Guttertown by Hank3, while not technically a concept album, I do like to think of it as one. It really feels like a feverish journey through the Louisiana back-roads/swamps.
Guttertown by Hank3, while not technically a concept album, I do like to think of it as one. It really feels like a feverish journey through the Louisiana back-roads/swamps.
Supernatural is an incredibly nihilistic show, that anyone thinks that the characters will get a happy ending. Makes me want to quote Dean in "Sacrifice," "What show you been watching?"
There's Neil, the angel that loves The Notebook.
Edlund was never a showrunner.
Ben Edlund was always going to include the character in "Bad Day at Black Rock." But when the The CW asked him to bring in two female characters, they decided to just expand her from a one off to a regular
Yeah, but he also laid the whole Purgatory thing on Dean's shoulder. And frankly, Dean doesn't have the best track record.
There's also the fact that Death was locked away for God knows how long, meaning the reapers answered to no one.
The one show I could maybe see poaching Berens is Hannibal, but mostly because a producer on it also produced Ringer.
You can thank him (and Gamble) for all the dick jokes in season 7.
They're clearly different from the standard angel, since they have their own bodies, and don't need vessels.
Though it still makes sense that the first blade can kill more than just demons, because honestly that would make it kinda useless if it just killed demons.
Edlund already said on Twitter he has no plans on coming back, he wants to do something new.
He was still around after Raphael blow up Cas in season 4, and of course Cas mentions spending the year as a multidimensional wavelength (his true form), which begs the question what happened to Jimmy? If he was dead/an empty vessel he shouldn't have been able to take possession again, because there would no one to…
Why shouldn't angel blades work on them, it's a powerful weapon, it makes sense that it would.
I'm thinking Jimmy Novak. Metatron tells him that once his grace burns out, it'll take him with him.
She's in "First Born," possessing Colette.
I'm probably one of the only people that found Tessa's death tragic, but not because of the gender, but her character. Tessa was a entity with a job and purpose, which gets taken away from her, and she's left with countless souls trapped in the Veil, and it breaks her.
Pretty sure Dean has mentioned seeing a donkey show before.
I'm not counting the hallucinations of Lucifer, as he really wasn't a big bad.
They are around, but more or less without a job, since Sam and Dean ripped up the script stopping the Apocalypse.