Or he escapes. Maybe he ends up the other day-manager at the Cinnabon? Maybe that's what the series is leading up to? A lighthearted restaurant-themed sitcom featuring Saul and Nacho? I'd be so down for that!
Or he escapes. Maybe he ends up the other day-manager at the Cinnabon? Maybe that's what the series is leading up to? A lighthearted restaurant-themed sitcom featuring Saul and Nacho? I'd be so down for that!
So like… a person made out of chairs?
Still one hell of a snipe by Ramsay there, all things considered.
I'm assuming you left out the whole crippled little boy thing because it went without saying.
Sunny is so overly self-referential at this point that doing so would hardly make a dent.
Brought me back to my WoW days, and the people that would run the same dungeons over and over and over and over and over and over and over again. It was fun for awhile, but I consider myself lucky I took more of a Jake-mentality to the whole thing: once I got to the part where adventuring and story gave way to endless…
And you think they would be any different to any other ending?
Because ratings show that Americans are more attracted to oafs bumbling through a nonsensical world full of random gags than they are to a coherent, though-out, genuinely charming plot.
Stan in CIA-Manhunt mode is super badass. It's nice to see the head of an animated family actually be competent at his job (at times) for a change.
He takes on a new identity as "Landslide" and becomes a successful, albeit flatulent, stand-up comedian in Philadelphia.
Yeah, I just realized how many kids have gotten fucked-over in this show: Flynn, Holly, Kaylee, the kid on the bike who got shot, Tomas, Brock, Kiira (Lydia's kid), the kid who got his RC car run-over…
I'm sure it would still be hailed as "visionary" and "the greatest TV show ever."
Her death to me is among the most tragic (and definitely the most tragic of this episode) because she and Walt were in many ways very similar. Lydia, as did Walt, showed genuine love and concern for her family, to the point that she wouldn't let anyone threaten her security. As "spike is dead" mentions, she would most…
If Jesse keeps driving like that through the desert in the black of night, he'll be lucky to make it back alive.
I guess it was a callback to when he made the box that he "traded for an ounce of weed," and there may be slight Jesus-overtones as well, but it did feel kind of out of place here, and they didn't really expound on it further.
So… what happens to Lydia's kid? And Brock? Maybe they can star in their own spin-off as tough-luck yet lovable orphans tramping about the meth-filled streets of ABQ.
It'd be cool to see that go the direction of "The Wacky Molestation Adventure" where one pair is pitted against the other, but on purely arbitrary, non-moral grounds.
It's always included political satire, but it was never "just" about political satire. There were plenty of episodes that didn't try to skewer some contemporary event, and even the ones that did weren't nearly as ham-fisted and obvious as they are today.
You know what sucks about being a Baldwin?
I could see them holding off until after the BrBa series finale. It would be awesome to see it the Wednesday immediately after, but three days is cutting it pretty close even for Trey and Matt.