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Jesus Christ - Savior
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So, hipsters, basically. Now I understand.

Poor duck.

Yes. David Costabile is the actor who plays Gale and who played Thomas Klebanow, a character based off of real-life former Baltimore Sun managing editor and David Simon nemesis Bill Marimow.

We'll have to see what happens. Walt and Jesse were in a tight spot and they did what they had to do to get out of it. But it wasn't a clean getaway. In addition to everything you mentioned, Hank know knows that Jesse somehow got quick access to his cell phone number. That could certainly bring more suspicion down on

My shit is always dark.

Yeah, but it was a great death scene. The interior shot of the forklift entering the wall in slow motion reminded me of the end of Donnie Darko when **SPOILER** the jet engine crashes into Donnie's room and lands on him. I'm a sucker for that kind of shit. Note to Michael Bay: Destruction can be cool and not loud at

I don't think he was being cheap over the cell phone (he'll just bill Walt for it). He was being cheap over the idea of paying his secretary more. Or maybe just the notion that she'd haggle with him, which is a pain in his ass. But what's he going to do - name one thing in this world that's negotiable.

The cop was Native American and obviously not Steve. You can be certain that he was Native American because of the very opening shot, which showed his token on the rearview mirror: The words "Homeland Security: Fighting Terrorism Since 1492" and a picture of Indians with shotguns.

That hospital scene was brutal/awesome. If anybody has a chance of surviving the wrath of the Cousins, it's Hank. He has a love in his life and that make's him stronger than you can possibly imagine. So I'd say that's that, mattress man.

Well, your prediction that Hank will die after finding out that Walt is Heisenberg hasn't been proven true yet.

Yeah, man, good cadence.

I'm not weighing in on the quality of any of these shows, but if you think that Dollhouse was an example of Fox leaving Joss Whedon to his own devices, you have been misinformed.

@Stacy

For a real answer: No, she didn't invent it, but "Bonnie and Clyde" was the first movie to use it between pretty much every scene. Before that film, it was conventional wisdom that if you faded out, you had to fade back in.

Walt does dumb stuff. He's an angry, bitter, prideful person. After Jesse used Walt's formula without permission, Walt wanted to put him in his place. He told Jesse about his deal with Gus in order to make Jesse miserable.

Yeah, I distinctly remember a scene in season one or two where that actor rubs his hands together like a fly right before asking Jesse for a favor. I remember thinking that that was cool.

It was definitely sloppy of Walter to blab about his 3 million, but his motivation was obvious. He was rubbing it in Jesse's face about how much cash he'd be missing out on.

Oh, I see. I looked it up, and it's a dramatization of the Valerie Plame affair. In other words, it's a movie about how the Bush administrations are a bunch of assholes.

Doug Liman?
Well, okay, I guess.

Uncle Tupelo
is awesome.