What was the narrative purpose of this scene?

What was the narrative purpose of this scene?

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It forshadows Jesse pretending to set Walt's money a blaze...
BONFIRE!

[REVVING INTESTINES]

>directed by rian johnson

B
B
B
B
BONFIYYAAAAAA

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that walt isn't walt anymore, it's literally screaming at you that he broke bad, it's plain and simple, but effective.

>Dad what the fuck I said I wanted an RX7!

What did they mean by this?
youtu.be/VQG5_rR4hog

Imagine The Wire throwing a random car commercial in a scene.

dunno lol

Imagine expecting any other season than Season 2 of The Wire to be good

In which episode is this?

My favorite scene is when the bully is making fun of Flynn buying jeans

I never understood the ego Walter Jr. had. He always wanted the car from the poster and was acting like baby when he didn't get it, even when he didn't know about the money.

Literally to promote FiatChrysler cars.

Normaly it would indicate the character's materialism and greed. However, since the showrunners decided to use a couple of oversized and idiotic american shitboxes made from cheap plastic instead of expensive vehicles, this scene falls flat on it's face.

R.J. Mitte did portray a retard pretty well.

To create shitposting threads on TV. God, you're an insufferable faggot. Do you masturbate to (You)s? Eat shit and die, bucko.

Season 4

>Is knocking at the door

It would be a major crime, sheeeeeeeeeiiiiitttt

the scene was like a bad acid trip

This.

It is definitely product placement but Chrysler vehicles are used to project a devil may care masculinity like in Street Kings and Miami Vice.

Raisin Bran Crunch

>What was the narrative purpose of this scene?
BOBOBOBOBOBOBOBOBONFIRE!