other things i found out about her:
[LIST]
[]she was the lead in the pilot for Homeland, but they dropped her for Claire Danes
[]she hasn’t even met Vince Gilligan yet
[*]what her boobs look like
[/LIST]
what are everyones thoughts on the symbolism of the tarantula in the jar? i was chatting with a friend bout this show and he came up with this theory that the tarantula represents the entire case ie Walt and Jessie’s history of murder n meth, and the glass jar, while fragile, is a bubble keeping everything from unravelling. i dont remember the ending too well, but the jar didnt break right? could it mean that the kid is still alive? like everyone is saying, the kid getting killed will upset Jessie very much, probably enough to make him just pack up and get out or take someone out and cause the entire operation to crumble. or is it BECAUSE the jar didnt break, that Walt, Jessie and Mike’s shield is still up since they didnt leave behind any witnesses?
i also have my own little theory. the kid putting the tarantula in the jar represents walter breaking bad (ahyuck), entering the underworld in order to provide for his family, as well as fooling everyone into believing that he is a normal dude. the kid probably also has the same intentions and wants to keep the tarantula as a pet and take care of it. But once those intentions are gone, all there is left to do is burn in the cage that you were put in, ie the spider roasting in the jar out there in the desert will be what’s in store for walter in the upcoming episodes.
did anyone else notice this connection or am i just making stuff up haha.
anywya, damn i cant wait till the next episode!
I’m on my phone so I’ll
Keep this brief. Killing the kid was a very unwise move.
Had the boy survived, he’d have gone home, possibly (not even definitely) mentioned that he’d seen some guys messing with pipes by the train line, then his parents would have responded by saying “why the fuck do you have a tarantula”. Unless his parents were DEA or something to do with the train companies they wouldn’t care, or at least think
It was worth notifying police. There’s nothing suspicious sounding in the recounting of the events this boy saw. Even if, at a stretch, somebody felt they needed to get hold of these guys to see what they were doing, that boys not going to give sufficient descriptions to get hold of these guys, especially ones with no criminal records like Walt and generic features like the other two.
Now there will be forensics and a man hunt who will cross reference the time of death with the train stopping and they might start looking at identifying the man with the broken truck and vehicle (which will be non registered or stolen and the driver won’t come forward) meaning they are certain to investigate the chemicals. If they notice the methlamyne dilution they could even start taking prints off the carriage and really going deep into investigating something that would have gone unnoticed or blamed on Chinese factories.
In short, offing a kid makes things worse from a sarty point of view. Right dawgs?
I’m really confused as to why people expect a TV show to play out exactly like real life without the coincidences and convenient crossing of paths which are common in virtually every performance medium from Shakespearean plays to fucking big budget films.
Bill Burr did a good job. It’s funny when I saw his name in the opening credits and expected him to act like the dude in the Chappelle
s Show Sketch about the Racial Draft. He fit in with the band of “merry men” just fine.
But honestly, if this were any other season they would go that far. But since we are dealing with Scarface Walt burying easily discoverable bodies is cool.
I’m still trying to figure out why a 13 (if that) year old kid is riding a dirt bike through the desert alone. I thought white people kept their kids on leashes like I see at the mall/airport/Disney World?