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Breaking Bad on AMC (6 Viewers)

The scene with Saul saying "you don't try to win the lotto twice" brought up the issues I was feeling earlier, that Walt has an opportunity to walk away clean here and he's not taking it. I'm not sure his excuse of "Well, I owe $40,000" is enough. 40K doesn't seem like that much to have to risk everything he's risking by starting a new enterprise, buying new equipment, chemicals, buying people off (how much is this all going to cost) to take on the cartels and putting his family Back In Danger. At least, $40K doesn't seem that much when the car wash is profitable on its own (per Skyler) and he has years of healthy living ahead of him.. Hank can walk, they're probably at the tail end of those bills. Is Walt really going to go back to war over the cost of the Mustang excursion? (And how has Skyler not yet noticed the refund they were due from the dealership never materialized?)

I feel there must be something else, probably the return of the cancer, that's motivating him here. I don't buy it's just pride in his product and a desire for $40K just yet. If he really has a profitable business and many years ahead of him, I don't buy him jumping back in with both feet.
How can you not understand? He's a criminal now. It's that simple. He doesn't want to own a car wash. He wants to be a criminal. The show is "breaking bad". Previous seasons are about the journey to "bad". This season he is just bad through and through.
I don't want to drag this thread down with my personal opinion. Just quickly, thinking more about it, I think I just really bought Walt was really at a place in his life where he could walk away by taking the drastic step of calling Saul's vacuum-cleaner repair man and paying him all the money he had saved up. If Skyler hadn't given it to Ted, that's what Walt would have done. Only about a week or so has passed on the show since then, sure, there was a lot of stuff happening in that time, but Walt was ready to walk then, and got out in a different way but with the same amount of money--$0 to his name--but at least he has his name, his identity, the house, kids are safe, etc. Plus a working business. Killing Gus was big, but, Walt's killed people before. If he was really willing to call the vacuum repairman, I'm not entirely sold that $40K is big enough to him to risk his kids over. I think I want there to be something more pushing him.
I agree with this and thought the season would start with him trying to make it staright and then getting sucked back in. Then I saw a "meaningless preview" and that poster and knew it wasn't going to be the case.
 
Where Elliott offered to pay for Walt's care and Walt turned it down. He thinks that is Walt's tipping point
Heck, I think Walt never psychologically dealt with his suicide attempt. Perhaps he's thinking that since he pulled the trigger but lived, anything that happens after that is "playing with house money"... like he's thinking 'if I had it my way, I'd be a dead body in my underpants in the desert, so anything after that moment is gravy.'
 
With the DEA investigating all 12 guys, I think they'll notice Chows call to Mike pretty quickly.
Was thinking the same thing last night.Guessing burner cellphones.
Seems Mike has had the same cell phone for a while...Walt knows the number by heart (or maybe has it saved in his phone)...burner phones would have a new number for every phone, no?
Not really. You can have a google voice phone number and have phone calls forwarded to any phone you like - then all you have to do is program the new burner number.
Good call. I never thought of that.
While I am an avid Google Voice user myself for many years, yes, this is possible. It also probably defeats the point of a burner, since it would be semi-traceable.
 
All these new Breaking Bad fans are quite irksome. Complaining about spoilers and just detracting from the thread. No one on here is a producer or writer on the show so it's ok for us to speculate. That's the fun of it. However, don't read my prognostications b/c they're normally correct i.e. Gomez is a mole.
This week was the first week he's had a goatee right? Only bad guys wear goatees. He's definitely a baddie.
 
The scene with Saul saying "you don't try to win the lotto twice" brought up the issues I was feeling earlier, that Walt has an opportunity to walk away clean here and he's not taking it. I'm not sure his excuse of "Well, I owe $40,000" is enough. 40K doesn't seem like that much to have to risk everything he's risking by starting a new enterprise, buying new equipment, chemicals, buying people off (how much is this all going to cost) to take on the cartels and putting his family Back In Danger. At least, $40K doesn't seem that much when the car wash is profitable on its own (per Skyler) and he has years of healthy living ahead of him.. Hank can walk, they're probably at the tail end of those bills. Is Walt really going to go back to war over the cost of the Mustang excursion? (And how has Skyler not yet noticed the refund they were due from the dealership never materialized?)

I feel there must be something else, probably the return of the cancer, that's motivating him here. I don't buy it's just pride in his product and a desire for $40K just yet. If he really has a profitable business and many years ahead of him, I don't buy him jumping back in with both feet.
How can you not understand? He's a criminal now. It's that simple. He doesn't want to own a car wash. He wants to be a criminal. The show is "breaking bad". Previous seasons are about the journey to "bad". This season he is just bad through and through.
I don't want to drag this thread down with my personal opinion. Just quickly, thinking more about it, I think I just really bought Walt was really at a place in his life where he could walk away by taking the drastic step of calling Saul's vacuum-cleaner repair man and paying him all the money he had saved up. If Skyler hadn't given it to Ted, that's what Walt would have done. Only about a week or so has passed on the show since then, sure, there was a lot of stuff happening in that time, but Walt was ready to walk then, and got out in a different way but with the same amount of money--$0 to his name--but at least he has his name, his identity, the house, kids are safe, etc. Plus a working business. Killing Gus was big, but, Walt's killed people before. If he was really willing to call the vacuum repairman, I'm not entirely sold that $40K is big enough to him to risk his kids over. I think I want there to be something more pushing him.
You pointed out earlier Jesse/Flynn being Heisenberg/Walt's son. It seems perfectly reasonable to look at Walt's development as alternating between each persona. A duel between good and evil. Walt has morals, ethic boundaries, and wants to do the 'right' thing. Heisenberg is ruthless, manipulative, cunning, and wants to be the swinging **** everyone envies. In season 1 he was mostly Walt but Heisenberg would pop out when necessary. As the series has progressed, he's been Walt less and less while Heisenberg has become the dominant personality.Walt wanted to leave. He tried fleeing the city but couldn't because there wasn't enough cash. When that happened Walt 'died'. The laughter was the dying breath of Walt as Heisenberg took over for good. He doesn't go through the pretense of wanting out because he doesn't want out. Walt would try bowing out for his family. But Walt no longer exists. It's now Heisenberg. And Heisenberg has no interest/need to lie to himself. He is exactly the villain he wants to be. And he's totally okay with it.

 
With the DEA investigating all 12 guys, I think they'll notice Chows call to Mike pretty quickly.
Was thinking the same thing last night.Guessing burner cellphones.
Seems Mike has had the same cell phone for a while...Walt knows the number by heart (or maybe has it saved in his phone)...burner phones would have a new number for every phone, no?
Not really. You can have a google voice phone number and have phone calls forwarded to any phone you like - then all you have to do is program the new burner number.
Good call. I never thought of that.
While I am an avid Google Voice user myself for many years, yes, this is possible. It also probably defeats the point of a burner, since it would be semi-traceable.
How would it be semi-tracable?A person can sign up for a Google account completely anonymously using a fake name, etc. Do it from a Starbucks and the IP address won't identify you.
 
With the DEA investigating all 12 guys, I think they'll notice Chows call to Mike pretty quickly.
Was thinking the same thing last night.Guessing burner cellphones.
Seems Mike has had the same cell phone for a while...Walt knows the number by heart (or maybe has it saved in his phone)...burner phones would have a new number for every phone, no?
Not really. You can have a google voice phone number and have phone calls forwarded to any phone you like - then all you have to do is program the new burner number.
Good call. I never thought of that.
While I am an avid Google Voice user myself for many years, yes, this is possible. It also probably defeats the point of a burner, since it would be semi-traceable.
How would it be semi-tracable?A person can sign up for a Google account completely anonymously using a fake name, etc. Do it from a Starbucks and the IP address won't identify you.
Or just have a bunch of burners available.
 
I hate to say that's a flaw in the show, but I'm not sure I buy that Jesse would still be so loyal to Walt.
Why wouldn't he be? As far as Jesse knows, Walt has never betrayed him and has probably saved his life on a couple of occasions.
I know I'm in the minority on this, but I think Jesse's loyalty should be wavering a great deal at this point (even if he never finds out about the big betrayals).It was, what, a week ago, that Jesse beat Walt to a pulp and was about to kill Walt because he immediately knew it was Walt that poisoned the kid (he was manipulated, but his instinct was not to trust Walt).Walt's treatment of Jesse all though Season 4 was simply nuts. He belittled him and badgered him all season long. I think it's clear that a part of Jesse sees that Mike is right about Walt. I can't believe that he isn't getting close to the point of realizing that Walt will never respect him or give him his due. It isn't really about the betrayals. It's about Walt being an egomaniacal ##### that absolutely sucks to work with, serves no purpose anymore, and is a huge liability. I also have a feeling that Jesse didn't buy the Roomba bit.
 
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OH NOES! SPOILER!!!!!!
We asked nicely and some of you guys are intentionally being ##### about it. I'd rather watch each episode without any spoilers of any kind. So adios, #####es.
Uhm... ok. That line was in the episode. If you think that's a spoiler, what's the ####### point of even coming to the thread in the first place? Later, #####.
It's not you unless indentikit is an alias of yours:http://forums.footballguys.com/forum/index.php?showtopic=454875&view=findpost&p=14565481He replies to a post with spoiler and just plainly comments on what was in the spoiler tag. :wall: ...and people may argue that wasn't a huge OMG SPOILER. But its the tip of the iceberg and something I would have preferred not to know that
the wife of the DEA agent is on to Skyler/Walt about where the money came from to pay for Hank's hospital bills, quite possibly because Hank wants to know how they got paid.
 
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'wildbill said:
'identikit said:
OH NOES! SPOILER!!!!!!
We asked nicely and some of you guys are intentionally being ##### about it. I'd rather watch each episode without any spoilers of any kind. So adios, #####es.
It's a silly request. You may as well ask the networks not to air those. They give away nothing hence they can't be spoilers.
 
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'Jojo the circus boy said:
It's not you unless indentikit is an alias of yours:http://forums.footballguys.com/forum/index.php?showtopic=454875&view=findpost&p=14565481He replies to a post with spoiler and just plainly comments on what was in the spoiler tag. :wall: ...and people may argue that wasn't a huge OMG SPOILER. But its the tip of the iceberg and something I would have preferred not to know that

the wife of the DEA agent is on to Skyler/Walt about where the money came from to pay for Hank's hospital bills, quite possibly because Hank wants to know how they got paid.
He was replying to a post of mine, which is what I said was a quote from Mike that I thought was in the episode. Not the other thing you're talking about.
 
I did not watch the trailer for next week because I do not want to know what happens in next week's episode. Moreover, I'm sure it goes without saying that I am definitely not going to watch next week's episode. That would defeat the whole purpose of avoiding the trailer!

 
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'wildbill said:
'identikit said:
OH NOES! SPOILER!!!!!!
We asked nicely and some of you guys are intentionally being ##### about it. I'd rather watch each episode without any spoilers of any kind. So adios, #####es.
It's a silly request. You may as well ask the networks not to air those. They give away nothing hence they can't be spoilers.
Sure they do.
They show them in a new lab. We had no idea that was going to happen so fast. They show Marie demanding to know "the truth". It showed Mike confronting Walt.
All things I will now be thinking about, expecting, and waiting for during the new one next week which is why I am going back to not watching them anymore. These previews also take emphasis away on the episode that just aired. there is plenty to think and talk about that we see in an episode. No need to throw that aside and start speculating on clips for next week.

I also don't watch previews for movies if I know I am going to see it. What's the point? Everything is better when it comes at you organically. Hitchcock refused to have previews or story lines released for Physcho because he wanted the audience along for the entire ride. Its much more fun that way.

 
A couple of random thoughts since last night:

- Would Hank (or his superiors) really have been able to compel the authorities in the Cayman Islands to give up Fring's banking information? That's kind of why people hide their money in the Cayman Islands, no? Because it's safe and confidential?

- I know it's rewriting the show, and maybe I'm being naive, but when Hank dropped the bomb on Mike about Gus having $2M in his account in Mike's granddaughter's name, all he had to do was say "Wow, what a nice surprise. Gus really must have been fond of her. I had no idea."

Mike did in fact say he didn't know anything about it, but Hank could tell that the intel rocked him a bit.

 
A couple of random thoughts since last night:

- Would Hank (or his superiors) really have been able to compel the authorities in the Cayman Islands to give up Fring's banking information? That's kind of why people hide their money in the Cayman Islands, no? Because it's safe and confidential?

- I know it's rewriting the show, and maybe I'm being naive, but when Hank dropped the bomb on Mike about Gus having $2M in his account in Mike's granddaughter's name, all he had to do was say "Wow, what a nice surprise. Gus really must have been fond of her. I had no idea."

Mike did in fact say he didn't know anything about it, but Hank could tell that the intel rocked him a bit.
I thought the same exact thing.
 
- I know it's rewriting the show, and maybe I'm being naive, but when Hank dropped the bomb on Mike about Gus having $2M in his account in Mike's granddaughter's name, all he had to do was say "Wow, what a nice surprise. Gus really must have been fond of her. I had no idea."
And then the feds would no longer be suspicious, and would let her keep the money?I don't see a practical difference between that and what he actually said.
 
- I know it's rewriting the show, and maybe I'm being naive, but when Hank dropped the bomb on Mike about Gus having $2M in his account in Mike's granddaughter's name, all he had to do was say "Wow, what a nice surprise. Gus really must have been fond of her. I had no idea."
And then the feds would no longer be suspicious, and would let her keep the money?I don't see a practical difference between that and what he actually said.
No crystal, my comment had nothing to do with him being able to keep the money.I was merely speaking in terms of his denial being more plausible. Gus was known to be quite generous, after all.
 
- I know it's rewriting the show, and maybe I'm being naive, but when Hank dropped the bomb on Mike about Gus having $2M in his account in Mike's granddaughter's name, all he had to do was say "Wow, what a nice surprise. Gus really must have been fond of her. I had no idea."
And then the feds would no longer be suspicious, and would let her keep the money?I don't see a practical difference between that and what he actually said.
No crystal, my comment had nothing to do with him being able to keep the money.I was merely speaking in terms of his denial being more plausible. Gus was known to be quite generous, after all.
Mike knows the rules of interrogation. Give nothing. No specific excuses. "I don't know what you're talking about" is more effective than something that could be disproved. Don't make up stories or spin yarns or create any kind of background if it can be at all avoided. Don't say anything until you're lawyered up, then let the lawyer deliver a bunch of hypothetical non-denial denials.

 
- I know it's rewriting the show, and maybe I'm being naive, but when Hank dropped the bomb on Mike about Gus having $2M in his account in Mike's granddaughter's name, all he had to do was say "Wow, what a nice surprise. Gus really must have been fond of her. I had no idea."
And then the feds would no longer be suspicious, and would let her keep the money?I don't see a practical difference between that and what he actually said.
No crystal, my comment had nothing to do with him being able to keep the money.I was merely speaking in terms of his denial being more plausible. Gus was known to be quite generous, after all.
Mike knows the rules of interrogation. Give nothing. No specific excuses. "I don't know what you're talking about" is more effective than something that could be disproved. Don't make up stories or spin yarns or create any kind of background if it can be at all avoided. Don't say anything until you're lawyered up, then let the lawyer deliver a bunch of hypothetical non-denial denials.
I accept your explanation. Now see my Cayman Islands query.
 
- I know it's rewriting the show, and maybe I'm being naive, but when Hank dropped the bomb on Mike about Gus having $2M in his account in Mike's granddaughter's name, all he had to do was say "Wow, what a nice surprise. Gus really must have been fond of her. I had no idea."
And then the feds would no longer be suspicious, and would let her keep the money?I don't see a practical difference between that and what he actually said.
No crystal, my comment had nothing to do with him being able to keep the money.I was merely speaking in terms of his denial being more plausible. Gus was known to be quite generous, after all.
Mike knows the rules of interrogation. Give nothing. No specific excuses. "I don't know what you're talking about" is more effective than something that could be disproved. Don't make up stories or spin yarns or create any kind of background if it can be at all avoided. Don't say anything until you're lawyered up, then let the lawyer deliver a bunch of hypothetical non-denial denials.
I accept your explanation. Now see my Cayman Islands query.
I have no idea. Is there some way for the DEA to track US deposits originating from a specific Cayman account, even if the Cayman banks don't cooperate?

 
- I know it's rewriting the show, and maybe I'm being naive, but when Hank dropped the bomb on Mike about Gus having $2M in his account in Mike's granddaughter's name, all he had to do was say "Wow, what a nice surprise. Gus really must have been fond of her. I had no idea."
And then the feds would no longer be suspicious, and would let her keep the money?I don't see a practical difference between that and what he actually said.
No crystal, my comment had nothing to do with him being able to keep the money.I was merely speaking in terms of his denial being more plausible. Gus was known to be quite generous, after all.
Mike knows the rules of interrogation. Give nothing. No specific excuses. "I don't know what you're talking about" is more effective than something that could be disproved. Don't make up stories or spin yarns or create any kind of background if it can be at all avoided. Don't say anything until you're lawyered up, then let the lawyer deliver a bunch of hypothetical non-denial denials.
I accept your explanation. Now see my Cayman Islands query.
I have no idea. Is there some way for the DEA to track US deposits originating from a specific Cayman account, even if the Cayman banks don't cooperate?
I think that once he is dead and a suspected criminal, some if not all of the protections fade away
 
- I know it's rewriting the show, and maybe I'm being naive, but when Hank dropped the bomb on Mike about Gus having $2M in his account in Mike's granddaughter's name, all he had to do was say "Wow, what a nice surprise. Gus really must have been fond of her. I had no idea."
And then the feds would no longer be suspicious, and would let her keep the money?I don't see a practical difference between that and what he actually said.
No crystal, my comment had nothing to do with him being able to keep the money.I was merely speaking in terms of his denial being more plausible. Gus was known to be quite generous, after all.
Mike knows the rules of interrogation. Give nothing. No specific excuses. "I don't know what you're talking about" is more effective than something that could be disproved. Don't make up stories or spin yarns or create any kind of background if it can be at all avoided. Don't say anything until you're lawyered up, then let the lawyer deliver a bunch of hypothetical non-denial denials.
I accept your explanation. Now see my Cayman Islands query.
I have no idea. Is there some way for the DEA to track US deposits originating from a specific Cayman account, even if the Cayman banks don't cooperate?
I think that once he is dead and a suspected criminal, some if not all of the protections fade away
We have no authority there:
The Cayman Islands form a British Overseas Territory with a large measure of self-government.
 
Best review ever.
Mike tells Hank and the other guy what he “did” for Los Pollos, and they give him the runaround.
:lmao:
I was fond of this line: "So. After planting the cigarette in Jesse’s apartment, he and Walt musical montage search for it, finding it only after the roomba slowly moves past them." +1 to "musical montage" as an adverb.
 
- I know it's rewriting the show, and maybe I'm being naive, but when Hank dropped the bomb on Mike about Gus having $2M in his account in Mike's granddaughter's name, all he had to do was say "Wow, what a nice surprise. Gus really must have been fond of her. I had no idea."
And then the feds would no longer be suspicious, and would let her keep the money?I don't see a practical difference between that and what he actually said.
No crystal, my comment had nothing to do with him being able to keep the money.I was merely speaking in terms of his denial being more plausible. Gus was known to be quite generous, after all.
Mike knows the rules of interrogation. Give nothing. No specific excuses. "I don't know what you're talking about" is more effective than something that could be disproved. Don't make up stories or spin yarns or create any kind of background if it can be at all avoided. Don't say anything until you're lawyered up, then let the lawyer deliver a bunch of hypothetical non-denial denials.
I accept your explanation. Now see my Cayman Islands query.
I have no idea. Is there some way for the DEA to track US deposits originating from a specific Cayman account, even if the Cayman banks don't cooperate?
I think that once he is dead and a suspected criminal, some if not all of the protections fade away
We have no authority there:
The Cayman Islands form a British Overseas Territory with a large measure of self-government.
There is no such thing as an absolute safe haven except maybe if you decide to move to North Korea. Just more hoops for the Feds to jump through.
 
So Christo, what would the DEA's first step be? Contact the C.I. self-governing body directly even though they're a British territory?

 
I wonder if we will find out that Mike was abandoned as a child, or maybe there is something with the grand daughter.

Maybe the kid is the "abandoned" child of someone he killed. Someone in Philly?

Have we seen the kids parents?

 
Back at Walt’s house, BREAKFAST. People on the internet all probably got the hugest boner when Walt Jr. didn’t eat all of his breakfast. “I CAN’T WAIT” they all probably said in unison. “For what?” you wonder. “THE INTERNET TOMORROW” they all probably said in unison again
:lmao: :lmao:
 
Best review ever.
Mike tells Hank and the other guy what he “did” for Los Pollos, and they give him the runaround.
:lmao:
I was fond of this line: "So. After planting the cigarette in Jesse’s apartment, he and Walt musical montage search for it, finding it only after the roomba slowly moves past them." +1 to "musical montage" as an adverb.
:lol:

great stuff

 
Re-watching the last episode this AM, Lydia' attempt to place a tea/water order at the diner was priceless.

I know too many people just like that.

 
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'Maurile Tremblay said:
'corpcow said:
With the DEA investigating all 12 guys, I think they'll notice Chows call to Mike pretty quickly.
Was thinking the same thing last night.Guessing burner cellphones.
Seems Mike has had the same cell phone for a while...Walt knows the number by heart (or maybe has it saved in his phone)...burner phones would have a new number for every phone, no?
Not really. You can have a google voice phone number and have phone calls forwarded to any phone you like - then all you have to do is program the new burner number.
Good call. I never thought of that.
While I am an avid Google Voice user myself for many years, yes, this is possible. It also probably defeats the point of a burner, since it would be semi-traceable.
How would it be semi-tracable?A person can sign up for a Google account completely anonymously using a fake name, etc. Do it from a Starbucks and the IP address won't identify you.
Coincidentally I've just subpoenaed Google's information regarding Google Voice and tying it to the forwarded phone number to see if I can still get a call log dump.
 
- I know it's rewriting the show, and maybe I'm being naive, but when Hank dropped the bomb on Mike about Gus having $2M in his account in Mike's granddaughter's name, all he had to do was say "Wow, what a nice surprise. Gus really must have been fond of her. I had no idea."
And then the feds would no longer be suspicious, and would let her keep the money?I don't see a practical difference between that and what he actually said.
No crystal, my comment had nothing to do with him being able to keep the money.I was merely speaking in terms of his denial being more plausible. Gus was known to be quite generous, after all.
Mike knows the rules of interrogation. Give nothing. No specific excuses. "I don't know what you're talking about" is more effective than something that could be disproved. Don't make up stories or spin yarns or create any kind of background if it can be at all avoided. Don't say anything until you're lawyered up, then let the lawyer deliver a bunch of hypothetical non-denial denials.
:goodposting: From a defense attorney's standpoint, I though Mike played it realistically well and accurately reflected his character as being smart and calm. I appreciated the writer's refrained from making this scene more interesting to stay consistent and realistic.

 
I like the part in the preview where Jr ate breakfast.
SPOILER ALERT PLEASE!!!! :rant: :hot: :rant:
Crap.....sorryIt was Cheerios with a small glass of OJ and some berries arranged in a smiley face.
CHRIST!........
Seriously! Just give away the whole plot why don't you. Well, now that the cat's out of the bag in this thread, can we start discussing now what this all means? First off, obviously the smiley face means Skyler's mood has improved, but the childish Cheerios and small OJ mean she's definitely still babying Flynn. If she really looked at him as an independent young adult, it'd be bran and a tall glass of OJ. She obviously doesn't trust him with anything sharper than a spoon, either. Nothing you'd eat with a fork or knife. I think the obvious difference here between how Skyler sees Flynn and how Walt looks at him (buys him a Mustang, etc.) reveals the huge gulf still between them. It's obviously foreshadowing the eventual destruction of any hope of reconciliation and the end of the marriage. Is that why Walt leaves for New Hampshire? I have to think the choice of using berries symbolize a "yes" to that question. What does this breakfast mean for the future? I think it gives it all away, disagreements about child rearing make Skyler leave Walt. Without having to pretend to be a family man, Walt then goes full-Heisenberg. The orange juice is an obvious symbol of southern climates, will the Mexican cartels be coming back? Again, the answer here is "yes". Walt's attempt to go solo will obviously fail against that kind of firepower, no matter how strong he believes in Heisenberg, so he's got to go on the lam. Away from the world of bacon-less breakfast of Cheerios and berries and toward the world of real bacon and bathroom deals for automatic weapons. I think the defeat of the berries by the bacon means that Walt feels his very manhood is under fire and he won't stop until he gets his way, or die trying. But the berries are red, like blood, so I think this breakfast tells us that in the end, Walt doesn't make it out alive. Poor guy.

Well, no need to watch anymore. Thanks for ruining it, Duff.

 
In all seriousness

The uneaten breakfast

the unattended lasaga dinner

Walt trying to show affection for his catatonic wife

Walt is trying to hold on to something that isn't there anymore.

He can't be Heisenberg and keep the things that were Walt's.

The uneaten raisin bran, the smiley face - something you'd do for a small child, not for a near-adult. It's so symbolic of the fact that this idyllic home life is gone and in the past.

 

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