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Entertainment Weekly Special Edition: The Ultimate Guide to Supernatural 2017
SAM AND DEAN WINCHESTER KNOW "WEIRD." Their entire life has been weird, ever since the moment a demon claimed their mother's life. In case anyone has forgotten over the course of the show's past 12 seasons, Supernatural tells the story of the Winchester brothers, portrayed by Jared Padalecki and Jensen Ackles, who fell into the family business of hunting creatures after their mother's murder. What began as their father's journey for revenge has evolved into endless monster slayings, near-death experiences and more than a few actual deaths.
By this point the Winchesters have been to Hell and back, killed Death himself, come face-to-face with God and prevented the Apocalypse. But perhaps more impressively, the series has survived three network presidents, five showrunners, a writers' strike and five different time slots. Turns out the only thing harder to kill than the Winchesters is the series itself. "It's one of those shows that has moved a lot, and yet each time it has found that core audience and built on it," Warner Bros. Television president Peter Roth says. "It's been an unsung hero."
If anyone knows about being an unsung hero, it's Sam (Padalecki) and Dean (Ackles), who've dedicated their lives to saving others and asked for nothing in return. Seriously, how many nights have they spent sleeping in their car?And yet that on-the-road lifestyle has paved the way for a number of the show's riskier episodes, which play a crucial role in keeping the audience engaged. In 2015 "Baby" was told entirely from the perspective of their beloved 1967 Impala, and that's not even close to the craziest thing the show's tried.
Aside from the rules the show creates within its canonâyes, they have a historian in the writers' room to keep them honestânot even the sky is the limit when it comes to story ideas. â[Show creator] Eric [Kripke] used to say, 'Smoke 'em if you've got 'em,' which meant: Anything crazy, don't be afraid to run it by us," executive producer Robert Singer says.
That motto led most famously to season 6's "The French Mistake," in which Sam and Dean found themselves in an alternate universe where everyone mistook them for Jared Padalecki and Jensen Ackles, the stars of a show called Supernatural. "Our show's not bound by reality," Ackles, 39, says. "We're rooted in reality, but we're not bound by it. That gives us a fifth wall almost."
But Supernatural's season 12 finale managed to raise the stakes by somehow introducing the boys to something they'd never seen before: a world in which they don't exist and Heaven and Hell are locked in an eternal war. By episode's end, their allies Castiel (Misha Collins) and Crowley (Mark Sheppard) were dead, and their mother, Mary (Samantha Smith), who was resurrected-by God's sister!-in the season 11 finale, found herself trapped in this new reality with the Archangel Lucifer (Mark Pellegrino). If that doesn't seem bad enough, the birth of Lucifer's son is the very thing that opened the rift to this apocalyptic realm. "The world in which Sam and Dean were never born is not a good world," showrunner Andrew Dabb says. "It speaks to the importance of our guys. The world Sam and Dean live in is certainly not perfect, but it's a whole hell of a lot better than the alternative."
Dabb describes the new run of episodes as more melancholy than last year's, with new threats including some long-dead characters. And somehow Scooby-Doo has a role to play. (More on that later.)
"Last season was, in some ways, a very upbeat season for us," says Dabb, who goes on to explain that season 13 will be "darker." In their grief the boys will butt heads when it comes to both Lucifer's son JackâDean wants nothing to do with him; Sam thinks he's worth trying to saveâ and Mary, whom Sam refuses to give up on despite Dean's having lost hope that she's still alive. "The Apocalypse world hangs over our guys a little bit like a sword of Damocles," Dabb says of the season's beginning. "We're definitely going to spend a little time there."
And of course Sam and Dean have this new responsibility thrust upon them before they've had the chance to properly grieve their many losses, including Castiel, who Dabb says will appear, though maybe not the way fans are expecting. "We're not looking to hit the reset button," Dabb says. "We want to give both our guys an opportunity to react to that and ask the question: How would that affect them if their closest friend sacrifices himself for them? There is a certain amount, especially when you look at Dean, of survivor's guilt."
That being said, there will be at least one (animated!) moment of levity, though it's in the season's back half. Episode 16 will be a much-anticipated Scooby-Doo crossover, for which Ackles, Padalecki and Collins have already recorded the audio. "They've often talked about Supernatural crossing over into something." Ackles says. "I love that it's Scooby-Doo."
But even with exciting new ideas on the agenda, there's always the lingering question of how much longer the show can continue. According to CW president Mark Pedowitz, the answer is as long as the guys are happy and the ratings are relatively stable. As for Ackles and Padalecki, they are focusing on the next milestone: hitting 300 episodes (something that would take them 13 episodes into season 14). However, if Sam and Dean have taught the actors anything, it's that Death can be lurking around every corner (and he's usually eating pizza). "If we don't make it to 300, I think Ackles and I will both be truly bummed," Padalecki, 35, says.
Ackles adds, "They're paying us to bring that little bit of magic to what they wrote, and I still feel that magic. The day that I don't feel that magic will be a very sad day, and I hope that day never comes. I'd like to get to 300 before that day comes."
One thing everyone can agree on is that they want to know when the end is nigh. "I think it would be bad for this show to just ride off into the sunset without a finale," Singer says. "I think we've earned that." Ultimately the only thing that's certain about Supernatural's eventual end is the fate of Sam and Dean's Impala, Baby. "He gets Baby," Padalecki says of Ackles. "I get Baby Two." Ackles makes one correction: "No, you'll get Three. Two is a stunt car. It's beat to s---.â
But nobody gets Baby just yet. For now they'll need all the Impalas they can get as they try to solve the problems of not one world but two.
[pg 10-12]
LIFE IN THE FAST LANE
Stars Jensen Ackles, Jared Padalecki and Misha Collins have rolled with rapid changes and some surprising detours during the series' remarkable run. BY SAMANTHA HIGHFILL
JARED PADALECKI CAN STILL REMEMBER THE exact pitch for Supernatural's first season: âRoute 66 meets X-Files, brothers on the back roads of America hunting things that go bump in the night.â That was how he and costar Jensen Ackles were told to promote the show, which, in its first year, was just that-Sam and Dean Winchester chasing urban legends from state to state.
But over time that original pitch added a few sentences. Much like with any good road trip, there have been quite a few turnsâand the occasional crossroads along the way. Although the show remains about two brothers on the back roads of America hunting things, those "things'' now include everything from vengeful spirits to imaginary friends and even Lucifer himself. After all, a show doesn't last 13 seasons without adjusting its game plan. For Supernatural that has meant an ever expanding mythology, some shocking deaths, resurrected characters, breaking the fourth wall and so much more.
Yet all the while, one thing has remained true: Sam and Dean Winchester will do whatever it takes to save the world and, even more so, to save each other. And they'll do it while navigating those seemingly endless back roads in their 1967 Impala.
Finding John Winchester (portrayed by Jeffrey Dean Morgan) was the boys' goal in season 1, though that ended up being about as difficult as getting John to stick around once he was finally discovered. The Winchester family reunion was short-lived: Season 1 closed with a car crash and the fates of all three men up in the air. And then there was that demonic deal John made with the same monster they had been hunting.
JENSEN ACKLES Everything up until that point was about finding Dad. We found Dad, we continued to fight as a unit, and then we lost Dad, and now we were two orphans.
JARED PADALECKI And I think that was the first time we ever brought back somebody from the dead, and it was you [to Ackles].
ACKLES I died in the car crash, and he traded his life with Azazel.
PADALECKI I think that was the first time we ever saw a major character die and come back. And that was a total leap of faith. So we told the story of Reapers and the veil and what happens to your soul.
ACKLES That's when we got into afterlife.
PADALECKI That was a big title shift in what Supernatural could do...
ACKLES With the introduction of Hell and making deals with demonsâwhich is funny, because you think about that now, and [creator] Eric [Kripke] must've always known because Mom made the deal with the yellow-eyed demon.
The next shift would come later in season 2, laying the groundwork for the introduction of angels far before Castiel spread his wings in that abandoned barn in season 4.
PADALECKI "Houses of the Holyâ was the first time we ever talked about angels on Supernatural. [Jensen] and I both were like, âWhatever your religious beliefs, whatever ours, we're not here to proselytize. We're here to make a serialized television show, but we want it to be universal.â So we actually had a conference call with Eric Kripke, and we were like, "Hey, man, we don't know how we feel about this.â
ACKLES We didn't want to be a mouthpiece for writers' religious views, because it wasn't the show that we had signed up for. Our argument was: âWe trust you. You've done good by us so far. However, this is our one concern, and we're just bringing it to the table so that we can discuss it.â
PADALECKI And they heard us out, and I think that's why they waited another year and a half before introducing our second and most famous angel. I think it's the one time we've ever called them together with a complaint. Because I'm not a writer. I don't want to be a writer. I enjoy my job as an actor. But that was legitimately like, âListen, if you're going here about religion, I don't want to be a part of it.â
MISHA COLLINS And now amazingly, 11 years later, so much of the show has been hung on biblical lore and mythology that is actually drawn from the Bible. One interesting thing for us is that we end up talking along the way to priests and pastors and ministers, or even nuns, who love the show.
(...)
ACKLES It was amazing, but my point being that we're in one of the most religious places on earth, and they're catering to people from a show that deals with religiously inspired story lines.
PADALECKI But not telling the story that the Bible tells.
ACKLES That's the out. That's where we get a pass is that we're not trying to tell the story of the Bible. The writers take inspiration from biblical elements and then elaborate on them. So when we got into that original discussion, Eric came back with: âWe're not here to tell the story of Jesus Christ. We're here to take that element and use it as inspiration for the story.â I think that alleviated any concerns that he and I had. And at the same time we really trusted Eric and still do to this day.
Another leap of faith came with season 2's "Hollywood Babylon,â which can be considered the show's first meta episode. It opened the door for everything from season 6's âThe French Mistakeâ to the upcoming season 13 Scooby-Doo crossover.
ACKLES âBabylonâ was the first time we took the piss out of ourselves and were poking fun at the industry.
COLLINS That has been a huge [help to know] that you can go to these absurd lengths and break conventions. Reading the script where we are doing a Scooby-Doo episode makes me feel proud. Where else can you do that?
Padalecki What other show does that and has the fandom at large excited that theyâre going to do that? Can you imagine if JAG or NCIS did a Scooby-Doo episode? People would be like, âWhat?â Not only do we break the fourth wall, do we go meta, but those end up being some of our best episodes.
The season 5 finale holds the No. 1 spot on EW's episode ranking, but that hour was important for many reasons, one of which being that it was creator Kripkeâs farewell.
COLLINS âSwan Song" was another milestone because that marked the culmination of Eric's original vision for the show. He had a five-season arc in mind that tied up perfectly with a bow, and then he moved on and handed the reins over to Sera [Gamble]. That became, âOkay, guys, now let's figure out how to start a new chapter or a new volume in a series of chapters.â
PADALECKI It's the story that we were all born from, those of us who were introduced in the first five years. So to have the creator step away? I would argue that it was the largest shift.
Gamble served as showrunner for seasons 6 and 7, the latter containing another major show moment: the death of Bobby (Jim Beaver), Sam and Dean's father figure.
PADALECKI Bobby was such a big part. Jeffrey Dean [Morgan] was never as much a part of the show. He was obviously a huge part of the story, but he did [just a few] episodes, and Jim Beaver did 60 or something. And there was something about his death that we knew it was final...or final for Supernatural.
ACKLES Because his character said, âI'm done.â So it wasn't like he got killed accidentally and we found a way to bring Bobby back. He was like, âI'm hanging it up, guys." It was heavy.
PADALECKI That probably was the first big death of someone who'd been there for years...
ACKLES [Interrupting] A fan favorite...
PADALECKI Yeah, and I remember [CW president] Mark Pedowitz saying something to the effect of âAs a fan, I hated when Bobby died, but it was great television.â That's how I feel.Â
ACKLES Like when Sam Winchester dies for good, it's going to be good television. But when Dean Winchester lives on, it's going to be great television. [Everyone laughs]
The season 12 finale saw the introduction of an apocalyptic alternate world in which Sam and Dean Winchester were never born and Heaven and Hell are locked in an eternal war. And with that world comes the possibility for a number of character returns. But does it feel like a turning point?Â
COLLINS Well, I think the rift and the fact that you can go into the apocalypse world and you can all of a sudden revisit every character in a different iterationâthere could be a different version of every characterâit opens up this incredible panoply.
(...)
PADALECKI And if an alternate universe exists, then how many alternate universes exist? It's hard to say, because I feel like it's impossible to identify a turning point during the turn. In hindsight it will reveal how this story will affect the show, the canon at large and the way we move forward. But I certainly feel like we're opening up doors with the rift and with the son of Lucifer.
(...)
[pg 20-26]
THE CORONER'S VAN JUST PULLED INTO THE driveway. It's the middle of August in 2016, and Jared Padalecki and Jensen Ackles are filming a scene for Supernatural's 12th season at a farmhouse in the Vancouver countryside, which is standing in for Iowa. Sam and Dean Winchester have ditched their flannels and jeans for sweaters and slacks in order to pose as social workers. They're doing what the two brothers do best: lying about their jobs in order to solve mysteries and kill monstersâin other words, saving people, hunting things.
When Supernatural premiered, Sam and Dean Winchester were born into the family business of hunting creatures, and it's a lifestyle that, over the years, has left them with very few people they love. Turns out, when you spend your days battling shape-shifters, witches and the occasional angelâthey're not all nice, you knowânothing is guaranteed, especially not tomorrow.
But no matter how crazy the Winchesters' world getsâor how many worlds they have to faceâone thing remains unchanged: At the center of it all are Ackles and Padalecki, whose Dean and Sam are the beating heart of the show (whether theirs are beating or not).
(...)
(...) even pulling up their favorite scenes on their phones to watch at the table. Padalecki can easily name the scripts that made him cryââHeart,â âSacrifice" and "Baby" all land on the list. The common thread is a heartfelt moment between the brothers where they get to talk about their crazy life as if, say, having visions of Lucifer is normal. âI feel like those situations where we treat the abstract and the fantastical as just part of life is where the show thrives,â Padalecki says. Ackles adds, âI think the show is truly at its best when it doesn't take itself too seriously, then it does take itself seriously, and it gets scary as s---,â.
But whether Supernatural is making fun of itself, scaring the living daylights out of its fans, or just letting the brothers have a moment on the hood of the Impala, it all works because of our central heroes. âIt's about the Winchesters," says Crowley actor Mark Sheppard. âWe really do care, and it's a testament to the boys that we still care."
(...)
As the sun sets on the Vancouver countryside, Sam and Dean ditch their slacks for jeans and send the coroner's van on its way. It won't be neededâthis show, and the brotherly bond that holds it all together, has a lot of life left in it. Not that death has ever stopped it before.
[pg 32-34]
(...)
DEAN WINCHESTER Jensen Ackles
He was always the good son. Dean embraced the hunter's lifestyle, and he idolized his father despite John's many faults. But with the senior Winchester devoted to tracking down demons, it fell to Dean to help parent Sam, and he went to great lengths to protect his younger sibling-at one point even making a deal with a Crossroads demon (at the cost of his own life) to resurrect Sam from the dead. The two have had their differences, but throughout, Dean's brother was his first priority. "Watching out for you, it's kinda been my job, you know? But more than that, it's kinda who I am." Cynical and initially skeptical of the existence of God, Dean has nonetheless managed to become best buds with the angel Castiel (and on first name terms with both God and God's sister Amara). His self-sacrificing nature means he would do literally anything for those he considers family-and that's a short list: Sam, Mary and Castiel.
[pg 38]
Sympathy for the Devil
EVERY HERO NEEDS A HELL, BUT SUPERNATURAL HAS JUST TWO PROTAGONISTS AND HUNDREDS OF VILLAINS. HEREâS HOW THE SHOWRUNNERS APPROACHED SAM AND DEANâS MANY FOES, FROM WELL-KNOWN URBAN LEGENDS TO SATAN HIMSELF. By Samantha Highfill
[pg 51]
Stairway to Heaven
SAM AND DEAN MET CASTIEL. AN ANGEL OF THE LORD, IN SEASON 4, AND IT CHANGED THE COURSE OF THE SHOW. BECAUSE ANGELS WERENâT ALWAYS THE PLANâ AND CASTIEL WAS ONLY THE FIRST. By Samantha Highfill
(on page 57 thereâs a small box of print on the corner that says: In what executive producer Robert Singer calls one of the seriesâ most âiconic images,â Castiel (Misha Collins) is introduced as the showâs first real angel.)
WHILE OTHER CHILDREN WERE LEARNING multiplication tables, Sam and Dean Winchester were hunting monsters. âWhen I told Dad I was scared of the thing in my closet, he gave me a .45!â says Sam to Dean in the Supernatural pilot, recalling an episode when he was 9 years old. Clearly creature encounters were par for the course in the Winchester way of life. And when you grow up battling all the evil in the world, it's hard to believe in the good. But in the show's season 4 premiere, Dean would come face-to-face with the one supernatural entity he didn't think existed: angels.
â[Show creator] Eric [Kripke] wasn't in love with the idea of doing angels,â executive producer Robert Singer says of the early days. âBut as things went on and we were getting into demons, I would say to him, 'I don't know how we do demons without doing angels.ââ
The show tested the waters in season 2's âHouses of the Holy,â when Sam and Dean worked a case that appeared to involve angels then went in a different direction. It wasn't until late in the next season that the seraphim were finally embraced. When Dean was dragged to Hell, they needed to get him out. And if there's a Hell, it stands to reason there has to be a Heaven. "[The season 3 finale] was the gateway into this whole other world of angels and demons," executive producer Andrew Dabb says.
When it came time to spring Dean from Hell, it was Castiel, the show's first angel, who gripped him tight and raised him from perdition. But Castiel quickly established that he wasn't a typical cherubic angel. Many of the show's angels were, as Sam and Dean would put it, real dicks. âWe have our own brand of angels and the idea that they were these warriors of God,â Singer says. âWe introduced Castiel, and we just went from there. Heaven opened up different levels of angels.â
The moment Castiel spread his wings, the show expanded its universe. Castiel came bearing news of something much bigger: the Apocalypse, the ultimate showdown between good and evil-or more specifically between Archangels Michael and Lucifer. âWe started with archangels and the idea that Lucifer was an archangel and was cast out of Heaven,â Singer says. âWe certainly took some license, but it was all biblically grounded. We just took those things and went a step further to make them work for our story.â
From there the show explored all kinds of angels, from Zachariah and Naomi to Gabriel and Metatron, and, of course, it eventually arrived at God-or Chuck, if you prefer. âWe didn't really know that Chuck was God when we first started with him," Singer says of introducing the character in season 4. (He wouldn't be revealed as God until season 11.) âThat evolved. We wanted a relatable God, a God with foibles.â
Nine seasons later, what started as one angel in a trench coat has evolved into Lucifer, God, Leviathan and even a sister for God. âWe play a little fast and loose with religion, but no one has really complained about it,â Singer says with a laugh. âSo we'll just keep going.â
[pg 56-58]
CASTIEL Misha Collins
What can you say about the only member of Team Free Will who wears an overcoat? Cas has become a true member of the Winchester family.
[pg 61]
âTorCon Meet and Greet Jensen recapâ by Fangasm
(...) Lynn: In the scene where Dean is trying to convince Sam not to go with Death, and says that memorable line, âThere ainât no me if there ainât no you,â alot of us werenât sure if that was actually Dean â if Ezekiel sent Dean in to convince Sam and then switched places with him to possess Sam â or if that was Ezekiel looking like Dean. When you were doing that scene, how were you playing it?
Jensen: I was playing it as Ezekiel.
Lynn: (gasping rather dramatically) Noooooo, thatâs not the answer I want!
Jensen: (probably rolling his eyes a little at Lynn. Which is totally understandable) Sorry!
He went on to explain that Ezekiel was, however, expressing Deanâs genuine feelings about Sam, but putting it in words that Dean himself probably would never say out loud.
Lynn: *looks less traumatized*
In other words, the line was the truth, but we all know that Deanâs not very good at putting his feelings out there, which even Lynn had to admit was true. Jensen said similar things have happened in other scenes between Dean and Cas and between Dean and Sam. [ETA again, omg this is exhausting â another person who was there posted a clarification of what was said â thanks!]. Jensen said something about the scene with Cas beating Dean up, there was consideration of Dean saying âI love you,â but it didnât seem like something Dean would actually come out and say, so it was changed to âWeâre familyâ (My interpretation is that in both cases, he was talking about familial love, hence the change to âweâre familyâ. I also thought that might explain how certain priceless S8 gag reel scenes happenedâŠ) There have been times when theyâve considered the same for Sam and Dean, but the brothers just arenât guys who are able to express their feelings openly. Jensen did leave Lynn with a bit of hope though.
Jensen: They should save that for the finale, then the brothers can finally say how they feel. (...)
[source]
Fangasm âSupernatural Pilot: A Look Back At How This All Started Post Series Finaleâ
(...) Jared said in a meet and greet that this was Samâs happiest moment in a way because it was what started him on the path that became so fulfilling for him, as he got back on the road with his brother. Having heard Deanâs confession of how terrified he was that Sam would turn him away, Sam showed up in clothes that evoked that moment, at the time when Dean would never have to worry about being without his brother again. Damn it, more tissues⊠(...) (...)When the finale script was read by the actors, Jensen Ackles wasnât sure he could get his head around Sam and Dean dying, so he spoke to the person who he knew he could trust to give him a read on whether it really was a good ending â the man who created the characters and the show, Eric Kripke. After talking with Eric, he got it â and came to wholeheartedly support the ending. (In fact, both Jared and Jensen have said that they count the finale as a favorite episode, perhaps the favorite). Shortly after Jensenâs chat with him, I had a chance to chat with Eric and I asked him what heâd said to make Jensen feel so much better. He didnât spoil the ending, but he did remind me that Sam and Dean deserved âpeace when they are doneâ. And the only way they could find peace is if it was no longer their mantra that âwe got work to doâ. As long as there were things to fight, the Winchesters would have work to do. Their peace, in other words, had to be on another plane of existence, one where there are no monsters. Thatâs what Sam and Dean found at the very end of Supernatural, in Heaven. And thatâs beautifully full circle. (...) In their chapters in Thereâll Be Peace When You Are Done, both Jared and Jensen talked about how important Sam and Dean are to them, and how even the end of the show wonât change that. Pretty sure alot of us can say the same. (...)
[source]
Green Pages âMint Conditionâ Season 14 Episode 4
Written by: Davy Perez Directed by: Amyn Kaderali
Context: Later in November of 2018 a rumor was made that Perez was shading wincest shippers when Dean said, âThatâs weird,â in response to the Bert and Ernieâs duo costume idea Dean had just offered seconds ago. But here in the scriptâs green pages it seems to imply that it was Jared and Jensen who made the changes that ended up on air, not Perez.
"Mint Condition" Green Pages 8/14/18 41.
35 CONTINUED: (4) 35
DEAN That's why you hate Halloween?
Sam nods-- yeah-- Dean takes a beat, then...
DEAN I get it.
Sam smiles-- a nice brotherly moment.
DEAN But you gotta move on man, so next year, we do it right. I'm thinking, matching costumes-- Batman and Robin.
SAM No.
DEAN Rocky and Bullwinkle?
SAM No.
A36 EXT. ROAD - NIGHT A36
As the Impala continues down the road--
DEAN (O.S.) Sonny and Cher?
And any more the guys want to throw out. As they drive away, We FADE TO--
36 INT. WESTIN HILLS HOSPITAL - MORGUE - NIGHT 36
[source]

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The New York Times- âHeaven, Hell, Brothers and an Impalaâ
(...)
(...) Broadly speaking, it revolves around two brothers, Sam (Jared Padalecki) and Dean (Jensen Ackles) Winchester, who lose their mother early in life when a bizarre air current sucks her body up to the ceiling of the family house one night, leaving a bloody, ravaged corpse.
Apparently a faulty HVAC system is not the culprit. Occult forces are at work in Winchester world, and eventually the family patriarch is killed off as well. All of this positions Sam and Dean for a career in hunting down demons, vampires, reckless angels, Lucifer and his various associates.
A predictably messy business, the pursuit of evildoers in both the scriptural and âTwilightâ sense requires the brothers to compromise, negotiate and forge unholy alliances. Various acts of soul trading transpire as the show mocks the idea that anyone could ever even aspire to living a life of complete moral purity. On âSupernaturalâ decent people tend to travel in and out of hell as if it were an Extended Stay America. A trench-coated angel is aloof and dresses as if he were modeling himself after Columbo.Â
(...) During the seriesâs first three seasons Dean, who speaks as if he were trying for chief-executive authority by forcing his voice down a few octaves, had been an atheist. (Letâs leave aside the fact that there are far easier avenues of employment for nonbelievers than combating Satan.) But saved by a surly angel during a bout of spiritual ugliness in the fourth season, Dean reconsiders his thinking.
(...)
âSupernaturalâ was only supposed to last five seasons, but it did so well, its life was extended to chronicle the world after the Winchesters saved it, a feat accomplished in part with the help of a 1967 Chevy Impala. (Add to the list of the showâs subtexts a pro-Detroit theme. After all, it was no Honda that kept the world intact.)
So âSupernaturalâ is about heaven, hell, faith, revenge  and the automotive industry. But at its most basic it is about sibling devotion: no pair of brothers or sisters on television is more closely bound, not even the siblings on âBrothers and Sisters.â Proving their intimacy each week the Winchesters argue as if they were a married couple and seem conceived to correct for the existence of so many only children who must fight their battles solo in fairy tales and other fiction for the young. Single children should watch at their own peril.
In a sense all the brothers have is each other, and in that way the series embodies another defining characteristic of its network: the portrayal of families who configure in unusual patterns, among, say, in the form of friends, vampires, cheerleading squads, children long lost to their mothers, and fathers who reconnect. Again and again CW tells its viewers that parents  who are so often depicted as absent or dead or distracted  arenât everything. Perhaps in the end itâs that simple message that has made âSupernaturalâ such a hit.
[source]
TVLine: âMatt's Inside Line: Scoop on Titans, Virgin River, Supernatural, S.W.A.T., Chicago Fire, Dark Shadows and Moreâ
(...) I know you canât reveal much about the Supernatural series finale (airing Nov. 19), but can you at least tell us if Sam and Dean will have a common ending (either they both live or they both die)? I donât want my boys to be separated in the very end. â Maria
âSam and Dean started this journey together, and they are ending this journey together,â co-showrunner Andrew Dabb affirms. âDo they end it in the same place? Do they end it in the same way? Are they both on the same page when it ends? That remains to be seen in the last episode. But the show started about these two guys, and it ends about these two guys.â BONUS SCOOP!: In order to save Jack, Dean, Sam and Cas are âgoing to go to great lengths, and some huge sacrifices are going to be made along the way,â Misha Collins previews. (...)
[source]