Ok, this is what pissed me off about the Supernatural finale.
One of the things I loved about this show is its lessons.
And one of the most valuable lessons is that you choose your Family.
If someone is related to you but he/she is nothing but a douchebag, if he/she never be there for you, if he/she is toxic, then it's not your Family.
And that, that is a fucking deep lesson.
I for example struggled for years bc I thought that if someone is related to me, even if he/she had always been a shitty person, is anyway my family and I owe he/she something.
Supernatural taught me that it's not like that. Supernatural taught me that true Family is who is always there for you, especially during hard times. It's who cares for you, it's who knows everything about you, bad and good things, and still loves you.
And it's not about blood, it's not about being related.
It's a fucking important lesson that can change the way you see life and relationships.
And then comes the finale.
And everything is erased.
How painful are these words? After all the things they did and all the people they've met, the Family they've built...
The last Dean's speech is all about him and Sam, ONLY he and Sam. He said that the only important thing is Sam, always been. Period.
And then he goes to heaven and meets Bobby. Bobby was like a father to him and Sam, always helped them and protected them. But hey no time for you, just as I understand how heavens work (and most of all that Sam will come) time for me to go.
He tells Dean that Rufus is here, that his parents are here, and that Cas is here, but nothing and no one is important to Dean.
He just wants to wait for Sam. That's all.
He doesn't care for his parents, his friends, and even for Cas. Cas who is Family, bc he said that multiple times.
But nothing matters anymore, just him and Sam. He has to wait anyway so why in the hell wouldn't he go to see one of them?
He would care to know if they're ok, if everything is fine. He would go to see and talk to them, telling them everything that happened.
Why they have to erase everything that was built in fifteen seasons?
Of course Dean cares about Sam! Of course is one, maybe even the most, important person in his life but is not the only one!
Why they erase all the relationships they've built, all the people they care about, the ones who even if they're not blood became Sam and Dean's Family?
This is not the Supernatural I know, this is not the Supernatural I love.
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I know the birthday wishes misha sends out are all the same and might even not be written by him but something about that last line in every wish - "I am glad you were born" - gets me so much. Maybe because, even if it wasn't actually written by him, I can certainly say that he absolutely means it.
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Chapters: 1/?
Fandom: Supernatural (TV 2005)
Rating: Explicit
Summary:
Dean Winchester's life is no fairy tale. Forced to give up his dream of a degree in political science to work in the family business, he's relegated to janitorial duties at a Pirate Pete's burger joint by his absent father's business partner Azazel and his two unbearable sons. But a newly elected president in nationwide search of a political advisor and a mysterious stranger who stumbles into Pirate Pete's late one evening have Dean exploring new possibilities for both his professional and personal future.
Cas Milton is the newest and most reluctant US President - feeling shackled by his responsibilities, he sends out a nationwide call for an advisor to help ease his professional burdens. His hunger for escape - and burgers - leads Cas to a Pirate Pete's in Lawrenceville, Kansas, where he meets an enigmatic janitor who's unaware of his real identity. Upon hearing Dean's aspirations for his future, Cas encourages him to chase his dreams. He returns to his office to find those dreams include an application to the very role he's looking to fill, making a relationship between them impossible.
A Destiel love story inspired by Cinderella and a prompt by Misha Collins.
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even in the darkest times (there is light)
At the bottom of the Pacific Ocean, two thousand miles off the coastline of China, lies the Gate. A portal to a hellish dimension, a nightmarish mirror image of the normal world: the Upside Down. The place swarms with demonic beasts, commonly known to the world by their Japanese name, Maju. For years now, the Maju have been making their way through the Gate to Earth, ranging in size from dangerous yet small Demobats to giant monsters the size of a building. Humanity eventually pools all its technological resources to create the Jaegers, robots that are on par with the size of these creatures, and the neural network required to control which is so complex it requires two pilots, working together in a shared mind space known as the Drift.
Ranger Steven Harrington, freshly out of the Cadet training program at the LA base, has yet to match with a compatible co-pilot. Ranger Edward Munson, just recently transferred, has already seen his fair share of combat at the other side of the Pacific, where close proximity to the Gate makes the ongoing battle for humanity’s survival especially brutal and bloody. Due to an unfortunate mix of circumstances, prejudices and misunderstandings, they somehow manage to start off on the wrong foot, and might have remained mostly strangers to each other if it weren’t for their Captain’s order to try out for Drift compatibility. Eddie is skeptical that anything will come of it; with the memory of recently losing his previous co-pilot and best friend Chrissy Cunningham still fresh in his mind, he is far from the easiest person to establish a stable Drift with. However, largely thanks to Steve’s determination and willingness to work through Eddie’s trauma, they progress with their joint training faster than he would have expected.
Day after day, mission after mission, one shared memory after another, they grow closer, eventually developing feelings for each other they couldn’t hide even if they wanted to; for in the Drift, there is no space for secrets. Meanwhile, just a few floors below, in the restricted area of the base, a plan is being conceived. One that involves a young girl who can do the impossible, and might just be the only hope for humanity's salvation.
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June 19-20, 2022 - Supernatural trends after Misha Collins Says A Thing.
It's become sort of expected at this point that once in a while Misha Collins will say something on a convention that will cause even more stir in this hot mess of a fandom.
This time it's during the All Hell Breaks Loose Convention when he described what he stated was supposed to be the show's finale. He even repeated his famous "what are they gonna do, fire me?" phrase originally said in 2020 when, funnily enough, he was discussing the same thing [x, from 25th minute].
He described a scene in the Roadhouse in Dean's heaven, with Sam, many other characters that had appeared in the show over the years, and Cas: "Dean was gonna sidle up next to Cas at the bar, Cas was gonna be there." [video] [transcript] We may never know what was supposed to happen in that last episode, but it's always good to see that Supernatural can still cause a little chaos two years after it ended.
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