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Feb. 6th, 2007 10:04 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
One more thought on Dean's music...
In the pilot Sam rags on Dean for his tape collection. ("Dude, you've got to update your tape collection." "Why?" "First of all, they're tapes.") But in "Houses of the Holy," Dean is listening to his music on an LG phone. Now, Dean doesn't seem like a luddite, but he's not the most tech savvy person either (he's never heard of myspace). The fact that Sam makes a big deal of the fact that Dean hasn't succesfully made the transition to CDs makes it hard for me to believe that he hopped on the forefront of the digital music revolution.
Which begs the question -- when did Dean get an MP3 player? And when did his tape collection go digital? I can see only one answer to this: Sam got it for him, downloaded a whole bunch of music he knew his brother would like, then uploaded it to the phone. I don't see Dean being terribly conversant with iTunes, unlike Sam the college boy. It must have been a labor of love.
In the pilot Sam rags on Dean for his tape collection. ("Dude, you've got to update your tape collection." "Why?" "First of all, they're tapes.") But in "Houses of the Holy," Dean is listening to his music on an LG phone. Now, Dean doesn't seem like a luddite, but he's not the most tech savvy person either (he's never heard of myspace). The fact that Sam makes a big deal of the fact that Dean hasn't succesfully made the transition to CDs makes it hard for me to believe that he hopped on the forefront of the digital music revolution.
Which begs the question -- when did Dean get an MP3 player? And when did his tape collection go digital? I can see only one answer to this: Sam got it for him, downloaded a whole bunch of music he knew his brother would like, then uploaded it to the phone. I don't see Dean being terribly conversant with iTunes, unlike Sam the college boy. It must have been a labor of love.