Geben hiermit zu Protokoll, daß wir jetzt auch Breaking Bad angeschaut haben. Da sich ungefähr alle Leute wunderten, daß wir es nicht schon längst gesehen haben, gehe ich mal davon aus, daß es sonst alle sowieso schon gesehen haben.
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"WOW I can't believe RJ Mitte is still in character as Walter Jr. after all these years!!"
He has cerebral palsy, jackhole, shut the fuck up. He sounds like that in real life. You, unfortunately, are an ableist piece of shit in real life.
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Bryan Cranston, Dean Norris, and RJ Mitte in Breaking Bad (2008) Over
S2E10
Despite the good news about his condition, Walt is feeling out of sorts and is generally unhappy, verging on anger. Skyler decides to throw a party to celebrate the news and thank all of their friends for their support, but Walt gets drunk and then into an argument with Hank that puts a damper on things. He's embarrassed about his behavior and tries to make amends all around but it's proving to be a challenge. He tries to channel his energies but eventually realizes what the problem is. Walt also tells Jesse the good news and tells him that he is finished with their little enterprise. Jesse's relationship with Jane continues to grow but he's taken aback when her father drops in to see her and she doesn't introduce him as her boyfriend. The ensuing confrontation clarifies their relationship.
*While Jane is eating a Popsicle in Jesse's kitchen, the Popsicle goes from being nearly half-eaten to whole and back again during the course of the conversation.
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And this show was all about disabled people
All of them but mostly deaf people but it did the thing
That everyone keeps trying to force
It casted real disabled people
In life
And it wasn’t all sappy and sad and ~inspiring~
They just wanted the story to be about a deaf girl
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"Breaking Bad" is probably the most popular tv show in the U.S. wherein a disabled character is not only portrayed by an actual Disabled person, but is written with a personality & a sense of self-advocacy.
And yet nothing has changed in how Disabled people are treated in the U.S.
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