avclub-7a386dbab849b9dd29a626324e74ec3e--disqus
Staggerbaroque
avclub-7a386dbab849b9dd29a626324e74ec3e--disqus

Me too. For a half-second I thought he might come back as a zombie. I've got to quit tweaking while I watch this show. I'm getting way too involved….

That bit rang a bit false. The on-air drive team wouldn't have that much information so soon, or spell it out so explicity. I was half-expecting them to say "If you're a chemistry teacher who cooks meth and you're concerend about being murdered by Gus the drug kingpng, your worries are over. "Writers exagerrated a bit

Thought for sure Gus was only badly wounded and would come back with an eye patch and scar tissue like Half-Face in the Batman comics. Can't believe he's dead. Maybe he'll come back as a zombie. :)

"Fourth of July," written by Dave Alvin, performed by John Doe and X, in which a couple's disintegrating relationship is paused by a happy interruption: Fourth of July Fireworks.

The housekeeper who looks like she escaped from "The Omen." The apparition of bloody twin boys, gender-switched from the twin girls in "The Shining." The way everyone delivers their lines in a low whisper, like Bruce Willis in "The Sixth Sense." I hear a cancellation clawing itss way out of its grave and advancing,

Agree. As I posted at the top, he's gone from being a stick-in-the-mud to Walt's potential savior. He might get to Gus before Walt does. He's not such a buffoon after all.

It's interesting how Hank has gone from a bothersome buffoon who was going to rain on Walt's parade to his potential savior. Maybe ole Hank isn't such a stick in the mud after all.