) Why would they send me to some Joe Doakes who isn't even licensed as a psychologist?
See also: Doakes, joe

John Doe

A man whose identity is unknown or being protected, as in legal proceedings. The victim is a John Doe—the paramedics didn't find any identification on him. The case was brought by a John Doe, so we don't know the true identity of the man suing us.
See also: doe, john
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

John Doe

1. Also, John Q. Public; Joe Blow; Joe Doakes; Joe Zilch. An average undistinguished man; also, the average citizen. For example, This television show is just right for a John Doe, or It's up to John Q. Public to go to the polls and vote. Originally used from the 13th century on legal documents as an alias to protect a witness, John Doe acquired the sense of "ordinary person" in the 1800s. The variants date from the 1900s. Also see Joe six-pack.
2. Also, Jane Doe. An unknown individual, as in The police found a John Doe lying on the street last night, or The judge issued a warrant for the arrest of the perpetrators, Jane Doe no. 1 and Jane Doe no. 2 . [Second half of 1900s]
See also: doe, john
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.

Joe Blow

and Joe Doakes (ˈdʒo ˈblo and ˈdʒo ˈdoks)
n. a typical or average male American citizen. What do you think Joe Blow really thinks about all this? Joe Doakes thinks the government ought to pay for all medical care.
See also: blow, joe

Joe Doakes

verb
See Joe Blow
See also: Doakes, joe

John Doe

and Jane Doe (ˈdʒɑn ˈdo)
n. a name used for a person whose real name is unknown. The tag on the corpse said Jane Doe, since no one had identified her. John Doe was the name at the bottom of the check.
See also: doe, john
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions

John Doe

The average person. This appellation actually dates from the thirteenth century, when it was used in legal documents to disguise the identity of witnesses; the tenant plaintiff was called John Doe and the landlord defendant Richard Roe. In the nineteenth century the name acquired the present meaning of ordinary person. A book, The O’Hara Family (1825), included “Tales, Containing . . . John Doe,” and almost a century later a movie starring Gary Cooper was entitled Meet John Doe (1941). Similar appellations include Joe Blow, first recorded in 1867; Joe Doakes, from the 1920s; and John Q. Public, coined by the writer William Allen White in 1937. John Doe has outlived them all.
See also: doe, john
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer

Joe Blow

An ordinary person. That phrase meant just an average guy—any old Joe (“Joe Doakes” was a variation). It was the predecessor of “Joe Sixpack.” In fact, “Joe” was such a common first name (or nickname) that it became a slang word for coffee, which was also found everywhere.
See also: blow, joe
Endangered Phrases by Steven D. Price
See also:
  • Joe Blow
  • up on (one's) ear
  • chip
  • chips
  • Two Bob
  • mutton
  • dead as mutton
  • (as) dead as mutton
  • be well in
  • be well in (with)
References in periodicals archive
Patrick Welch's The Casebook of Doakes & Haig is a compilation focused upon a intriguing pair of at times, mind-boggling, 'English' detectives living in an alternate universe.
The fuels division's motivation and teamwork shined clean, clear, and bright, just like the fuel we gave them," said Aviation Boatswain's Mate (Fuels) 2nd Class Rita Doakes.
Joe Doakes must not try to be like Abraham Lincoln or Thomas Jefferson or anybody else.
She believes Dexter to be her soulmate and even kills off James Doakes who gets to know that Dexter is in fact the Bay Harbour Butcher.
FULL SOLUTION (except the circles!): 0901 609 0642 (61p/min) LAST WEEK'S SU-DOKU WINNER: MISS V.M DOAKES OF PICKERING, N.
James Doakes' (Erik King) surveillance ('It's Alive,' 2: 1; 'Waiting to Exhale,' 2: 2; 'An Inconvenient Lie,' 2: 3).
Tragic beginnings, secret identities, part human, part mutant, [and making reference to Doakes, the only detective of Miami's Metro Police Homicide Department who is aware of his real nature] archenemies" (2.5).
AIMING HIGH: Newsome Scouts pictured outside their old hall which needs to be re-roofed, (from left) Scout leader Peter Doakes, Matthew Conroy, Sam Baxter, Sam Wakefield and Hakim Sheard and (inset) leader Peter inspects the damage to the ceiling inside (PW060810Egrant-03)
They cry that Joe Doakes from "Windblaster" magazine gets 1" groups from every gun he shoots.
With Doakes in his captivity, he is faced with two options, either letting Doakes go and turning himself in and revealing his identity as the Bay Harbor Butcher, or continuing with his plan to frame Doakes himself.
Meanwhile, his relationship with an unstable artist (a very foxy but ridiculously English Jaime King) goes badly wrong while detective James Doakes grows ever more suspicious of Dexter's behaviour.
Doakes - the only cop smart enough to twig that Dexter is the Bay Harbor Butcher - is locked in a cage in an Everglades cabin.
Rikki Doakes, of Strathmore Avenue, Lower Stoke, was caught behind the counter of a branch of Halifax when protective screens dropped down during his attempted robbery.
Doakes is questioned over an incident in which a suspect was shot, and Rita begins to realise ex-husband Paul isn't quite the reformed character he claims to be.