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#3: Hank will waltz in, sit down, and give a very casual "Hello, Jesse". Hank will throw out some more names, call him a piece of ****, and tell him he has a chance to redeem himself. That he's on the verge of catching Heisenberg, and all he needs is Jesse's confession to knowing something.
Here's where it'll fall apart: Hank will tell Jesse that if he gives him some solid evidence, Heisenberg will go down forever and Jesse will have a deal to be let free. Hank will offer a deal to work with Jesse in order to make sure he gets minimal sentencing, and Heisenberg will get everything that's coming to him. Now, Jesse is looking for punishment. He's looking to pay for the things he's done, so that deal doesn't work for him. Jesse looks up and says "I'm Heisenberg".
He especially needs to get his hands on that book. That's really the only thing Hank has on him, and even that is pretty thin.Why doesn't Walt just burn down Hanks garage, all the evidence is now in there. Might I suggest a toy remote control car as the incendiary device?
Sorry for having a different opinion than yours. I just prefer the guy who is a badass rather than the guy who every once and a while tries to be a badass.
I think the Ricin is for Lydia and the guns are for her entourage in retribution for them taking out everyone close to Walt, including Skyler, kids, Hank, and Jesse. Walt's the only one who walks away alive.
I can only assume Hank is thinking about the book and tv deals that will come with sending his own brother in law to jail. I mean seriously this story would make for a hell of a drama series on AMC, and they could get the dad from Malcom in the Middle to play... Oh crap, never mind.
I'm pretty sure no one can watch that show, with its original intent, ever again. Along that same line, search on YouTube "Bryan Cranston Coffeemate" and "Aaron Paul Corn Pops". Watch and then read the comments. (I'd post, but I'm on my phone)
You would think if someone took out Skyler, the kids, Hank, etc., then why would Walt stick around himself? My only answer would be to take care of whoever killed his family, then kill himself.
I agree with previous posters that I see Grey/Gray Matter as a loose end that needs to be taken care of in the next six episodes. That subplot felt like it fell off a cliff...that doesn't seem like the writers' style.
Samuel L Jackson and Bob Odenkirk (Saul) on next week's Talking Bad. AMC better have the beep button ready.
Do you think Huell and Kuby take any of Walt's money? They give each other a look after Walt asks if the money is all there. That could be the downfall to Saul: his hired men cross Walt.
Yeah, it was kind of inferred that they might have taken a little as Walt says "close enough."Walter doesn't even know how much money he has and also he has bigger things to worry about than a couple stacks of cash.
Yeah, it was kind of inferred that they might have taken a little as Walt says "close enough."
There's no way Walt would be able to tell if anything was missing, even a very large amount. I think his close enough comment would be more accurately interpreted to be "there was a crapload of cash in the storage unit and there's a crapload of cash in these barrels - good enough for me." The look the guys gave each other seemed to say, "dang, we totally could have taken a bag full of money each and he wouldn't have ever known."
I'm pretty sure no one can watch that show, with its original intent, ever again. Along that same line, search on YouTube "Bryan Cranston Coffeemate" and "Aaron Paul Corn Pops". Watch and then read the comments. (I'd post, but I'm on my phone)
You would think if someone took out Skyler, the kids, Hank, etc., then why would Walt stick around himself? My only answer would be to take care of whoever killed his family, then kill himself.
I agree with previous posters that I see Grey/Gray Matter as a loose end that needs to be taken care of in the next six episodes. That subplot felt like it fell off a cliff...that doesn't seem like the writers' style.
Samuel L Jackson and Bob Odenkirk (Saul) on next week's Talking Bad. AMC better have the beep button ready.
Hank is definitely going to break bad. Like he said last night, if he brings this to the DEA, his career is over. They also aren't going to be able to prosecute Walt. The majority of the evidence is circumstantial, the key piece of evidence is stolen, and Walt is out of the game. If they launch an investigation it gets increasingly difficult to show any connections Walt might have, as he's been divested of the some for awhile.
The only way left for Hank to bring Walt down is to operate somewhat outside the law.
I think the point will be to illustrate what we're capable of to protect the most important things in our life. Walt with his family and Hank with his career.
those were copies, as they were not indexed.Why doesn't Walt just burn down Hanks garage, all the evidence is now in there. Might I suggest a toy remote control car as the incendiary device?
Using the reddit link someone posted earlier, I read some comments/ideas and built this possibility:
Lydia thinks Skyler is keeping Walt from cooking since the car wash confrontation. Lydia hires Todd's Uncle's team to kill/kidnap Skyler to blackmail him into cooking again. Walt's trip back to New Mexico with that machine gun is to go after Todd's Uncle's team... Building off of that even more, I think Jesse kills Todd since Todd killed the boy on the dirt bike.
Unless Hank can tie Walt and Jesse together, which is very possible.
You want to know what the greatest thing about this TV show is? After reading the numerous different possibilities to the ending of this show, in reality we have no idea how it is going to end. We're all just along for the ride and the ride is going to be epic.
Another great thing about this show... on alot of other great series (Sopranos, Lost, BSG), it seemed like the last season had a lot of filler episodes and then all the action and real plot movement happened at the end. Every episode of Breaking Bad has been tense and moved the plot forward. Well done.