thinking about the first time mike met jesse after jane had died and jesse was inconsolable, in tears, barely getting his words out. the contrast between that jesse and the one he talks to on the stairs is so vast :(
I think the WW scene is quite popular, personally I loooove it. Hank is doing two tropes that always get me going: He's seeing Walt the gambler in a new light and is a little shocked by it. And he gets that instinct, that inkling that something is not right, when he stares at Walt with that moment of genuine "could it be..." after saying his name. Even if a much more obvious and not-forcing-him-to-REALLY-reinvent-his-image-of-Walt explanation offers itself up in the next moment haha. TENSIONNN.
The moment that hits the most here is when they are arguing over the script and Walt suddenly tells Skylar "I'm sorry I put you through all of this." She is taken aback for a moment when he says "How's that sound?" revealing that it was a fake apology. A quick chance of détente becomes a moment in which Skylar learns that Walt is capable of becoming a much better liar through experience.
@@jp-sg6uv Nah, that was a different woman. This scene's clearly trying to show Jesse's warped innocence. You think he's taking this girl to bang her but he just wants a mario kart partner lol.
Not gonna lie, I had the almost the exact same reaction as Maple when Walt said “Why am I the only person capable of behaving at a professional level?” 😂
Episode ends on a setup-y note because of Jesse, but the "reveal" to Hank and Walter Jr. was a pretty big deal in its own right. Dramatically might've been cooler for that to be the penultimate scene, but I guess the timing doesn't work for Walt to freak out at Jesse if that were the case.
Never understood why the BB audience did not like Skylar. Outside of her dalliance with Ted, there really was nothing she did which was not in the best interests of her family.
It's not about her being right or wrong, it's about her having an annoying personality. Veggie bacon, Walt's birthday "present," Walter on pot, being a Karen on Jesse's property, "Yo," the cancer reveal scene, the talking pillow scene, etc, etc.
It was Aaron Paul's idea to shave his own head he actually went to rehab meetings and studied people who went through truama to get into that mind set and he thought that shaving his head would make sense with his character's trauma
@@TheRepublican777 We've got Walt, Jesse, Mike, and Hank, all bald. And all the Salamancas are either bald or have very short hair I think. Gus's hair is pretty short too. And Victor! Every male besides Saul and Walt Jr. basically 😆
Walter just can't accept anyone else writing his story. His ego is so huge and bloated that he can't even let his Wife come up with a good idea how to sell it. She's not perfect but what she's doing is sympathetic, which is something he can never be. Also, Walt is a piece of garbage.
So, jesse shoots someone in the head, and it tortures him. Walt shot someone in the head, in the previous episode, and he hasnt thought about it twice. Just saying
Everyone in the show has a specific color actually. and the color tells it's own story throughout the episodes. Marie is just the most "in your face" color.
You're missing so many call backs. The one tear, two tear thing was a reference to the one shot, two shot thing he asked Jesse. Plus Skyler saying she was a less natural liar than Walt was complete hypocrital BS. She's lied twice (that we know of) to get her way (fake pregnancy and the locksmith thing) plus anyone who can cheat without guilt is an innately gifted deceiver. In contrast, Walt is not a natural liar at all. He gesticulates and has so many obvious tells that his gambling story is quite laughable really.
The house only wins if you don't know when to walk away.... Quit while you're ahead. The odds in blackjack actually favor conservative players. Everyone wins if you bust the dealer.
Gus did not kill Victor to make a point or intimidate Walter. That is Walter’s ego. Thinking it was about him. Gus did that because Victor was seen at Gale’s murder scene
It was the manner in which he chose to kill Victor that was the point. Victor was obviously a dead man once he was seen, and that is the motive behind killing him, but Gus didn't have to do it himself in front of Walt and Jesse. He did that for a reason.
Have you ever, like, counted like the number of like times you like say the word like per like sentence like because like it's like quite like a lot of like like.
For the girls - Jesse has had that party going the whole time, mostly because he believes if he is never alone, then Gus/Mike will not show up and kill him.