Inara: Who's winning? Simon: I can't tell. They don't seem to be playing by any civilized rules that I know.

'Bushwhacked'


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.


sumi - Feb 01, 2008 9:49:55 am PST #5952 of 10002
Art Crawl!!!

Zap2it's blog entry is entitled, "Supernatural versus Charmed."


darlini - Feb 01, 2008 10:47:57 am PST #5953 of 10002

Bev: "Cut out the pitiful politic attempts to placate whatever religious queasiness you're being pressured with by naming "pagans" as evil. Ta ever so."

Sorry for not knowing how to properly quote. At any rate I am with Bev on this. As a pagan myself--in a matter of speaking, I get sick and tired of the pagan=evil motif as well. I thought that SPN was an exception to this, at least in regards to witches, in the early episodes as I seem to remember Dean correcting someone about Wicca/Witchcraft and devil worship. It seems that as the show becomes more accepting to some monsters it is becoming more intent on reinforcing the Pagan=evil ideal. Case in point, the christmas ep. Pagan gods are scary cannibals that are disguised as your grandparents? That ep got points for humor but it did annoy me on the whole.

When I saw that the new ep was about evil witches I was disappointed. Especially since the 'old world black magic' witch technically never existed in literal form (people who do not believe in the existence of Satan certainly cannot be said to worship him) and the specter of it is nearly always invoked to punish/control/execute women who stepped outside of their prospective roles.

Now, it could be argued that since SPN is a show concerned with folk tales, myths, urban legends and creatures of nightmare that this type of witch is acceptable to canon but if they were going to cast witches as petty women seeking lower mortgage payments I see no reason they could not have included males in the coven.

btw, I agree that the beheading of Gordon by Sam was more disturbing that the stabby stabby.


Morgana - Feb 01, 2008 11:04:24 am PST #5954 of 10002
"I make mistakes, but I am on the side of Good," the Golux said, "by accident and happenchance.” – The 13 Clocks, James Thurber

It occurs to me that Sam does have a way to get Dean out of hell once he's dead, but it would involve letting who knows how many demons and other spirits out of the gate.

Matt, I like that idea.


Beverly - Feb 01, 2008 1:17:17 pm PST #5955 of 10002
Days shrink and grow cold, sunlight through leaves is my song. Winter is long.

darlini, to quote, put a > before the bit you want to quote, with no space.

before the bit you want to quote

I remember Sam, in the pilot: I like your necklace. (Girl holds her silver pentagram pendant and says something about people believing it's a Satanist symbol). Actually, it's a protection against evil. The pentagram...

And then Dean cuts him off.

But the show--until this season--has been more or less inclusive of many pagan beliefs. Bobby goes to the books to find ancient rituals from a wide variety of beliefs, and John passed many of those on, as well. The unspoken message had been that using the power of any ritual to do harm is bad, while using the same power to prevent harm, or to combat it, is what hunters do. I don't know why, alla sudden this season, "pagans" are suddenly evil.


P.M. Marc - Feb 01, 2008 1:37:20 pm PST #5956 of 10002
So come, my friends, be not afraid/We are so lightly here/It is in love that we are made; In love we disappear

As far as the witches being women, I'm going to continue to sound like I'm defending the patriarchy, and maybe I am, but when it comes to American mythology, are there really a lot of warlocks running around? Are there lots of male covens? The mythos of a coven of female witches seems much more prevalent to me.

When you've specifically said that Old School Bad Witch Evil Bad Nasty is gender-neutral, but what you show is excessively feminized (spurned by a man revenge! get hubs a promotion! win the craft fair!) and exclusively female, and the language you use to smack talk 'em is as gendered as it was, it reads as very much anti-woman with a "but we don't mean it that way!" disclaimer smacked over the top.

IIRC, though it's been years since I read the things on a regular basis, the American horror genre has plenty of men doing Bad Black Magic Evil Things. There's in no way a female monopoly on it.


Matt the Bruins fan - Feb 01, 2008 3:26:51 pm PST #5957 of 10002
"I remember when they eventually introduced that drug kingpin who murdered people and smuggled drugs inside snakes and I was like 'Finally. A normal person.'” —RahvinDragand

Conjure men and male hoodoo priests are pretty common in American folklore. And actually I can't recall any female malevolent witches from what little Native American lore I've encountered, although there are spiritual woman-figures like Blue Corn Woman, Selu, and White Buffalo Calf Woman.


Amy - Feb 01, 2008 3:41:13 pm PST #5958 of 10002
Because books.

No matter how research-happy Kripke says his writers are, though, it's clearly easier to use the cliches as shorthand. Probably because the majority of the people they envision as their audience is more familiar with Salem than they are with Native American folklore, right or wrong.

The fact that what the coven wanted was primarily feminine-oriented didn't bother me. They're allowed to want to win craft fairs, or get their husband a better mortgage rate.

If anything, the misdirect of making them seem like the homicidal ones is getting old. And how did Sam and Dean know that the first death was anything supernatural in the first place? (I missed about a minute at he beginning, so maybe that was explained?)


Juliebird - Feb 01, 2008 4:03:37 pm PST #5959 of 10002
I am the fly who dreams of the spider

As gross as Gordon's head being popped off his neck was, Amy, there wasn't a lingering visual of it in glorious detail. It wasn't the violence of it, it was the cinematography/editing of it.

And this was probably covered in the "bad editing" comment, but the fight scene between Ruby and the demon chick was just atrocious, which I'll pass off to bad editing. Which, hullo bad editing! I know that editing can make or break a fight, and this broke it for me.


Nutty - Feb 01, 2008 4:26:44 pm PST #5960 of 10002
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

No matter how research-happy Kripke says his writers are

Kripke can say a lot of things. Apparently 30 seconds on Google is all the research they do.

the majority of the people they envision as their audience is more familiar with Salem than they are with Native American folklore

I think that's the problem, actually. We all know the Salem/medieval version of witchery; we know it up and down, in and out -- kind of humdrum, to tell the truth. If they'd gone into a mythology that isn't like the back of all our hands, it might have had some excitement or novelty to it.

Also, I mean, you've got "witches are unsanitary and evil" and Ruby having been a witch during the Black Death, and I'm like, Eric Kripke, you did NOT just blame the victim for hundreds and hundreds of ordinary women burned at the stake for looking crosseyed at their neighbor. You did NOT just take a bunch of real people and make their suffering into a backhanded joke. I KEEL YOU.


Atropa - Feb 01, 2008 5:17:52 pm PST #5961 of 10002
The artist formerly associated with cupcakes.

No matter how research-happy Kripke says his writers are

Kripke can say a lot of things. Apparently 30 seconds on Google is all the research they do.

And Nutty says what I was going to! Because really, Google does not help you construct a decent demon banishing ritual.