The road to the abyss

Jazlyn 2022-04-03 09:01:12

After watching the second season, I saw a lot of people arguing for the old white. In fact, there is an evaluation that is right, saying that he is a real drug dealer now. The drugs he produced, either directly or indirectly, would inevitably lead to the destruction of people's homes, the death of drugs, the separation of wives, and so on. He has long since lost his conscience and moral qualifications.
Compared to this, seeing death is not a big deal. It just happened in front of him, so it caused some shocks.
Although I am really reluctant to admit it, I have to admit that he is no longer a righteous and kind chemistry teacher. He has stories and difficulties, but he has been walking steadily on his way to the abyss.
Remember when he saw a guy in the store buying drug-making stuff (if I understood it correctly) and he couldn't help but storm out and say, get the fuck out of Lao Tzu's place!
Old white, handsome. Waiting for you to go further and further down the dark and evil path...

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Extended Reading
  • Jakob 2022-04-05 09:01:07

    Wife playing Nima is too annoying. I've only watched a dozen episodes, and I almost got emphysema; Lao Bai has lived with this woman for more than ten years, and naturally he has lung cancer. Marry a control freak wife, so she was so aggrieved that she got cancer; when she got cancer, she was forced to become a drug lord; when she became a drug lord, her wife went to steal a man and cuckold Lao Bai. . . Failure in life, in fact, from the day of marrying the wrong wife.

  • Arnold 2022-04-24 07:01:26

    The story is more solid and good-looking than the first season

Seven Thirty-Seven quotes

  • Walter White: [showing Jesse a baggie of castor beans] We are going to process them into ricin.

    Jesse Pinkman: Rice and beans?

    Walter White: Ricin. It's an extremely effective poison. It's toxic in small doses. Also fairly easy to overlook during an autopsy.

    Jesse Pinkman: All right. All right. So...

    Walter White: [slapping his hand away] Don't touch them.

    Jesse Pinkman: Seriously, you can get poisoned from beans?

    Walter White: Yes. Back in the late '70s, ricin was used to assassinate a Bulgarian journalist. The KGB modified the tip of an umbrella to inject a tiny pellet into the man's leg. And we're talking about an amount not much bigger than the head of a pin.

    Jesse Pinkman: But it... it killed him?

    Walter White: Oh, yes. Now we just need to figure out a delivery device, and then no more Tuco.

  • Hank Schrader: [at a crime scene] Oh, this is beautiful. Hey, someone call Jay Leno. We got the world's dumbest criminal. This guy wasn't murdered. Look. Big stuff here was, uh, moving this guy's body when the, uh... the stack must have shifted. Crushed his arm, pinned him here, and he, uh, he bled out.

    Steven Gomez: Poetic justic. Oh, I love it.

    Hank Schrader: Don't you just? Hey, hey, get a photo of me with this guy, all right?

    [posing next to the body]

    Hank Schrader: Old stumpy here. Make sure you get the stump in there.