- 28,706
- 11,940
- Joined
- Oct 31, 2009
The blue and red theory makes sense, its used in ancient Greek and Roman art too. Love this dude Gilligan
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: this_feature_currently_requires_accessing_site_using_safari
There was no set up/meaningful details for Walt poisoning Brock with the lily of the valley. Just a reveal that he did do it in the end by showing it in his back yard.
[thread="619284"]The way Nike Jordan worded that confused me but now i see what he was saying. Larry David was a writer on SNL with Odenkirk, Jerry Seinfeld was not[/thread]
I don't think every single detail means something, just that that's the tone the writers have created with small things like the coloring they chose for wardrobe and scenery. Every detail does help to create the world, though...and when tiny things pop up once, and you think nothing of it, then they pop up again I love it.I don't believe this is true at all. At least not everything.Just the fact that this show lends itself to this kind of conversation is great. I loved BB because it forced you to watch episodes multiple times. Every little detail was thought through, it seemed.
Exactly. Every detail seemingly means something, or nothing at all.
And when it means nothing at all, suddenly 5 episodes later it means everything.
Nothing in their universe is without rhyme or reason. Flash forwards, flash backs, slick comments, pieces of a puzzle, easter eggs, coffee mugs, chess pieces, everything builds onto something.
The opening scene of the entire series came from an innocuous comment. I mean......
I mean what did Walt throwing the pizza pie on the garage roof out of anger mean then? Not a damn thing specifically that mattered at the moment or down the line.
There was no set up/meaningful details for Walt poisoning Brock with the lily of the valley. Just a reveal that he did do it in the end by showing it in his back yard.
I'm pretty sure it was Vince himself nearing the 2nd half of the final season that said he's seen some fan theories about the ending or specific seasons that he never gave a 2nd thought about when making the decision.
That's one thing I've noticed on internet forums coinciding with the rise of better tv shows. Fans will do their hardest to come up with the wildest theories to connect **** together no matter what. It's happened to the point I think some creators capitalize off of it by doing stuff like that knowing it will go nowhere and has nothing to do with the main story.
I usually like to blame LOST for starting this **** but I recognize fans of anything have been doing this stuff with all types of pieces of work made for public consumption many with the intent to mind****.
oh this is one of them threads
Not EVERY small scene means something.
Pretty sure the pizza being thrown onto the roof was for comedy, not foreshadowing...
Unless the Pizza was bought from the same exact place that's next to the Cinnabon in Omaha...
Which it was.
not srs
Yes not everything means something or is foreshadowing. The pizza literally was nothing other than a pizza. My point is the pizza on the roof sticking around for a few episodes was a cool little thing that helped build the world and make things more believable.Not EVERY small scene means something.
Pretty sure the pizza being thrown onto the roof was for comedy, not foreshadowing...
Unless the Pizza was bought from the same exact place that's next to the Cinnabon in Omaha...
Which it was.
not srs
oh this is one of them threads
**** ruined true detective for me and I won't let it happen again |I
Probably both. He seems like a stickler when it comes to not getting good service he already paid for but I'm sure he was extra suspicious of Jimmy for that last visit given he was early.did chuck force himself to steal the paper because he really loves local news or because he suspected something when saul said he just had to get his face out there?
Read again.Larry David was a writer on SNL, not Seinfeld.
You couldn't be more wrong Larry David created Seinfeld with Jerry and helped write the show until season 7 do your googles.
HAHAHA dialing the number on Sauls billboard will give you the answering machine where he's using his fake british accent
new mexico number and everything
(505) 842-5662
Had no idea Nacho was mentioned in S2 of BB...mind blown
HAHAHA dialing the number on Sauls billboard will give you the answering machine where he's using his fake british accent
new mexico number and everything
(505) 842-5662