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Flappidoo

@flappi22

25 y/o from Italy. She/her. Movies and TV shows lover. Mostly Supernatural here, but there's space for anything. J2M and Dean Winchester own my heart.

For the ones who thinks that this scene justifies Dean's horrible death (and the message it sents):

''Because that's ALL I have waiting for me''/''This is my perfect ending and it's the only one I'm gonna get''.

And that's exactly why his death is SO wrong.

This is a dialogue that took place 8 years ago when Dean was probably at his worse, in his full ''life isn't worth living''-mode.

In all these years he fought hard to feel better, to feel worthy of love and happiness, to find joy and purpose in life, and not only in sacrifice and death.

With this ending they validated years of self-loathing, trauma and suicide-instincts after all the efforts he put to overcome them.

Dean, my warrior and brave man, you deserved so much better. I'm so sorry.

In the finale, Kendall tells the story about his dad promising him the kingdom when he was 7 years old. Was that new information for you or was that moment always in your understanding of the character? Jesse gave me a bible, a timeline for Kendall, that I always had and referred to since we started. That was a memory for me that I carried around. In my mind, it happened concretely at this place called the Candy Kitchen, which is on Route 27 out in the Hamptons. Jesse let me throw that in there to crystalize the memory. But in a way, that’s where the seeds of destruction are. The child is tethered to the man. It’s a promise, and also, it’s a sentence. He doesn’t really have a chance. His father says, “One day, this will all be yours.” And that becomes his reason for being, and his only reason for being. The loss of that, finally, that we see in this episode, is an extinction-level event.

Jeremy Strong, for The Hollywood Reporter (x)