Classic J2 at #SPNSea 2018 😊
Category: Uncategorized
Favorite Sam & Dean moments per episode: 4×01 “Lazarus Rising“
“Hey, wait. You probably want this back.”
“Thanks.”
“Yeah, don’t mention it.”
[x]
PaleyFest 2018 [x]
I love it when they whisper to each other and then crack up (x).
spnhiatuscreations | 2017 week 2
↳urban legendsthe sensible grown ups will tell you that they’re just urban legends; scary stories made up to teach little children not to go wandering off in the market, or teenagers not to sneak off at night to make out on secluded overlooks or abandoned parking lots. they’ll tell you that the stories are too fantastical to be true, that there’s nothing hiding under your bed or in your closet, no one stalking outside your window late at night. they’ll tell you that you’re safe. but gracie knows better.
oh, the stories were exaggerated, sure, blurring the line between truth and legend. they’re not seven feet tall, although she can see how someone could think they are. they’re not as wide as a truck, either, although one of them may have trouble fitting through the odd doorway here and there. and they’re certainly not hideous, at least not at first, they smile and shake hands and say yes ma’am and no sir just like her momma and daddy taught her to do. they crouch down to speak with little children, soft smiles and softer voices, completely disarming behind a mask of kindness.
and she figures it is a kindness to some, to the others, the plain and the ordinary and the weak.
she was nine when she saw them, they came right to her house, right to the front door and knocked, asked to be let in, and of course momma let them in because monsters don’t ask, do they, they just enter. but that was all part of the masquerade. gracie saw them for what they were, saw what the grownups couldn’t because grown ups are too busy to think about boogeymen and scary campfire stories and things that go bump in the night. busy putting food on the table, that’s what daddy used to say.
but their smiles, they were just a little too smooth; their questioning just a little too nonchalant, and it tickled the fine hairs on the back of her neck. when they left, seemingly satisfied with the answers momma provided, she begged and begged to skip town, to move on before they came back. but daddy said nonsense and momma said we seen plenty of detectives come and go, those ones will be moving on soon enough.
it was the big one, not that they’re not both big, that spared her. momma was on the kitchen floor with a silver knife in her neck, daddy was down the hall, head laying several feet from his body. she was supposed to be asleep but the noise had woken her up. there he stood, one half of the story that wasn’t supposed to be real, covered in blood but barely even breathing hard at all for having killed two people. he looked so startled to see her, and then so sad. i’m so sorry, he’d said, and damn if it didn’t sound sincere, but we had to stop them, and then he was gone.
a part of her understands. almost. momma and daddy killed their kind, after all, lured them into dark alleys and drained their blood to the very last drop. but that was their food. they had to. she’s not sure whether they knew if she was like her momma and daddy or not. part of them had to suspect, but he didn’t make one move to hurt her. sometimes she thinks they might come back for her when she’s older. sometimes she thinks she should go after them before they have a chance to.
just stories, her new family insists, like she didn’t see what she knows she did. probably just another vamp they’d pissed off somewhere along the way, that was their explanation. those super hunters, they tell her, those winchesters, they aren’t real. there’s lots of dangers in the world for young little vampires and werewolves and ghosties and ghouls, they say, but nothing so outlandish as giant humans who travel the whole country, who stalk the night and who can’t die. tall tales that grew taller over time, that’s all. urban legends.
12×18 | The Memory Remains
‘Supernatural’: Jensen Ackles, Jared Padalecki on what makes a good season
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: What are the key ingredients to a good Supernatural season?
JARED PADALECKI: Some of my favorite seasons have dealt with a very real threat, the introduction of a new character, and a little humor spattered throughout — or, as is the case with the Scooby episode, something outside the box. Supernatural since day one with my mom and my girlfriend burning on the ceiling has dealt with some pretty dark subjects, so you have to flip the script and laugh and make fun of yourself.
JENSEN ACKLES: There’s got to be a good struggle with the brothers, either with each other or with a very good foe. Having a good big bad is always key, but also having a clear mission is vital.
PADALECKI: We’ve had a few seasons that went a bit too far left or right, but now the bosses have figured out that there’s a recipe that works. They’ll add new spices and mix it up, but they don’t try and reinvent the wheel. The addition of Alexander [Calvert] this year has just been phenomenal. His character is not someone we’ve ever encountered before.
ACKLES: I’ve always loved when the motivation shifts between brothers: The push and pull of Sam trying to get Dean aboard or Dean not wanting to go that direction, that constant struggle, and them ultimately finding a way to make it work and doing what’s right and fighting the good fight.At what point into a season do you get a sense of whether the story works?
ACKLES: Probably episode 4 or 5. Because a lot of the groundwork for the season is laid early on in those first five episodes and then 6 and 7 and 8, somewhere in there we start having those standalone episodes, which are always great too. By then I feel like I’ve got a good gauge of tone and where we’re headed that season. And then that gives me an idea of where I need to take Dean.
PADALECKI: Episodes 9 and 10 of the season are where I get a sense of how I feel about it and the arc in general. By the time we’re filming 9 and 10, we’ve aired a few episodes, we’ve been able to gauge the audience reaction and the on-screen chemistry and whether it exists. Right around the midseason finale, it feels like the writers and our editors and producers have been watching the scenes, seen what works, seen what doesn’t, and are really fine-tuning it to figure out where they want to go with it. That’s also when I get a sense of, “Okay cool, this is gonna work.”What’s been your favorite episode of season 13?
PADALECKI: I loved “Tombstone” and “Lost and Found.” I always love our season premieres. Everyone’s been waiting, including the actors, to find out what’s happening. There’s an almost tangible buzz on set — we can almost feel the eyes of the fans on us. And “Scoobynatural,” obviously.
ACKLES: The “Scoobynatural” episode [which airs March 29] was such a unique experience. I’ve got to go with Scooby.Looking back, which Supernatural season is underappreciated?
ACKLES: Season 10 had Demon Dean, [who was] underappreciated and underused.
PADALECKI: Season 7 has “Death’s Door,” which might be my favorite episode, but I’ll go to season 1. We went off in so many different directions. The writers really explored a lot of avenues that set the stage for what we’ve been able to do since then. There was a lot of good television that was made because we hadn’t yet made the rules.
‘Supernatural’: Jensen Ackles, Jared Padalecki on what makes a good season
cut me, do I not bleed?
for @crusadedean