Her blood is on Jessie hand, picture of them was an obvious threat and Jessie ignored it thinking only about himself. He had easy way out to Alaska but he choiced another way.
@@John_Locke_108 Jesse is in that position because he didn't take his millions and just disappear, because he snitched to the DEA (and got Hank and Gomie shot). All to get revenge over Walt giving Brock a temporary tummy ache (because Jesse was siding with Gus so Walt could be MURDERED by Gus). Because Jesse thought escaping would have no consequences?? Todd explicitly showed him Andrea's picture as a threat! FFS! Well, now Brock has no mom, good work Jesse. If you're gonna do organized crime, don't hypocritically snitch and then cry about the outcome. Jesse is his own catchphrase.
there's a mystery about him, his job, his past, like a whole other show we never see. some actors just have that ability to make a character seem like they've lived a whole life.
Considering they were neo-nazi's keeping Jesse as a slave and after watching season 2 of Son's of Anarchy. I was glad that all they did was shoot her in the head.
The way Skyler was promising Todd's crew that she wouldn't say anything about Lydia, is the exact same way Ted promised her that he wouldn't breathe a word, when he was in the hospital. Skyler felt like a boss when she responded saying "Good" now she is in that exact same situation.
@@insiddious Yeah, I was wondering about that. It's expensive to shoot in multiple far away locations, I know in BCS they shoot Nebraska scenes in Albuquerque, they just put some fake snow down. You can kinda of tell though
I get why Gretchen and Elliot are lying (trying to save face, trying to protect their company from nonsense allegations) but man... They were lying their asses off in that interview lol It's never made REALLY clear why things fell through between them and Walter. To the best of our knowledge, Walt left because he started to feel inferior because maybe Elliot took a liking to Gretchen, cuz he felt small because Gretchen came from a rich family etc, so he just left. It is made pretty clear that Walt made legitimate contributions to growing that company. So saying that all he contributed was the name... is WILD lol
But in the grand scheme of things, they're not that wrong. The company was nothing when Walt left. He had nothing to do with what the company is currently. It's like saying Pete Best contributed to The Beatles becoming The Beatles. Walt is Insignificant.
@@John_Locke_108 i mean Walt literally had a Nobel Prize for some of his contributions to the company. to say he contributed nothing when he is mentioned in one of the most prestigious awards you can get is a bit much. we dont know how much he contributed, but its obvious if you didnt miss that fact that it was a great deal.
As far as I can recall, Gray Matter happened because of innovations and discoveries that Walt made that he and Elliot decided to build a company around. And he was apparently in a relationship with Gretchen at the time, and then there was the weekend Walt spent with Gretchen's rich family, and something about that rubbed him the wrong way. Gretchen and Walt's conversation back in season 2 was probably as close as we'll ever get to why he dumped her and left Gray Matter behind. From her perspective, it had to do with Walt's resentment over their affluence. When he explains why he left to other people, none of that comes up. He's created this whole other rationale revolving around being forced out but he never elaborates. It feels like he forced himself out. Gretchen and Elliot lying on national television to save their company's reputation is what was needed to light a fire under Walt and give him a reason to keep going again. :)
@John_Locke_108 I get that you hate walt a lot ... but saying he is insignificant in growing the company into what it is .... that is just wrong and doesn't make sense as to why he holds so much regret towards the company that he left
Walt perceives it as Gretchen and Elliot "artfully manipulating" him out of the company. Now granted, it's unclear whether he said that because he believes it or just to hurt Gretchen in that moment, but it indicates that Elliot probably played some kind of hand in it, however small. We know he left shortly after going to Gretchen's summer house with her and her parents, and he also calls her a rich girl adding to her millions, so you're probably correct that Walt's inferiority complex also had something to do with it. My guess is that Gretchen's parents belittled him, there was some kind of fight, and Walt might have even suggested to Elliot that they cut Gretchen out only for Elliot to refuse. Walt then left the group with the faint impression that they had somehow colluded together all along, a suspicion which would have been strengthened when they became a couple.
Watching you guys get excited for Jesse as he attempts to escape the pit....hurts. It hurts because we know what's about to happen. And crushes my soul. This is the worst death in the show.
Back when I saw this in an Angelica Theatre, I remember thinking them killing Andrea was a step too far, that’s how shocking it was. And the ending with the theme finally coming in was perfect
It's definitely risky. Meth labs blow up all the time so Jack and most of the crew probably keep their distance. He'd only end up killing Todd and Jack would scorch the earth to avenge his nephew.
The issue though is Jessie has no idea if they'll kill the kid afterwards out of sheer spite if they don't get everyone. Jesse would never put a kid at risk like that. He genuinely thought they would kill him when he tried to escape
I love that Robert Forster got a chance to still work so close to his untimely passing. RIP, sir. And he was great as usual. Some guys just seem to control the scene with their very presence.
Lydia reminds me a lot like Gale and early Walt: if you just don't look at it, the grimy dangerous awful part of criminality doesn't exist and you are blameless for participating in it.
I've always maintained that Lydia is a female Walter. Up to the very end she keeps trying to convince herself that she's not rolling in the dirt with the rest of the criminals, that's she's somehow above it all and morally correct. It's why she behaves like she's in a crime movie, as Ariana and Maple pointed out.
"You walk in there with your head held high, you'll be the John Dillinger of the metropolitan detention center. How bad is that?" Words to live by, Saul. Words to live by.
I really appreciated your discussion about how Walt has so many complicated, different sides to his personality, and that means it's STILL hard to predict exactly what he's going to do, even in the very final episode of the show!
It's crazy how delusional Walter was even all the way up to this episode in him thinking he can just "fix" all the wrongs. Maybe that was just him subconsciously trying to disassociate from the fact that he was in the place that he was all because of his own actions.
He does ending up fixing most things though, the Nazi guys are dead, Jesse is free and his family will get all the money they need. Its not perfect obviously but it worked out pretty well for him.
They didn’t. They already saw it and they’re at Better Call Saul. Although to be honest, they would’ve been able to watch the first four seasons beforehand.
todd is so interesting to me because the contradictory parts of his character that would normally be a mask (his politeness and uncertainty, his 'gentlemanly' behaviour) is actually just as sincere as all of the evil criminal stuff. none of it is fake or exaggerated in the slightest. he's not hiding in plain sight the way walter and gus are, this is just genuinely who he is all the time, including while actively torturing and killing innocent people.
If you guys remember back in season 1, Flynn asked Walt why wouldn’t he just die already. That was for a different reason, but now he’s fully cut ties and I don’t blame him. Walt had Hank and Steve killed among other people, and he still has the nerve to make his son an accomplice. At least Flynn still has integrity, but Walt’s biggest fear has manifested. Flynn loathes Walt, and that’s how he’s gonna remember him.
Well he didn't have them killed on purpose Jesse brought them out there but because he was trying to kill Jesse is why the guys showed up in the first place he should know nothing ever goes as planned
Most underrated episode. Watching this reaction was the first time I caught a line from Saul (not saying what to avoid any hint of spoilers for BCS) that I now believe the BCS writers took into strong consideration.
When people say the show wasn't hard enough on Walt, I always wonder what they were paying attention to during the phone call with Walt Jr. in this episode. That was a nuclear bomb dropped.
There's a line in Better Call Saul that subtly but I think deliberately implies that Walt's perceived issues with Gretchen and Elliot doing him dirty were sort of in his head. However, I think when this episode was produced, while there's no overt confirmation either way, there does feel like there's some subtle suggestions that Gretchen and Elliot (probably more so Elliot) were kind of snakes. At the very least, we know they're playing down Walt's contribution to Gray Matter (we've been told explicitly that he, at the very least, contributed a few patents). Beyond that I can't point to anything explicit, but the conversation does have this vibe of "I assure the public I barely ever made repeated flights to Jeffrey Epstein's island." Also, I just think it genuinely adds more punch to the season finale if you assume Gretchen and Elliot really were snakes who kind of did Walt dirty.
I do think, just from a realism perspective, that Gretchen and Elliot's behavior on Charlie Rose would be a perfectly standard reaction for a public figure who had just been linked in the media to a massive national scandal. Not many people would be comfortable in that situation, and know the right answers to give the media. But, from the perspective that you're watching a show with brilliantly subtle writing that constantly feeds you bread crumbs to draw inferences from, the fact that they come off a little phony feels like a deliberate choice. Even if it is a deliberate choice though, that doesn't mean it's intended to confirm anything about the Schwarzes. The goal could just be aiming to raise the possibility as a question in your mind. Maybe to get you thinking about Walt's motives at the end of this episode, maybe just to gin up fan speculation about what went down in Walt's backstory. Also, when I talk about the Schwarzes maybe being weasels, I'm mostly assuming Elliot, since I do think at least Gretchen comes across as sincere in her disbelief that Walt could see their history the way he does. Then again, Walt always comes across as sincere when he tells Skyler, Jesse, and even himself that he's doing it "for the family".
While it's been obvious since the beginning, the ending here really drives it home. The whole drug empire was never about his family or even the lure of being a drug kingpin. It was always trying to make up for what happened with Grey Matter and how his ego hasn't been able to handle it. Given that it wasn't just the money aspect, but the ego aspect of it, the chase is never-ending. No matter how much money he makes, he'll never be able to get over what happened with Grey Matter. But he'll continue to try to find ways to sooth his bruised ego.
When these were airing live back in 2013, the description for this episode said only "Events put in motion long ago move towards a conclusion". As it turned out, that wasn't referring to Hank getting killed, or even the meth cooking - Walt's story was always about Gray Matter.
The writing by Vince Gilligan was phenomenal. Being a resident of Albuquerque and seeing the various landmarks was awesome. The finale "Felina" is a perfect ending to the series, the big scene coming up is a big F U to Jack, Todd and Lydia.
It's easy to say that greed is a major motivation of a lot of characters on this show, but greed is such too much a shallow, mustache=twirler character motivation for the depth of character writing on this show. Their "greed" is as always a placeholder for a much more complicated and interesting character motivation. Gus's "greed" is really his pent up grief, anger, and desire for revenge over the murder of Max. Walt's "greed" is actually an attempt to fill his massive void of self-respect and purpose in life, needing to feel like he didn't waste his entire time and potential for nothing (of course, missing the fact that his loving family should have been proof enough in his value). And Todd's "greed" is really just him trying to simp over his dopey school boy crush on an older woman from the other side of the tracks.
Dimple is a blended Scotch called Haig & Haig Dimple Pinch in the USA and Haig Dimple everywhere else in the world. The terms Dimple and Pinch refer to its distinctive three-sided bottle. It was a favourite of a now deceased Dutch TV personality who was an old friend of mine.
"skylar just wanted to be a housewife" except that she screwed her boss and went along with the whole thing because she got used to the nice things her rich boss had, you know the guy she screwed who wasn't her husband.
How do the cops not catch Walter after storming the bar? They probably got there less than 5 minutes after he left. He's walking in show and malnourished. My 6 year old could track him down in those conditions.
Bought a truck in the parking lot for way too much cash and vamoosed? He had $100k with him at the bar. Also no one knows about his cabin 8 miles away nor do the cops know this wasn't a prank call until they fingerprint the glass or trace the phone call to Junior. He had some time.
I spent a month in Albuquerque in 2022. Should have tried to go see that house. I stayed at a Red Roof Inn and they had brochures in the lobby for Breaking Bad tours, lol.
10:08 I would have never guessed it took them by surprise if not for the large caption that obscures and distracts from their reaction. I’d say cancel that raise I told the editor deserves in previous episode’s comments.
The relentless cucking for Walt in the comments has been hilarious. Yall are the same people who wrote Skylar’s actor those death threats 😂 Props to these two for having their own opinion.
I mean if you wanna get technical, I’d place a good bit of blame on Walt. The only reason Jack and his men knew where Andrea lived was because Walt took them there
Big drop in quality. I believe this episode is only rated 9.8.
😂😂😂😂 you really had me in the first half ngl
But what about the moment when Walt becomes Heisenberg again? Truly the turning point of the show imo.
In some countries, it only scored a 9.74 out of 10. Some people have no taste.
Wow this show fell off hard. Basically GoT season 8 😂
well in this economy....
Jesse seeing Andrea getting executed is for me the most dark scene of this series.
After that, there's no lower point to reach.
❤🔧
Her blood is on Walt's hands. Jesse is in that position because of Walt.
Her blood is on Jessie hand, picture of them was an obvious threat and Jessie ignored it thinking only about himself. He had easy way out to Alaska but he choiced another way.
@@John_Locke_108 Jesse is in that position because he didn't take his millions and just disappear, because he snitched to the DEA (and got Hank and Gomie shot). All to get revenge over Walt giving Brock a temporary tummy ache (because Jesse was siding with Gus so Walt could be MURDERED by Gus). Because Jesse thought escaping would have no consequences?? Todd explicitly showed him Andrea's picture as a threat! FFS! Well, now Brock has no mom, good work Jesse. If you're gonna do organized crime, don't hypocritically snitch and then cry about the outcome. Jesse is his own catchphrase.
@@John_Locke_108are you Maple's or Adrianna's Alt account 😂😂😂
Robert Forster was so good in this episode it feels like he had a much bigger role in the series. His character stays with you.
RIP. He was such a great actor.
there's a mystery about him, his job, his past, like a whole other show we never see. some actors just have that ability to make a character seem like they've lived a whole life.
There were lots of fucked up things in this show, but the Andrea thing straight up nauseated me with how evil it was.
Yup. It turns my stomach.
How is Brock not going to end up absolutely messed up in the head after the things he's experienced.
Considering they were neo-nazi's keeping Jesse as a slave and after watching season 2 of Son's of Anarchy. I was glad that all they did was shoot her in the head.
@@John_Locke_108 What's worst is that they did it at night so there is a good chance he was the one who ended up finding her.
Oh yeah, Brock is guaranteed to become an addict of some sort
The way Skyler was promising Todd's crew that she wouldn't say anything about Lydia, is the exact same way Ted promised her that he wouldn't breathe a word, when he was in the hospital. Skyler felt like a boss when she responded saying "Good" now she is in that exact same situation.
That ending scene is one of the best. Chills every time.
It's the turning point of the show.
The only time in the show where the theme song plays outside of the opening.
he transforms into a whiskey glass!
@@doctafloheisenburgs greatest trick
@@Etticos. and they used it so well
I live in New Hampshire, the granite state. It's always cool to see my little state in something so popular.
Beautiful state.
Except they shot the New Hampshire scenes in the Sandia mountains in New Mexico
@@insiddious Yeah, I was wondering about that. It's expensive to shoot in multiple far away locations, I know in BCS they shoot Nebraska scenes in Albuquerque, they just put some fake snow down. You can kinda of tell though
And this is where Vito met Johnny Cakes
Poor Andrea and Brock.
I get why Gretchen and Elliot are lying (trying to save face, trying to protect their company from nonsense allegations) but man... They were lying their asses off in that interview lol
It's never made REALLY clear why things fell through between them and Walter. To the best of our knowledge, Walt left because he started to feel inferior because maybe Elliot took a liking to Gretchen, cuz he felt small because Gretchen came from a rich family etc, so he just left. It is made pretty clear that Walt made legitimate contributions to growing that company. So saying that all he contributed was the name... is WILD lol
But in the grand scheme of things, they're not that wrong. The company was nothing when Walt left. He had nothing to do with what the company is currently. It's like saying Pete Best contributed to The Beatles becoming The Beatles.
Walt is Insignificant.
@@John_Locke_108 i mean Walt literally had a Nobel Prize for some of his contributions to the company. to say he contributed nothing when he is mentioned in one of the most prestigious awards you can get is a bit much. we dont know how much he contributed, but its obvious if you didnt miss that fact that it was a great deal.
As far as I can recall, Gray Matter happened because of innovations and discoveries that Walt made that he and Elliot decided to build a company around. And he was apparently in a relationship with Gretchen at the time, and then there was the weekend Walt spent with Gretchen's rich family, and something about that rubbed him the wrong way. Gretchen and Walt's conversation back in season 2 was probably as close as we'll ever get to why he dumped her and left Gray Matter behind. From her perspective, it had to do with Walt's resentment over their affluence. When he explains why he left to other people, none of that comes up. He's created this whole other rationale revolving around being forced out but he never elaborates. It feels like he forced himself out. Gretchen and Elliot lying on national television to save their company's reputation is what was needed to light a fire under Walt and give him a reason to keep going again. :)
@John_Locke_108 I get that you hate walt a lot ... but saying he is insignificant in growing the company into what it is .... that is just wrong and doesn't make sense as to why he holds so much regret towards the company that he left
Walt perceives it as Gretchen and Elliot "artfully manipulating" him out of the company. Now granted, it's unclear whether he said that because he believes it or just to hurt Gretchen in that moment, but it indicates that Elliot probably played some kind of hand in it, however small. We know he left shortly after going to Gretchen's summer house with her and her parents, and he also calls her a rich girl adding to her millions, so you're probably correct that Walt's inferiority complex also had something to do with it. My guess is that Gretchen's parents belittled him, there was some kind of fight, and Walt might have even suggested to Elliot that they cut Gretchen out only for Elliot to refuse. Walt then left the group with the faint impression that they had somehow colluded together all along, a suspicion which would have been strengthened when they became a couple.
Watching you guys get excited for Jesse as he attempts to escape the pit....hurts. It hurts because we know what's about to happen. And crushes my soul. This is the worst death in the show.
Back when I saw this in an Angelica Theatre, I remember thinking them killing Andrea was a step too far, that’s how shocking it was.
And the ending with the theme finally coming in was perfect
I’m with Maple, I’d have to try taking me and everyone else out if I’m Jessie. But if you fail, the kid dies.
It's definitely risky. Meth labs blow up all the time so Jack and most of the crew probably keep their distance. He'd only end up killing Todd and Jack would scorch the earth to avenge his nephew.
The issue though is Jessie has no idea if they'll kill the kid afterwards out of sheer spite if they don't get everyone. Jesse would never put a kid at risk like that. He genuinely thought they would kill him when he tried to escape
janes death disturbed me for days then andrea.. makes your guts feel weird
I love that Robert Forster got a chance to still work so close to his untimely passing. RIP, sir. And he was great as usual. Some guys just seem to control the scene with their very presence.
Lydia reminds me a lot like Gale and early Walt: if you just don't look at it, the grimy dangerous awful part of criminality doesn't exist and you are blameless for participating in it.
I've always maintained that Lydia is a female Walter. Up to the very end she keeps trying to convince herself that she's not rolling in the dirt with the rest of the criminals, that's she's somehow above it all and morally correct. It's why she behaves like she's in a crime movie, as Ariana and Maple pointed out.
Your reactions to Meth Damon in this episode are hilarious. 😂 You two should consider watching the show Fargo, if you haven't yet.
Heisenburg: "I watched Andrea die. I was there. I watched as that bullet went through her head. I could've stopped it, but I didn't"
"You walk in there with your head held high, you'll be the John Dillinger of the metropolitan detention center. How bad is that?" Words to live by, Saul. Words to live by.
I really appreciated your discussion about how Walt has so many complicated, different sides to his personality, and that means it's STILL hard to predict exactly what he's going to do, even in the very final episode of the show!
It's crazy how delusional Walter was even all the way up to this episode in him thinking he can just "fix" all the wrongs. Maybe that was just him subconsciously trying to disassociate from the fact that he was in the place that he was all because of his own actions.
He does ending up fixing most things though, the Nazi guys are dead, Jesse is free and his family will get all the money they need. Its not perfect obviously but it worked out pretty well for him.
Hope they didn't skip El Camino?
They didn’t. They already saw it and they’re at Better Call Saul. Although to be honest, they would’ve been able to watch the first four seasons beforehand.
The only episode in BB that made me sick to my stomach. Even after the events of Ozymandias.
Finally, we've reached the turning point of the show
A complete 360
The only time they have used ost track in full. And it hits.
My favourite episode of Breaking Bad ❤
We need a reaction to the movie Game Night!!!!!!
I second this
No, we don't.
Nice, a new Diet Jesus video :D
todd is so interesting to me because the contradictory parts of his character that would normally be a mask (his politeness and uncertainty, his 'gentlemanly' behaviour) is actually just as sincere as all of the evil criminal stuff. none of it is fake or exaggerated in the slightest. he's not hiding in plain sight the way walter and gus are, this is just genuinely who he is all the time, including while actively torturing and killing innocent people.
What would you do if you had a time machine?
If you guys remember back in season 1, Flynn asked Walt why wouldn’t he just die already. That was for a different reason, but now he’s fully cut ties and I don’t blame him. Walt had Hank and Steve killed among other people, and he still has the nerve to make his son an accomplice. At least Flynn still has integrity, but Walt’s biggest fear has manifested. Flynn loathes Walt, and that’s how he’s gonna remember him.
Well he didn't have them killed on purpose Jesse brought them out there but because he was trying to kill Jesse is why the guys showed up in the first place he should know nothing ever goes as planned
Most underrated episode. Watching this reaction was the first time I caught a line from Saul (not saying what to avoid any hint of spoilers for BCS) that I now believe the BCS writers took into strong consideration.
When people say the show wasn't hard enough on Walt, I always wonder what they were paying attention to during the phone call with Walt Jr. in this episode. That was a nuclear bomb dropped.
I love this episode because this is just Walt realizing he's completely powerless.
There's a line in Better Call Saul that subtly but I think deliberately implies that Walt's perceived issues with Gretchen and Elliot doing him dirty were sort of in his head. However, I think when this episode was produced, while there's no overt confirmation either way, there does feel like there's some subtle suggestions that Gretchen and Elliot (probably more so Elliot) were kind of snakes.
At the very least, we know they're playing down Walt's contribution to Gray Matter (we've been told explicitly that he, at the very least, contributed a few patents). Beyond that I can't point to anything explicit, but the conversation does have this vibe of "I assure the public I barely ever made repeated flights to Jeffrey Epstein's island." Also, I just think it genuinely adds more punch to the season finale if you assume Gretchen and Elliot really were snakes who kind of did Walt dirty.
I do think, just from a realism perspective, that Gretchen and Elliot's behavior on Charlie Rose would be a perfectly standard reaction for a public figure who had just been linked in the media to a massive national scandal. Not many people would be comfortable in that situation, and know the right answers to give the media. But, from the perspective that you're watching a show with brilliantly subtle writing that constantly feeds you bread crumbs to draw inferences from, the fact that they come off a little phony feels like a deliberate choice.
Even if it is a deliberate choice though, that doesn't mean it's intended to confirm anything about the Schwarzes. The goal could just be aiming to raise the possibility as a question in your mind. Maybe to get you thinking about Walt's motives at the end of this episode, maybe just to gin up fan speculation about what went down in Walt's backstory.
Also, when I talk about the Schwarzes maybe being weasels, I'm mostly assuming Elliot, since I do think at least Gretchen comes across as sincere in her disbelief that Walt could see their history the way he does. Then again, Walt always comes across as sincere when he tells Skyler, Jesse, and even himself that he's doing it "for the family".
21:18 - Some of the best acting I've ever seen in my life.
While it's been obvious since the beginning, the ending here really drives it home. The whole drug empire was never about his family or even the lure of being a drug kingpin. It was always trying to make up for what happened with Grey Matter and how his ego hasn't been able to handle it. Given that it wasn't just the money aspect, but the ego aspect of it, the chase is never-ending. No matter how much money he makes, he'll never be able to get over what happened with Grey Matter. But he'll continue to try to find ways to sooth his bruised ego.
When these were airing live back in 2013, the description for this episode said only "Events put in motion long ago move towards a conclusion". As it turned out, that wasn't referring to Hank getting killed, or even the meth cooking - Walt's story was always about Gray Matter.
perfect scene to play the theme once in the background
The writing by Vince Gilligan was phenomenal. Being a resident of Albuquerque and seeing the various landmarks was awesome. The finale "Felina" is a perfect ending to the series, the big scene coming up is a big F U to Jack, Todd and Lydia.
It's easy to say that greed is a major motivation of a lot of characters on this show, but greed is such too much a shallow, mustache=twirler character motivation for the depth of character writing on this show. Their "greed" is as always a placeholder for a much more complicated and interesting character motivation.
Gus's "greed" is really his pent up grief, anger, and desire for revenge over the murder of Max. Walt's "greed" is actually an attempt to fill his massive void of self-respect and purpose in life, needing to feel like he didn't waste his entire time and potential for nothing (of course, missing the fact that his loving family should have been proof enough in his value). And Todd's "greed" is really just him trying to simp over his dopey school boy crush on an older woman from the other side of the tracks.
Dimple is a blended Scotch called Haig & Haig Dimple Pinch in the USA and Haig Dimple everywhere else in the world. The terms Dimple and Pinch refer to its distinctive three-sided bottle. It was a favourite of a now deceased Dutch TV personality who was an old friend of mine.
"skylar just wanted to be a housewife" except that she screwed her boss and went along with the whole thing because she got used to the nice things her rich boss had, you know the guy she screwed who wasn't her husband.
LET'S GOOOO
I like how even for a couple of certified Walt Haters, there's not a whole lot of that in this week's reaction. :)
Lol I never realized Saul brings up managing a Cinnabon in this episode
If only Jesse knew his chemistry maybe he could have blown the lab up
How do the cops not catch Walter after storming the bar? They probably got there less than 5 minutes after he left. He's walking in show and malnourished. My 6 year old could track him down in those conditions.
Bought a truck in the parking lot for way too much cash and vamoosed? He had $100k with him at the bar. Also no one knows about his cabin 8 miles away nor do the cops know this wasn't a prank call until they fingerprint the glass or trace the phone call to Junior. He had some time.
There’s no way maple just called my goats average
The final table turn!
The show turns 360° with this one.
“What does that mean? Ohh”
I'm reallly confused as to how she wouldn't know.
I spent a month in Albuquerque in 2022. Should have tried to go see that house.
I stayed at a Red Roof Inn and they had brochures in the lobby for Breaking Bad tours, lol.
😂😂😂 Sounds like a scheme my buddy Jimmy would come up with.
Dimple Pinch is a Scotch whiskey
I looked it up and it's cheap whiskey. 30 bucks a bottle. Cheaper then Jack Daniels.
@@John_Locke_108 Yeah, it's like the generic version of Haig.
Did you ladies watch “El Camino”?
Y'all calmed down from the last reaction yet? 😂
0:30 "Not enough stickers? More stickers!"
This is really the turning point of the whole show imo
do a reaction to the trailer before watching the movie
You guys aren't ready for the finale.
i hope the girls dont forget the El Camino :)
The only way they could make the audience root for Walt in the end was to make an even more despicable enemy for him to get back at.
Yeah but it didn't work. Nobody was rooting for Walt in the finale.
Such great, last three episodes.
Did you guys watch “el Camino” the breaking bad movie?
Yup
As good an ending as possible. Will you be reacting to the El Camino movie next?
Already have :)
1 more episode. Time flies
10:08
I would have never guessed it took them by surprise if not for the large caption that obscures and distracts from their reaction.
I’d say cancel that raise I told the editor deserves in previous episode’s comments.
The Finale will be lit
Poor Andrea 😭
Happy that you girls were moaning and talking very less compared to previous videos
21:28 If girl on the left wasn't yapping so much you would've heard them say if Jessie tried anything else they would get the kid next.
The relentless cucking for Walt in the comments has been hilarious. Yall are the same people who wrote Skylar’s actor those death threats 😂 Props to these two for having their own opinion.
Jesse got Andrea killed. Period.
I mean if you wanna get technical, I’d place a good bit of blame on Walt. The only reason Jack and his men knew where Andrea lived was because Walt took them there
@@floridaman.813Yup. At the end of the day, everything comes back to Walt deciding to break bad back in Episode 1.
@@John_Locke_108 well I wouldn’t go that far lol. Jesse definitely made his fair share of mistakes. He fucked everything up with Gus, for instance
"What was she wearing though?"
@@floridaman.813but none on Jesse? Y'all are delusional, this isn't Walte fault
They just will not hush lol
I think this is some of the least theyve ever spoken lmao
It's a reaction episode. We're watching to hear their thoughts and opinions in the moment.
@@John_Locke_108 Yes but they tend to miss important dialogue when talking over it, thats why they don't really even understand the show very much.
@@Quarthonyep. Just here to over react and cover their mouths when minor things happen lol
Why don’t you watch the show by yourself then 😂