It's been 7 months since I did my intro, so I'm going to redo one, as a lot has changed!!
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⋆.˚ you can call me Novak, and I use he/they/she pronouns! (thats order of preference). ⋆.˚
I'm neurodivergent, a studying therapist, and my current main interest is the show Supernatural. I've recently been quite busy and burnt out, but I hope to post more again in the future. this is pretty much a supernatural blog, so here are my opinions!
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Supernatural opinions:
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Favourite characters: Castiel, Dean, Gabriel, Crowley, Benny, Meg (mostly meg 2), Eileen, and Amara. I also like Sam, although I have some issues with his writing.
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Favourite ships:
Destiel!!!!! But also, Saileen, Deanbenny, Drowley, Megstiel, and more. I don't support any ships involving incest, so do not interpret any of my posts as such.
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Favourite seasons/plots:
Season 4, 5, and 11. Season 9 and the first few episodes of 10 is fun as well. This might change as I watch/rewatch!
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tags I use:
#spn : every single supernatural post is tagged with this
#TFW ultimate headcanons : full lists diagnosing and categorising team free will
#destiel : self explanatory
#essay posts : my massive long posts of any fandom
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That's why I keep seeing posts claiming that Cas never actually loved Jack, all of it was just a brainwashing. Because Cas would never choose someone (who has harmed Dean) over Dean unless he was magically controlled to do so.
And Cas hates Sam, because of the few snarky lines Cas threw at Sam. Cas can only love Dean, so he totally just tolerates Sam for Dean.
And Cas doesn't want to do anything with Heaven because Dean is way more important to him (even though Cas keeps coming back to Heaven and keeps wanting to give other angels a free will and feels responsible for his failure to convince angels to turn away from Heaven's control)
As a Destiel shipper myself, I agree with this post so much.
A healthy relationship means that you have other family members, friends, and potentially even children you love and care about. Does having these relationships mean you don't care for your spouse? NO!!
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Ain't no rest for the wicked is such a Dean Winchester song, as we all know.
But let me propose: the song being about Castiel's perspective of Dean. Relisten to the song and think about that.
"you don't think you deserve to be saved?" - castiel
"I said you're such a sweet young thing, why do you do this to yourself?" - the song
(there are genuinely so many parallels- even dean attacking Castiel the first time they met, Cas being slowly won over to Dean's darker perspective, aaaa)
An analysis of Jimmy McShane, the proto-Jimmy Novak from Jeremy Carver's original outline of 04x20 The Rapture
I read the original draft of The Rapture, in which the Novaks are actually the McShanes. (the document can be found here) My main takeaway from this outline is as follows:
Jimmy McShane is an everyman. Jimmy Novak is not.
A post and its tags from @autisticandroids and @ellicler respectively pointed out that Jimmy Novak, despite having the quintessential 'normal life' that is often framed as the unreachable ideal for hunters in Supernatural, is not an everyman character. As the latter put it, he is "by turns too sincere too manic too naive - maybe the most sympathetic portrayal of christian fundamentalism i've ever seen?" They go on to point out that unlike Supernatural's 'typical dude' or even typical (civilian) father, he doesn't really perform traditional masculinity at all -- he's not making an attempt to put himself in control or call all the shots (for an example of this, see the scene where he's quick to make a compromise with Amelia and doesn't offer any pushback when she says she's not ready to fully let him back into their life - even though he didn't hesitate to get back home by whatever means necessary against the Winchesters' very reasonable concerns. He clearly doesn't consider himself a more rational person than his wife) as a "man of the house" probably would, despite appearing to live a pretty culturally conservative life in general. He's not angry at Castiel, aside from maybe the scene where he yells at the sky because he thinks Heaven abandoned his family -- we can see that his anger even deflates into frustrated resignation about halfway through his speech.
While I hadn't really thought about it one way or another before seeing the post, I agree with them -- Supernatural undeniably has a 'normal guy' mold, and Jimmy does not fit in it. I think this was intentional on the part of the cast and crew, but if somehow Misha Collins was trying to portray Jimmy as someone who fit that mold, he failed spectacularly and gave us a much more compelling character instead.
TL;DR, the man that Castiel's vessel belongs to in the final cut of the show is kind of weird -- and this brings me to what I'm really here for:
Enter Jimmy.
(that was actually my impression of Heaven ordering Castiel to take a vessel. Now--)
[Enter Jimmy McShane.]
When we compare the outline to the final script, it’s important to note that we are dealing with two different Jimmys here -- The rest of this post will detail every contrast I noticed.
The most obvious difference between Jimmy McShane and Jimmy Novak is that the former is not religious (at least not very) -- certainly not the "devout man" that Castiel described in 04x01, implying that this iteration of Castiel was either lying to Dean or was misinformed by Heaven about his vessel's background.
While Jimmy McShane isn't very religious, his wife Amelia is -- Instead of a scene where Jimmy says grace before having dinner with his family, we get a scene of the family celebrating Christmas Eve at home. While Claire [clumsily wraps presents on the floor] - which is a really funny detail to me for some reason - [Amelia is trying to convince Jimmy to take the family to Midnight Mass tonight, for the first time ever--she thinks Claire is old enough to appreciate it now.] -- I think this reference to Mass is the only mention of what faith Jimmy's family follows -- they're almost definitely meant to be some variety of Christian in the show, maybe even Catholic like they are in the outline, but I don't think they ever confirm it - though there might be an obvious tell that I'm just missing.
I think it's plausible that Jimmy Novak would be reluctant to go to church at midnight even before Castiel, but it definitely wouldn't be for the same reasons as Jimmy McShane. [Jimmy rolls his eyes--for starters, he thinks church is creepy, much less Midnight Mass...And what's it all for, really? So he can wake up exhausted on Christmas Day? No thanks.] -- This is obviously a far cry from Jimmy Novak. I could see Dean Smith or another human AU Dean saying something like this, which I think strengthens my take that Jimmy McShane fits Supernatural’s ‘normal, everyday, not-hunter guy’ archetype in a way that Jimmy Novak just doesn’t.
Amelia and Jimmy continue discussing Mass. [“I’d just like her to understand Christmas is about more than Santa Claus and shiny presents.” Jimmy grins: “Since when?” Amelia’s stubborn as her husband though--she's taking Claire whether he comes or not.] -- Amelia is clearly more religious than Jimmy in this draft, and while I do think it would be interesting if she spent months watching her previously faithless husband start believing that an angel was talking to him out of nowhere, I ultimately like the theme of an angel leading Jimmy to lose his faith too much for me to say that the McShanes' dynamic is better.
In the notorious hand-boiling scene, we get confirmation of the groundbreaking fact that Jimmy was supposed to be making pasta. While the Jimmy we see looks unfazed by the radio whining in the final cut, the outline has him desperately try to ignore it. [A CEILING LIGHT begins to BURN BRIGHTER and BRIGHTER...finally blazing down on him!] -- The ceiling light would've been a cool detail and I imagine Jimmy Novak would've been even more dazzled by Castiel if he'd made the electricity go crazy like in 04x01, but the lights and the radio aren't enough to win over Jimmy McShane, who [does his best to ignore them both, anxiously stirs a POT OF SAUCE. Grows more and more agitated. Finally, he angrily snaps: "No...no...shut up! I told you...you're not real!" Obviously...this isn't the first conversation Jimmy's had with a radio and a bright light in the past few months. He listens for another moment, sneers: "Oh, you're gonna prove it? Oh, yeah? How?"] -- A pattern here is that Jimmy McShane is a bit more combative in general and especially towards Castiel, which tracks with him not being as devout. Even putting the faith aspect aside, this really doesn't read like Jimmy Novak to me either. Actually, it sounds like Jeremy Bradshaw from Bridgewater -- over a decade later, Misha Collins ended up getting to play this kind of character after all. (I also want to say the visual of Jimmy anxiously stirring a pot of pasta sauce as he tries to ignore his hallucinations is really funny. 'Crazy? I was crazy once. They put me in a kitchen. A midwestern kitchen. A midwestern kitchen with angels. And angels make me crazy. Crazy? I was crazy once. They put me in a kitchen--')
When Amelia catches her husband with his hand in the pot of boiling water and screams, [Jimmy yanks his arm out of the water, smiles oddly at her, dreamily: "It's okay...it's okay...look, I'm fine...it's a miracle, like he said...he's real!" Amelia stares at him, shocked: "Who's real?" Jimmy: "Castiel. The angel."] -- Since Jimmy McShane didn't believe the voice was real before, I kind of wish this outline showed the excruciating process of Castiel trying to convince him to stick his hand in the pot. Did Jimmy say he didn't trust him and make him do some other miracle first? Did he carefully dip one finger in, fully expecting to get burned? Did he say 'Fuck it, I'll burn my whole hand' and shove it into the water because he was that desperate to make the voice stop?
In the scene where Amelia tries to convince Jimmy to take antipsychotics (?) and he refuses, she refers to said pills as [his meds] -- has he had an actual psychotic break before? This was a thing I wondered about while coming up with my backstory for Jimmy Novak, since (correct me if I'm wrong) it's not that easy to get prescribed antipsychotics. Past mental history aside, Jimmy McShane knows at least part of what Castiel wants from him. Jimmy insists [what's happening to him is real. Amelia shoots back--"So, Castiel the Angel has chosen you?" Jimmy: "Yes, he wants me to give myself over to him completely."] -- This implies that Jimmy McShane, probably because he doesn't trust the angel, asked why Castiel wanted him. When Jimmy tells Amelia that Castiel said he was chosen because it was 'in his blood' and Amelia asks what that means, Jimmy says ["He didn't tell me, I don't know...I wish I knew." But Jimmy does know one thing--Castiel also told him the world was ending. Amelia explodes: "You know who says that, Jimmy? Crazy people!"] -- I don't know for a fact that the writers intended to copy this line almost verbatim from Yellow Fever Dean, but remind me to make another post compiling Dean/Cas | Amelia/Jimmy parallels because there are more than you would expect from the <2 episodes we got of the latter couple.
Additionally, Jimmy's reaction to Amelia's lack of faith in him is very Cas-like: [Jimmy shrugs, genuinely upset she doesn't get it, but what can he do? The world is ending, he can help save it...doesn't she realize he's trying to protect her and Claire?] -- Call this a stretch and I know it wasn't an intentional parallel, but does this sound to anyone else like Castiel's justification for opening Purgatory? He wants to save the world and the only way he can do that is by taking God's place, he wants to protect Dean and Sam, but Dean can't see it his way and is trying to get him to stop. Is this anything?
Amelia tells Jimmy that she's going to take Claire to her mother's house and urges him to get help. [Jimmy walks outside, stops in the middle of the driveway, a regular guy overwhelmed by a force he doesn't understand.] -- This is another big difference between Jimmy McShane and his canon counterpart. Jimmy Novak isn’t exactly a 'regular guy who doesn't understand,' he's someone who's probably been reading about God choosing seemingly unremarkable people his whole life and he certainly thinks he understands Castiel, as much as any human could understand something holy -- as he stands in the driveway, he may be thinking of Abraham, of Mary, of Esther, of Noah, of the prophets-- it isn't because he's egotistical or thinks he's better than anyone else; it's because he knows that people who don't seem like anything special can still be chosen to help fulfill God's will. This is why Jimmy Novak doesn't ask "Why me, Castiel? Why me?" -- The explanation of 'blood' is more than enough for him.
Jimmy McShane tells Castiel that he's going to lose his family if he doesn't tell him what to do, but he doesn't make Castiel promise that his family will be safe -- apparently, whatever vision Castiel showed him in this version was enough to assure him that they would end up okay.
After finding him in the warehouse, Sam and Dean end up helping Jimmy get back home. I think that Jimmy actually escaping from them in the final episode solidifies his position as kind of a rebel when it comes to doing what he thinks is right even if it’s ill-advised, and it also mirrors the Winchesters' habit of doing short-sighted things for the sake of family. (Not to mention the parallel between Castiel and Jimmy -- true followers of God who nonetheless can't be controlled.)
Jimmy McShane has a bit of a hero complex. Maybe you could argue that Jimmy Novak does too, but even if he does it isn't much compared to what he has in this outline. In the scene where he tries to keep his family in the pantry to hide from the demon and Amelia argues with him, he [insists he's saving her and Claire!] When Claire runs out of the room a minute later, [Amelia moves to chase after her but Jimmy shoves her back--it's too dangerous, he'll take care of it!] -- While Jimmy McShane still isn't exactly the most manly man, he's definitely closer to filling the role of the taking-charge "man of the house" than Jimmy Novak ended up being. He’s obviously trying to protect his family, but the reason he believes he’s in a position to do so is that he happens to be the one Castiel spoke to.
Where Jimmy Novak still held on to hope that he'd be able to see his family again eventually, Jimmy McShane genuinely doesn't seem to understand why the demons would go after him -- no one said anything about demons to him until they showed up. [Jimmy just doesn't get it--he thought this was over. Sam shakes his head, tells Jimmy, apparently, it's never over.] Sam being the one to tell him this is probably significant in that Sam also used to have a 'normal life' before the supernatural took it away. Under the assumption that Jimmy Novak isn't meant to be a so-called 'regular guy,' this draws even more of a parallel between the two -- Jimmy, like Sam, never truly had a chance to belong in an apple pie life.
Jimmy asks what the demons could even want with him. [Dean explains what Anna told him and Sam: Jimmy's an angelic vessel, vessels are rare, not just anyone can be one...any moment, a big-ass angel could step inside of him and start kicking demon butt. So, of course demons would want to smash him.] -- In my opinion, an explanation like this should've ended up in the episode. After all, we know that Jimmy is a ridiculously strong vessel in canon -- His body held fully-powered seraph Cas along with the millions of Purgatory souls, and only all of the Leviathans working together to destroy it could manage to start breaking it down from the inside. A seraph, an archangel, and the king of Hell all shared the vessel at one point. The angel Hael tried to make Castiel let her in because his vessel was more durable than hers -- he never developed lesions like Lucifer's vessel or Hael's vessel. Jimmy Novak does get an explanation for why he has to stay away from his family in 04x20, but all Sam says is that the demons want to know what makes him tick -- the Winchesters don't mention that angelic vessels are rare or that demons are trying to eliminate them from existence, since the longer exposition from Anna was cut. The explanation also gives more weight to Jimmy's concern for Claire; if he's a vessel that the demons want dead, there's a chance she is too. He understands that he needs to let his family leave without him if he wants to give them a chance at being safe.
Jimmy yells at the sky when Amelia and Claire are captured. [Jimmy paces, alone, his mind in knots. Back and forth, back and forth, finally he speaks. Quietly, urgently, a prayer--to Castiel. Jimmy gets it, he can never get out of this, he can never go home again...he just wants to know a home is there. He begs Castiel to save his family, begs him to take him back: "I will give myself to you completely, for the rest of my life. Please."] and if that line had made it in, I can't say for certain that I wouldn't have been a jimstiel truther. Anyway, this is a rare instance of Jimmy Novak being the more assertive Jimmy -- he's upset with Castiel for breaking his promise. Additionally, Jimmy Novak's prayer says nothing about his fate; the promise was only for his family and he doesn't have the energy to think about anything aside from Castiel's apparent betrayal.
When Castiel approaches Jimmy using Claire's body, the 'offer' is different. [Cass moves to stand over Jimmy, who bleeds through his shirt, on the verge of death, but still alive. Castiel: "You will never go home again. You won't even be able to say good-bye. Do you agree?" Jimmy throws one last look at his wife, stares into Castiel (and his daughter's) eyes, and nods. He agrees.] -- This is a VERY important difference. Jimmy McShane agreed to being possessed again while praying to Castiel -- he explicitly offered himself to save his family, and yet Castiel takes Claire anyway. There could've been a tactical reason for this; maybe Claire was already injured, or maybe Castiel was already possessing her when he prayed -- the point is, Jimmy is not put in a position where he's seconds away from death and his guaranteed paradise. He's simply resigned to his fate. I think that Castiel could've had a few reasons for intending to take Claire and let Jimmy die in canon -- my personal take is that despite being freshly brainwashed back into obedience, Castiel still respects Jimmy for his service and wants him to get the rest he deserves. Castiel expects to return to Heaven after his mission, so he believes that he would've done his part for Claire by leaving her vessel within the coming months, or a hundred/a thousand years if it's necessary. He doesn't understand why a human would object to being 'dropped off' after centuries of possession -- he believes that as long as they can return to their body eventually, it's okay. I think the Castiel of this outline comes off as more manipulative; he already has Jimmy's consent and yet he uses Claire's face to convince him to agree to his terms. Ultimately, I prefer Jimmy's sacrifice like we ended up seeing.
Now, starting from the beginning of the episode outline, let's get into some of the relatively minor changes that are nonetheless important in defining the difference between the McShanes and the Novaks.
Like in the final cut, Jimmy can't remember much about being possessed. Interestingly, here he tells the Winchesters that [He does remember saving their asses once or twice,] meaning that either his memory of the situation was further nerfed in the rewrite, or that the final version of Jimmy is a little less cocky than his original counterpart. (I personally think it's both -- Jimmy Novak can't really remember what happened externally while he was possessed, and if he did, he wouldn't take credit for what Castiel had done. Jimmy McShane's line reminds me a little of Pixar's Joe Gardner on his body being controlled by someone else, or even John Malkovich in Being John Malkovich.)
[Dean has to ask: "So...what was it like being rodeo'd by an angel?"] (side note: if the writers included that line in the final episode, destiel would’ve never let them hear the end of it) [Jimmy smiles grimly--"Man, if I only knew what I was getting into." He tells Dean being a servant of the Lord was far more of a clusterfuck than he'd ever dreamed.] -- I feel like the grim smile combined with the fact that he remembers more about being possessed point to Jimmy being more jaded and cynical about the situation here than he is in canon. He also mentions that he was shot, then healed, then stabbed, then healed, which isn't much of a departure from what he ended up saying in 04x20, but the phrasing made me realize that he's probably referring to Dean shooting and stabbing him in 04x01, which is pretty funny. Another example of Jimmy McShane remembering more specific things is when he says that he [once found himself standing on the summit of Mt. Everest] - presumably while Castiel was having a conversation with another angel.
In this draft, [Dean and Jimmy form an easy bond--two very reluctant soldiers of God.] -- While this is nice and all, I ultimately like that Jimmy Novak has been given his body back only for an important part of him -- his faith -- to be missing after everything he's been through.
When asked what he does know if not what Castiel was trying to say, Jimmy McShane [thinks for a beat, his face suddenly full of pain: "I know I had a family. I want to go home."] -- This isn't too different from Jimmy Novak's reaction to the same question. I just wanted to say that I liked Misha's portrayal of a 'face full of pain' in the final cut.
[Dean asks what Castiel really knows about Dean's fate, about the angels' ultimate purpose for him, but, again, Jimmy has no idea--Castiel shielded that from him. But Jimmy does know one thing--he knows of Castiel's doubt. He knows Castiel doesn't even think God is calling the shots anymore. Dean: "That's troubling." Jimmy nods, that's not even the worst of it--"Castiel doesn't think this is winnable anymore. He thinks the apocalypse is coming."] -- It's interesting to me that this draft had Dean find out Cas's issue with Heaven before 04x22. I personally think that this would've been too early for him to learn that, but it would be cool if we as the audience somehow found out later that Castiel was having these kinds of doubts and was forced to forget them -- maybe years later (like when they introduced Naomi's operating room) they could've given Cas his memories back, or maybe they could've come back naturally over time or something.
Before Jimmy gets on the bus to go back home, Dean asks him one last question. ["How can you go back to potlucks and Monopoly knowing the apocalypse is coming?" Jimmy thinks on that a quick beat: "Happily." And he's gone. Dean stares after him a moment, quiet, envying him-- "Lucky bastard."] -- There are a few ways to take this. One is kind of similar to Zachariah's Endverse Cas - 'The world is ending anyway, why not have a good time while it lasts?' Something immediately felt off to me about the idea of this coming from Jimmy Novak because it feels incompatible with sacrificing his Heaven for Claire (which, again, Jimmy McShane did not do) -- but logically I can't find a definite reason he wouldn't say this if he knew for a fact that he couldn't do anything to help stop the world from ending, aside from the fact that it's a bit of a dickish thing to say to a guy who has no normal life to go back to because he's too busy saving people from monsters - so I chalked my instinct that this is ooc up to not aligning with the way I write Jimmy Novak -- and as much as I like my characterization of Jimmy it obviously has no effect on who he is according to the actual writers so I'm letting this line slide. (Kind of -- stay tuned because this isn't the last thing I have to say about what Dean specifically said here in this draft.)
When Jimmy returns home after so long and Amelia is shocked to see him, [Jimmy gives a sad smile, assures her it's okay, it's him, it's really him. Amelia starts to cry, they'd given up looking for him, they thought he was dead! Jimmy can't bear to see the pain on her face, assures her again and again: he's okay.] -- I like this because I like Amelia and Jimmy’s relationship as it’s portrayed later on in the show, but I think I prefer Amelia being either in shock or numb here after everything that happened like she ultimately was in canon. Amelia’s sentiment in this draft appears in their s10 reunion in Heaven and I think it fits better there.
Jimmy tells Amelia that he had a psychotic break and wandered for months before he finally got help, and that he [didn't call because he was too ashamed, didn't want to bother them until he got himself straight. That's why he's here. He's good now--angels aren't real, the world isn't ending, that was all in his mind. (Obviously, he's lying.) Amelia studies him--he certainly sounds sane. Still...what does he want? What does he expect to happen here? Jimmy: "I just want to come home." Amelia stands there, conflicted--Jimmy's the love of her life, he is, but after all that's happened, after how he acted, how can she be sure it won't happen again? She's just not sure accepting him back so quickly is the right thing to do here. Jimmy feels her doubt, understands, suggests maybe they take baby steps. Start smaller. Like...how about dinner?] -- This is good insight into what Amelia is thinking. It's possible that she was the one who experienced a loss of faith after Jimmy left in this version.
Amelia lets Jimmy have dinner with her and Claire. [Claire rushes down the steps, Jimmy takes her in, his heart-bursting. "Hi, Daddy." "Hey, Baby." Amelia apologizes as she serves SANDWICHES--it's all she had in the pantry. Jimmy motions for her to sit, stop apologizing--"It's fine. It's more than fine...it's perfect."] -- Again, this is nice, but I think Amelia Novak's kind of sassy line about the sandwiches "It'd better be okay, it's all we have" speaks to her reluctance about letting Jimmy back in after how long he was gone.
Crucially, Claire McShane doesn't point out that Jimmy McShane didn't say grace, because saying grace was never a thing he did. Instead, [Jimmy takes in his two girls, grows emotional. Claire notices, asks why he's sad. Jimmy smiles--he's not sad...he's happy.] -- In this version of the scene, he's most likely telling the truth about why he's crying. Faith wasn't a big part of his life.
The neighbor/family friend knocks on the door. His canon name is Rodger, but he's Jack Tracey in this outline. [Jimmy pokes his head into the hall, breaks into a grin--"Hey, Jack!" They embrace. Goddam, Jack is pleased as hell to see his buddy back in one piece. He's okay? Jimmy assures him he is. Jack takes a long, concerned look at him, speaks quieter: can they talk? Amelia gets the hint, volunteers to go get the boys some beers.] This may seem like a silly thing to focus on, but stay with me: two beers in the outline. In 04x20, Amelia only offers Rodger a beer. She likely sees Jimmy's mental state as unstable despite seeming back to normal because of what he did before, so she might still consider him fragile. Stay with me a little longer: playing Monopoly, going to potlucks, drinking a couple beers with your buddy - these are adjacent to the 'sheltered suburban man' archetype that occasionally appears on the show, and are notably not mentioned adjacent to Jimmy Novak like they were with Jimmy McShane. Jimmy Novak does NOT represent a midwestern average joe. He does not fit in the mold. He is other.
'Rodger' (or 'Jack' in this case) reveals himself as a demon while Amelia is out of the room and only Jimmy can see him, just like he does in the show. In the final version, Jimmy responds by hitting him with what I think is a candlestick. What does our man Jimmy McShane do, you ask? (No one asked, but you should've and here's why:) [He SLAMS JACK IN THE FACE WITH A GOLF CLUB! Jack crumples to the floor as Jimmy savagely beats him again and again with the club! AMELIA SCREAMS--what the hell is Jimmy doing!?] -- Wait, back up--
That's right.
Jimmy McShane hits the demon with a golf club.
A golf club.
Jimmy Novak does not own a golf club.
Jimmy Novak does not play golf.
He does not fit in the mold.
Author's note: I'm not crazy. This is God's will.
Anyway, Jimmy shoves Amelia and Claire into the pantry to get away from the demon. As the adults fight over whether any of this is real, Claire escapes -- this is different from the final cut, where Amelia encourages Claire to run.
When the McShanes escape their house with the Winchesters, we see [A SERIES OF QUICK CUTS] showing their getaway. It's unclear when exactly Amelia got possessed (in both the outline and the final episode) - but this bit is a good candidate, as is the later scene in the parking garage while Sam and Dean hotwire the car. I think the quick cuts could've illustrated the chaos that kept anyone from noticing the demon possessing Amelia if it was in fact meant to be here.
I like how the outline describes the thought process of the demon. She [marvels at her good fortune--this was just supposed to be some easy-peasy day job wiping out Jimmy the Schmoe...now she gets Sam and Dean Winchester? And a defenseless, powerless Sam Winchester to boot? There's gonna be a plaque somewhere down in Hell with her name on it, that's for sure.] -- Note that Amelia Novak's demon describes her job as "picking up an empty vessel" as opposed to wiping him out -- the outline heavily implies that murdering confirmed vessels and their blood relatives is a thing that demons do. Sam vaguely alludes to it when he explains why Jimmy can't go home, but I'm not sure why the episode buries the lead on the fact that the demons want to kill Jimmy and Claire specifically because they're suitable angelic vessels, and that the demons are trying to eliminate as many vessel bloodlines as they can to make it harder for angels to come to Earth and get in their way.
Castiel possesses Claire, but we don't get Jimmy's awed acknowledgment as he starts to bleed out that Castiel didn't abandon him and/or horror that he used Claire as a vessel. The outline also doesn't mention Castiel watching Sam drink demon blood straight from the source.
Dean also acknowledges the fact that Castiel possessed Claire: [Dean: "How? How are you in her body?" Cass: "It's in the blood."] -- If they'd kept this exchange, they obviously would've made it sound a little more natural than it is here in the outline, but I honestly think it's kind of funny that no one ever mentions that Cas possessed Claire ever again. Yes it would've been great for angst purposes, but it's such a Supernatural writer thing to do to never acknowledge it. I think it's the first time we as the audience see direct confirmation that angels can just switch vessels like that - and yet Cas comes back in Jimmy's vessel for almost twelve years to come.
In conclusion, Jimmy Novak is a lot of things. A believer, a ghost in the narrative, a bit of a weirdo.
That's why he's interesting to write, even in the scope of the much more extraordinary universe he lives in. Despite appearances, his final incarnation doesn’t represent a one-off victim/witness character the same way that other ‘average joes’ do on the show.
Looking at the early draft, I find it very interesting. The end result was obviously better, The Rapture being one of my favourite Supernatural episodes of all time, but there are some very cool parallels that can be drawn between the McShanes and the Winchesters.
For one parallel, I can definitely see Mary in the early version of Amelia, and John in Jimmy. They both fit into the stereotypical gender roles and love each other very much but disagree frequently. The wife is religious, trusting in angels to save them all. The husband isn't, rebels against religion, goes out for beers with his mates and prides himself being the man of the house, and when put under stress toughens up and doesn't hesitate to beat a demon to death because it tried to hurt his family. The wife however shies away, runs from the supernatural despite the proof she has to its existence, and doesn't want to accept the truth. Both Jimmy and Amelia McShane also seem to lean towards forgetting about Claire's importance, much as John and Mary did with their children.
Claire definitely could've mirrored Dean in more than one way in this scenario, the small child watching her world light on fire and being too small to do much about it. God, the Claire and Dean parallels later on after she grew up would've been even crazier then they already are.
There's also the parallels between Jimmy McShane and Dean that didn't quite make it to the final draft.
Neither are religious men, both refuse to pray, and their main issue from Castiel's perspective is the same. A lack of faith.
Their stories are quite similar, alienated from their family, shoved into a position where they were eventually needed to be 'saved' by Castiel and given a job to do that they never wanted. A job that doesn't technically involve them at all. They're both just angelic vessels, puppets, and Dean doesn't realise just how much his future is going to be like Jimmy's.
[Dean and Jimmy form an easy bond--two very reluctant soldiers of God.]
Neither of them want to serve heaven. Both of them handle that burden in different ways, but at it's core, are very similar people. Jimmy McShane and Dean Winchester are at different stages of the same journey.
I do love these parallels that can be drawn from the earliest drafts, but I'm also incredibly pleased that Jimmy was made more into his own man in the final draft. The role shift and slight gender swap between Amelia and Jimmy was fantastic, making the Novak family stand out from all the other classic 'victim' families. The single episode where they are all together feels like the plot of a movie, to the point where I genuinely almost forgot that Jimmy wasn't the main character for a little while.
Jimmy Novak deserves to be remembered and appreciated!!!
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MASSIVE SPOILERS FOR SUPERNATURAL: Spoilers from season 4 to 15!
hello. this has been sitting in my drafts since march, and as I finally got around to adding the images, here's one of my main Supernatural theories. I think I found the exact moment that the supernatural universe went against Chuck's plan!
So, in The Monster At The End Of This Book (fitting name) we're introduced to Chuck. Everything he writes seems to come true, and then it's revealed that he's a 'prophet'. For the entire episode, he is not once genuinely surprised, to the point where he's already written down an entire script.
Chuck knows all that has and will happened, and to any who have gotten past season 11, you know that this is because he is God. Obviously, nothing will surprise him.
Until the end of the episode.
Dean begs Cas for help, praying for the first time. He's already stepping off the reservation, because Dean Winchester does not pray. And Castiel shows up, reprogrammed recently by heaven.
And Cas helps him.
If we look at season the season 15 quote, "You know what every other version of you did after 'gripping him tight and raising him from Perdition?' They did what they were told. But not you," we can see that Castiel did what he was told in every other timeline. Every single other timeline, Castiel turned down Dean, didn't help him, stuck to what he was told to do.
Not this one.
Immediately after this, Dean puts Cas's plan in action, using the knowledge that they could use either Raphael or Michael to scare away Lilith, and shoves Chuck into the room.
Chuck appears panicked, repeating over and over that this wasn't the plan, that he didn't write this. Dean and Castiel are not in this story. Not here, not now.
This event causes a knock-on effect, causing Sam to not make a deal with Lilith, which changed the entire course of season 4 and 5.
This is the first instance of a timeline changing past Chuck's plans that I can pinpoint. Perhaps Dean admitting he needed help and Castiel rebelling was what made this universe so unique and interesting.
In summary: The Monster At The End Of This Book is likely the first episode that properly stars Team Free Will living up to their name.
nothing and nobody will ever make me like Lucifer from supernatural as a person
but gosh do I miss him in the early seasons.. he was so intimidating. so inhuman, quiet and somber. One of my personal favourite depictions of The Devil. An angel who deceives and yet never lies, one who plans for centuries and yet never grows tired
Hot take in some places but.. Gabriel is not just a silly little innocent prankster
He's a traumatised, cowardly, murderous, hypocritical and sometimes immature angel who's might almost compared to Lucifer, and is older than time.
Gabriel has made mistakes in his short amount of screen time that he doesn't deserve to be babied for, and those mistakes is what makes his redemption so awesome to see!!
I firmly believe that removing or downplaying his traumatic life and bad traits/decisions removes the depth and meaning of his eventual attempts to save humanity.
genderfluid Gabriel is so special to me, not only because he’s one of my favorites and I’m genderfluid, but because he has the ability to change his appearance on whim. I understand the pangender Gabriel headcanon, but I also feel like genderfluid Gabriel fits very well based on his powers. I don’t care what your headcanon for him is honestly, as long as we can all agree his ass is NOT cis 😭
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That part in Changing Channels where the doctor who keeps slapping Sam in the face tells him "So that girl died on your table; it wasn't your fault, it wasn't anybody's fault. Sometimes people just die." always hits me in an odd fashion. I know it's just supposed to be a jokey jab at hospital dramas but the fact that it's Gabriel's TV land illusion land that he controls plus the fact it's said so directly to Sam makes the line feel bigger than it is.
Gabriel makes the world, the characters, and hell, I'm betting the script too, so I'd say it's intentional, however to back up my theory, this is also something he's told Sam before. In mystery spot he tried to show Sam over and over again that he needed to let go; that, so what if people die, that's what they do, it's what everyone eventually does in a myriad of ways and that's not your fault, it's not about fault. Because that's where this whole thing started, Jess and all the people he couldn't save. It's what his visions were, it's what Lucifer used to try and lure him into becoming his vessel. Time and time again Sam's biggest fault, as Gabriel sees it, is his responsibility.
The archangel tried to prepare him for Dean's death, now it's preparation for Lucifer's possession, the unspeakable things he will do, and the apocalypse. A predetermined set of events that Sam will undoubtedly blame himself for despite none of it being within his power to control. The line is almost a kindness. Yet, it being said as it's said and where it is said, Sam of course only responds with, "I have no idea what you're saying to me." Which is funny no matter how you look at it, only now it also hits me with a heart wrenching sadness.
Continuing on the thought of these themes within their characters, it's also interesting to see (both in early and later seasons) that where Sam is too blaming of himself, Gabriel is too blaming of the world. Sam tries to take all of the accountability where Gabriel takes none, and they are drawn to that in each other, almost seeming to sympathize or pity the other for it. Gabriel keeps centring on Sam because he sees that familiar story of the brother who chose to run away, but he sees too that Sam is stuck in his guilt, is confined by it, and he wishes to free him. Sam too sees this similarity, but he sees the way that it's not guilt that Gabriel lacks, it's commitment. Gabriel too is trapped by his guilt in the way that it keeps him from action, where he wishes things were one way, he does nothing to change them away from the other. Another pull and push point of their characters is that Gabriel has power where Sam has to gain it. At the point of Changing Channel's or even later seasons, there's the dichotomy between the use of power and the having of it. Gabriel has the power, he just refuses to use it and Sam wants to use power he doesn't have.
This is all to say... Well, it's mostly to say I love Sam and Gabriel's relationship and wish we got more of it, but of course they have to kill him off before he can follow through with any of the responsibilities he ends up taking on; and no dying does not count as taking responsibility (I'm looking at you John Winchester). In the later seasons especially I think it would have been neat to see him try and help heaven but perhaps the writers thought it would be too easy a solution, repetitive, or couldn't think of a meaningful way to put him there (though just think, we could've had Queen of Hell Rowena, Ruler of Heaven Gabriel power couple/FWB and that would have been hilarious... *sighs* anyway). So, to finish this thought off, I think it's neat when there's a crack in the joke, a truth in the lie. Gabriel's a masterful illusionist, but when his facade breaks, even for just a moment, it's really interesting to see what can be drawn from it.