Oh, Walt didn’t mean for Brock to die. Doesn’t mean that there wasn’t a risk of it happening. It looked a bit touch-and-go there for a while.
(By the way, what’s up with all the confusing Walt’s and Hank’s names in these threads? Walt is the gloomy-looking bald guy, who according to Hank was running a secret meth empire. Hank is the gloomy-looking bald guy, who according to Walt was running a secret meth empire. Jeez, it’s not hard.)
TLDR of my previous posts, the Cartel wouldn’t kill Gus because they were scared of what would happen if they did. Walt did. I wonder if he will find out why they were scared.
There’s no way this is true. Jesse would never have let Walt live if he had known that he’d poisoned Brock. Jesse was fooled - he was ready to go right at Gus after the meeting. When Walt planted the ricin in the Roomba, Jesse broke down and apologized for ever doubting him.
Jesse definitely bought the idea that Gus had poisoned Brock.
Well, Walt could’ve/would’ve been paid as the chemist for Hank’s meth empire, so that’s not really consistent.
No, Hank looks really bad in all of this. People have highlighted the reasons in other threads. Hank’s obsession with controlling the blue meth case, refusing promotion to come back to ABQ, his obsession with Fring (and Walt implicates them as rivals), the hit on Hank, the treatment paid for, there are dozens of little reasons that add up to make Hank look quite guilty.
At least Jesse has snapped out of his depression. OK, so it’s been replaced with mad fury, but hey, baby steps, I guess.
(I just had a bit of a :smack: moment by myself concerning Jesse’s sometimes, shall we say, unpredictable behaviour over the seasons. You know how it goes, “this is your brain on drugs”? Yeah, Jesse has been a heavy user of meth, and occasionally of heroin, for a number of years, with a not insignificant pot habit thrown in for good measure. I guess some twists and turns of temperament and a bit of odd decision making isn’t all that surprising.)
Except none of that adds up to much of anything. There is no evidence that Hank did anything wrong and plenty that he diligently pursued the case. Is there any that he actively hindered the case? No. It might be enough to require investigation, but they will find nothing worthwhile. And why would Hank, this supposed drug kingpin, need to borrow money from Walt? Where’s Hank’s money? Where is the evidence? There is none. Walt’s story falls apart quite easily with just the most rudimentary investigation.
Hank has no direct evidence on Walt either except the money, and that’s gone. Anyway, hank doesn’t need to be convicted in order to destroy his career, just the accusation and the fact his rehab was paid with drug money would be enough to get him kicked out of the DEA.
Why? He (not even him, Marie) accepted money from his brother and sister-in-la, who later turned out to be drug kingpins. What is going to get Hank in trouble is not saying anything now that he knows, none of his actions up to this point are evidence of any wrongdoing, primarily because Hank has done nothing wrong. It is dramatic, and makes for good television, but Walt’s confession is completely empty. At worst Hank gets put on leave while there is an investigation and he looks foolish in front of his colleagues.
I thought the “confession” was brilliant, just because it was so completely outrageous. I was reminded of Saul’s line from an episode way back when: “I once convinced a woman I was Kevin Costner, and it worked because I believed it”.
This came up in last week’s thread, but to a suspicious outsider, it could look like Hank went to great lengths to maintain control of the case and stop other agents from looking into it. Walt’s not planning to go to the DEA with this story anyway. The point is that from the outside it would look consistent with the facts, it would cause Hank a lot of problems, and (if Walt thinks he’ll be dead in five or six months - which of course he won’t) give Walt the time he needs. And it does give Hank a better idea who he was dealing with. You could see how disgusted Skyler was with this trick. Walt was trying pretty hard to come up with lies to explain the soda machine thing and then his other trip, and she didn’t care at all. She’s checked out.
On a recent episode of the Nerdist Podcast, Vince Gilligan stated that they had no intentions to explain any more of Gus’ past. They just wanted to flesh him out as a character and add some interesting mystery as to his backstory. I also thought that it was going go come up, but thinking about it, it does work better as a mystery (Darth Vader, anyone?).
… but this is the same Hank that is/was afraid to go to the DEA. It’s very reasonable for Hank to be scared shitless of what Walt has on him … or may have on him that none of us even know.
This is true, my point being is that Hank is acting stupid, because clear thinking would convince him Walt’s confession is toothless. But I do not find it unbelievable at all, Hank is kind of in shock and not thinking clearly. It is totally believable, but I don’t think it is a brilliant ploy by Walt, it is extremely high risk.
Have we actually ever seen a shot in which a doctor tells Walt his cancer is back? IIRC, we saw him going into the PET scan and then he went around telling Skyler etc. that his cancer was back. Is there any evidence at all that’s true?
Jesse doesn’t think Brock was poisoned with ricin - because Walt put the fake ricin cigarette in Jesse’s Rumba vacuum cleaner. Now, he may realize at some point that Walt staged this whole thing but I think for now, he’s just realizing that Walt had the ricin lifted off Jesse in order to make Gus look like a child murderer, and then of course, to have Jesse help Walt murder Gus.
I didn’t notice that, but it made me go check something else. Saul had on purple socks (and possibly a purple pocket square, hard to tell on the online highlights). Saul is a flamboyant dresser, but I can’t imagine they go near the color purple lightly. Not so much because of it’s symbolism, but because it’s Marie’s color. Even some one who doesn’t read into the colors, may have picked up on the Marie=Purple thing and might still wonder if they’re trying to make a Marie/Saul connecting. The only reason I even looked at that was because I was thinking that he had a purple shirt on which would have been a much bigger statement, the socks, we can probably ignore, if the pocket square was purple, that’s a bigger deal, IMO.
Also, I just ran across this when trying to find something about symbolism in the colors, which I’m terrible at picking up on.