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  • We're learning English with TV today. I asked you  

  • what movies and TV you wanted to study  for English and you saidBreaking Bad”.

  • Today's clip is an intense scene that  was recommended by one of my followers  

  • on Instagram, thank you for suggesting this scene.  

  • It's got some great phrases to studyAs always, if you like this video or  

  • you learn something new, give it a thumbs up and  subscribe with notifications. Thank you so much.

  • First, let's look at the scene together. As  we watch, you'll see on-screen the words we  

  • will pull out to study together. If you're not  familiar with the storyline, here are the basics.

  • Walt is a high school chemistry teacher. He was  diagnosed with cancer and money got really tight.  

  • If money gets tight, that means you don't have  a lot of money. It's hard to pay all your bills.  

  • So he ended up making the street drug methTurns out with his chemistry background,  

  • he's really good at it. He became powerful and  important, this changed him. Now his wife, Skyler,  

  • she knows he's got into something but  she doesn't know the whole picture.  

  • She wants to involve the police in an attempt to  get Walt out of the situation. Here's the scene.

  • Walt, I've said it before. If you  are in danger, we go to the police.

  • No, no, I don't want to hear about the police!

  • I do not say that lightly. I know what it  could do to this family. But if it's the only  

  • real choice we have, if it's either that or you  getting shot when you walk in your front door

  • I don't want to hear about the police!

  • You're not some hardened criminal  Walt! You are in over your head.  

  • That's what we tell them! That's the truth!

  • No, it's not the truth.

  • Of course, it is! A school teacher  cancer desperate for money?

  • Okay, we're done.

  • Roped into working for, unable to even  quit? You told me that yourself Walt.

  • Jesus, what was I thinking?

  • Walt, please, let's both of us stop  trying to justify this whole thing  

  • and admit you're in danger.

  • Who are you talking to right now?

  • Who is it you think you see?

  • Do you know how much I make a year?

  • I mean if I told you, you wouldn't believe it.  

  • Do you know what would happen ifsuddenly decided to stop going into work?

  • A business big enough that it could be listed  on the NASDAQ goes belly up, disappears! It  

  • ceases to exist without me, no. You clearly don't  know who you're talking to so let me clue you in.

  • I am not in danger Skyler, I am  

  • the danger. A guy opens his door and  get shot, you think that was me? No.

  • I am the one who knocks!

  • Intense right? Now, let's look at some of the  phrases we learned. Skyler tells Walt he's not  

  • a hardened criminal. What is a hardened criminalHardened has a couple of different meanings. It  

  • means unlikely to change, it means someone who  is toughened by seeing a lot of horrible stuff.  

  • For example, a war reporter might be hardened. He  isn't as affected anymore with all the suffering.  

  • A hardened criminal is a criminal  that doesn't have remorse,  

  • doesn't feel bad for what he doesHe's used to that way of life.

  • Skyler is saying, sure Walt is doing something  illegal but he kind of slipped into this crime  

  • because of his circumstances. He doesn't want  to continue, he doesn't want to be a criminal.  

  • She doesn't quite understand  his circumstances, does she?

  • She thinks of him as being a nice guy. A  chemistry teacher trying to do the right thing.

  • You're not some hardened criminal Walt!  

  • You are in over your head. That's  what we tell them, that's the truth!

  • No, it's not the truth.

  • She uses the phraseIn over your head”.  

  • This is an idiom that means a situation has  gotten too complicated for you to handle.

  • When I was in college, I tested out at  first year Physics. And they put me in an  

  • upper-level Physics class my freshman year. Butreally didn't get it. I was definitely in over my  

  • head so I dropped that class. I actually thought  I want to be a Physics major but even just one  

  • week of that class was enough to change my mind. I  was so in over my head. Let's see that clip again.

  • You're not some hardened criminal  Walt! You are in over your head.  

  • That's what we tell them, that's the truth!

  • No it's not the truth.

  • Walt doesn't like that she sees him  as weak. She goes on describing.

  • A school teacher cancer desperate for money?

  • Okay, we're done.

  • Roped into working for, unable to even quit?

  • Roped into working. If you're  roped into something, it means  

  • you were made to do something you didn't really  want to do. Or you agreed to do something you  

  • didn't actually want to do because someone  kept pestering you or you felt bad saying no.

  • Can you think of something you were roped into  lately? Anything you think you couldn't say no to.  

  • I really do my best at this  point in life not to get  

  • roped into things. I've gotten a lot better  into saying no, sorry I can't do that.

  • Skyler thinks Walt fell into this job because  of his circumstances and that he's trapped in  

  • it. He feels that he can't quit. He got roped  into position and he can't make it change.  

  • Walt doesn't like her having this picture of him.

  • A school teacher cancer desperate for money?

  • Okay, we're done.

  • Roped into working for, unable to even quit?

  • Let's keep going.

  • Jesus, what was I thinking?

  • Walt, please, let's both of us stop  

  • trying to justify this whole  thing and admit you're in danger.

  • If you justify something, you explain why  you did it. It's your reason. We justified  

  • buying expensive champagne because  we were celebrating our anniversary.

  • Or, the punishment wasn't justified. What  the kid did wasn't really all that bad.

  • Skyler wants him to quit justifying Walt making  drugs. They were justifying it because he was  

  • really sick. They really needed money. It  was tempting to justify doing something wrong  

  • that made a lot of money. But she's  tired of making excuses for it. Of  

  • coming up with reasons why it's okay to do  it. She doesn't feel okay doing it anymore.

  • Who are you talking to right now?

  • Who is it you think you see?

  • Do you know how much I make a year?

  • I mean if I told you, you wouldn't believe it.  

  • Do you know what would happen ifsuddenly decided to stop going into work?

  • A business big enough that it could  be listed on the NASDAQ goes belly up.

  • Listed on the NASDAQ.

  • The NASDAQ is an electronic marketplace for buying  and selling securities. An index that investors  

  • can track. It's like the Dow. Is it down? is it  up? Did it crash? Did we lose all our savings?  

  • Walt is saying the company he  works for, the secret company  

  • making and selling all the  meth is huge. So profitable,  

  • so much money. It's equal to the companies listed  on the NASDAQ. If he quits, it goes belly up.

  • We use this phrase to describe  a business or organization  

  • when it can't make it financially anymoreWhen it goes bankrupt or it has to close  

  • down. A lot of business went belly up in the  pandemic. Where does this phrase come from?  

  • Think of a fish. If it's dead, it floats  in the water on its side or belly up.

  • Do you know what would happen ifsuddenly decided to stop going into work?

  • A business big enough that it could be listed  on the NASDAQ goes belly up, disappears! It  

  • ceases to exist without me, no. You clearly don't  know who you're talking to so let me clue you in.

  • Wow. I do not want to make Walt mad. Let me clue  you in. This means let me help you understand  

  • something you don't understand. Let me give you  the information you're missing. So, you can use  

  • it as a phrasal verb. Why are you so upsetLet me clue you in. But also as an adjective.  

  • I'm not clued in. Or, he's really clued in  to the kinds of toys kids like. He gets it.

  • You clearly don't know who you're  talking to so let me clue you in.

  • I am not in danger Skyler, I am  

  • the danger. A guy opens his door and  get shot, you think that was me? No.

  • I am the one who knocks!

  • I'm the one who knocks. He's the one  on the other side of the door knocking.  

  • Not the one inside in danger which is her  idea of him. He set her straight. He's  

  • clued her in. She has no idea  who he is or what he is doing.

  • Have you seen this show? I watched it a few years  ago and I really liked it. Violence, graphic,  

  • I didn't like that part but I did love how the  characters change and the situations evolved.  

  • Now, pick a scene from TV or movies,  

  • put it in the comments below. What other  clips would you like to study English with?

  • Thank you so much for learning with me. Keep it  going now with this video and don't forget to  

  • subscribe with notifications. I make new videos  every Tuesday and I love to see you back here.  

  • That's it and thanks so much  for using Rachel's English.

We're learning English with TV today. I asked you  

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