Smokin Rider
I been official
Jane is also in the movie
Shouldn't have done that... pinkman grew a fat face in the later seasons, it wont look organic
Jane is also in the movie
This isn't "Dexter" man.
This isn't "GOT" either.
It's crazy how these writers have given us two fire, critically acclaimed shows....but people still doubt them.
Fred.
They’ve been filming since nov, they could of filmed bcs first. This has to be a long azz movie though
Since BCS has been very good, the BB universe feels complete and cleanly concluded
no need for any more additions to the BB universe inorder to close any loose ends
Thus a BB movie is leaching at this point and is borderline greed, which threatens the franchises
I'm jaded. Too many shows and great concepts ruined by lazy writing, poor executions, or repetitive conflictsBut people said the same thing before "BCS".
Now you're saying "well, now that's enough".
If they listened to people like you in the first place "BCS" wouldn't exist. Which you say is very good. So I'm kinda confused.
Fred.
While Breaking Bad ain't really about the "reality" thing, how far did Jesse make it? He was at the literal bottom of the game until he tagged onto Walt's wave, he did nothing by himself.Jessie wouldn’t of made it that far in real life in The drug game. I really hate his character, Walt is suppose to be some genius and never thought he would turn in him even though there was obvious signs
While Breaking Bad ain't really about the "reality" thing, how far did Jesse make it? He was at the literal bottom of the game until he tagged onto Walt's wave, he did nothing by himself.
And being a scientific genius has nothing to do with your emotional IQ. Walt repeatedly proved that he read long-term relationships poorly. That had been the story of his life ever since he got blindsided by his business partner taking his girl and then cutting him out of Grey Matter. He didn't deal with his family effectively, misread Gus, misread Mike, underestimated Han, picked plenty of terrible partners (Skinny Pete and Badger?) and disastrously allied himself with the freaking White Supremacists.
He "beat" them out of lucky circumstance. Gus easily could have offed him first. He should have seen that Gus was too much the real deal for his ad hoc operation. Remember, if Jesse doesn't get into that apartment, Walt was gonna be a dead man. What if Gale wasn't home that night?I thought that early gf started dating Eliot after they broke up
Anyways your right about him picking poor relationships, especially after Jesse ratted him out to jane.
How did he misread fring and mike, he beat them after all the bullsh!t of killing their dealers and chemist. I think he read those guys perfectly, used them and discarded them
Nikka said grew a fat face like it's a beard or summinShouldn't have done that... pinkman grew a fat face in the later seasons, it wont look organic
Okay, I looked it up and Gilligan actually revealed it:I thought that early gf started dating Eliot after they broke up
But it was easy because Vince Gilligan told us exactly what went down between the characters off screen: We were very much in love and we were to get married. And he came home and met my family, and I come from this really successful, wealthy family, and that knocks him on his side. He couldn’t deal with this inferiority he felt — this lack of connection to privilege. It made him terrified, and he literally just left me, and I was devastated. Walt is fighting his way out of going back to that emotional place, so he says, “F— you.”
Jessie wouldn’t of made it that far in real life in The drug game. I really hate his character, Walt is suppose to be some genius and never thought he would turn in him even though there was obvious signs
ESQ: What were some of the biggest problems you faced?
CH: Personnel problems were the most difficult for me. It was almost instinctive for me to resort to physical force whenever I encountered personnel who wouldn't... acquiesce, you know? They'd say something like, "Why can't we go straight through the problem? Why do we have to go around it?" And I'd be like, "Look, just do what I'm telling you the way that I'm telling you because you're looking to the next point. I'm looking to the next seven points, and where I want to be those seven steps later. I'm not explaining that to you, one, because that's not for you to be concerned with. And, two, because you wouldn't understand it if I did, because you weren't trained to think in this way."
CH: One time, I opened up in the Bronx, in 1986, and I had a guy inside this apartment. I had had guys operating inside crack apartments before, but there was a consistent problem that was happening with these guys. You'd leave them in the crack house overnight, and at a certain point, the crack prostitutes come and they'd negotiate themselves into the goddamn crack spot, circumventing the security. In a lot of cases, the girl was working for a guy who was waiting to rob the crack spot. I'd heard about this, and didn't want to wait until I experienced it myself. So this one young man that I put into an apartment, when he showed himself to be susceptible to that kind of scenario, I just said, okay, I know what I'm going to do. I told him, "When you go inside, I'm gonna lock you in." Now, at this time, many people were smoking crack in New York. They'd become strung out and wouldn't pay their bills, and the city would put them out. The only way to keep them out was to put these big padlocks on the doors, so it was common to see these big padlocks. So I went and got a big padlock and locked this guy inside, and made a slide so he could pass things in and out. Now, whenever someone came, they would knock on the door and say whatever they wanted. They would slide their money in and he would slide the crack out. When the women started with the, you know, "You in here by yourself, you in here all night, you want some company?" the guy would be like "You see that lock on the door? I can't get out of here, I can't open that door."
ESQ: Sounds like Jesse.
CH: Yeah! And I had to do things like that. I had to create situations where guys just couldn't do the stupid things that they were inclined to do. And you have to contend with that kind of situation far more than you have to contend with the threat of being arrested. Far more. The people closest to you hold the greatest detriment. That's why the dynamic between Walter and Jesse on Breaking Bad is so good. Because they just got it right. You're rarely going to find somebody you can work with who is going to have any degree of the intellectual process that you have. You have to think for everybody. You have to learn personalities and you have to constantly orchestrate situations that will not allow those personalities to create problems. Because the moment they have a problem, they look to you. Because you're the thinker. You're the boss. You're the leader. That's what Jesse does, right? Every single time, Jesse creates a situation and Mr. White has to correct it. It's almost like he's required to. It's like "Why aren't you fixing this? It's your job to fix things!" And that's a common thing, man. If everybody did what they were supposed to do, the streets would be so much more profitable than they are today.
I'm curious when did Aaron Paul film "Westworld". Because he's apparently a major character next season.
Fred.