Official BREAKING BAD Season 4 Discussion Thread 10p SUNDAYS

peace

so in the end it was GUS underestimating Jesse.

Funny how Jesse was hating on Mr. White cause he felt he was underestimating him.

When in REALITY Walt had faith in his "son" the whole time...

I really need them to end this series with WAlt getting the win...

I really dont give a shit about NOBODY else (especially) Skylar getting hemmed up.

MY THEORY...:D

In the end it will be SKYLAR who ends up taking the fall for the family...

And lying that she was the REAL brains behind the entire operation...

and Saul getting her a sweetheart deal. She gonna rat out the cartel and Gus and get witness protection...

And tell her sister and Hank the pressure from the cancer and car wash and gambling got to her...

And she will FINALLY be a hero in her son's eyes...

That's faith in spite of himself & I don't feel he earns the win with all that impulsive, incorrect decision making & thinking through paniac & stupidity.

Of course he'll get some sort of 'win' just being alive (it being HIS Show) or with some cost but deserves it:smh: nah fuck him; I like the fact that he felt pain for his lil plan backfiring as he KNOWS that hne should have 4-6 backups fucking with Gus; Gus aint playing & Walt definitely is. When he was cancer ridden, blowing up Tuco's office, running kats over, blowing up BMWs of dickheads, sending orders getting Gale bodied, he was cool as ice.

Now he's rattled & trying to put it together with him spinning that piece on the table as one of the only times he's allowed himself to THINK & think ahead.


As far as your theory's concerned....
Interesting

I'm thinking, I'm more than likely wrong, but I feel one of them cats guarding Hank and the fam is going to kill one of them. This seasons ending has alot to do with next seasons ending. Damn near every season the last episode Walt comes out unscathed. Jesse loses something especially the last 2. His druggie chick and his sanity after killing Gale. Walt hasn't lost anything yet. He said the consequences are coming, to really amp things up, I think Hank's wife gets it in the end of this season. It amps up everything next season. Hank goes batshit crazy, as does Walt as he feels its his fault. What would really be an Ohhhhhhhhhhh moment, if its Hank's homie the mexican cat that does it. This thread would light up like the 4th of July

Now I thought that for a second when they were paying some sort of attention to that DEA agent outside the house but iono.

Wouldn't put much pass the writers looking for an interesting closeout to keep peiople bugging & thinking for the premiere:dunno:
My prediction is the black trainer that everybody was amped about earlier in the season will come back and finally fuck Marie :lol:

Twin nikka, that's what YOU wanna see.
They never even took a closeup on tht kat's face for more than 5 seconds without someone else in a shot.
How's he gonna score some ass, where & for what:roflmao2:?
They cant even fit that it;

QuietLieutenant Goon & him have the same chances of running a train on chick:lol:


peace
 
Twin nikka, that's what YOU wanna see.
They never even took a closeup on tht kat's face for more than 5 seconds without someone else in a shot.
How's he gonna score some ass, where & for what:roflmao2:?
They cant even fit that it;

QuietLieutenant Goon & him have the same chances of running a train on chick:lol:


peace

Na Twin I'm just bullshittin w/ cats! :lol:
 
That wasn't Gus on the phone it was Mike, that's why they had the convo they did in the bar

Sounded like Gus to me. I thought he called mike and went to meet him at the bar because Mike was the original person that set up the meeting. His only connection to seeing Gus again.
 
it was gus
and if it does come out that it was walt that did it jessee is gonna really kill him
i expect gus to be in the wind now, jessee had too much access to him he was open and vulnerable and gus realized that
probably won't be with 4 miles of him the rest of the season unless he wants them to be

i know one thing walt and jessee better be on the look out for old ass cutlass's riding around
 
who knows what episode the conversation takes

place in(where walt is told to go home)?

& since we're guessing i think walt & jessie will do in gus,

possibly with mikes help(as crazy as that sounds).
 
who knows what episode the conversation takes

place in(where walt is told to go home)?

& since we're guessing i think walt & jessie will do in gus,

possibly with mikes help(as crazy as that sounds).

I posted the name of the episode

It was gus

End of story
 
I think it's Gus as well now.

They only say go home Walter.

It's ep. 4.2. He would know, 'cause he

Probley has cameras on his house.

It seemed to be mike 'cause of the bar

Scene. The voice is not distinctly Gus or mike.
 
It had to Mike on the other end of the phone, that's why Walter started lookin' around from left to right, he even looked behind himself just to see where he was bein' watched from, but he never looked at the windows in Gus' home tho.

If it was Gus, I think he would've heard about it later on from Gus himself, instead of gettin' fucked up by Mike the very next morning.

If that wasn't Mike on the phone, then it definitely wasn't Gus.
 
It had to Mike on the other end of the phone, that's why Walter started lookin' around from left to right, he even looked behind himself just to see where he was bein' watched from, but he never looked at the windows in Gus' home tho.

If it was Gus, I think he would've heard about it later on from Gus himself, instead of gettin' fucked up by Mike the very next morning.

If that wasn't Mike on the phone, then it definitely wasn't Gus.

Exactly like Gus gonna just say 'go home Walter' and then NEVER mention that he saw him walking toward his house w/ a gun
 
It had to Mike on the other end of the phone, that's why Walter started lookin' around from left to right, he even looked behind himself just to see where he was bein' watched from, but he never looked at the windows in Gus' home tho.

If it was Gus, I think he would've heard about it later on from Gus himself, instead of gettin' fucked up by Mike the very next morning.

If that wasn't Mike on the phone, then it definitely wasn't Gus.

It was pretty obvious from the voice that it was Gus....Mike was staking out, called Gus to ask what to do, and Gus decided to handle it himself...
 


CLICK AT YOUR OWN RISK, BREAKING BAD ALUMNI!

:eek::eek::eek::eek::eek:


http://www.slashfilm.com/tv-previews-beavis-butthead-trailer-minute-breaking-bad-season-finale/

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uOhxV9ssXOo&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vT6IupG-JXI

http://www.reddit.com/r/breakingbad/comments/kzjx5/i_am_declaring_breaking_bad_to_be_the_greatest/




oQInr.png

H6J2F.jpg


 
You ninjas sicken me

Can we get back to the season finale

I hope they dont end it with more questions then answers and then make us wait a year for the conclusion


The guy who plays dexter is asking 24 million for 2 more seasons

Anybody know how much walter is getting paid?
 
http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/10/07/us-breakingbad-idUSTRE7966MK20111007



r



"Breaking Bad" season finale ends best season yet


Cast members (L-R) Anna Gunn, Giancarlo Esposito, Bryan Cranston and Aaron Paul of AMC's drama television series 'Breaking Bad' pose as they arrive for the premiere screening for the show's fourth season in Hollywood, California June 28, 2011. REUTERS/Fred Prouser

By Kimberly Potts

Fri Oct 7, 2011 7:19pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - Here's the dilemma about Sunday night's "Breaking Bad" season finale: We can't wait to see it. But once we do, we won't get any more "Breaking Bad" episodes for...well, a long time.

The show's fourth season has cemented its status as one of the best TV dramas ever, and, we might even argue, the best TV show ever, period. Fans of "The Wire" and "The Sopranos" and "Mad Men" will make their own arguments, but we challenge anyone to honestly point to another series that, episode after episode, season after season, entertains as much as this one.

Series creator Vince Gilligan, the writers, the crew, and the Emmy-winning cast have built a sometimes unbearable amount tension into season four, with payoffs both subtle (Hank's theory about the industrial laundry operation!) and shocking (poor, dumb Ted Beneke).

They've also managed an astonishing amount of humor in a show about a chemistry teacher who starts cooking meth with his slacker former student after a terminal cancer diagnosis. Much of the credit goes to comic mastermind Bob Odenkirk (Better call Saul) -- but everyone gets their licks in.

Everything so far comes to a head in Sunday's season ender, as the inevitable showdown between Walt and his drug boss Gus (Giancarlo Esposito) plays out. Jesse and Walt's entire family are caught in the middle.

We can't wait to see how it unfolds. Even though we'll have to wait -- until the summer of 2012, most likely -- to check back in with our favorite Albuquerque residents for the show's fifth and final season.

Sunday's finale airs at 10/9c on AMC.
 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breaking_Bad#Season_five

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breaking_Bad




Breaking Bad has received widespread critical acclaim and has been praised by many critics as one of the greatest dramas of all time.[20][21]

David Segal of The New York Times praised the show as "satisfying and complex: a revolutionary take on the serial drama."[13] Alan Sepinwall of HitFix remarked that the third season belonged "in the pantheon of all-time great years for a TV drama."[22] Newsweek called the program "TV's finest hour."[23] Richard Woodward of The Huffington Post referred to the series as "ultra-dark and gripping."[24] James Poniewozik of Time named Breaking Bad the top show on his "Top 10 TV Series of 2010" list.[25] Todd VanDerWerff of HitFix admired the show for being "better than almost any series on right now at ramping up tension in almost completely organic ways."[26] Linda Stasi of the New York Post stated "the acting is as good as you'll see on TV."[27] Time said the series "has the elements of success."[28] Ken Tucker of Entertainment Weekly rated season one a "B+".[29] Novelist Stephen King also praised the series as "the best scripted show on TV" in his "Pop of King" column in Entertainment Weekly.[30] National Review commentator Jonah Goldberg has referred to the program as "the best show on TV" (emphasis in original) and to the character White as "a mensch at sea."[31] Author and Grantland.com contributor Chuck Klosterman named Breaking Bad the "best TV show of the past 10 years," edging out Mad Men, The Sopranos, and The Wire.[32] Tim Goodman of The Hollywood Reporter admired the show as "unquestionably one of the greatest dramas in TV history."[33] Slant Magazine contributor Sarah Holcomb detailed the show as "a complete work, one thought out long in advance and unfolding in its own time. This is one of the rarest finds on television."[34]

On the review aggregator website Metacritic, the first season scored 74/100,[35] the second season scored 85/100,[36] the third season scored 89/100[37] and the fourth season scored 96/100, receiving the status of "universal acclaim."[38]


The series has won numerous awards and nominations, including six Emmy Awards and Bryan Cranston winning the Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series three years in a row.[39] Overall, the show has won 16 industry awards and been nominated for a further 40.[40]
[edit] Ratings

The first season averaged 1.2 million viewers.[41] The second season premiere was watched by 1.7 million viewers, up 41.6% from the previous season.[42]

The third season premiere was the highest rated episode in the series' history at that time; having been watched by 2 million viewers, with an additional 1.1 million viewers with the repeat airings later the same night, increasing 40% from the second season premiere.[43] The rest of the third season episodes averaged between 1.2 and 1.8 million viewers.[44]

The fourth season premiere received 2.6 million viewers, increasing 32% from the third season premiere and becoming the most-watched episode of the series.[45]
 
It had to Mike on the other end of the phone, that's why Walter started lookin' around from left to right, he even looked behind himself just to see where he was bein' watched from, but he never looked at the windows in Gus' home tho.

If it was Gus, I think he would've heard about it later on from Gus himself, instead of gettin' fucked up by Mike the very next morning.

If that wasn't Mike on the phone, then it definitely wasn't Gus.

weird, I had always assumed it was Mike, but it doesn't sound like him and it definitely doesn't sound like Gus (no hint of an accent)
 


Good appearance from Bryan Cranston on Friday, Oct. 7th's Letterman show on CBS. See if you can stream it online, fam'. He mentioned the closing shot from episode 13 - season 4 that leaves us for the season. Sounded interesting. Watched it this morning (as I had recorded it yesterday).

http://baldmove.com/category/breaking-good-a-breaking-bad-podcast/

http://itunes.apple.com/ca/podcast/breaking-bad-afterbuzz-tv/id451396553

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qYrUOFP6-uk

http://www.prweb.com/releases/breakingbad/aftershow/prweb8858764.htm

http://www.ustream.tv/recorded/17370742

http://www.ustream.tv/afterbuzztv

http://baldmove.com/





 
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