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Breaking Bad on AMC (1 Viewer)

'Sebowski said:
Sorry if this has been covered. Don;t have time to comb through the next two pages right now.

'Flying Spaghetti Monster said:
Not a very good episode.

Didn't like the leap of faith that Jesse is taking that Gus somehow gave the kid ricin. It seems like the writers needed somehow to get Jesse and Walt back together again.
Jesse needs to think it wasn't his fault. He has to put the blame somewhere else. Walt's story made more sense than the one Jesse came up with.
'SacramentoBob said:
Gus's spider sense at the end was lame too.
I liked that scene. On the close up of Gus you can see him thinking. Walt has said Gus is constantly 10 steps ahead. On that close up you can see Gus going through those steps. He probably took at a look at the car all by itself and thought "this car has been vulnerable. I din't account for that. What are the risks of that vulnerability... Not worth it. Let's take Tyrus' car"
I think it's less about thinking his car is vulnerable and more about thinking about what Jesse said about him being poisoned, etc. I'm guessing he's going in to talk to Jesse, not going to take a different car. Just :2cents: I don't think he was ever really looking or expecting to see something on the buildings.
No doubt his conversation with Jesse nudged him towards being cautious, but the point is, better safe than sorry.
 
'SmoovySmoov said:
'Don Quixote said:
'SacramentoBob said:
'McJose said:
'Abraham said:
I don't think Gus suspected something in the car. I think he was taking a moment to gather himself before going back to the hospital to talk to Jesse.
They really made it look like he was looking for something in the distance.
You obviously mistook him walking to the edge and scanning the buildings as him looking for something and not composing himself. Understandable mistake.
Maybe he was just taking in the view of downtown Albuquerque.
California. Gorgeous!!!
Sounds like you're inferring they shoot the show in Cali. They don't. That is all Albuquerque.
 
'Sebowski said:
Sorry if this has been covered. Don;t have time to comb through the next two pages right now.

'Flying Spaghetti Monster said:
Not a very good episode.

Didn't like the leap of faith that Jesse is taking that Gus somehow gave the kid ricin. It seems like the writers needed somehow to get Jesse and Walt back together again.
Jesse needs to think it wasn't his fault. He has to put the blame somewhere else. Walt's story made more sense than the one Jesse came up with.
'SacramentoBob said:
Gus's spider sense at the end was lame too.
I liked that scene. On the close up of Gus you can see him thinking. Walt has said Gus is constantly 10 steps ahead. On that close up you can see Gus going through those steps. He probably took at a look at the car all by itself and thought "this car has been vulnerable. I din't account for that. What are the risks of that vulnerability... Not worth it. Let's take Tyrus' car"
I think it's less about thinking his car is vulnerable and more about thinking about what Jesse said about him being poisoned, etc. I'm guessing he's going in to talk to Jesse, not going to take a different car. Just :2cents: I don't think he was ever really looking or expecting to see something on the buildings.
No doubt his conversation with Jesse nudged him towards being cautious, but the point is, better safe than sorry.
What I'm saying is, it ends when he walks away from the car, but we don't know where he's going or why he's walking away. You guys are suggesting that the reason he walked away is that he suspects the car is rigged. I'm suggesting that he's walking away because he is going to talk to Jesse because, e.g., he's going to tell Jesse that Walt must have poisoned the kid because remember how he protected the child last time?The net result is that he's saved, for the time being, from Walt's bomb... but I don't think he specifically suspects a bomb. That's all.

 
Found out today that Jesse's character was supposed to be killed off at the end of season 1, but due to his chemistry (pun intended) with Walt they kept him on.

 
So are there any Mike theories at all or do you think his story is wrapped up?
I think Walt takes out Gus and Mike takes out Walt to end the series. Mike probably has standing orders to take out Walt and possibly his family if anything happens to Gus and Mike seems like the loyal type.
 
'whoknew said:
'ArcticEdge said:
I liked the episode. I thought for sure it was going to end with Gus and Walt's eyes meeting. No mention of Ted.. Hmm. Can't wait for next Sunday!!! :thumbup:
Its unclear whether Gus saw Walt, right? I'm guessing he did.
Walt had said earlier that Gus was always 12 steps ahead of them. I think he smelled a setup. You can't be in that line of work as long as he has without being able to sense a trap.Wasn't the ricin in a vial? no way the kid got poisoned by smoking the cig. Gus had his henchman lift the vial while they were in the lab.Although it wouldn't surprise me if Walt DID poison the kid to get Jesse back in the fold. That would definitely complete his turn to the dark side. Even if he did it to save his family.
 
I thought it was an excellent episode.

For those that are questioning how realistic it is that Gus would stop before going to the car because his spidey sense was tingling, two things:

One, the episode ended right after that scene. If it had happened in the beginning of the episode and no further explanation was given, that might be a semi-reasonable complaint, although I still think it's not a huge deal. But you haven't even given the writers a chance to explain it yet. Maybe next week he'll explain how something that happened set off the alarms in his head.

Two, Gus is in organized crime and just took out the entire Mexican cartel and has just threatened his former chief manufacturer with the murder of his entire family. Both of those things happened within what we assume is the last couple days. If I was in organized crime and had just done all that in the last couple days I'd probably be paranoid and would hesitate before doing just about everything, especially getting into a car. Walt isn't exactly the first person, real or fictional, to attempt murder of an organized crime figure by car bomb. It doesn't seem unreasonable to me that Gus would pause for a split second before doing anything, including getting into a car, and in that split second would realize that there was no reason Jesse couldn't have had that conversation with him over the phone. And then, after that realization, would have decided not to get into the car. Even if he thought there was only a teeny tiny chance that it was a trap, there's no real cost to him to choosing an alternate means of transportation.

Two, based on the interview Gilligan gave a while back I think I have a pretty good guess as to where this is going. I'll use spoiler tags because it's based on info other than what was shown on TV, but it's just a guess.

Gilligan said in an interview that Walt would do something this season that would be so bad that the audience would no longer be able to sympathize with him. There's only one episode left and he hasn't done anything like that yet. I think it's pretty likely that he poisoned Brock in order to frame Gus and to turn Jesse against him. It makes more sense than Gus doing the same. The speech about how Gus is always ten steps ahead of him convinced me- Walt is way too proud to admit that someone always gets the best of him, what he was actually doing there was basking in his own cleverness.
Just my 2 cents

 
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'whoknew said:
'ArcticEdge said:
I liked the episode. I thought for sure it was going to end with Gus and Walt's eyes meeting.

No mention of Ted.. Hmm.

Can't wait for next Sunday!!! :thumbup:
Its unclear whether Gus saw Walt, right? I'm guessing he did.
Walt had said earlier that Gus was always 12 steps ahead of them. I think he smelled a setup. You can't be in that line of work as long as he has without being able to sense a trap.Wasn't the ricin in a vial? no way the kid got poisoned by smoking the cig. Gus had his henchman lift the vial while they were in the lab.

Although it wouldn't surprise me if Walt DID poison the kid to get Jesse back in the fold. That would definitely complete his turn to the dark side. Even if he did it to save his family.
... aaaand it would go along with the "Walt is going to do something so awful" thing we've been talking about, without actually killing a major character off.I suspect Gus is not getting killed off this season, and that it will all come to a head next season. Remember, too, that this all happens within the period of a year... (which of course makes her weight gain that much more ridiculous ... just saying).

 
I don't see how Walt had time to poison Brock. From the time Walt first met Brock to the time we found out he was sick is like 24 hours real time. Considering Walt spent most of the day at his house waiting to die, he had a couple hours to get/make poison, find Brock and somehow get him to ingest it. Seems very unlikely. The Gus poisoning angle doesn't seem much more likely either, although it's more plausible since he had access to the cigarette and the means to get to Brock quickly.

I think Walt doing something to completely turn to the dark side happens in the season finale. It hasn't already occured.

 
I thought it was an excellent episode.

For those that are questioning how realistic it is that Gus would stop before going to the car because his spidey sense was tingling, two things:

One, the episode ended right after that scene. If it had happened in the beginning of the episode and no further explanation was given, that might be a semi-reasonable complaint, although I still think it's not a huge deal. But you haven't even given the writers a chance to explain it yet. Maybe next week he'll explain how something that happened set off the alarms in his head.

Two, Gus is in organized crime and just took out the entire Mexican cartel and has just threatened his former chief manufacturer with the murder of his entire family. Both of those things happened within what we assume is the last couple days. If I was in organized crime and had just done all that in the last couple days I'd probably be paranoid and would hesitate before doing just about everything, especially getting into a car. Walt isn't exactly the first person, real or fictional, to attempt murder of an organized crime figure by car bomb. It doesn't seem unreasonable to me that Gus would pause for a split second before doing anything, including getting into a car, and in that split second would realize that there was no reason Jesse couldn't have had that conversation with him over the phone. And then, after that realization, would have decided not to get into the car. Even if he thought there was only a teeny tiny chance that it was a trap, there's no real cost to him to choosing an alternate means of transportation.

Two, based on the interview Gilligan gave a while back I think I have a pretty good guess as to where this is going. I'll use spoiler tags because it's based on info other than what was shown on TV, but it's just a guess.

Gilligan said in an interview that Walt would do something this season that would be so bad that the audience would no longer be able to sympathize with him. There's only one episode left and he hasn't done anything like that yet. I think it's pretty likely that he poisoned Brock in order to frame Gus and to turn Jesse against him. It makes more sense than Gus doing the same. The speech about how Gus is always ten steps ahead of him convinced me- Walt is way too proud to admit that someone always gets the best of him, what he was actually doing there was basking in his own cleverness.
Just my 2 cents

:goodposting: Thought I still insist he didn't stop because of a perceived threat in the car but rather because he "figured out" something about the poisoning (how to spin it, that Walt is involved, whatever) and is going back to talk to Jesse. It's just a coincidence that he didn't get in the car, and I think the looking at the rooftops was a misdirection there.

 
Gilligan said in an interview that Walt would do something this season that would be so bad that the audience would no longer be able to sympathize with him. There's only one episode left and he hasn't done anything like that yet. I think it's pretty likely that he poisoned Brock in order to frame Gus and to turn Jesse against him. It makes more sense than Gus doing the same. The speech about how Gus is always ten steps ahead of him convinced me- Walt is way too proud to admit that someone always gets the best of him, what he was actually doing there was basking in his own cleverness.
Just my 2 cents

Everything you put in spoilers has been discussed pretty openly in thread.
 
Gilligan said in an interview that Walt would do something this season that would be so bad that the audience would no longer be able to sympathize with him. There's only one episode left and he hasn't done anything like that yet. I think it's pretty likely that he poisoned Brock in order to frame Gus and to turn Jesse against him. It makes more sense than Gus doing the same. The speech about how Gus is always ten steps ahead of him convinced me- Walt is way too proud to admit that someone always gets the best of him, what he was actually doing there was basking in his own cleverness.
Just my 2 cents
Everything you put in spoilers has been discussed pretty openly in thread.Huh. I didn't see anyone talking about the Gilligan interview and the thing about Walt as it pertains to this week's episode until the post just after mine. My spoiler policy is better safe than sorry- it's not exactly a chore to click the "show" button.
 
Gilligan said in an interview that Walt would do something this season that would be so bad that the audience would no longer be able to sympathize with him. There's only one episode left and he hasn't done anything like that yet. I think it's pretty likely that he poisoned Brock in order to frame Gus and to turn Jesse against him. It makes more sense than Gus doing the same. The speech about how Gus is always ten steps ahead of him convinced me- Walt is way too proud to admit that someone always gets the best of him, what he was actually doing there was basking in his own cleverness.
Just my 2 cents
Everything you put in spoilers has been discussed pretty openly in thread.
Huh. I didn't see anyone talking about the Gilligan interview and the thing about Walt as it pertains to this week's episode until the post just after mine. My spoiler policy is better safe than sorry- it's not exactly a chore to click the "show" button.No need to fly off the handle here.
 
I really wish Gilligan hadn't alluded to the fact that Walt would do something horrible...even though we don't know what that is yet, I wish I didn't know that yet.

 
I thought it was an excellent episode.

For those that are questioning how realistic it is that Gus would stop before going to the car because his spidey sense was tingling, two things:

One, the episode ended right after that scene. If it had happened in the beginning of the episode and no further explanation was given, that might be a semi-reasonable complaint, although I still think it's not a huge deal. But you haven't even given the writers a chance to explain it yet. Maybe next week he'll explain how something that happened set off the alarms in his head.

Two, Gus is in organized crime and just took out the entire Mexican cartel and has just threatened his former chief manufacturer with the murder of his entire family. Both of those things happened within what we assume is the last couple days. If I was in organized crime and had just done all that in the last couple days I'd probably be paranoid and would hesitate before doing just about everything, especially getting into a car. Walt isn't exactly the first person, real or fictional, to attempt murder of an organized crime figure by car bomb. It doesn't seem unreasonable to me that Gus would pause for a split second before doing anything, including getting into a car, and in that split second would realize that there was no reason Jesse couldn't have had that conversation with him over the phone. And then, after that realization, would have decided not to get into the car. Even if he thought there was only a teeny tiny chance that it was a trap, there's no real cost to him to choosing an alternate means of transportation.

Two, based on the interview Gilligan gave a while back I think I have a pretty good guess as to where this is going. I'll use spoiler tags because it's based on info other than what was shown on TV, but it's just a guess.

Gilligan said in an interview that Walt would do something this season that would be so bad that the audience would no longer be able to sympathize with him. There's only one episode left and he hasn't done anything like that yet. I think it's pretty likely that he poisoned Brock in order to frame Gus and to turn Jesse against him. It makes more sense than Gus doing the same. The speech about how Gus is always ten steps ahead of him convinced me- Walt is way too proud to admit that someone always gets the best of him, what he was actually doing there was basking in his own cleverness.
Just my 2 cents

:goodposting: Hell, Gus could be walking back into the hospital and demanding what exactly is wrong with the kid and to get the best doctor's available to fix him.

We have no idea what Gus was thinking about (could be Walt, what Jesse said, someone alive from Cartel looking to kill him, is the poison a sign, does Jesse suspect it was him who poisoned the kid, etc) or why he left the car (something is fishy, going back to Jesse, going to talk to doctors, etc.) until Gilligan explains it next episode and/or next year.

By the way, I believe the final season doesn't start until NEXT summer! :thumbdown:

 
I don't see how Walt had time to poison Brock. From the time Walt first met Brock to the time we found out he was sick is like 24 hours real time. Considering Walt spent most of the day at his house waiting to die, he had a couple hours to get/make poison, find Brock and somehow get him to ingest it. Seems very unlikely. The Gus poisoning angle doesn't seem much more likely either, although it's more plausible since he had access to the cigarette and the means to get to Brock quickly.I think Walt doing something to completely turn to the dark side happens in the season finale. It hasn't already occured.
Unless he did it previously. We already know ricin takes time to work.
 
Just listened to the Breaking Bad podcast, here are some tidbits, not real spoilers but will tag just in case

Vince Gilligan said about the Gus staring out of parking lot before car, he wasnt saying what was actually happening just what could have been going through Gus's mind.

He said that Gus is clearly the smartest guy on the show, even smarter then Walt. He said the reason Gus didnt go to the car could have been because if Gus wanted to poison Brock to have Jessie mad at Walt, why was Jessie not mad at Walt when he spoke to Gus? So he could have figured out that Jessie was playing him and not angry at Walt.
He also said that the drug sniffing dog was a real police dog and he had to alert his whole crew not to bring any pot whatsoever to the set that day just in case they were planning on.

Also a funny tidbit was that the actual dogs trainer must carry some pot with him in case the dog doesnt uncover any drugs they have some drugs placed at the end of search so as not to discourage the dog, lol

 
I don't see how Walt had time to poison Brock. From the time Walt first met Brock to the time we found out he was sick is like 24 hours real time. Considering Walt spent most of the day at his house waiting to die, he had a couple hours to get/make poison, find Brock and somehow get him to ingest it. Seems very unlikely. The Gus poisoning angle doesn't seem much more likely either, although it's more plausible since he had access to the cigarette and the means to get to Brock quickly.I think Walt doing something to completely turn to the dark side happens in the season finale. It hasn't already occured.
Unless he did it previously. We already know ricin takes time to work.
Walt finding out Jesse had been cooking w/o him is in the same time frame. It's possible he hatched this once he found out Jesse was lying about Gus, but he still has to find out about Brock and get to him. A flashback episode to Walt doing all this would be bad form IMO.
 
Does someone have a link to the piece where Gilligan talks about how Walt will do something this season that will make it impossible to still symathize with him? The one quote I was able to find is a lot more ambiguous;

“There will be a point for everyone when they finally stop sympathizing with Walter White,” Mr. Gilligan said. “It’ll occur at different times for different people. In the early going it was quite easy to see him as a good man who was trying hard to do the right thing. “But if you watch enough of these episodes, you realize eventually that Walt was a good man, but this thing he’s chosen to do is changing him. He becomes harder and harder to root for.”
 
'McJose said:
'SacramentoBob said:
'McJose said:
'Sebowski said:
Sorry if this has been covered. Don;t have time to comb through the next two pages right now.

'Flying Spaghetti Monster said:
Not a very good episode.

Didn't like the leap of faith that Jesse is taking that Gus somehow gave the kid ricin. It seems like the writers needed somehow to get Jesse and Walt back together again.
Jesse needs to think it wasn't his fault. He has to put the blame somewhere else. Walt's story made more sense than the one Jesse came up with.
'SacramentoBob said:
Gus's spider sense at the end was lame too.
I liked that scene. On the close up of Gus you can see him thinking. Walt has said Gus is constantly 10 steps ahead. On that close up you can see Gus going through those steps. He probably took at a look at the car all by itself and thought "this car has been vulnerable. I din't account for that. What are the risks of that vulnerability... Not worth it. Let's take Tyrus' car"
Yeah but why would Gus assume that the only attempt on his life would come from a car-bomb? How did he know that Walt wasn't on a roof somewhere with a rifle? Or hiding behind another car with an Uzi? It was all pretty strange.
He blew up Tuco. A bomb is a reasonable assumption. Uzi, not so much.
He did?
He set off a bomb at his HQ. :shrug:
Oh didn't realize that = "blew up".
 
Walt Heizenberger definitely did it. No doubt about it. It will be interesting to see how he did it. remember the coffin shot in crawl space?? That was the death of Walter White (who would not have hurt a child).
 
Walt Heizenberger definitely did it. No doubt about it. It will be interesting to see how he did it. remember the coffin shot in crawl space?? That was the death of Walter White (who would not have hurt a child).
:yes: Understandably, there is an unwillingness to believe Walt, the main character we still believe is still good deep down, will do anything reprehensible. But he already has. He will do whatever it takes to survive. The territory this show wants to mine is a man's descent into darkness. Maybe there will be some redemption eventually, but for now the assumption should be that he will committ evil and do whatever it takes to protect himself.

 
Another thing that caught my attention was Skylar asking the agent for an extra cigarete, saying that she could "really use one". Not sure how exactly that points back to Walt, but figure the writers put that scene in there for a reason.

 
Just listened to the Breaking Bad podcast, here are some tidbits, not real spoilers but will tag just in case

Vince Gilligan said about the Gus staring out of parking lot before car, he wasnt saying what was actually happening just what could have been going through Gus's mind.

He said that Gus is clearly the smartest guy on the show, even smarter then Walt. He said the reason Gus didnt go to the car could have been because if Gus wanted to poison Brock to have Jessie mad at Walt, why was Jessie not mad at Walt when he spoke to Gus? So he could have figured out that Jessie was playing him and not angry at Walt.
He also said that the drug sniffing dog was a real police dog and he had to alert his whole crew not to bring any pot whatsoever to the set that day just in case they were planning on.



Also a funny tidbit was that the actual dogs trainer must carry some pot with him in case the dog doesnt uncover any drugs they have some drugs placed at the end of search so as not to discourage the dog, lol

:goodposting: :lmao: do you have link to this podcast?

ETA: found it

 
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Another thing that caught my attention was Skylar asking the agent for an extra cigarete, saying that she could "really use one". Not sure how exactly that points back to Walt, but figure the writers put that scene in there for a reason.
Interesting. The explanation for this is going to be overly convoluted IMO.
 
Another thing that caught my attention was Skylar asking the agent for an extra cigarete, saying that she could "really use one". Not sure how exactly that points back to Walt, but figure the writers put that scene in there for a reason.
Interesting. The explanation for this is going to be overly convoluted IMO.
that's why I didnt even try. lol
Well.. the cigarette has been a sort of symbolic thing in this show: Walt's lung cancer (yeah, not "smoke" related but you get the point), the Ricin in the cigarette of all places, etc. Have you also noticed how Walt has been coughing more and never answered when asked about his checkup? The cancer, as represented by the cigarette, is going to come back into play soon, I believe. And didn't Walt recently smoke and say something about it not mattering anyway?How was that? Overly convoluted? :)
 
Another thing that caught my attention was Skylar asking the agent for an extra cigarete, saying that she could "really use one". Not sure how exactly that points back to Walt, but figure the writers put that scene in there for a reason.
Interesting. The explanation for this is going to be overly convoluted IMO.
that's why I didnt even try. lol
Well.. the cigarette has been a sort of symbolic thing in this show: Walt's lung cancer (yeah, not "smoke" related but you get the point), the Ricin in the cigarette of all places, etc. Have you also noticed how Walt has been coughing more and never answered when asked about his checkup? The cancer, as represented by the cigarette, is going to come back into play soon, I believe. And didn't Walt recently smoke and say something about it not mattering anyway?How was that? Overly convoluted? :)
Agreed...mentioned it a few pages back (before all the arguments about Gus being a perfectionist) that I think the cancer is def back.
 
Why was the baby crying in that scene? There must be a reason for it. Possibly the baby is a mole and was crying to alert Tyrus about their escape.

 
Another thing that caught my attention was Skylar asking the agent for an extra cigarete, saying that she could "really use one". Not sure how exactly that points back to Walt, but figure the writers put that scene in there for a reason.
Putting in spoiler because involves "scenes from next week" at the end of last week's ep:
I think Walt was asking someone how much they told and giving that person a tough time about it. Walt's voice was saying that over video of Jesse talking to someone in what looked like an interrogation room. I wonder if that clip was just trying to throw off and it's actually Skylar that Walt was talking to because she was talking to the security detail.
 
Why was the baby crying in that scene? There must be a reason for it. Possibly the baby is a mole and was crying to alert Tyrus about their escape.
The baby crying was foreshadowing the poisoning of Brock...a child in pain. Sky telling the DEA agent how to put in the car-seat was obviously and allusion to her realizing that she may have to find another man to take care of her in the future once Walt is gone. The cigarette she bums, however, was just a smoke.
 
Why was the baby crying in that scene? There must be a reason for it. Possibly the baby is a mole and was crying to alert Tyrus about their escape.
The baby crying was foreshadowing the poisoning of Brock...a child in pain. Sky telling the DEA agent how to put in the car-seat was obviously and allusion to her realizing that she may have to find another man to take care of her in the future once Walt is gone. The cigarette she bums, however, was just a smoke.
:lmao: :thumbup: :lmao:
 
Why was the baby crying in that scene? There must be a reason for it. Possibly the baby is a mole and was crying to alert Tyrus about their escape.
The baby crying was foreshadowing the poisoning of Brock...a child in pain. Sky telling the DEA agent how to put in the car-seat was obviously and allusion to her realizing that she may have to find another man to take care of her in the future once Walt is gone. The cigarette she bums, however, was just a smoke.
Lol Also when Walt Jr says he wants pancakes that is fore shadowing to him working at an Ihop once Walt is dead
 
Why was the baby crying in that scene? There must be a reason for it. Possibly the baby is a mole and was crying to alert Tyrus about their escape.
The baby crying was foreshadowing the poisoning of Brock...a child in pain. Sky telling the DEA agent how to put in the car-seat was obviously and allusion to her realizing that she may have to find another man to take care of her in the future once Walt is gone. The cigarette she bums, however, was just a smoke.
Lol Also when Walt Jr says he wants pancakes that is fore shadowing to him working at an Ihop once Walt is dead
Walt Jr working at IHOP would be rather ironic.
 
Why was the baby crying in that scene? There must be a reason for it. Possibly the baby is a mole and was crying to alert Tyrus about their escape.
The baby crying was foreshadowing the poisoning of Brock...a child in pain. Sky telling the DEA agent how to put in the car-seat was obviously and allusion to her realizing that she may have to find another man to take care of her in the future once Walt is gone. The cigarette she bums, however, was just a smoke.
Lol Also when Walt Jr says he wants pancakes that is fore shadowing to him working at an Ihop once Walt is dead
Walt Jr working at IHOP would be rather ironic.
Wow, you are right
 
Why was the baby crying in that scene? There must be a reason for it. Possibly the baby is a mole and was crying to alert Tyrus about their escape.
The baby crying was foreshadowing the poisoning of Brock...a child in pain. Sky telling the DEA agent how to put in the car-seat was obviously and allusion to her realizing that she may have to find another man to take care of her in the future once Walt is gone. The cigarette she bums, however, was just a smoke.
Lol Also when Walt Jr says he wants pancakes that is fore shadowing to him working at an Ihop once Walt is dead
I always am.Walt Jr working at IHOP would be rather ironic.
Wow, you are right
 
Why was the baby crying in that scene? There must be a reason for it. Possibly the baby is a mole and was crying to alert Tyrus about their escape.
The baby crying was foreshadowing the poisoning of Brock...a child in pain. Sky telling the DEA agent how to put in the car-seat was obviously and allusion to her realizing that she may have to find another man to take care of her in the future once Walt is gone. The cigarette she bums, however, was just a smoke.
Lol Also when Walt Jr says he wants pancakes that is fore shadowing to him working at an Ihop once Walt is dead
I always am.Walt Jr working at IHOP would be rather ironic.
Wow, you are right
:lmao:
 
Why was the baby crying in that scene? There must be a reason for it. Possibly the baby is a mole and was crying to alert Tyrus about their escape.
The baby crying was foreshadowing the poisoning of Brock...a child in pain. Sky telling the DEA agent how to put in the car-seat was obviously and allusion to her realizing that she may have to find another man to take care of her in the future once Walt is gone. The cigarette she bums, however, was just a smoke.
Lol Also when Walt Jr says he wants pancakes that is fore shadowing to him working at an Ihop once Walt is dead
Walt Jr working at IHOP would be rather ironic.
slams $20 on the tableI'M OUT!
 
Why was the baby crying in that scene? There must be a reason for it. Possibly the baby is a mole and was crying to alert Tyrus about their escape.
The baby crying was foreshadowing the poisoning of Brock...a child in pain. Sky telling the DEA agent how to put in the car-seat was obviously and allusion to her realizing that she may have to find another man to take care of her in the future once Walt is gone. The cigarette she bums, however, was just a smoke.
Lol Also when Walt Jr says he wants pancakes that is fore shadowing to him working at an Ihop once Walt is dead
Walt Jr working at IHOP would be rather ironic.
slams $20 on the tableI'M OUT!
Are you saying you masturbated to that image? Ewww.
 

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