Just thought of this, but …
Just thought of this, but …
Good point; I had forgotten about that. See, I knew Saul was a good guy. (smirk)
So what do we think - was Saul telling the truth when he said he didn't know what Walt was going to do with the ricin cigarette and wouldn't have helped him if he had?
If you can't even bother to stay sober for the moment when your life changes, then maybe you're not a very stable person … and if you're not a stable person, you could blow the whole operation. As Gus Fring said, "You can never trust a junkie."
I'd think you're right, at least about Walt (based on the flash forwards) but then this is one of those shows where you just never know. There were a couple of moments this episode where I thought Jesse might be a goner, and this is a show that's unpredictable enough to kill off a major character with 5 episodes still…
Plus, I'm still hopeful that Jesse could make it out alive, but I've accepted that Saul is probably going to bite it before the end of the series. He knows waaaaay too much and as Walt has seen, he flip flops indiscriminately for the right price. Walt or someone else will kill him … we can only hope that it's in a…
Jesse, bitch!
I really hadn't thought of that. Now I'm really intrigued….
Mmm, I dunno, I feel like he's pretty set on destruction. He looked crazed. I feel like something's going to have to stop him or he'll torch the house. (Obviously he must not get to this point, as we seen in the flash forward that the house is not torched, although it is pretty destroyed.)
But…the whole premise of the show is that Walt IS a thundercunt. (Nice word choice, btw.)
omg you guys, I know no one will read this and you don't care anyway, but I just have to get my thoughts out … I realized YESTERDAY as I was rewatching old MM episodes that I had NEVER. SEEN. THIS. ONE. I don't know how that's possible, as seasons 1 and 2 were out on DVD when I began watching the show, and I watched…
I've rewatched all of season 2 now, and apparently I missed the last episode of season 2 and NEVER REALIZED IT … (HOW???) So it became obvious that the baby was indeed given up for adoption. I also had forgotten that Peggy's sister was very pregnant when she visited Peggy in the hospital … so obviously she had a baby…
Was it insinuated in a previous episode that Ted had some sort of a drinking problem, or was trying to avoid alcohol? It was subtle, if so … or I might be making it up. When Don asked him what he liked to drink, he said, "Whatever you have," or something like that. That could be a way of saying "I'll drink a bottle of…
Did you see that plane? I think Mr. T would be scared to ride in it.
But now he works at Sterling Cutler Cooper Gleason Draper Chaough Pryce, so it's all good!
This is why I (and others … I KNOW I'm not alone in my strange addiction) sometimes feel sorry for Pete. He is often the only voice of reason, at least when it comes to business matters. Yes, he's slimy, which is why he never succeeds. But I was hopeful for awhile that he could learn to be a better human being.
False. He didn't think Anna was a whore. I don't think he thinks of his female, non-lover co-workers (Joan, Peggy) as whores either. (In fact, he went out of his way to try to STOP Joan from whoring herself out.)
Yes, bother - following Joan to the door bothering her is the perfect cover because that's what Bob always does. He's constantly trying to have conversations with people while they're working or on their way somewhere. I LOVED the fact that he said that … it showed he was self-aware that people view him as an annoying…
The relationship between Joan and Peggy fascinates me. I look at them as an allegory for women in the workplace in general. I think at the time, if women wanted to succeed in the workplace, they had to accept to a certain degree that other women would resent them. (Remember the secretaries looking on, impatiently…
Alright, who invited Pete Campbell to the meeting?