johnspankenstein--disqus
John Spankenstein
johnspankenstein--disqus

Makes sense. Dude thought that maybe Trump would be cool, that he wouldn't be as bad as people thought. He was quickly proven wrong and made an about face. Nothing wrong with that.

To be fair, those references were made on May the 4th, the day after the episode aired. They're rather topical.

It's actually relatively easy to understand, though you (understandably) might not like the explanation. A lot of the kids bullied and ostracized escaped into the world of books and video games because they could feel like a hero there, being a part of these mystical worlds where losers like them (myself included)

Unrealistic standards? What the fuck? How is it an unrealistic standard for me to not want someone to spoil the final scene of a television show out of nowhere?

"I'm an asshole. Here, let me justify why."
Listen, dude. You got to get through the entire series without knowing that Walter White dies. You got to see all the build-up to his death and when his death happened, it made sense. People reading this article who have yet to see Breaking Bad won't get the same feelings you

Am I the only one who thinks that those ending scenes are actually canonical and didn't take place in his screenplay? From what we see, his screenplay is nothing but narration — like Stevie said, all tell, no show. It makes sense — to me — that what we see is what actually happens, and what we hear is how KP would