avclub-b9cf0c418cafe5a0ef8a423ea9d82d8e--disqus
crisotunity
avclub-b9cf0c418cafe5a0ef8a423ea9d82d8e--disqus

I thought "1st year undergraduate essay" as soon as I started reading this article. I have tried to draw attention to a couple of issues in another post, but I just don't have the stomach to go through the whole thing.

I'm sorry but I stopped reading after the whole "Walt would be better off finding religion" thing and that the degree of sin matters. I'm afraid that there will be a lot of nonsensical articles on the back of this brilliant series and I would have expected Salon to misunderstand basic things, but c'mon AVC - you can

I like Jesse's character but I disagree - in this case, less was more. The last thing I wanted to see was bastard "Ramsay Snow vs Reek" type of scenes (apologies if you are not Game of Thrones fan).
The less I saw of Jesse, the more I worried about him and the more I wanted to see him; surely, this must be a sign of

Except Walt was the disguise and Heisenberg was, in fact, the real him. Walt was not a failed teacher/car wash attendant: he was a freakin' genious. Also, the thing about Walt is that he has always been consistent in his behaviour: he was secretive about his first ever collapse (he would not allow the hospital to

"And the vast majority of those sucked, so don't y'all get excited"

I respectfully disagree. Firstly, "entitlement" is not gender-specific, it just takes different forms, depending on the dynamic of particular situation. Lydia appears to be as entitled as Walt (her whole being screams "I am the smartest person in the room"; "I work sooo hard for this"; "look how stressed I am", etc