I guess since none of Sam's women have actually died while having sex with him, those episodes wouldn't qualify...
Supernatural 2: Why is it our job to save everybody?
[NAFDA]. This is where we talk about the CW series Supernatural! Anything that's aired in the US on TV (including promos) is fair game. No spoilers though — if you post one by accident, an admin will delete it.
I keep forgeting to say that I wish Kim Manners could have seen the opening this week. Even if he thought it was corny, I bet he would have got a kick out of it on some level.
eta: I remembered again tonight because I'm working my way through an initial watch of the X-files. Yes, I was that one person who didn't see it. I got all the Mulder and Scully pop references though; I just didn't know which one was the red headed woman. So anyway, I am up to Season 3 Episode 15 tonight and before I started it, "The truth is in there" from Friday came to mind again.
Huh.
Well, I have to say that I watched it Saturday night (Chicago was deprived!) with a friend and we both heard Fairy Expert Lady say that Dean was taken to "serve as Oberon" while everyone else in the world heard "service Oberon". I was guessing a year of living high on the hog and then a ritual sacrifice at the end of it. (And so was my friend. . . clearly we think alike and that's why we're friends.)
we both heard Fairy Expert Lady say that Dean was taken to "serve as Oberon" while everyone else in the world heard "service Oberon".
I heard the former and then realized it was the latter based on the reaction. Also because it didn't seem to make sense the first way.
I guess we were going for the dark, the dark that Sam and Dean hadn't quite imagined.
How is serving as Oberon darker than servicing Oberon?
The human sacrifice part.
I guess - depending on what you eat in Faerie - serving Oberon might be less bad. Kings have plenty of servants.
Of course, Sam and Dean are very likely an exception to the rule that if you are killed you stay killed - whereas if you are a slave you have the possibility of escape. (I think, though, that had Dean not made a fuss - he would have been thinking of ways to escape the entire year anyway.)
Well, the implication in intonation seemed to be sexual servicing, so I was wondering where you were going that was darker than rape.
That's where Sam and Dean went with it - I didn't think that's where fairy tale lady was going.