have Sam and Dean Supernatural ever visited the place you’re from?
yes
no
noise dept.

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izzy's playlists!

blake kathryn
we're not kids anymore.
Keni
macklin celebrini has autism
Stranger Things
Cosimo Galluzzi
d e v o n
will byers stan first human second
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if i look back, i am lost
DEAR READER

Andulka
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

seen from Australia
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seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
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seen from Italy
seen from United States
seen from T1

seen from United States
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@castielliveson
have Sam and Dean Supernatural ever visited the place you’re from?
yes
no
the bunker has a record player 🎶🎸💿
Idk write who's pov this😭
I love how dean is fruity even in small details like the movies he references and his literary every friend is gay, every queer person around them always gravitates towards him, and he's always the one to get hit on by other men, this is so funny, genuinely.
My angel tile... it came out so coooool
Are you still taking poll requests? Can you ask people how long they have been in the fandom? I’m very curious.
I’m assuming you mean the supernatural fandom so just send me a message if I’m wrong!!
How long have you been in the supernatural fandom? 😇 🤠 🥗
Less than 6 months
1 year
2-3 years
4-6 years
7-9 years
10 years
11-13 years
14-16 years
17-19 years
20+ years
Since the beginning (September 13th, 2005)
Reblog to help out a curious anon
I fell asleep last night thinking of a concept episode.
Basically it’s just an episode with Jack holding a camera and filming everyone’s daily routines, like a home video. He just follows them around and they’re just so confused what he’s doing and ignores it. He introduces them and is like “here are my dads :3 and here’s me!!!” and he turns the camera back to himself, smiling and then he turns the camera back around and they’re just all smiling at him. And then the episode continues with like minor conflicts like just fighting n stuff. But like the way families interact with each other.
This part is semi lame but like he would definitely capture like a weird destiel moment. Like they accidentally bumped into each other the way they do on romcoms or just a moment of them sitting awkwardly close in silence and Jack records from around a corner and he just giggles and they both just stare at him, and then the camera cuts.
Jack would also record their daily routines and narrate. “Cas is always the one up first because he doesn’t need to sleep. Sam wakes up early to do is runs.” He just holds the camera with Sam walking up the stairs and he pauses. “Jack, what are you doing?” He somewhat laughs but also is confused. “I’m making a video of our lives!”
GOD I HATE THEM I HATE THEM I HATE THEM
I smiled so big writing this. They are everything to me.
Dean remembers having had the thought: "When did he start smiling like that?" on one of many occasions he'd seen Cas smile big -or at least big for Cas - an undeniable flash of teeth that often seemed to be drawn out in spite of himself. A prolonged pun, a pie he could taste, a tv commercial for a local mattress store with an overly themed advertising concept. Dean hadn't been able to recollect the first, but the warmth, he knew, carried through all of them.
Now, Dean suffers with his head in his hands with a new thought: "When did he stop smiling like that?". Cas had made the decision, at some point, to stop being happy, and somehow, Dean hadn't noticed. Cas had wondered what happiness looked like, but Dean could have told him, if he'd asked. It looked like crows feet crinkling, and a mouth twitching up, and a shake of the head, and the shifting light of the tv playing BIG TOP'S BIG LOW PRICES. It looked like safety. It looked like a nerd in a trench coat delighting in a novelty beer mug that said SO WHAT, IT'S MONDAY, even when that makes no goddamn sense as a joke. It looked like Cas. It looked like Cas.
just being
People love to say what is and what should never be is the first supernatural episode that made them fall in love with Dean and is when he became the main character of the show WRONG it’s actually dead in the water
Dean: I know. You didn’t, you didn’t think of it like that. ⤷ oblivious younger sibling Sam + not thinking before he speaks. 1.02 | 1.18 | 5.16
TBF, I think sometimes ppl consider Cas’s communication style too divorced from what is actively happening to him (being hunted, being murdered despite billion years of service, civil war, grief/ptsd, vessel trauma, and an empty deal that hinges on staying “closed off” in order to stay alive)
#i’m not saying s14-15#but ESPECIALLY s14-15#the empty deal is a barrier to emotion and an important one too#and cas got problems i like him messy#but to say he’s hopeless is high dollar uncharitable#i’m surprised he’s as warm and communicative as he is tbh#a huge portion of his arc is he can’t reciprocate or he dies (and you die)#and it’s not just the empty deal#that’s a microcosm of his plight for most of his run#the cool thing is: 99% of the times dean both understands and is heartbroken by this#and sometimes what looks like chivalry is angelic enforcement: i.e. you can care about MISSIONS but not individuals#which is how and why he tends to convert things he cares about into to missions#it's a sort or bargaining effect
//
#the empty deal is a barrier to emotion and an important one too#< prev yes !!! SAY THAT#i get frustrations with some of the s14 / 15 stuff i do#but i can't blame cas /too/ much for sticking to old patterns and staying avoidant abt things riiiiight up until the end bc yeah#the empty deal was a huge chain around his neck#sure he could've told dean abt the deal but. hello. this is CAS we're talking abt here. he was NOT going to do that if he could avoid it#(just like how dean really did not want to tell them abt his malak box plan. they are samesies in this way)#cas studies via @angelsdean
//
#Cas’s way of dealing with the empty deal was#I’m not going to feel anything at all via @my-flying-sister
The particular quality that makes Supernatural so unprecedented as queer media is specifically that they DID allow the characters to grow and change past what their initial plan for them was. That's why Cas's confession matters so goddamn much. We've had queer media before, of course, but not like this. Not the way Supernatural did it.
A lot of times, shows get called queerbait incorrectly, specifically because the audience sees potential, and they COULD take it there, but the showmakers don't take it there because that was never the plan. This includes things like BBC Sherlock and the MCU. Without the active choice to make Destiel a viable canon, this is where Supernatural would fit. Not going along with a popular ship that wasn't planned to exist in the first place is not queerbait.
Actual queerbait happens when the showmakers never intend it but act like they are gonna, promote the story as such, and then actively choose not follow through. This is where I'd put things like What We Do in the Shadows. It's a promotional stunt, done to attract viewers via the Will-They-Won't-They, knowing full well that They Won't.
Both the queerbait and not-quite-queerbait things often have an extra salt rubbed in the wound by slapping a big giant helping of Excessively Het Stuff on top at the end, juuuust to make sure we get the message that This Is Not For You. This is where you get things like Steve Rogers going back in time to marry Peggy thereby destroying 10 years & multiple movies & shows worth of character development and other character relationships. Compulsory Het additions are used just to really emphasize that yeah, they're SUPER FUCKIN STRAIGHT and SOULMATES.
As a narrative example, in the case of queerbait, excessively het endings are like that high school prank trope, where someone pretends they're gonna take the loser to prom, then shows up with their Real Date to throw eggs at them on the porch on prom night. In the case of not-quite-queerbait, the excessively het ending is where you have that popular kid that's always nice to the loser, that the loser has a crush on, but is still gonna date the other popular kid, not out of spite, but simply because they weren't interested in the first place.
But we do have a realm of Queer media that plans to be queer and follows through, like Heated Rivalry, Our Flag Means Death, Sense8, assorted movies. But there's a different flavor to media like this. It starts out and carries through as openly queer. It celebrates queerness. But often, because it is so openly queer, these get boxed in as "Queer Show" to the exclusion of all else. It's advertising focuses on that it's queer. The narratives often revolve around what it means to be queer. Narrative elements that aren't Being Queer are, very often, just a backdrop. The stories are incredibly conscious and aware of their queerness, of their queer audience. They deal with themes around identity, the closet, sexuality, family dysfunction, societal expectations, religious and authoritarian pressure, fear of rejection, grief, romance, safety, isolation — things that are deemed "the Queer experience". And these are absolutely fair themes to apply; there's a reason those resonate.
Now. Supernatural.
Supernatural didn't set out to directly be queer media. It has always held elements of it, yes, and I will argue for that forever. But it's intended audience was not out and proud queer people the way that Queer Media (tm) was. It talks about several similar themes — patriarchal pressures, grief, family dysfunction, the conflict between sacrifice for the community vs. choosing what is right for yourself. It's one of the reasons why other queer themes like the closet slot in so easily. But the characters were not intended to be out and proud and open. Often when queer media features a character in the closet, the narrative is about them coming out. It deals with their interiority around their sexuality — guilt, shame, passion, fear. At some point, they're always intended to Come Out.
Supernatural handles the closet differently. A queer reading of Supernatural deals with a character that has no intention of ever coming out. For whom the closet is still more safe than it is a trap. And, importantly, there are other concerns than if it's safe to be openly queer. Being openly queer, after all, is about fulfillment and self-actualization. But Supernatural is a war story. It's narrative revolves around survival, around sacrifice, around saving the world. And so it's themes treat self-actualization as a distant dream. Often an unachievable one. Maybe one day, when the Mission is complete, we can stop. We can have a home and love and a life. ...but the Mission will never be over, will it? That life just isn't for us, I guess.
And then there's Cas. Cas, who comes from this hyper religious background, who undergoes religious indoctrination and re-education, who is given conversion therapy to literally kill the person that he loves. His love, in the eyes of heaven, is illicit, forbidden, in every sense. Cas who chooses to escape his cult for a beautiful boy that believes in him. Who gives up everything for Dean, always drawn to him specifically, protecting him, supporting him, sacrificing for him. Cas, who misses and loves his family in spite of their rejection and abuse, who keeps fighting and begging for them to see him, to give up their prejudices and see the beauty that he sees, to be free of the prison they have made for themselves.
And Dean, for whom family is everything. Dean who is willing to sacrifice everything if it means protecting innocents. Dean who craves comfort and safety for himself, but moreover, someone that he can feel safe to drop the mask around. And then he meets Cas, who becomes his best friend. Who sees his vulnerabilities and weaknesses and doesn't judge him for them, who accepts him - all of him. Who also is willing to do the hard thing, to make the big sacrifices, to protect the innocent. Cas who is funny, and steadfast, and strong, and kind but also kind of a bitch, who loves humanity as much as Dean does.
They make each other want to be better. They challenge each other. They accept each other and support each other, even when they fail. They help each other up, dust them off, and say let's try again. We'll do better this time. They fight the good fight, but they also protect each other's right to rest, to have things for themselves for once.
Is it any wonder that the audience looked at this and said oh. Obviously they're in love.
But they didn't start out that way. Cas wasn't supposed to be there. He was meant to die three episodes in. A minor throwaway character, there to serve a quick purpose, and be discarded.
But the energy just felt... interesting. Lightning in a bottle, they called it. The way Cas and Dean clicked onscreen, the way they reacted to each other. And so the showrunners reworked the plan. And they kept reworking it. And kept reworking it. Every season, every new showrunner, every new writer, adding on. Misha and Jensen, adding their spin.
It wasn't planned. Not initially. But it worked, and it made the story better, made it more interesting. Cas & Dean's dynamic was interesting, and it made each of their characters as individuals better. Offered complexity and complication and subtlety.
It would have been so, so easy for them to leave it at that. No one would have been surprised if they left it at that. I'm sure many would have cried queerbait — they already were. And others would have been very smug and triumphant with yet another win over the gays, I'm sure. Because fuck us and our exhausting wish to feel seen and accepted, right?
But they didn't. They chose to go there. Cas confessed, and it was explicitly romantic, explicitly and openly queer. and it mattered. It mattered SO MUCH because it wasn't originally planned. Because the writers and showrunners of Supernatural, for all their flaws, were willing to follow through on an element of the story that developed over time, instead of chickening out, or forcing it to fit a heteronormative mold. They let the characters develop and change and grow according to what clicked in the narrative, according to what made the story more interesting. One of Supernatural's strengths is that, in spite of it's formulaic plot structuring, in spite of all the negative influences against it, they managed to coax out characters that feel True and Real. Not always, and sometimes they have setbacks, but when they nail it, it's because they let the characters develop instead of fighting it. Cas's confession was so, so earned. Taking something that had been implicit, that had underlaid the entire show if you knew what to look for, and bringing it into the open where everyone can see it. And that was something they excelled with from the start with Cas — they saw character & story potential and they used it.
The love is explicit. It is canon. The queerness is there, openly, verbally, on screen. It's there, and it's ours, and it is true. And it validates everything that Destiel fans had been seeing and arguing for for years.
And to me, one of the most important things about this is that it was a struggle. This wasn't like most openly queer media, where you can come into it comfortable that the queer love would be there. This is a show where queer readings have had to fight tooth and nail to be taken seriously. And we were fucking right.
Criminal that we didn't have a Supernatural vintage car show episode, come on now
Dean can infiltrate no problem bc he genuinely knows everything about cars and gets super into discussing fixes, gets wildly side-tracked, while Sam goes off to interrogate a bunch of car-enthusiast hot milfs
Dean is glued at the hip to Cas and Cas always stands awkwardly at the Impala, doesn't know anything about cars, so everyone just assumes Cas is the boyfriend who showed up for support? And the hot young ladies in shorts and boots befriend him bc he's apparently one of the hot girlfriends? And so he gets insight into their lives and solves the case, leading them final-girl style through the monster showdown in a garage full of heavy machinery and angry ghosts
Dean watches him emerge from the garage, shotgun in hand, shirt torn and covered in grease, and he bluescreens so hard he just runs past the flock of bombshells in shorts and tank tops (also covered in grease) to clutch Cas to check him for injuries
Thank you. This post cured my art block
New Episode of Supernatural just dropped
Through a series of action-packed events, Castiel enters a warehouse in a three-piece suit and walks out in an explosion with barely any of his clothes left, followed by three bombshells who adopted him along the way
I shit you not I kept laughing while I drew this
his sexuality crisis would NOT involve him researching micro-identites to find the exact one to label his attraction. he's a forty year old man, he's calling himself gay and never thinking about it again
-Jensen Ackles
the thing about supernatural. is it will have you saying dean for gods sake look at the road
you are going to crash that car