I won't even mention how I can see how it might work out to where it is Dean who kills Bobby either to stop Bobby from killing Sam or because Bobby is already mortally wounded.
eta: sense-making words
Early ,'Objects In Space'
[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 won't even mention how I can see how it might work out to where it is Dean who kills Bobby either to stop Bobby from killing Sam or because Bobby is already mortally wounded.
eta: sense-making words
Plei, just out of morbid (heh) curiosity, what do you see as the main narrative need for Bobby's death?
If you buy into the notion that Supernatural is structured like a tragedy, which I do, and if we're entering the last act, which is the hypothetical plan, Bobby is more valuable dead than alive.
Ow. Shades of Bill Harvelle and John,
there, Perkins.
Oh god, Perkins is evil, too.
"I KNEW it!" t /Chandler
if we're entering the last act, which is the hypothetical plan, Bobby is more valuable dead than alive.
So, he's the Mercutio of the piece, then? (Except instead of "a plague on both your houses," we get a heartfelt "idjits," I suppose.)
In other news, Perkins is evil. EVIL.
What? I didn't make you read the whitefont.
So, he's the Mercutio of the piece, then? (Except instead of "a plague on both your houses," we get a heartfelt "idjits," I suppose.)
One of their Mercutio Chorus! Which, at this point, they kind of have enough for. The Winchesters burn through allies like whoa.
One of their Mercutio Chorus! Which, at this point, they kind of have enough for.
True. Pamela fits the role a little too well.
(Trying to think if there's a better Shakespearean counterpart for Bobby...)
On a different topic, I'm still mulling over Castiel's new attitude towards Dean. Given how paranoid he was about being overheard while in the relative privacy of Dean's dream*, were we really seeing the genuine result of some heavenly re-programming, or was that a case of Castiel trying to keep Dean at a safe distance?
* I found it heartbreaking that Dean was dreaming of peacefully doing not much of anything.
(Except instead of "a plague on both your houses," we get a heartfelt "idjits," I suppose.)
Hee!
A flistie mentioned that Dean's dream of fishing came after finding out that John took Adam fishing. Fishing never seemed the kind of thing Dean would be interested in--unless it was The Deadliest Catch sort of thing.