This is why Walt died at the end. He was an idiot. If I would have been in his shoes, I would have stayed in the car and send the other two guys to do the what ever. And while they would have done the whatever, I would have poked my head out the windows and would have said: forget about those two guys. Say MY name! Maybe even do a little song. Play it on the radio, who knows? Say my name say my name, you calling me baby, see how much I've waited. Why do these drug businesses always have to be so serious? It's not like anyone wants to get killed or anything. And a little music and fun will always relax a tense situation. Who doesn't like a little music? And if it works for most things, why wouldn't it work for drug trade? A little music, maybe some biscuits, a little tea, who knows? The good stuff. So people can enjoy themselves. And afterwards, they exchange the whatever they were exchanging and everyone got to go home. Alive and well. Like... are biscuits that expensive for drug dealers? I don't think so. They have a lot of money. If they can afford those fancy cars they sure as hell can afford biscuits. Why risk you life for so little money, when a simple exchange of treats can do wonders?
The history of Cheez-It crackers began in 1907, when Weston Green founded the Green & Green Company in Dayton, Ohio.[1] The company produced a variety of baked snack foods such as Dayton crackers, graham crackers, gingersnaps, and, during World War I, hardtack. On March 31, 1921, Green introduced Cheez-It crackers, commonly called Cheez-Its, as a new product. The company marketed the cracker as a "baked rarebit", a reference to a dish of melted cheese over toast. On May 23, 1921, the first Cheez-It logo was submitted to the United States Patent and Trademark Office.[1][2][3][4] In 1932, the Kansas City-based Sunshine Biscuits (which was known as the Loose-Wiles Biscuit Company until 1947) acquired the Green & Green Company, and with it came the Cheez-It cracker. Sunshine Biscuits expanded the distribution and popularity of Cheez-It crackers across the country. In 1996, Keebler acquired Sunshine Biscuits, and in 2001, Kellogg's acquired Keebler, bringing Cheez-It crackers under its umbrella.[4] Cheez-Its were officially launched in Canada in January 2020.[5][6] In late 2023, Kellogg's spun off its North American cereal division as WK Kellogg Co. The company's snack food business, including Cheez-It, became part of the renamed Kellanova.[7][8]