avclub-4d0669d1c79eb21e516dbf8b5d5f03ad--disqus
Enemynarwhal
avclub-4d0669d1c79eb21e516dbf8b5d5f03ad--disqus

I thought your 9th favorite movie was "fucking anal" for like twenty seconds and I thought I could relate to you but you continue to be beyond that, I think I've only heard of twelve of those movies but I haven't seen most of those twelve.

In the beginning of the episode Vacuum Cleaner Guy and Saul flat-out tells Walt that Walt's family will have to deal with a load of legal shit due to Walt running off, a load of legal-shit that would immediately be solved if Walt just went to prison (which he never did). However, they didn't tell Walt that his family

I was actually sincere though when I said that this post was originally in defense of Stephen because you just absentmindedly implied he was stupid and I wanted to make fun of you for it.

Well you laughed at the obviousness of the title of the article, which poked fun at something Stephen's deformed twitchy brain was inspired by or interested in or whatever it is that his brain is barely capable of.

Listen, Glaz, I know we all make fun of Stephen's individual case of mental-impairments behind his back but making fun of him to his online-face is representative of a worrying case of behavioral traits that are typically exhibited by borderline sociopaths, as you're showcasing a lack of empathy for a person with a

It originally struck me as just the sort of bullshit some company muppet would spout if they were trying to distance themselves from a path of shit that was wandering too close to their pile of money but then I realized some people saw it as the moral of the show.

@avclub-b7a8211586995578af1a2a97cfd214ca:disqus  Does it matter?

I feel like they'll nail Walt's storyline for sure, just because I've enjoyed everything so far, but Jessie has been subjected to a realistic but narratively cartoonish fate. It's just so weird.

They'll be doing midseason and season finale reviews here, methinks. Like retrospectives when the time comes. For pilot season they just review as many episodes as they can get, which in some cases is one.

They're going to start off by reviewing as many episodes for a single show that they can and then possibly do retrospectives at midseason and after the finale (depending on page views or something I guess).

Oh my god, Jessie, I'm surprised thats not a more common complaint than it is. It's weird how far they're going to ruin his life but keep him alive. That guy hasn't had a scene all season where he hasn't been either crying or on the verge of crying and then now he's stuck in a hole.

He deserved it. Poor guy has been looked over for years now.

I was mostly angry about the stupid child not being able to act but I'm sure the fans are already used to that.

Is that what I'm thinking of? The Emmys happen too much around here, they should go away.

I thought we got Walt's history With Gray Matters in season two? I don't remember much of it but I remember flashbacks and bitterness or something.

Yeah I absolutely love it when the world a show takes place in completely changes and yet the characters are still true to themselves/appealing.

I didn't know the Emmys happened today. I thought they already happened a while ago but I might be thinking of last year.

Why does the show have to care about Grey Matter for it to make sense for them to bring it up again? Its not part of Walt's day to day life but it really made sense that the company would have to distance themselves from Walt, that Walt was already bitter about the company and that he would probably want to do

I was actually expecting this episode to be more up to your standards than the previous non-Ozymandias standards. Oh well, I really really loved it but I can't say I'm one who cares about pacing (which isn't a bad thing to care about when you're trying to understand a medium, so kudos to you for caring).

I really love how this episode treated him. He was never a powerful man, aside from his knowledge of chemistry he really had nothing. The only thing he could do was attach himself to tangible things like money to try to make stuff happen. Now we get to see that for what it really is. This lonely man, who would