avclub-0f0d67e214f9fef69b278e3d08114da9--disqus
Miller
avclub-0f0d67e214f9fef69b278e3d08114da9--disqus

I was listening to James McMurtry's "Choctaw Bingo" earlier, I think Uncle Jack and the boys would fit in well with that clan: https://www.youtube.com/wat…

The show has always been brutal and brilliant in body disposal, from Emilio to Jane to Victor to Mike and so many more. The crime never ends with the act, there is always fallout and it always makes the crime itself pathetic in away, here is this mound of former person taking up space while the soul has fled, a sack

Yeah, I'm with @avclub-12f59e05c632bd17f2409172507d6407:disqus — he has a lot to lose, up to his life if the cook doesn't improve. Or maybe just involvement in the cook, I do not see Uncle Jack fucking around if Todd keeps blowing up labs.

Nice catch.

I got a beer before the show started and mentally said "OK, we'll have two max this episode." By the first post-intro commercial break, I needed a new one.

Dialogue aside, Norris is just great there. Frightened at what's coming (how many times is he almost shot before he is shot? Two or three, right?), you can see it in his eyes, but you can also see the resolve to meet it. To deal with the consequences as they are due, which Walter can't do. (And which of course Hank

Heh, Lance lanced.

I feel like Mark Strong has to have Elvised about 18 TVs by now whenever he sees a Breaking Bad cast member. Sorry dude, absolutely no one gives a flying fuck about your show.

Walt Jr.: "You're not the boss of me now!"

The first minute implicates her pretty clearly though, doesn't it? It implies she knew and did nothing. I suppose that's fairly easy to walk back as under threat though.

Nice analysis, @avclub-9cd818ea56273170b63f339aa6f34bca:disqus . Because I need some relief after that episode, though, I've been viewing it as a tribute to Navin Johnson's "Go on! Get out of here!" speech to Shithead.

He's in hell, it generally does not end well for people there. On the other hand, Todd, that sly fuck, needs him and knows it. Because Todd does not know the chemistry and Jesse does. It's not a coincidence, I think, that we see one last glimpse of fun ignorant Jesse at the start of this episode. He's not ignorant

He set the tone at Hank's death, his mouth is a gaping maw of horror, everything lost, especially the thing he didn't think he would have to lose. And we see it two more times — in Skyler's face as Holly is driven out of her life and in Marie's face when the final confirmation of her husband's death is spit out as a

If I were Pete Wentz I'd carry a gun.

I do not know about "best" because I'm a person who considers emotions and such but funniest? Quite likely.

The timing of Flanders getting shot is perfect. BANG and down he goes, upward just enough to get off the gag and BANG down he goes again.

I'm sure it goes without saying that the cracker boss is easily in the top ten of the show's greatest one-off characters and likely in the top three.

This entire episode is a showcase for facial expressions. My favorite is probably the malicious glee on Krusty's face as he shocks Homer at graduation, he is a clown possessed.

Yep. I think it says something about the Simpsons writers that they not only understood the comedic value of a clown beating a fake burglar to death, but they took it upon themselves to one-up that hilarity with a young boy's tearful plea. It leaves me in tears as well.

The accountant's gap-mouthed incredulity before this line is animation at its finest, easily the comedic equivalent of the line itself.