^That is very nice. Tooth, i've seen that clip, quite funny! Thanks for posting and reviving this thread. I've been anticipating this show's return! Rewatched the pilot, as well as other brilliant episodes like "Fly". Here's what was at Lulubell not too long ago.
AMC had re-runs of every season a few weeks ago so it gave me incentive to rewatch the series. Surprisingly I finished almost a month than I had expected (yes its addicting). Can't wait for the season to conclude!
It has been a great show from the beginning. It had its slow moments now and then, but it never failed to deliver and I am glad the showrunners are giving it a proper conclusion now that it is at its best and not bleeding it out for 7 or 8 seasons. Im looking forward to the season premier.
In preparation for the beginning of the end of the greatest television show of all time, I present to you the greatest scene in television of all time. Can't wait.
i refreshed on the last 2 episodes in prep for sunday... boy oh boy. I can not wait... we were left hanging. Walt said he was out, which I would be too once I saw that mountain of cash I had already done. Especially being at the top of the tier now, where you could possibly actually get out with no malice against you for doing so. boy oh boy the first episode should be crazy in itself. Since we get to see what Hank decides to do with this epiphany he just had.
I can't wait for this show to end if only because I hate every single character and hope something really bad happens to them. Except maybe Jessie. Unless he's using again.
In the first of the last eight episodes, mild mannered fast food franchise manager Gustavo Fring awakens from a long, complex dream about drug dealers, shakes his head, rubs his eyes and says "Damn that was a weird one!" before getting dressed for work. For the final seven episodes, we witness Gus' routine working class everyday life, as he subcontracts a mediocre fryer repair man named "Bill," discards frozen secret sauce packets far past their freshness expiration date, idly daydreams about his eventless childhood in an impoverished Peruvian hamlet, and considers trying to recruit some of the best staff persons from the competing KFC across town with a competitive compensation offer. The End.
Dean, youre missing the part where he drives over some bridge. Oh wait, its New Mexico, never mind, he can walk over them I guess.
While waiting for tonight's episode, you might enjoy reading this fine analysis of the parallel-yet-opposite trajectories of Walt and Hank: http://boingboing.net/2013/08/11/how-br ... to-th.html
I used too watch this with my now passed dad. Mom's hooked on it too, and season 5 just showed up on netflix! Edit: Lol I don't live with my folks or anything, but they have netflix.
Great read Dean! Ive been a fan of Hank's dwindling boastfulness into a human being rather than a typical alpha male. great comparison. the call back to walt's lesson on chirality is a neat bit also.
What a time not to have television. I didn't even know the new episodes started tonight..exciting. And scary!
Was a stellar return. That ending confrontation. Man. Just pure intensity. This is going to be one heck of a finale.
Something tells me that re-arranging the air fresheners at the car wash isn't going to make anything any more clean or pleasant.
Can't believe how good the new season has already started off. Does anyone think Walt will actually die of Cancer?
I don't, mainly because in the start of the first half of this season he had hair, and was turning fifty two. Perhaps they threw the chemo in to throw us off the scent? I just don't believe for a second that is how Walt goes out.
Stellar confrontation! Can't wait to see more. Did anyone else get the feeling Walt was acting exactly like Fring when he was talking to Lydia? "Here's your change, hand this to your car wash professional and have an A1 day!"