Liebe Katharina @photoshamanism alles Liebe & Gute zu Deinem Geburtstag 🧡💛
265 notes
·
View notes
i went to the post office today
0 notes
DEAN WINCHESTER in one random episode per day ‣ 32/327
10.11 THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE HOME
422 notes
·
View notes
“Instead of helping your friends, you should have saved your energy to deal with me.”
“Would it have made a difference?”
“Probably not.”
203 notes
·
View notes
NBC Promo Pics for Episode 10.11
"THE BLACKLIST"
"THE MAN IN THE HAT"
ORIGINAL
05/07/2023 (10:00PM - 11:00PM) (Sunday) : When Red is identified as a possible hostage during a deli robbery in Philadelphia, Dembe and Ressler take action. Back in D.C., Sen. Panabaker evaluates The Task Force's dealings with Red while Siya digs deeper into her mother's past.
TV-14
54 notes
·
View notes
i see the running bias here now
when sam has no soul, he's shown as particularly sexually voracious compared to seasons 1-5, and after he gets his soul back, he's hardly ever shown engaging sexually with anyone
when cas becomes human, he gains a sex drive and sexual attraction. it's portrayed as a fundamental human experience that he didn't have access to before (see: dean trying to hook him up with a sex worker)
when charlie splits into "good" and "dark" versions of herself, her "good" half loses her sexual attraction and libido, and her "dark" half keeps it
so sexuality is in the world of supernatural an inherently evil and sinful thing (assuming angels are at least originally exempt from sin unlike humans). at the very least, it's indicative of moral bankruptcy.
it's obviously not a new or unique bias in art, but it is something i think is pretty weird to reinforce so consistently, especially when sexuality is such a large part of the show. especially with dean, though that in itself can show an interesting dichotomy between him and sam: dean is the "bad" brother and sam is the "good" brother
this expectation is subverted throughout seasons 1-5 obviously, and maybe it's notable that all three of these examples are post-kripke. makes me wonder how much of this bias is foundational to the show (such as dean's displays of sexuality being used to signify his role as a "bad boy" archetype) and how much of it was injected into it after the original conception was actualized
4 notes
·
View notes