SpeedingUptoStop
will totally Facebook friend you! *giggle* *LOL*
A rat.Last week they referenced Ratatouille, a film in which a rat discovers he has extroardinary cooking ability.
Make of that what you will.
Walt rats on Syler ftw.
A rat.Last week they referenced Ratatouille, a film in which a rat discovers he has extroardinary cooking ability.
Make of that what you will.
There's no way he's that obvious.
My theory is a crazy one, but it's crazy enough that it could happen in the BB universe:
I told you it was crazy. hahaTodd becomes Walt's new partner, Mike dies at the hands of Hank, Hank teams with an unlikely partner in Jessie to bring down Walt, Walt kills Todd & Hank before he dies at the hands of Jessie.
Ah, that would explain it.This pic is also in the Rolling Stones issue I just got.
True, he does know too much, but in a way he's the perfect partner for Walt.
Someone who will do whatever it takes with no reservations.
Plus looking at Walt's body language and tone towards Todd suggests a certain admiration.
Todd is going to step in as Jesse steps back.
Also, why are people spoiler tagging speculation? It doesn't make sense.
Todd is going to step in as Jesse steps back.
Also, why are people spoiler tagging speculation? It doesn't make sense.
Yeah, if people could stop doing that I'd appreciate it. It gets confusing when people start mixing up speculation and actual spoilers. If you don't know what's going to happen, don't spoiler tag it.Also, why are people spoiler tagging speculation? It doesn't make sense.
After Walt teams up with Todd, Todd gonna eventually try to plug Jesse then Walt plugs Todd and the Jesse plugs Walt and the Jesse gets to plug SkySky.
I wouldn't take that one too serious tho
Now Heat and Scarface reference has some more ground imo.
This forum is now becoming dangerous for moy enjoyment with people catching the references and making theories about what will happen, and if the predictions are right and I am convinced of that, I would not like it. Like a previous forum in previous season when they discovered the twist of Walt poisoning the kid. I think I will stop reading it to avoid people discovering too much as discovering it yourself or sometimes being oblivious can be more enjoyable. But then reading peoples thoughts on BB can sometimes be irresistable
But he might be doing that BECAUSE his cancer has come back.
True, he does know too much, but in a way he's the perfect partner for Walt.
Someone who will do whatever it takes with no reservations.
Plus looking at Walt's body language and tone towards Todd suggests a certain admiration.
There's no way he's that obvious.
My theory is a crazy one, but it's crazy enough that it could happen in the BB universe:
I told you it was crazy. hahaTodd becomes Walt's new partner, Mike dies at the hands of Hank, Hank teams with an unlikely partner in Jessie to bring down Walt, Walt kills Todd & Hank before he dies at the hands of Jessie.
When Marie asked Walt if the issue was that his cancer was back, Walt didn't say no it wasn't back. He just said that it wasn't the issue... When was the last time we heard a qualified medical expert say Walt was in remission? Season 2 or at best 3.
When Marie asked Walt if the issue was that his cancer was back, Walt didn't say no it wasn't back. He just said that it wasn't the issue... When was the last time we heard a qualified medical expert say Walt was in remission? Season 2 or at best 3.
Nonsense. We already know Walt is alive a year from now and buying a machine gun. My guess is that everyone is dead at that point and this is Walt heading into a showdown as a throwback to the first episode with Walt and the pistol. I think we've seen Walt ready to die in a hail of bullets.
He seems to have his hair back in the intro of the first episode of this season.
Heh. Interesting analysis. I think I see the show completely differently and disagree with all your points. But that's the beauty of a piece of art.Cancer has always been the motivating factor for the show. They can't separate it from the reasons why Walt has made such a huge character shift. Thematically I can't imagine them doing anything but have Walt succeed in everything he's tried to do as a drug kingpin and end up sitting on his throne as the big winner and then die silently with nobody around to witness it like Pacino at the end of Godfather 3.
Heh. Interesting analysis. I think I see the show completely differently and disagree with all your points. But that's the beauty of a piece of art.
I think it will play some part, but I don't view it as Walt's motivation; it simply gave him an excuse for his sociopathy.It's definitely fallen out of the show's vocabulary except as a passing reference, but I think that's their intention. Cancer was a huge part of the first season and that's why I think it'll be a huge part of the last.
I think it will play some part, but I don't view it as Walt's motivation; it simply gave him an excuse for his sociopathy.
I also think Walt is going to be a miserable wreck by the show's end, like literally begging for death to bring him a sweet, merciful escape from the hell that has become his life.
The only reason I can't just assume that Walt has always been a sociopath is that he had so many years of relative normalcy. I think something inside him just snapped, and I think it was in the episode when he quit the carwash. Which I guess is the first one.
I think there's evidence he's always had this kind of behaviour in him, through what little we know about his career and relationships before the show started.
That's reasonable. But for me, I don't think Walt deserves to be in as good a position as he is at the end of Season 4. He needs to be taken down.
Selfishness and hubris sure, but I don't know about sociopathy.
And I think this is why it's one of the best shows on television. They don't have to show the characters doing all this boring bullshit because they've actually done all this boring bullshit themselves and they know it's workable. I love that kind of research.
What exactly am I reading here? So I guess by this logic, if the people making the show learn how to hack a satellite from a library computer, then depict Team Walt doing it on the show, then we, the audience, don't need to see the ways in which they gain that knowledge? Or we just presume they know it inherently?
Simple fact: You can't pull off a heist like they did without knowing lots of very special information. Most of which they are ignorant to (based on what we know of them) or was simply outside their collective areas of expertise. So some of that acquired knowledge to pull the heist off has to transpire on-screen for said audience to believe it.
What exactly am I reading here? So I guess by this logic, if the people making the show learn how to hack a satellite from a library computer, then depict Team Walt doing it on the show, then we, the audience, don't need to see the ways in which they gain that knowledge? Or we just presume they know it inherently?
Simple fact: You can't pull off a heist like they did without knowing lots of very special information. Most of which they are ignorant to (based on what we know of them) or was simply outside their collective areas of expertise. So some of that acquired knowledge to pull the heist off has to transpire on-screen for said audience to believe it.
I think this episode failed to visualize and communicate some of those points (for me anyways), and most people are just giving it a pass because there was interesting, engaging, and well-shot action to satiate us.
However, NONE of the characters have been established as having preexisting knowledge of the proper order of cars on a freight train, so if they took that measurement of 814 feet and buried their tanks there because of such knowledge, then you pretty much have to show them learning it at some point.
Exactly that. Some stuff doesn't need to be explained, like Walt knowing when to start the water to best reduce the chance of the output methylamine being diluted. We've been watching him be an expert chemist for 4+ seasons now, so we can assuming that Walt's handling any chemistry-related stuff on the show. Much like how we didn't need to see him look up how to make a pipe bomb. We figure that he can figure it out on his own.
However, NONE of the characters have been established as having preexisting knowledge of the proper order of cars on a freight train, so if they took that measurement of 814 feet and buried their tanks there because of such knowledge, then you pretty much have to show them learning it at some point.
It's Lydia's job to know this information.
It's even worse than that though. That 814 feet just happened to be the distance from a road to a bridge so that Walt and crew would be hidden under the bridge and couldn't be seen while they stole the methlymine. It was a pretty absurd heist.
However, I doubt that the fact that there's specific rules governing the order of freight train cars is common knowledge to a whole lot of people. So yeah, we know it's Lydia's job to...
.. Wait a second. We don't even know what her job actually IS, do we? I had assumed that she was some sort of corporate attorney, given her presence at the DEA meeting back in "Madrigal". But if that's the case, why would Hank and the DEA guys have gone to her to ask her to point out the foreman of the warehouse?
Either way, let's assume that her job is to monitor freight shipments to and from Madrigal business and clients. Without knowing ahead of time that the "proper car order" is even a thing, we have no way of knowing that she'd be able to give the guys a rough estimate on where to set up the tanks. All we got was the line about how she would know the exact car the night before.
It's even worse than that though. That 814 feet just happened to be the distance from a road to a bridge so that Walt and crew would be hidden under the bridge and couldn't be seen while they stole the methlymine. It was a pretty absurd heist.
I wasn't as bothered by that, though. They didn't HAVE to hide under the bridge, it just made their jobs a little easier. They could have just as easily used the excavator to dig a hole that they'd spring out of when the train was stopped, or disguised themselves people joyriding some motorcycles like the kid and just buried their equipment. Lots of options, the bridge was just a coincidence that made their jobs a little easier.
There are about two and a half cars on that bridge, so assuming a standard railcar length, it's about 200 feet long (not considering the hookups, which would make it even longer). So they have a ton of room to work with and still have the car end up somewhere on the bridge -- it doesn't have to be completely on the bridge, because as you can see in the video, it isn't. So he's like like "814 FEET THE ONLY VIABLE DISTANCE," he's more like "oh, good, it's between 600 and 1000 feet, just like the map said."
She's obviously a logistics person. That's why she can access the inventory, that's why she handles the shipping, that's why she can get methylamine in the first place. She is absolutely going to know the correct order of cars on a freight train. Hell, I used to vaguely know that and I never even handled railcars when I worked in logistics. That tanker car is worth millions and millions of dollars and you don't think she's going to have every possible bit of information when it moves? You need every detail.
Actually, now that I think about it, her handling logistics explains why she's so stressed out all the time.
It's even worse than that though. That 814 feet just happened to be the distance from a road to a bridge so that Walt and crew would be hidden under the bridge and couldn't be seen while they stole the methlymine. It was a pretty absurd heist.
Selfishness and hubris sure, but I don't know about sociopathy.
And how did they know where the train would stop? It could have easily stopped hundreds of feet earlier, which would have meant using a very long hose.
It was very convenient that the train stopped exactly in front of the truck. But hey, the show often plays fast and loose with stuff, I thought the giant magnet was a lot worse.
And how did they know where the train would stop? It could have easily stopped hundreds of feet earlier, which would have meant using a very long hose.
It was very convenient that the train stopped exactly in front of the truck. But hey, the show often plays fast and loose with stuff, I thought the giant magnet was a lot worse.
But what are the chances that there's a bridge within miles of a road, let alone within a few thousand feet.