avclub-ce8dd8d7da52336fdc1e633a9c3f9049--disqus
erikamatsu
avclub-ce8dd8d7da52336fdc1e633a9c3f9049--disqus

You were complaining about Dexter's review scores but haven't even been watching it this season?

You're right, they don't make any sense, especially not with such a visual director.

Wikipedia is fine. Just discard anything that doesn't have a reference.

Crying victim-blaming for criticism of writing in a tv show. That's self-righteous even by AV Club comments section standards.

There's a difference between characters being dumb and characters thinking they're smarter than they actually are. Hank just neglecting to involve the DEA without any reason to would've been bad storytelling. Hank making the calculated choice not to involve the DEA because doing so would've been letting Walt get the

That seems kind of silly and alarmist, but you have 107 likes so I guess you're right.

What difference does it make how bad he feels? I've never understood that mindset. It makes him more empathetic than Walt but in judging him morally it's meaningless. Jesse's attempts to atone have involved doing a lot of meth and then making a half-hearted attempt to give some money to people but almost immediately

I think that "myth" comes from watching the show. In the scene you're talking about Jesse also says that Walt is smarter than everybody. This episode Hank says that Walt is the smartest guy he knows. Early on in the series Elliott Schwartz alludes to Walt being a brilliant chemist. And what do you make of inventing

Walt's been way overestimating Jesse's loyalty (or maybe his criminal honor not to snitch), not so much underestimating Jesse himself. I mean, the plan was 99% Hank's and had Hank not been there to intercept the phone call, chances are Jesse would've fallen for the Brock bait as well. Jesse's still the same guy who