Supernatural 1: Saving People, Hunting Things - the Family Business
[NAFDA]. This is where we talk about the CW series Supernatural! Anything that's aired in the US (including promos) is fair game. No spoilers though -- if you post one by accident, an admin will delete it.
Different meat puppets, sure, but shouldn't there be more demons, too? A NE division, a SE division ... They could have the annual conference in New Orleans every year. Hell, they probably do, during Mardi Gras.
I thought they used up the last bullet killing the YED and only the bullets Colt forged worked with the gun.
Yeah, they used the last bullet. Unless I'm wrong. Which I usually am.
The demon possesses a living woman.
You'd have to get an actress who resembled Jess, no need for AP.
But it would totally rock to have AP being Not!Jesse because she can.
Is that the Stephanie Meyer Twilight, Austin? First in a series?
Bev, yes, and thanks to someone *cough*tiggy*cough* flaunting the crack in front of me, I devoured the first book and seriously thought about putting off sleep for the second. Because of this I haven't seen this week's Eureka and am behind in Boxed set. These diamond shoes are ouchy.
I started the Tanya Huff series because I luuuurve the Blood Ties tv show. But it has stayed in my suitcase and I haven't been able to get into a groove with it. As soon as I finish the third book of the Twilight series, that will be my next project.
(I hope the girl they pick when Sam finally faces her down is blonde and looks like Jess.)
or
What if it appeared to him as Mary?
Jesus, you people are brutal. Send emails to the writers stat!
Yeah, see, that different-actresses thing confused me. Especially since it was a different crossroads, too. Shouldn't there be one for every corner, like demonic hookers?
Brutal and funny.
Don't they still have Samuel Colt's demon-zapping MacGuffin revolver? I say, why bother trying to trap an enemy you can destroy?
I'm in agreement with those that think the last bullet has been used.
BUT
I was the one going around saying, "I hope the impala is okay after that crash with the semi" at the end of season one. People patted me on the head and said, "Silly Austin, no way could the car survive. That is just crazy talk." So after that experience, I believe in anything. And I'm happy to do it. Thank you God for listening to me.
It was stated that the last bullet had been used.
Sam trying to make more might make for an interesting episode...
Oh, bless. There are already gag reel icons here: [link] and here: [link]
I love those boys.
From the first link, I wish the icon that says Candy Shop, said something about their love child instead. You can hear Jared say "I'm showing."
If I were to bet on two regrets, I would think Jared would regret the ass slap heard round the world (maybe not, the goof) and Jensen would regret, "I always land on all fours." I, however, am still laughing.
I just want to smoosh them, they are so cute.
Also from the first link
I haven't seen the Pushing Daisies pilot, but I would really like to hear the conversation for the icon, "I used to think Masterbation meant chewing your food."
But I'm not spoiled so I will wait.
The "American Psycho" moment freaks me right the hell out. Does in the icon and in the gag reel.
Honestly, if I were JP I would either regret the farting, or the ass shimmy that leads to SPLITTING HIS PANTS WIDE OPEN, the enormous, adorkable puppy. But that could be because I'm a girl and he's clearly not.
If they actually go for a Devil-and-Sam-Winchester scenario, they better make it AWESOME.
I had occasion to look up that short story recently, hoping it would tap into local lore and give some good fic cues, and remembered abruptly that it was written in the 1930s, not the period when Dan'l Webster himself was alive. The prose is very modern, in a way I found disappointing. And that the upshot of the story is that Webster doesn't even win on procedural grounds; he persuades a jury of dead souls with the power of his emotional rhetoric. (How he persuades the Devil to put his deal in the hands of a jury requires a bit of handwavium.)
Goethe, on the other hand, does use a technicality -- the only fate that ever hinged on a subjunctive verb!! -- or anyway a technicality and the overwhelmingly generative power of female genitalia. (Don't ask. The whole story is like that.)
I don't remember what Kit Marlowe did for his Faustus, because I've never read all of it, but it's possible his is the only one that dates from later than Medieval times where Faustus
actually gets damned like the deal says.