Dean shrugs; it's not especially complicated in his world either – granted, this thing with Gordon's made him question the idea that hunters are necessarily good, but if there's one thing he knows it's that monsters are still definitely bad. “I figure the ones that weren't that bad wouldn't want to be ghosts anyway, y'know? Like it'd really piss them off to know they were hurting people, so it's like... community service, I guess. Only with more grave-robbing.”
> I mean, I've never heard of someone hunting anything that used to be someone famous which is weird, you know?
… he's never really thought about that. Now she comes to mention it, though... He frowns a little, unconvinced - “I dunno, I think it'd suck, hunting someone famous. Like, salting-and-burning John Bonham'd feel like some sort of heresy, right?” Dean scratches the side of his neck thoughtfully. It's telling, probably, that he's treating this almost as some sort of exercise in theoretical hunting – it's the sort of question Dad would pose; how would you smoke this particular ghost? What about such-and-such a complication? “'sides famous people don't get buried in regular cemeteries.” He grins as an idea strikes - “Though breaking into Graceland'd be a hell of a story”
> Unless all those Elvis sightings are actually legit I guess
- and it seems she's on a similar wavelength. Again. Awesome.
He rolls his eyes, summons his best deadpan tone and expression - “Didn't you get the memo? He never died. He just went home” adding “Also, Bigfoot is real” in case there's any doubt on her part – because there's not a hunter worth their salt who doesn't know for a fact that Bigfoot's just a hoax. Leaving her with that thought he salutes again and sets about putting the buns in. Ordinarily (or as 'ordinarily' as the idea of him cooking can be, because it's not something that happens anywhere near frequently enough for there to be any real routine) he'd have just shoved them in any which-way, but given how specific her instructions are he takes a little more time setting them up.