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SUPERNATURAL

✧ FEAR ENDS WHERE FAITH BEGINS ✧

What is Supernatural?

Chances are you probably know of this series, even if you haven't watched it. Just as a warning for anyone wanting to watch, this page will contain spoilers. Supernatural is a CW show that ran from 2005-2020 with a total of 15 seasons and 327 episodes. The show centers around the journey of two brothers, Sam and Dean, and their unending fight against (you guessed it) the supernatural.

The show starts off with a darker and grittier style, following a very "monster of the week" style of episodes. There is an overarching plot of the boys looking for their father that sets them up for long and torturous journey.

These earlier seasons are some of my favorite. The entire story of seasons 1-5 being the best of the entire series. I love the creepier, southern gothic atmosphere of these seasons. The monsters feel far more threatening, and when demons are introduced, they feel downright dangerous.

Despite the way the show changes as it progresses, it's worth sticking around to see where the story takes the characters. I was deeply invested in Sam and Dean's stories, and it kept me around until the end.

Aside from all of this, Supernatural also became a staple fandom in the earlier days of the web, and was a prevalent part of the 2010s Tumblr experience as it was one of the "Trifecta" of SuperWhoLock (Supernatural, Doctor Who, and Sherlock). The fandom is actually considered to be the birthplace of the omegaverse genre, as well. The show even goes on to have an episode that acknowledges (and maybe pokes a bit of fun at) the existence of slash fiction within the fandom.

Supernatural and Religion

I'm a sucker for some religious themes, imagery, and guilt. The earlier seasons deal with angels and Heaven, the question of if God is real, and the concept of free will vs destiny. There is lots of imagery, especially involving Sam and his religious guilt, and Dean struggling to believe anything at all. I appreciate how the show actually paints the angels to not really be the good guys. They still want the battle between Michael and Lucifer to happen even though it will probably destroy humanity, and they actively pull strings to try and make it so.

God is missing, he hasn't been around. The angels don't even know where he is. He reveals himself in later seasons, and it becomes pretty clear he isn't exactly a good guy. By the end of the series, he truly is the bad guy. I think as someone who has been immersed in and hurt by religion, I liked seeing a show explore those themes.