morefoolme
The Fool
morefoolme

Nice to see Gomez ask for some goddamn clarification. He clearly trusts Hank more than anyone should trust anyone in this universe.

Eight gunman, at least half with automatic rifles, against a guy with a pistol and a guy with a shotgun.  Gomez couldn't even fire his gun and pull out a badge at the same time.

I imagine outright Nazi's in modern times tend to hang out together. What with the tattoos and shaved heads, not much chance walking onto a pickup basketball game.

This is one of the early moments in the series that shows how damn smart Jim can be when he wants to be. The idea of mashing together famous lines is funny enough, but he edits them together in a half-coherent way that illustrates how well he understands Dwight's speaking patterns.

This is the kind of interaction that made underplayed Ryan so funny. He probably considered Stanley one of his favorite co-workers, and vice-versa, simply because they kept to their damn selves.

Hah, that was great.  The scene they used (Jason Sudeikis dissing TLC's Waterfalls until everyone else gets him into it) was funny, but not that believable. He actually says "I didn't even like this when this came out" and that it's not even the good TLC song.  I assume he means No Scrubs, which I can respect, but

The first time they both hopped out of their easy-chairs when the others entered their apartment? Classic.

If I was an investigator listening to that message, I'd probably assume Mr. White is an unoriginal moniker, a la Reservoir Dogs.

Even a season ago, the idea of Walt releasing the "confession" would be ridiculous. He was upset that no one would know his criminal greatness, for god's sake.  But now, he's far past being motivated by his own pride.  So I agree that he has no real intention of releasing that tape, since it doesn't really help

The Good, The Bad, and the Guac.

The two of them are bullheaded in the same way.  Marie's confidence can seem like petulance, and Hank veers closely towards arrogance, but they clearly value each other's strong personality.

Luckily his bodyguard gets tons of exercise.

The guy who's supposed to double-bag Carol's groceries?

Walt Jr.

If anything, I think Skylar will learn about Walt poisoning Brock or something similarly evil. With Jesse, Hank, and Saul's loyalties shifting as the truth is revealed, it seems probable that someone will tell Skylar something Walt did that she can't forgive.

Jesse fumbles with the gasoline, drops it, slumps down on the curb crying.

I can see how debilitating that realization would be. The guy almost gets you killed, but then supplies the money to get you well again. He deserved the punch you gave him when you found out, but if he hadn't paid the medical bills, his chemo'd self would probably still win in a straight fight against you…

The way she zoned out for the rest of the episode, I anticipate Skylar will kick into action in the next episode or so, much like Jesse. This is definitely the worst thing she's done so far; worse than being complicit financially. She basically threatened her sister so she could get away with her crimes and maintain

That's the only reason I wasn't as nervous as usual at the cliffhanger ending. The way he stared at the spider when waiting for Walt in the desert reminded me of all the quiet Jesse-empathy scenes, and the idea of Jesse encountering Jr. and staying in a murderous fury doesn't ring true to me.

Under the Dome, featuring Dean Norris, lifted the 'dome' plot of The Simpsons Movie.