gentlymanly--disqus
GentlyManly
gentlymanly--disqus

Only certain men can call their dick and balls their "plops" without diffusing the sexual chemistry.

The Man from The Road.

Tina, come get your food, you jive motherfucka!

You just want the title of being the "Michael Jordan of being a son of a bitch." Don't lie.

Or it was the primary goal to discuss masculinity. AV Club is a very effeminate and progressive website that I find it more interesting that they finally singled out masculinity. You can't have this sort of discussion if we are just talking about good role models because Ree from Winter's Bone would definitely take

Joel from The Last of Us
Resourceful, unusually spry and powerful for a fifty year old dude, knows how to treat a woman, and with the love of a father so hardwired in his head that he condemned humanity it's retribution. Actually, the last bit is debatable, but all of the masculine aspects were there to admire.

Storytelling concerns telling what matters, not giving every single character an arc. Plus they did bring them back in Season Two, but that was probably colleagues of Walter's from school and possibly Skylar's friends from her job. By Season Three, Walt was fired and Skylar was seen as a tramp by everyone in their

Well, while BCS doesn't always follow the ways of BB, they do share consistent styles and I'm going to guess that BB's love for bookends will probably carry over into the long term storytelling for BCS. It wouldn't work as well if it came back seasons later when everybody has sort of forgotten about as if it was just

Ooooo, you're so big.

So do I. As clever as Gould & Gilligan are with creating referential jokes, I feel like the season opening teaser was more than just a tip of the hat to all of the returning Breaking Bad viewers.

I'm sure that aspect of Breaking Bad will prevail because of the similarities between characters arcs, i,e. Walter becoming Heisenberg and Slippin' Jimmy becoming Saul. I hope they figure out a way to show Saul in the future somehow and tie it into the story well.

I agree. I loved when an episode can cleverly pull it off, whether thematically or dramatically, but sometimes it just doesn't work and doesn't need to work. Better Call Saul is one of these exceptions.

Better Call Saul seems to use the cliffhanger more for sustaining the suspense rather than ending the story on a high note that also worked as an actual ending such as how Breaking Bad did. Either way, give me more Mike back story!

I actually found just about every episode of Dexter too painful to watch after experiencing the decline it went through.

"YEAH, THIS IS BULLSHIT! CHICKEN!"

Reminds me of a little slice-of-life moment I had the other day. I drove past a guy with the longest driveway just covered in snow. I came back through an hour later and he had only made it halfway.

That's the best thing I've ever heard.

Bill Burr has had quite the affect on me.

I'm sure it is, but Fincher comes off as a person who doesn't really care for award shows to begin with. So when he says he'll watch the Tony's just for one man, that's saying something.

Kind of sucks knowing that Shane's career was probably hurting after that.