Lindsey: Why--why did you... Lorne: One last job. You're not part of the solution, Lindsey. You never will be. Lindsey: You kill me? A flunky?! I'm not just...Angel...kills me. You...Angel... Lorne: Good night, folks.

'Not Fade Away'


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.


Amy - Apr 20, 2010 6:01:57 pm PDT #7757 of 30002
Because books.

Is it a DA crossover or are they just named Ben and Alec?


§ ita § - Apr 20, 2010 6:05:43 pm PDT #7758 of 30002
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

It's the DA Ben and Alec, young.


Amy - Apr 20, 2010 6:08:02 pm PDT #7759 of 30002
Because books.

Ah. Thanks.


tiggy - Apr 20, 2010 6:40:33 pm PDT #7760 of 30002
I do believe in killing the messenger, you know why? Because it sends a message. ~ Damon Salvatore

I interrupt you're regularly scheduled posting to have a serious case of WTF?! JDM is datin Hilarie Burton???? WHAT?! why??

okay. i'm done. dude has bad taste. (pick me!!)


§ ita § - Apr 20, 2010 6:43:40 pm PDT #7761 of 30002
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

I had no idea who she even was until I just googled. Huh.


Amy - Apr 20, 2010 6:51:47 pm PDT #7762 of 30002
Because books.

From One Tree Hill?! Man, she is ... quite a bit younger than him. I do like her, though! She got her start winning a VJ contest for MTV, I believe.


Marcia - Apr 20, 2010 6:52:53 pm PDT #7763 of 30002
Kneel before Glod. ~Stephen Colbert

As I'm reading -- and admiring the careful thought and eloquence of -- the thread on Sam, it occurs to me that many literary and TV/movie heroes are faced with challenges that compromise our positive perceptions of them.

I see parallels between Frodo Baggins and Sam. Frodo, under the influence of the ring and the Golum, was not very endearing. I see that with Sam, under the influence of Ruby and her blood, not to mention grief. Still, Frodo emerged a hero. I hope that'll hold true for Sam Winchester.

The redemption of Sam this season has been pretty spectacular to me. From the pilot, Sam was the idealistic, sweet and conflicted moral center of the show, evolving through the years into a vengeful, driven, power-hungry, demon blood addict completely suckered by heaven and hell into starting the Apocalypse.

He's emerged from this remorseful and determined to make things right and save the world. This year he's become self-aware, has seemingly made peace with his father and, given his gentle dealings with Dean in PoNR, he doesn't appear to be reacting angrily as he might have in previous years. In fact, I see Season 2 Sam here, the same Sam who didn't retaliate after Dean clocked him in Bloodlust, only a bit wiser and with an obscene amount of muscle mass.

Dean saved Sam by allowing Sam back in after his trip to 2014. Sam just saved Dean. In the last few episodes, he's returned once again the moral center of the show. And he managed to drag Dean with him. He's come full circle.

I. Love. It.

Show makes me happy.


aurelia - Apr 20, 2010 6:56:11 pm PDT #7764 of 30002
All sorrows can be borne if you put them into a story. Tell me a story.

Google has this Twitter result:

...hilarie burton is dating jeffrey dean morgan? why is peyton dating john winchester?! HOPE THIS IS FALSE.


Amy - Apr 20, 2010 6:56:23 pm PDT #7765 of 30002
Because books.

tiggy, where did you see that? The only gossip I can find dates back to early 2009, and she's supposed to be married to some guy named Ian Prange.


Morgana - Apr 20, 2010 9:28:58 pm PDT #7766 of 30002
"I make mistakes, but I am on the side of Good," the Golux said, "by accident and happenchance.” – The 13 Clocks, James Thurber

Responses to responses to my earlier serial posts:

“It's the Great Pumpkin, Sam Winchester” and “On the Head of a Pin” were two season 4 episodes where Sam technically saves the day, but isn't regarded as a hero.

ita -- He's continuing willfully on a path that's supposed to end with the end of the world. How heroic is that?

That first comment wasn’t from me, it was a quote from the lj meta. I think she meant that Sam was performing a necessary function at the time – just as necessary as what you refer to in MBV which is okayed by the text – in Great Pumpkin Mr. Hain had to be stopped and the magic demon-killing knife wasn’t doing it. Sam held him off with his mojo and then exorcised him. In OTHOAP Sam killed Alastair when Castiel wasn’t able to do so. I can’t see how stopping Alistair from getting loose could be construed as a bad thing – he had just beat the hell out Dean and was trying to kill Castiel.

(I’m not saying that being hooked on demon blood is a good thing. Definitely not. Yet at the time Sam was focusing on his goal of gaining strength, and the ability to pull demons without killing the hosts and the ability to kill major baddies like Sam Hain and Alastair isn’t completely a negative.)

Ailleann -- From the perspective of any of us, who had "normal" lives, Sam's choice to leave is what's best for his personal future. Of course Dean views it as selfish, because Dean never got to make (or feels like he never got to make) those kinds of choices. By the time Sam would have been leaving Dean would have been 22, and hunting was not only his whole life, but by then he was probably long past deciding that it would be his life's work.

I feel that it’s time to start thinking about scaling back on the whole ‘Dean sacrificed his entire life/ gave up all his options for the sake of Sam /everything was so limited because of Sammy’ belief system that fandom’s had going on for 5 years now. We’ve had it proven canonically that even as a youngster Sammy was no wilting flower and as he grew older he was self-sufficient. This isn’t to say he didn’t need Dean around; of course he would have needed Dean. They love each other and would have depended on each other and taken care of each other. I’m not trying to imply anything other than that. But…. once Sam reached his mid to later teens Dean would have had more freedom. Dean didn’t need to be there to cook for him or button his shirts or get him off to school or whatever. I’m sure Dean would have wanted to make sure he was okay, just like any other older sibling would, but he wouldn't have to be glued to Sam’s side until Sam turned 18.

Also? Dean’s choices are Dean’s choices. Sorry, but they are. Situations can narrow options dramatically but he has said over and over and over that this is what he wants to do. Given the events of the past couple of months and how exhausted he is he may have recently changed his mind, but when he was 22 he idolized his father and seemed to love running around saving people and hunting things. If he had wanted to be a mechanic or a firefighter or an EMT or join a SWAT team or whatever it would have been up to him to say something to his father and do something about it.

Plei -- They didn't drop it so much as fold it into the Azazel story, at some point making it explicit that his dreams were all somehow connected in a Rube Goldberg fashion to it.

This is one of those things, like Angel’s gypsy curse, that never made sense to me. Why would Azazel want Sam to have a power than enabled him to help people? The kid who electrified people, or Lily who also electrified people, those make more sense. Like Andy’s evil twin. But the benign powers mystify me.

Perkins -- John was the one that told him to not come back if he left. (Which I don't totally blame John for either--while I know some of what John said was based on anger, I also think some of it was based on a desire to get Sam out of the life/out of harm's way).

I find this inherently contradictory – we’re led to believe this was a cataclysmic fight in the (continued...)