After Sam and Dean defeat the woman and white, Dean wants to go to where the coordinates indicated with Sam, but Sam declines by saying he has to make a law school interview. Although Dean is not pleased with this, he drives Sam back to Stanford. When Sam enters his apartment, he sees that Jess, his girlfriend, is absent, so heads directly to bed after a tiring hunting trip. When Sam opens his eyes, he finds Jess pinned to the ceiling. Sam screams while flames fill the room. Dean rushes in to save his brother, but Jess sadly dies the same was as Mary Winchester. From this, Sam is given the same determination as his father to kill the thing that killed his mother and girlfriend. Sam and Dean set out to find their father and kill the thing he has been tracking down for twenty two years, which leads to several other events such as the apocalypse. As the story grows, the protagonists develop and more characters, such as Castiel, an angel, and Charlie, a girl who is like a sister to the brothers, join sides with the Winchesters.
Personally, Supernatural is my favorite television show even over Doctor Who, which is has been ongoing for fifty years. The show takes risks other productions would never dare to attempt, such as crossing into parallel worlds where the characters are seen as the actors, having a Tuesday repeated over and over for Sam where Dean dies every day, and Sam and Dean being transported into “TV Land.” Jared Padalecki, Jensen Ackles, and Misha Collins, the actors who portray Sam, Dean, and Castiel, all manage to make their characters dynamic and compelling, which is a extremely difficult task. Additionally, the fanbase of Supernatural is just as crazy as the cast for they dig deeply into the show and admire the relationships between characters with passion. Supernatural is a story with two hundred episodes, ten seasons, and two brothers that truly have dug their way into my heart.