Shadowing-Übung: Analysing the Most Important Scene in Breaking Bad - Englisch Sprechen Lernen mit YouTube

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I apologize, deeply.
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I apologize, deeply.
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Thank you.
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Now please tell me why you did it.
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Let's talk about one of the most important scenes in Breaking Bad, buried halfway into Season 2, Episode 6.
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Every time I rewatch it, I always find myself pausing, rewinding and going back and forth to certain points in the conversation to try
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and piece together the context the best I can.
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Also mostly remembered for Jesse's storyline, tucked away in the middle is a short conversation so crucial to understanding Walt's story.
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In just 5 minutes this scene sheds so much light on his character,
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pulls back the curtain surrounding the mystery of grey matter and gives us some much needed insight into Walt's past.
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It's just two people, Walt and Gretchen, sitting in a restaurant having a conversation.
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And in typical Breaking Bad fashion, the genius lies in the restraint.
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The show doesn't tell us what happened between Walt, Gretchen and Elliot, it just hands us puzzle pieces for us to put together ourselves.
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So let's break this scene down line by line, moment by moment, let's talk about what we know,
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what we can guess and most importantly what the show refuses to say out loud.
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First we need to go all the way back to season 1 episode 3, that's the first time we ever see Gretchen, we flash back to a younger Walt,
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confident, charming and romantically involved with Gretchen.
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The two of them are working together at what we can assume is the early stage of Grey Matter Technologies, the company Walt co-founded with her and Elliot.
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And just for a moment, we see the version of Walt that could have been, the scientist, the academic, the visionary on the cusp of something huge.
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But somewhere between that flashback and the pilot episode, everything fell apart.
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Walt walked away.
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He left the company, left the relationship, all for a cheque of a measly $5,000.
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Meanwhile, Grey Matter went on to become a multi-billion dollar tech giant without him.
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And that is the origin point of Walt's resentment, his bitterness, his insecurity, his obsession with being underestimated.
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And what's so brilliant is how little the show actually tells us about what happened.
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It's It's all vague, hinted at through these tense conversations and offhand comments.
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And that's exactly what makes this restaurant scene so important.
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It's one of the very few times that someone from Walt's past confronts him directly about all of it.
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When Skylar reached out to Gretchen and Elliot, asking if they'd be willing to help pay for Walt's treatment, it seemed like a totally rational move.
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They're billionaires, her husband used to be close with them, and she thinks it makes perfect sense to ask.
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But I've always wondered how much Skylar knew about Walt's romantic past with Gretchen.
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It doesn't really seem like she knew anything.
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She never hints at any tension or awkwardness.
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She treats Gretchen and Elliot like old friends.
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Which leads me to think that Walt never told her about any of it.
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Walt probably kept a lot of his grey matter history a secret.
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The money, the success, the fallout.
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He isn't just ashamed of how things ended, he's still wounded by it.
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and he's never managed to let it go.
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So when Skylar reaches out to Gretchen and Elliot, she's unknowingly dragging up all of that buried resentment, and Walt's reaction, the panic, the lies, the cover story,
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it all starts to make sense.
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So let's go to the restaurant scene.
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It starts off polite, formal, but there's a tense feeling from the start, and Walt, as he always does, tries to stay in control.
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He starts with a carefully worded apology.
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Alright, first, let me say, I very much regret involving you in this.
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This was.. this entire thing was unfortunate.
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Unfortunate is an interesting way of putting it, almost suggesting he wasn't expecting this outcome.
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But he must have known this would happen eventually.
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And Gretchen knows this, so she immediately calls him out on it, almost sarcastically.
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Unfortunate.
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She's not here for vague apologies.
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She wants the truth.
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She wants to know why he dragged her and Elliot into a lie.
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Why he made Skylar believe they were the one paying for his treatment when they weren't. And I apologize, deeply.
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Thank you.
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Now please tell me why you did it.
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This is a question that up until this point, even the viewers have been puzzling over.
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He could have taken the money, he could have been honest, he could have avoided meth entirely.
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And I think you can tell from Gretchen's tone that she still cares.
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She's not just angry at him, she's hurt.
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She doesn't just want to be absolved, she wants honesty.
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She knows Walt is broke and that something just isn't adding up.
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And of course, Walt deflects.
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That's not really at issue here.
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This is what Walt does best.
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Redirect the conversation, keep control and don't let them see the full picture.
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And what's interesting is Walt could have told any lie here.
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He's smart enough to come up with something credible and he's already deep into deception.
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He could have mentioned a fake benefactor, his mother, a distant relative,
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a family friend, anything that could have offered her some kind of explanation as to why he didn't want Skylar to know.
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But he doesn't.
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As much as he doesn't want help from the people who, in his mind, stole his career, he can't even bring himself to lie about getting help from anyone else.
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It's not just that he doesn't want to be seen as weak, although that's part of it, it's that he wants to feel in control of his narrative.
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And the best way he knows how to do
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that is by crafting a version of reality that keeps him in a position of power.
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And it all ties back to something he spoke about in season 1 episode 5.
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Sometimes I feel like I never actually make any of my own choices.
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My entire life, it just seems I never had a real say about any of it."
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We have to remember that this is the version of Walter White that Gretchen once knew.
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He had his moments of confidence, but he would also avoid confrontation and let others make choices for him.
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This is also an incredibly important scene because it gives us a rare glimpse of the person he used to be, which is the reference point to how far he's come in his transformation.
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Gretchen decides to ask, point blank, If you won't take our money and your insurance isn't covering it, how are you paying for it?
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This is not an issue that concerns you Gretchen, okay?
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As I said, I will clear this up.
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Just please allow me to do this in my own way, in my own time, all right?
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I will explain the whole thing to them.
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And while you're at it, explain it to me.
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I don't owe you an explanation.
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I owe you an apology, and I have apologized.
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I am very sorry, Gretchen.
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There.
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I've apologized twice now.
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I'm humbly sorry.
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Three times.
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I love how petty he comes across here, so passive-aggressive.
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He counts his apologies like they're worth something to her, like they should be enough to just buy her forgiveness.
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The brilliance of this scene isn't just in the writing, it's in both performances.
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Bryan Cranston plays Walt with this kind of subtle bitterness, simmering under the surface.
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He's polite, but barely, biting his tongue, literally covering his mouth as he tries to keep the conversation as clinical as he can.
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Without our knowledge, against our will, you involve us in your lie.
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And you sit here and tell me that that is none of my business." Walt leans back, smirks and says, Yeah.
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That's pretty much the size of it.
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At this point, Walt's done pretending.
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If Gretchen wants the truth, she's going to get the ugliest version of it.
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What happened to you?
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The resentment that's been seething under his fake politeness is too strong to control.
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What happened?
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Because this isn't you.
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One of the standout things about this whole scene is the subtlety of Jessica Hatcher's face.
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You can read the heartbreak and confusion right there.
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She can't reconcile the walk she once knew with the one sitting across from her, cold, snide and smug.
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And here comes the long-awaited outburst of Walt's resentment.
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What would you know about me, Gretchen?
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What would your presumption about me be exactly?
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That I should go begging for your charity,
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and you waving your checkbook around like some magic wand is going to make me forget how you
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and Elliot cut me out.
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This is the line that reframes everything.
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Whether it's literally true or not, it's how Walt perceives it.
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He sees himself as the brilliant mind who was robbed of success, left behind while Gretchen and Elliot profited from his work.
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And in my opinion, I don't think up until this point that Gretchen had any idea that Walt saw it that way.
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And her shock response kind of confirms it.
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Then I go up to our room and you're packing your bags, barely talking.
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What, what, what did I dream of all that?
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This is the most revealing line of the entire Grey Matter backstory.
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It's the only real glimpse we get into someone else's perspective of what actually happened.
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But Walk doesn't even contend with what she's saying, and more importantly, he doesn't deny it either.
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That's your excuse?
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To build your little empire on my work?
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How can you say that to me?
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You walked away, you abandoned us, me, Elliot.
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I'm a rich girl just adding to your millions.
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According to Gretchen, Walt abandoned her suddenly without explanation.
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Maybe he just couldn't deal with her level of wealth, felt too inferior, patronised or even jealous after getting too involved with her rich family.
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Maybe Gretchen's father made Walt feel that if he was to marry his daughter, he'd be more dependent on her family and their financial success than Walt was ever comfortable with.
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And here's the moment you've probably all been waiting for.
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I don't even know what to say to you.
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I don't even know where to begin.
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I feel so sorry for you Walt.
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Fuck you.
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And there it is, one of the coldest lines in the entire show.
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Saying those two words gave him such a rush of adrenaline he's clearly becoming addicted to.
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We're at the early stage of seeing Walter White's mask slowly slip, only to reveal nothing but pure venom.
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I want to talk about this scene for a second too, because I absolutely love how Bryan Cranston plays it.
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He's acting within acting, which is obviously extremely difficult, but he does it so well.
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What I've noticed about Walt is that he can be a bad liar, especially when he's caught off guard, but when he's one step ahead,
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he's an expert at weaponising his language to control the narrative.
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She said something like,
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I'm sorry to have to do this but Elliot and I can no longer continue to pay for Walt's treatment.
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Huh.
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Yeah.
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I love the little smirk he makes when he realises he can pivot the conversation to his advantage.
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It's so subtle and easy to overlook, but it's the exact moment he realises he can pretend Gretchen and Elliot are broke.
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How not only will that explain Gretchen's strange behaviour
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and neatly close the door on any expectation they might still pay for his treatment, but also turn the situation into one where he's not the needy one,
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they are, which is exactly the kind of narrative he wants.
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She just couldn't bring herself to tell you today.
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I mean, she couldn't tell me either, really.
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I mean there was a lot of hemming and hawing and beating around the bush from both of them.
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OK, what?
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Tell us what?
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He speaks slowly, deliberately and with just enough pauses to give the appearance of reluctant honesty.
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You can see how he lets Skylar fill in the gaps so it feels like she's discovering the truth.
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And he blends the truth with fabrication in such a masterful way.
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cash poor and leveraged, quarterly decline, yada yada yada.
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But what they were truly saying, in my opinion, they're broke.
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You are kidding me.
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I mean the economy's in the toilet, we all know that.
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He's improvising a lie in real time and enjoying every second of it.
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This is one of those early small wins for Walt, but not in a heroic sense.
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It's the quiet satisfaction of having outplayed someone in his own personal chess game.
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A game he became so addicted to that it ultimately led to his downfall.
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Long ago, he's gone.

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Kontext & Hintergrund

In dieser Szene aus der Serie "Breaking Bad" treffen wir auf eine entscheidende Unterhaltung zwischen Walt und Gretchen. Der Dialog findet in einem Restaurant statt und offenbart viel über Walts Vergangenheit und seine Beziehungen. Es ist eine subtile, aber nicht weniger bedeutende Konfrontation, die uns Einblicke in die Dynamik zwischen den Charakteren gibt und die oft unausgesprochenen Spannungen beleuchtet. Diese Szene bietet eine hervorragende Möglichkeit, um virtuelle Kommunikationsfähigkeiten zu entwickeln und das Verstehen von Englisch in einem kulturellen Kontext zu fördern.

Top 5 Phrasen für die tägliche Kommunikation

  • "Ich bedauere dies zutiefst." - Ein Ausdruck von Bedauern, der in vielen Situationen verwendet werden kann.
  • "Das war bedauerlich." - Eine subtile Art, Verantwortung zu übernehmen.
  • "Ich möchte mich dafür entschuldigen." - Eine formelle Entschuldigung, die respektvoll wirkt.
  • "Das ist interessantes Denken." - Ein Ausdruck der Wertschätzung für die Perspektive des anderen.
  • "Können wir darüber sprechen?" - Eine Einladung zur offenen Kommunikation, die hilfreich ist, um Missverständnisse zu klären.

Schritt-für-Schritt Shadowing-Anleitung

Diese Szene eignet sich perfekt für Englisch Shadowing, um die Englische Aussprache zu verbessern und Sprachverständnis zu fördern. Hier ist eine strukturiert Anleitung, wie du die Szene effektiv nutzen kannst:

  1. Höre dir die Szene zunächst ohne Untertitel an: Versuche, die Emotionen und Intonation der Charaktere zu erfassen.
  2. Schaue die Szene erneut an: Konzentriere dich auf spezifische Abschnitte und halte an, um die Phrasen laut nachzusprechen.
  3. Mache eine Aufzeichnung: Nimm dich selbst auf, während du die Phrasen nachsprichst, um deine Aussprache zu hören und zu vergleichen.
  4. Wiederhole anfängliche Abschnitte: In der ersten Runde kann es hilfreich sein, kurze Abschnitte zu wiederholen, um die Sprechweise zu verinnerlichen.
  5. Wende das Gelernte an: Versuche, die Phrasen in deinem alltäglichen Gespräch einzubauen, um dein Sprachgefühl zu erweitern.

Durch dieses Shadowing-Prinzip kannst du nicht nur deine Sprachkenntnisse stärken, sondern auch das Verständnis für kulturelle Nuancen in der englischen Sprache vertiefen. Denke daran, dass regelmäßiges Üben der Schlüssel zum Erfolg ist.

Was ist die Shadowing-Technik?

Shadowing ist eine wissenschaftlich fundierte Sprachlerntechnik, die ursprünglich für die professionelle Dolmetscherausbildung entwickelt und durch den Polyglotten Dr. Alexander Arguelles populär gemacht wurde. Die Methode ist einfach aber wirkungsvoll: Du hörst englisches Audio von Muttersprachlern und wiederholst es sofort laut — wie ein Schatten, der dem Sprecher mit nur 1–2 Sekunden Verzögerung folgt. Anders als passives Hören oder Grammatikübungen zwingt Shadowing dein Gehirn und deine Mundmuskulatur, gleichzeitig echte Sprachmuster zu verarbeiten und zu reproduzieren. Studien zeigen, dass es Aussprachegenauigkeit, Intonation, Rhythmus, verbundene Sprache, Hörverständnis und Sprechflüssigkeit signifikant verbessert — was es zu einer der effektivsten Methoden für die IELTS Speaking-Vorbereitung und reale englische Kommunikation macht.

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