davidwhangchoi
Member
man the boss yelling @ Jimmy was disheartening.
but what a cliffhanger at the end =)
Gus would be awesome
but what a cliffhanger at the end =)
Gus would be awesome
Accidentally saw the preview, spoilers:Looked like Jim Beaver? Walt bought a gun from him in BB
Two actually
Accidentally saw the preview, spoilers:Looked like Jim Beaver? Walt bought a gun from him in BB
That other video wouldn't have done shit and he knew it. Then he'd have no new clients and Chuck would make him look bad considering client outreach is his job. Lose lose.Oh Jimmy. He knew they'd never sign off on that video, so he not only does something they won't approve of, but deliberately does it behind their backs. That's not how you ingratiate yourself.
Sepinwall is kind of a tool IMO. Anyway the avclub review explains why this show is great. Nothing we haven't said here but it's true.Many will dismiss this as a slow moving episode (Sepinwall, for example), but these kinds of board-setting episodes are some of the underrated ones that make the most difference in the long run.
Gilligan and Gould are doubling down on their radical narrative strategy of simplicity. Characters pause before they make decisions. The small and finite set of contexts and causes impinging on them is clearly delineated. Consequences proceed directly from actions. And at the end of every episode, Jimmy and Mike, the protagonists of the only two plotlines, have moved a few spaces along a game board whose finish line is already set, and we know exactly what to anticipate the next time we see them.
But simple doesnt mean simplistic. Because the plots are stripped down and moved forward step by step, we strategize alongside the characters. Because their decisions are given a generous cushion of narrative space, we hang suspended with them in their pivotal moments. Because the stakes are clear, we feel the existential weight shift from the anxiety of a free agent to the nausea of a condemned victim.
Consider how much psychological ground that covers, and how spare and spacious are the scenes that guide us through it. A Better Call Saul episode never feels rushed or overstuffed. The breathing room the viewers are given could be mistaken, by viewers used to prestige complexity, for lack of incident. But even a cursory analysis belies that notion. Its because we always know where we are and whats at stakebecause we never worry that the creators are waiting to ambush us with some bit of backstory or left-field complicationthat we are given the chance to travel so far and empathize so deeply.
Can anyone explain how the bus scene at the start qualities as solicitation?
A lawyer shall not by in‑person, live telephone or real-time electronic contact solicit professional employment when a significant motive for the lawyer's doing so is the lawyer's pecuniary gain
Why didn't Mike just tell his daughter in law he was outside the house all night and what she heard was newspapers? She'd get pissed for not listening to him?
Now that I read that over, though, it makes me wonder what Jimmy was doing in the first season (before all the Sandpiper fraud was even discovered) would violate that rule. He was going around the nursing home, handing out business cards to people. While it wasn't for a specific case, he was still soliciting clients.
That commercial they made killed me! Especially since they mentioned how they didn't have a dollie to use so they improvised and used the old lady's stairlift to make the sweeping shot of the woman on the rocking chair hahahaha
Damn Jimmy, couldn't have waited until next week when Stan Sitwell got back to the office?
Oh shit, the pig!
What is the significance of the pig, again?
What is the significance of the pig, again?
Cliff Main is reasonable, I mean he really should've had that vetted by the partners before airing it. But blame Chuck. #fuckchuck, he pretty much goes to the meetings to goad Jimmy into being his worst, and Jimmy continually falls for it, and Chuck knows that.Fuck the boss, and fuck Chuck.
That is all.
Cliff Main is reasonable, I mean he really should've had that vetted by the partners before airing it. But blame Chuck. #fuckchuck, he pretty much goes to the meetings to goad Jimmy into being his worst, and Jimmy continually falls for it, and Chuck knows that.
I think Jimmy is trying to screw everyone right now. He has pretty much been told he's not good enough and has tried to tell everyone that he knows what he's doing but they don't believe him. He just wants to help people so it's 'S'all good, man.Pretty soon Chuck won't have to worry about it anymore, once Jimmy gets fired or disbarred, whichever comes first.
Jimmy's unwillingness to take others advice on ethics is as much a snub to Kim, Howard, and Clifford who all stuck their neck out for Jimmy. Especially Kim, she really put her career advancement at HHM at risk by going to bat for Jimmy in a big way.
Chuck was right. Jimmy isn't cut out for working at a big law firm. And Jimmy's kind of an ass for not taking Kim's advice to straighten up and fly right, considering how much she has riding on it.
Breaking Bad starts in like 2006 or something IIRC? So it makes quite a bit of sense a flatscreen 4:3 is like high end shit at the time of BCS.Also, where did they find that flat screen 4:3 TV in Jimmy's apartment?
Chuck is right but its still all his fault for holding Jimmy back when he tried to go legit