 Okay, 200 comments, holy crap. Thank you, thank you guys for all of this. I might not be thanking you so much by the end of it, but as we have done throughout the latter half of this season, I am going to be reading off all of your guys' comments about season 19, sorry, episode 19, season 15, the end of the whole Chuck story. First off, one thing I kinda wanted to question, I don't know if we're gonna see that in the comments here, but I am kinda curious as to what happened to Amara, because first Amara was like, ah, I'm all for humans and then Chuck tricks her, but Auster Dean kind of portrayed her. So I'm kinda wondering if she's just like, oh yeah, they couldn't bring her back for the episode 19 because of Mandalorian, but we'll see. Anyways, that was my question. It was an all right episode. It kind of felt like a very contrived and very watered down version of Swan Song. I saw the ending coming from a mile away, and yeah, I don't know, it was all right, but it wasn't like, but anyways, let's read what you guys had to say. I'm going to probably be here all night talking and reading these, and then if you spelled it badly though, I'm not gonna bother reading it, so let's see how you did for your grammar. This episode was watched in terms to describe it, everything was convenient. The whole magic hand wave Lucifer is back from the empty with a reaper, and then 10 minutes later, they are both dead. It was basically like, let's get this arc over with so we can hand wave as much as possible. The book is now conveniently open. Jack is now a power vacuum, however. In the previous episodes, they said this sucking power would cause massive chain reactions and damage to the point that it can't be contained. It would need to be contained. Now he can just walk around and suck plant energy. I think I mostly lost my shit at the ending of the world came down to a fist fighting God. Then Jack is now God, and even though he was breaking apart at the seams, just in taking Adam's God-touched rib. The Winchester's are now free from Destiny, but everyone they cared about over the 15 years is dead. Shrug and ride off into the sunset. This episode was hand wave myths galore with a clip show at the end, shrugs. This episode felt rushed. Also Lucifer felt super out of character. He would never help Chuck and he would never ask Jack to. He made Jack to defy Chuck, you know, when Chuck abandoned him after season 11. Also, since when can he snap death? Remember season five when he had to bind death? Yeah, that's actually funny enough. There are a few things that happened in this episode that were very surprising. Like I thought that Lucifer was very convenient in that episode. And again, yeah, the powers all of a sudden just like, he made death and then destroyed it. I was like, what the fuck, how'd that happen? RIP, Dean's 32nd dog cared more about the dog in the episode. Best part Lucifer coming in was up. Actually, and I made a comment that that was probably my funniest part of the whole episode is that you cared more about a dog than anyone else in this episode. In my opinion, Lucifer coming back shouldn't have been a trick, it should have been stated since it would made more sense. In my opinion, they had better options discussed in the episode and should have gone as planned. Instead of spell it, then of spell, it should have been ended with Lucifer and Michael fighting God together in Sam and Dean's bodies, knowing that they would lose. But the fact that it would feel Chuck played out better in a similar way. Oh, that actually is a good idea. It's taking the elements of Swan Song, but sort of tricking it. Like that twist with the whole Jack being the power vacuum would have been much more. Because you know, when the guys were getting their crap beaten out of him, I was like, okay, here we go, where's Jack? That way Lucifer's statement in the episode, the end during the season five became circular, the circumstances changed, but this is how it always ends. Because I fully, fully believe Sam and Dean would have said yes in the circumstance, but they already did the whole Dean turning into Michael thing in season 13 so badly, so they couldn't do that again. The writers seem to enjoy bringing character in twist and then another twist than death, but this episode was very lackluster, ruining Michael's character, bringing back Lucifer again and ruining his character and probably even Adam's character. I'll admit, yeah, I was very upset that Adam, like that whole Michael thing, wow, we waited so long to see him come back and he was just a joke. It doesn't make sense that Jack could absorb God's powers if God was truly omnipotent and then absorption would be impossible. If something is infinite, it remains no matter how much you take from it. Dude, they don't think that hard. They don't think that hard in the writing room. This feels like it's been written by someone very young with no writing experience, a weird editing as well, especially in the scene where Chuck is beating them up. I have zero hype for the show finale. Supernatural has become a zombie, unaware that it's still alive. At least it will be over next week since season 12 that is definitely not been as good. That would have been better off just making the empty of the main villain for the finale and making Chuck help them. I'm still struggling with Chuck being the villain in hell. That even works. Yeah, I'll admit, I really thought the empty was gonna be the villain. Maybe they'll come up in the finale of the show because I really don't know how the last episode is gonna be. While watching this episode, I honestly couldn't tell if I really enjoyed it or hated it. I felt numb throughout the entire episode. I did like seeing Luz for one last time. I thought the episode was a little convenient sloppy. They really outdid themselves. This was possibly the biggest piece of shit yet and you're wrong to give it a three out of seven. You say it's not terrible, but it's actually worse than the sum of its parts. Oh, neither Sam Nardin beat God. They spent five minutes explaining their own writing to the audience. That was no real closure with any of the real characters or the turning characters. None of anything was earned. Was I supposed to feel something when the music played and the people returned? Maybe if they didn't have been disappearing over the course of the season, it would have held some weight to it. Unless they were relying on Corona to give it weight. I thought watching Chuck, the writers of this show slash book, beating Sam and Dean to a pulp would lead to something. But nope, nothing came of it. Sam and Dean felt like guests are cameos. There was no emotional weight. There was nothing. These fuckers are laughing all the way to the bank. I'll admit that there wasn't much emotional weight in that when they were getting the crap beaten out of them, I know they're getting out of this. Like I said, watered-down swan song. Making Chuck slash God the final villain was a terrible choice from the beginning, especially since they wrote him as a good guy after he literally helped them defeat the darkness. Yes, and trust me, I've, you're preaching to the choir, my friend. This episode felt like a compiled version of what could have happened throughout the season. I don't even have the energy to complain much anymore. That final montage only reminded me of how much the Kripke era was better. I just wish HBO would pick up Supernatural for a reboot in the future. I remember I read a fan fiction about death reaping God at a house located in an asteroid, which would used to be part of a planet. That story was a thousand times better than this and such a thought-provoking philosophical vibe. That is a pretty interesting idea. I don't know how Supernatural could have done that, though. Just saying, I would have expected more surprise from Dean when his phone rang, not because the caller idea said cast, but because everyone is dead, so why is he receiving calls? Yeah, you're right there. I thought this episode served as a pretty decent season finale. Of course, it felt rushed and predictable, but honestly, that's how the show goes sometimes. That's no excuse. The season finale was horrible, especially compared to Swan Song that put so little effort into the season. That ending could have come up in season five. I love the show, but it ran out of steam when they burned through all the pantheon of gods. Yeah, like, they had some wins. Like, again, when I get to season eight, I know that was when I was rejuvenated in the show again. I was hoping this was the finale. This episode was way better the first time I watched it when it was called Avengers Endgame. The entire idea of God being a villain never made sense to me in the first place. His character flip was okay, but out of place. All right, honestly, the most emotional character death was the dog. This episode was just completely underwhelming, and I'm pretty sure the last cut scene in the montage was from season one, episode one. Yeah, when they were closing the trunk. I just knew it would end with that. One thing I don't get what exactly Jack sucks power out of because if he's killing plants, presumably he absorbs life forces, but then how doesn't he kill every person and animal that he walks by either? Yes, exactly. I was wondering that to myself. The empty is just dropped entirely, which is a real bummer because that's one of the only beings that holds any mystique or potential for any new storylines. The ending really served it to be a peaceful and uncontrived, uncontroversial one for which, for a show, that lost momentum and the ability to provide shocking revelations years ago. I guess that's better than having an entire fan base who stuck with it for 15 years to have some sort of Game of Thrones upset for an ending. They played it safe and I don't think most of the fan base was holding their breath for much more anyways. Yeah, pretty much. That's, oh, yeah, that's pretty much dead on. This episode tried so hard to be Swan Song, but it didn't even come close. Runched and convenient. Not terrible, but man. Yeah, man's a very good way to put it. You know, I've been reading the comments and finding it pretty funny that a show about Sam and Dean hasn't had a show about Sam and Dean for a while. The comments here barely mentioned them. Majority of them are about other things. That is what went wrong with the show. It turned into the side character show and Sam and Dean were on the outside looking in. When you have two characters of chemistry like Jensen and Jared and you relegate to them to minor characters who are to lift side characters, this is what happens. The show died when these two fantastic actors were kicked to the side of their own show. It went downhill fast and became chaotic. What a shame. Dab should have never been in charge of the show again. Should never be in charge of a show again. His writing team should never write for another show. They destroyed beloved characters and storylines. Now I can actually counter one thing about you there. It's season 11 was a good way of putting them on like being witnesses to what was happening. And that's why I thought season 11 was gonna be the end cause it set it out so damn well. And, but I won't really, the other reasons why they pushed them off to the side is because literally they had nothing. They were, they had done everything so they were just side characters. But that's an issue of it going on too long. This has gotta be a truck's dream sequences. You know how trucks predictable with the storytelling. Next week, hell break loose I hope. And they will send the boys to a blaze of glory. Maybe, I don't know, I think they're done. If they do die though, I'm gonna be very surprised. Ever since season five, the characters in the show were just shown more and more disrespect in how they were written. I cared about the dog more than literally anyone and who died in the past several episodes. When you take away the value of characters' screen time and the impact of the story, you don't deserve to write them. Ooh, very, very critical there. Oh, I'm just gonna leave my, I'm gonna lean back because I don't know I'm in this for the long haul. Jack's story still feels unfinished. The main reason he went along with Billy's plan after he got his soul back was because he was desperate for Sam and Dean's forgiveness. I expected there to be some sort of scene that addressed that before he became God. Then again, why should I expect anything from this show anymore? You got it there. You are, ugh, trying to get real comfortable. Ah, there we go. Okay, so I didn't see that this was a more one and holy crap, this is a long one. So I don't know if I'll be able to read the whole comment, but I'll try my best. Hey, Jeremy and folks, there it is. Finally, the show that killed the show that I loved 10 years ago is dead. No, there is no new episode next week. It's dead. Don't know what you're talking about. Fucking glad, yeah, there is. There's a serious finale next week. First of all, why did everything in Supernatural, why did everything in Supernatural that was so dangerous in the early seasons become hilarious and unspectacular? That was the most promised apocalypse. Everybody talked about was about in season four and five. This was everything that would have happened if Michael and Lucy would have fought in Kansas. I mean, okay, last time they pulled this off season 13, they ruined it exactly like they did the first time, but that doesn't make it better. Sure, one could say, well, it doesn't count as a real fight because both of them haven't had the true vessels, but it really is an argument though. Michael would have had his vessel in Swan Song either. Is it such a big difference that Michael would have never gone to the field? He would have never been destroyed also, light balls. What really pissed me off was the Deus Ex Machina. They didn't bring Lucifer, they didn't just bring Lucifer back. They invented that Michael could turn himself before God and so much more. It's getting boring. Why exactly didn't God make a deal with a reaper that he kills and makes a new death? Shouldn't he be smart? I mean, I think about that, and I'm not that smart to be honest. I liked how Chuck beat Sam and Dean. It would have been nice if Death would have fought that like that last week. That's a real cosmic being, letting the humans get no chance, even if I have to admit that Chuck couldn't have hit them. My biggest problem is Jack. Why can't he just kill God? It's the worst Deus Ex Machina and please guys, don't say it's not because he absorbed the life of plants since two episodes now and because you have predicted it before the season, it's just because Supernatural is nearly famous for Deus Ex by now and Jack was really the only thing being that could kill God. Also, the Deus Ex is that he can kill him like this, not that he is the one who does it. However, even more problematic is Jack, the overpowered character who really only weakness was that he's really dumb. Like not IQ-wise dumb, but dumb concerning his powers and the powers of the cosmic beings generally. It was suddenly how to kill God and that the powers of God can never be back. Or did Billy told him? And when was Billy's plan from the beginning? Then why did they change their agreement after the failure of the last episode? Sorry, I can't read all of it because I got so many more. RIP Supernatural, I hope that you, some of those talented people like Jared and Jensen will start to thrive in new surroundings and I'm really hopeful to see Jensen as a soldier boy. I think he's a great actor and it would pain for me to see him as a shallow character for years now. It was terrible last ride, but one of the most wondrous rides I ever did for the first five seasons. Thank you for reading and enjoy yourself. B.S., thank you for your reviews, Jeremy. I have to admit, I didn't watch them very often but I wasn't in the mood to watch reviews about shitty episodes with no brain work in it most of the time. I would love to see more reviews from you that are about the first five seasons. They'll be coming, don't worry. Holy crap, that took up so much time. Well, yeah, it sucks. They didn't do the main intro theme. I was waiting for it all season. Oh, trust me, it's coming tomorrow or Thursday. I didn't expect you to upload this review so quickly. I honestly be, I gotta be honest, felt so lackluster at the season finale. Felt like a good overall and then there was some parts I liked like that moment where Chuck beat the shit out of Sam and Dean was really well done. It just showed a lot of bones breaking but I felt, again, no weight. Though that episode had so many twists and turns that it almost got me a headache watching this. Like Lucifer coming back from the dead for 10 minutes bringing Reaper, then killing it. So it becomes death, then Lucifer killing the Reaper but then weight turns out Lucifer is lying. Wow, what a twist. And then Michael is also lying. Oh, and now Jack is a power vacuum. And I guess it turns out that the brothers knew about all the time and they also knew Michael was lying. Also at the beginning of the episode, Jack says he feels a presence and thought it was a dog. And then they show up at the church and Jack says that the presence is coming from. Am I just being dumb or is there a piece missing? I ended up watching episode 19 and wanted to talk about it when I found this. It was actually really lame, soulless, but it doesn't feel like they ended it. Like it feels like things faded anyways. I think the main problem with this show since years is our was that creators of the show cared way too much about playing it safe. Only killing small side characters are characters that are not that much loved. It would have been a bang if they killed off one of the brothers or Castiel way earlier. Unfortunately, this is what the masses like to see and feel good ending. The show could have been one of the best and longest shows of all time for me. If the ending would have been darker, like resetting the whole universe in the last shot, it's another big bang and the brothers sacrificing them to turn back time somehow. So lives continue but without the Winchesters. Ah, maybe, I don't know. Utter rubbish just makes no sense at all. Supernatural will be the first show which major part was written by Dab, a fan fiction writer. I'm speechless. Yeah, I like it with a lot of likes on that one. The reason why the episode wasn't good is because Michael's character arc was respecting Earth and humans and realizing God might be the almighty but was not good. Personally, I would have had wrote this ending something like Sam and Dean ask, where is he going? And Michael responds, there are other creatures out there. There are more demons, different worlds. And my path will consist of me discovering what it is and what they're like, boom, spinoff show, edit. The first show season of Michael's The Archangel could have been him fixing the apocalypse universe. And if they decided to do that, but it's too fucking late now, fucking supernatural writers. Was very let down from a creative and filmmaking standpoint. The editing and the acting were odd and cringe in many places. God power, such a cringe line and delivery, LMIO. That poor dog, the only time I felt anything, I guess the clip show at the end was nice and all. And for the last episode, Jeremy two hours, one's a retrospective and the other's an epilogue. Not how the series ends in my book. Feels like the last minute, plus let's give ourselves a pat on the back. We did it. I feel like it's unnecessary and wanna skip. I'm not gonna be watching the retrospective, to be honest. I don't have the time, but I will watch the epilogue if it's a story thing. Even in the almost last episode of the show, they still managed to have some signature cliches like hey and stab in the back, aka back stabbing twice. Supposed to be the big fight, but cheap Lucifer versus Michael. Lucifer is back baby and now he's gone again. Michael was back baby, but now he's gone again. Beating the crap out of the Winchester's and healed no harm done. So now we can stay together now. No reckoning snaps. Somebody should make an honest trailer of this show. Yeah, anyways, I like the scene where Lucifer made the new death, good performance, interesting concept that went nowhere. Actually that would be funny to see in honest trailers. No, I'm not doing it. No, no. The episode did feel weird and too easy. Like a toddler wrote it. Chuck's writing is juvenile, but it's not that juvenile. I think the writer just let his two year old write the ending. It felt like Chuck has wrote it, but they didn't have the time to explore the concept anymore. I think COVID epidemic may have had a factor on this, or I wanted to believe it in this case. That's why the show owners rushed it. I read that the series finale next week will have some familiar faces, but due to COVID they couldn't have travels. Yeah, COVID only affected one day of filming this episode because that was all they had left and they shut down. And the only thing that COVID affects is background and amount of people. That's it. Like the hand on hand contact, the actors get tested and all that stuff. So yeah, no. Maybe book and limiting's most coherent script. Yeah, like a lot of really crammed in things, but it wasn't like rushed. I was rushed, but it was, you know, you could understand what was happening. Somehow someone please enlighten me and tell me I'm wrong. This was the end of the show. And now the next week is just the actors and saying goodbye. If it is, I can't believe it ended this way. What a fuck road to nowhere. Also, why was there no career carrying on my wayward son? This is supposed to be the final season finale. I guess they're saving it for the series finale. Yep, no, I guess it'll be next week or this week. Running on empty is a great way to explain the writing. Lucy working for Chuck because reasons. Lucy able to snap the new death as big reasons. Michael beating Lucy, who literally just killed the new death without breaking a sweat for reasons. Michael working for the boys and then whiplash back to Chuck because reasons. Empty doing literally nothing because reasons. Chuck clearly breaking an arm and leg and the boys just shrug off the broken limbs and keep fighting like nothing else happened because reasons. That was what is funny that they kept on like, I swear they just reuse clips of them getting up and Chuck saying, come on guys, come on guys. Jack being the new God and just hands off as Chuck but now it's okay because reasons. Yeah, he was like, God wasn't interviewing with anything until season 11. I could go on, but really I'm just glad that they put this old dog down. Hey, sorry bro about the terrible spelling on your review for episode 18. I was drunk, however, okay, let's see what you have to say. Oh, it's not me, boom, over, just what? However this episode, I feel like it gave me a two out of seven. I really hate the idea that the writers probably knew that this was fan service once and gives to the fans. This episode really gave me a bad taste in my mouth because it's so predictable. I do like how the ending was all a lot of old footage they showed, but let's see what happens next episode because I believe Jack will mess up and the brothers will probably die and I hope the biggest plot twist is that they make that make me feel in peace with the show and that everything, make everything that has happened now is Chuck's original ending almost like he was a test all along, I guess, but I don't know, let's see what happens. And I do agree the empty being the villain would have been a great idea. Also the brothers didn't literally just game of thrones to the throne of God to the Antichrist. Yeah, they did. I know I said I liked it, but I watched it again and now I realize for years I have been in denial that this show I love so much has been declining. I guess I wanted to keep being leaving that after season five, it was still amazing, but truth after the phenomenal season one to five, it all went downhill and that hurts even to type, but it's true. Hey, you know what? It's okay to admit it, you know, we all have roasted in lads for a lot of things. They're like, yeah, it's unfortunate, but you know, whatever. We all got different things to do. We all can move on to watch a new show. Good review, I would have given it 4.5 out of seven. The church scene was great. The lighting, the tone wasn't bright and the thunder, the writers did Michael Dirty, so many people, including myself, had hopes of Michael and Adam having a spin-off show, or just no, the guys, they already said they were never gonna do a spin-off show. Thank goodness we had a fight scene between Michael and Lucifer, even the choreography was poor. Yeah, it was kind of, it wasn't any choreography, guys. It was staff. Carrying on my wayward son, there will be a piece when the season is over, but anyway, not a terrible episode. I'm gonna miss the supernatural TV show, but I'm happy it's over. 15 damn seasons, oh my God, I mean, oh my Chuck, oh please don't. Oh, ugh. After season five, it's not worth it to watch Supernatural. It's full of loopholes and dumb ideas. I feel like before season six, everything had its power known and precise. Now you never know and can never be, you can be a new God with a spell book, or the book of damn, so stupid to be honest. Spell check, what that? I enjoyed this episode, but I didn't like Michael's character development being reversed and Lucifer siding with Chuck is a bit much concerning, a long standing feud. Also, what happened to Adam exactly when Jack put everyone back since he had no vessel to come back to? Oh yeah, that's a, no one cares anymore. Yeah, that's pretty much. My main comment about this episode is how many times Chuck says guys. I think he said 50 times when he's beating them the crap out of Sam and Dean at the end of the episode and they kept getting up. Come on, guys, stay down, guys, stay down, stay down. And then when Jack takes Chuck's powers and becomes human and leaving a rod, he's like, come on, guys, come on, come on, guys, don't leave. Yeah, actually, that's true. I didn't notice that too. I thought that was a little bit odd. It was a very awkward. I have too much to say about this episode. There were maybe two or three paragraphs full about what I thought about this episode. It's only a few things. I just, I must be the only one who felt bad for Chuck at the end. I didn't like how they treated the character and I know it's been said many times that Chuck should have never been the villain. I also keep thinking Chuck's ending losing his power like that looked really familiar was exactly what they did on Avatar the Last Airbender. But at this point, I'm not shocked. I haven't watched a show, but I know my roommates do and I might have to ask them about that. I don't know how to feel. Just nothing. This episode is a good concept that could have been great if they had better execution as with better, pretty much every episode this season, they had a lot of issues. Why on earth do they still think they want to see Lucifer again? It's been 10 years of this character being dragged down and brought back and then brought back again. The last bit of engagement I ever got out of seeing him was in season 11 when he possessed Cass and Misha. I was just chewing the scenery the whole time. Yeah, I remember that. That was great. And he even made more lame in the eyes of that awful battle at the end of season 13. That wasn't very bad. But he died and you think that would be nearly a half a decade that would have been the end of it. But no, nothing really truly ever stays dead in Supernatural. I did not have any enjoyment seeing him one last time. No, I didn't either. When he was there, I was like, oh really? Wow. You spoke from my heart, buddy. Eric is a crypt key. What does even that mean? Hey, Jeremy, what are you doing for another season? Oh, are you gonna do another season review of 15 after you watch it? I'm never rewatching this season, guys. Never. No, no. Wasn't the greatest ending, but a lot the worst. Glad I got one. Nothing worse than an investment in a show and then cancel it. Thank you, Stan. Thank you, Ash versus Evil Dead. So sad I thought I got an ending in it. Yes, I can agree on that. Even if it's terrible, at least we got one. Given the episodes we've gotten in the season and all the drop-stop plotlines and stories, I would say that this was a decent ending. Although I didn't feel anything for anyone. We knew that they'd win. So why feel anything when they've gotten beaten up or when the people come back? A 10-year-old could have written this episode maybe if they were just built up better across the other episodes of the season like following Sam, Dean, and Jack sufferer by themselves for more than 20 minutes. Maybe even seeing Dean grieve at the loss of Cass and letting us see God sufferer on earth for a minute. Also, these guys are trying to kill God and now they're like, nah, we ain't murderers. So Sam and Dean outsmart Chuck. I don't know how that worked, but okay, decent episode. This was pretty much expecting the brothers defeating Chuck and driving off in the Apollo. Didn't leave me angry, disappointed. It was like, all right, sure. I just didn't want a terrible or disappointing ending while some fans feel like they was and I get it. But Andrew Dav was clearly shown that he is the best showrunner. I just kind of expected the season finale for him. So I guess in the end I liked it. It's the polar opposite of Kripke's swan song, which was tragic due to Sam having to give up the ultimate due to the ultimate sacrifice and doing the unthinkable to beat the devil. This ending is just happy, which is fine. But again, kind of expecting as well because the brothers dying and sacrificing for each other was done to death throughout the 15 seasons. Nah, man, no, I'm sorry. Sometimes you gotta end on a bad note. Sometimes you gotta end on a note that you'll just never forget. And that's what swan song was. And Dav is not been the best showrunner. He's been the worst, the literal worst one ever. I get where you're coming from though. I do understand what you mean, but sometimes feel good crap is just so sappy. I thought it was a terrible mess. I think three out of seven is too high, but to each their own, nothing really happens. Lucifer is the original turn cartoon character returns. I guess they had to milk the cow one more time. Michael does nothing, he was pointless. A new death dies in seconds, pointless. A fight that ends in seconds, pointless. Death's book on Chuck is never read, pointless. I made you look at Michael Laughable. Chuck, Jack being this flower plant killer. Him absorbing powers, ridiculously lazy. But I can, can I be really surprised, I guess not. Buckling him, episode eight was pretty good. Shame on me for thinking they'd be able to do it twice. The clip show went on for too long and I guess they had extra time to fill in, do that dull ending. I think next week I'll have some alcohol. No, we'll guess we'll see how it goes. I didn't like it either. Oh gosh, we got a big one here. Had several issues with this episode, but if I just focus on what they did with Chuck, I'd like it because it are artistic. No, no. Stavien, now to my issues. Wait 10 years for Michael and Lucifer to square off and wipe off half the planet. They didn't even knock a flower pot over. I felt like the episode was rushed in certain parts and slow in others. Like killing Lucifer was so nonchalantly the ultimate rebel. Just being on God's side and seriously then Michael portraying the boy. It was so pathetic that happened to Adam that he just come back when Jack brought everyone back or is he the black widow of the series. Like they built him up so well but he ended so pathetically and quickly it made me laugh. It was so out of character for Michael to say that what he said to Chuck in a way that before dying it could have been better if he went to heaven let Adam live and bring his mom back as promised. Even Jack Abel didn't like Michael's ending. Oh, but gave a diplomatic response and questioned and created Creation Con. I thought the angels could tell the humans were lying or not. How Michael knew Sam's not lying. Wrecked Con King Dab, that's how. Michael liked the, okay man you're going on too long and a lot of, but I get it. Five out of seven because I did like it overall. Kevin, oh man you got a spell better compared to other episodes of the season. I liked what they did with Chuck but only due to me forcing me to accept him as a villain. Although I still think it was idiotic. I prefer Raven Shore's theory to be true. I would have preferred. This episode was rushed as hell and I don't understand why they added so many filler episodes instead of extending the finale. Yes, on the sprite side, this was one of the very few episodes this season that kept my interest enough to not skip anything. However, it appears that the writers forgot Chuck kept all of his knowledge and could essentially cheat his way through life by using his overpowered spells introduced in recent seasons. Yeah, actually I was kind of wondering how the whole all knowing God didn't know what they were doing. And I was like, I wonder if they're gonna try and write around that. And they're like, nope. We'll just hope that people are done. Member when Supernatural went from the boys fighting the biblical apocalypse to the boys fighting vampires in season six to just keep up with the contemporary Twilight fad. Why did I have Hope's Ant for CW show that's essentially piggybacking on teenage online fan fiction to have any kind of substance? Do you think the show would have been different if it was on HBO or Amazon video like other, like Kripke's other show, The Boys? No, it would have not have been on there. They wouldn't have taken it. This not being the worst season finale is not a good point. No, no, no. Very much not a good point. There isn't one far better story that they haven't played rise in the story this season. Kripke is Chuck replaced by Jack who is Dab. That's how shallow and addictive this can get. So of course, me saying this is a stretch like all the fans, we want you to want a better, bigger deal even though that's there, even though it's not. But I think the writers make Chuck, AKA God into the fourth wall of writing and ending and nothing could have been representation. I don't know where you're going, but here. So the ending isn't beating Chuck but that the new God lives in all of us who have experienced the show and love the show. It's a stretch, but that's what I took from it. Please tell me if I'm wrong. I really don't know. You ever think there should be a movie? It would be cool, but they won't do one. They won't have the budget. They're done after this. I hope the series finale does better. So do I, sir. Damn, every theory that Jack would have become the new death sounds not too bad now. I expected Martin to control Chuck as well. Maybe he could have absorbed death power when Lucifer snapped her and after the internal struggle, Chuck and Amara split only to see Jack behind with a scythe or something like that. Just absorbing random, some kind of power with no structure whatsoever feels weird. But then again, they needed a new God in either way. I think the series has been biting on more than it can chew and recently resolved for a few years now. Oh buddy, most definitely has been going on for way too long. So if Chuck is omniscient and knew the plan to blow him up and Amara of, then why didn't he know about Jack being a power vacuum? And why would Jack blowing up in the empty turn him into a God power vacuum in the first place instead of killing him? Well, they had to end the story somehow. So I guess that will do. Dean is so all over the map this season. He was more than happy to use slash kill Jack because they weren't family but now they're back to being best friends. Whatever, at least I don't have to see cartoon Lucifer ever again. So are Jody and the Donna and the girl still dead and everyone else but the boys care about? Did the Jack kill off all the monsters? And he was unclear. Like I said, next episode we'll probably be addressing that. I was hoping that while God was beating Sam and Dean up, he would change his heart or some shit, realize how he was wrong and somehow reinstall his love and humanity and become good again. Somehow go through his personal character transformation, then he would bring cast back in the end. Final ending scene would be Sam, Dean, Cass and Jack talking about the Impala. Sam and Dean sing their famous line, we got work to do. And then they close the trunk and all four of them get in the Impala and drive off in the sunset then carry on my way where the sun starts playing. That would have been a better ending in my opinion. That's what I was on. Part of me wanted to see the Power Rangers slash Pokemon ending with Chuck but no, they went down the very, very predictable route. Also side note, it'll be sad to not watch your reviews for the show anymore. What's the next chapter for you once the show's next? I'm not ending guys. I'm still gonna be reviewing all the older episodes so make sure I'll be starting season four real soon. All I can say is that thank God this horrendous show is almost over. I can't tell you a sick and tired of I am of crying. The Apologies of Fig drama last week with Cass was whatever. And oops, oh, you've got a line. I don't know. I'm not gonna try and read through a line. With respect you have to remember that they actually had to rewrite the ending because of COVID. No, they didn't. They didn't have to rewrite the ending. They did not. I know this for a fact, they did not. Honestly, I think they could have ended the show here. It's the end of the Winchester's arc. So what do they do next week? I guess we'll see. Man, this is a season finale. It was so predictable. Not only did they feel like, the episodes feel like a cheap ripoff of Swansong and Endgame. Heck, the writers even ripped off other things like Avatar The Last Endbender and ended even, oh yeah, Jillian, I've been meaning to watch that. I really wouldn't recommend Neo Genesis. It's a great anime series. I've heard as much. After everything Michael and Lucifer went through in this show, they still chose Chuck. They still makes no sense, especially for Lucifer who hates Chuck. Yes, that didn't make any sense. The ending for Chuck was poetic justice and probably the only thing I liked about this episode, even though making Chuck into the final villain of the show was a stupid idea. The empty should have been the final villain. Jack became the new gun at the end, went from the man with the mental mentality of a child to what all knowing being brings all the people back and says, I'm not coming home. Don't worry, I'm everywhere and everything. See you around, cause bye. What about Cass? You know, your father figured, did you all of a sudden forget about bringing Cass back? Sam and Dean, yet again, sitting in the bunker, talking about things that were finally free. We can write our own story now. All we need, we all know you both will do the same shit over again. Go right back to hunting monsters and change nothing despite Chuck not controlling your fate anymore. Just like you said in your review, Jeremy, this isn't the worst season finale and miles better than season 12, 13 and 14 finale, but it's still bad. Supernatural should have ended with season 11. It's too easy to be critical of these seasons' episodes, but not because they don't meet our expectations of what a season finale is, but because they were serving up shit. The biggest problem I had with episode 19 was that when Jack, slash God, brought everyone back, you omitted everyone from Dean's immediate cliche click and neither one of them even bothered to make calls to see if friends or loved ones were back. Actually, yeah, they didn't seem to care. I don't know what to say, but I think I hate it. Oh, here we go. Zero out of seven for me. This is the worst episode of the entire series and probably the whole show. This is probably the biggest waste of potential ever. Michael was good, but then he portrayed the boys and just got killed. I mean, what was the point? Lucifer coming back and working with the boys just to portray them, to reveal that he was working for God after his entire motivation came from his hatred for them, for him. And then he just got killed. What was the point? Chuck being sucked dry by Jack was so anticlimactic. I mean, he was the ultimate villain of this entire series, the biggest threat that the boys had ever come across. And this is his ending. The whole Infinity War was resolved in one episode. Jack just became God, so goddamn predictable and nothing for Sam and Dean. I literally felt like nothing for them this episode. To me, this episode was the worst, all the build up and then nothing. And that's because they gave us three filler episodes. So they had to cram every little bit of story into these three episodes. I gotta say, after watching this, suddenly seasons 12 to 14 don't seem that bad anymore. Oh, no, no, no, no. They're still very bad. But yeah, no, this one was pretty pathetic. Well, I loved it. Well, good for you, Luke. Go back and watch the better episodes. Why, oh, last page, last page. I understand some may not like it, but one, how are they gonna narrowly kill God when the actors themselves are close to their beliefs? And two, how could they break our heart with a sad ending during the pandemic? They felt obligated to give us hope of this beautiful episode. One more to go. No, no, that's some sappy ass crap. I'm sorry. That's your opinion. And I apologize for what I said. But it is sappy. Like that, this show, like Swan Song was this. It was hard-hitting writing. And now we're essentially in children's story, children's television shows. Like you're essentially talking about a Paw Patrol episode. You're entitled to your opinion. And I liked it. Yeah, there we go. Better than your hair loss problem. Oh, this dude. Oh, this guy. Oh, baby. Oh, I love it. Cause I think I got it in your skin because this doesn't get under my skin anymore. Oh, you know what, yeah. I need to buzz my head, but I haven't done it. But yeah, I loved it. I was like, yes, I love it. I think you gave the episode a little too much hate. Sure, there was a lot of prediction of Jack becoming, oh my God, dude, can you re-spell? That doesn't make it bad. There are also some things that no one predicted. Chuck being alive or Amar being in harmony with Jack. I liked it that he didn't kill Chuck. I didn't like that all this happened in one episode with Lucifer, Michael, new death, and then Chuck. How did Lucifer kill, how did, oh, buddy, you need to spell better. Remember when Lucifer needed a spell to bound death? But to him, but killing him, he was too powerful. Now death is a joke. I'm overall okay with how it ended, but I'm not sure if I feel happy with it. You started off profending it, and by the end you're kind of like dissing it and ripping it apart yourself. So I'm kind of confused as to what your opinion is too. I think it was good, but not as good as it could have been that I think Michael and Lucifer could have had it better, but I think Chuck got, how do you spell, oh no, you spell Chuck, right? Got what he deserved, so it was good, but it could have been better. This guy's having the fact he's gonna miss Supernatural. Fans of the Supernatural know what they got when they tune in. You watch their shows because you want entertainment. I just grew into your view that the finale kicked ass in Supernatural standards. No, it did not. Supernatural has had much better standards than this. And I watch it because I am committed to it. I'm not getting entertainment from it. I know I'm not. And no, no, I've, if you were to go back and watch season four and then go back and re-watch this season finale, I think you'd realize that this has gone down as such a shitter. One thing I really enjoyed about this episode was how Chuck being narcissistic. Like every narcissist, they don't ever apologize for their actions, and Chuck, after all these years, after everything he did and when he became mortal, he didn't apologize. I really loved that he was, feels all powerful and almighty because he's God and when he confronts Jack, I love how desperate and terrified he is. There's something enjoyable about how Sam and Dean defy fate and had an epic form of creation versus God first in the creator's showdown. Sam and Dean always have put each other first against literally everything. And finally, they don't have to be tied down to someone calling the shots in the light. People who argue the idea and belief of God takes away free will. It's wonderful to see how selfless Jack really is throughout his development and his character. He hates lying because he's a goddamn child, dude. He's kind and merciful and you know that Amaro wished a better kinship and now she can have that. Okay, yeah. The only thing is Chuck or Jack never changed after three seasons, three seasons of development. He was never a different character. More than anything, I'm pretty sure those two who died are staying dead. I doubt the entire multiverse is restored. There's something satisfying to me personally of Chuck becoming mortal and forgotten and irrelevant to his creation. And now that his death isn't specified, I'm interested to see what Sam and Dean will be doing in the series finale. Yeah, all met. While it was pretty predictable, I do like the idea of the writer getting his comeuppance and being like, I thought that wasn't bad. So Ergo, why I gave it a three out of seven despite its predictability. Holy shit. All right, that's it. That's 45 minutes of me talking about your guys' comments. Thank you, you all for your comments. I hope you guys enjoy this video. I'm probably starting to sound like a madman by the end of it, but you know what? That's it. And now we've got one more episode left. One more. I'm very interested to see what it is because I don't know. I actually have no idea. I've been on the set with people who have worked on the finale and I've been dying to ask them that I will resist, but I'm very interested to see. Anyways guys, I hope you enjoyed this video. If you did, leave a like and if you're interested in more, subscribe. I'll see you for the final, final episode.