Crazy that they didn't renew this yet.
We should do one of those #hastag movements.Crazy that they didn't renew this yet.
They never explained how Jimmy weaseled his way into the chair yoga gig. His excuse was "Sandy's daughter has a cold"...I'll bet he gave her that cold the rat bastard!
J/K. I'm sure whatever he did was on the up-and-up.
He does for a lot of the television threads and i greatly appreciate thatOh, by the way...just wanted to say Cornballer, you've done a stand-up job maintaining this thread this season, especially when it's come to keeping the discussion up to date by supplying us with lots of relevant articles and interviews and the like. I imagine it must take up a lot of energy, so thank you! You helped make this a really great thread for us to discuss the show.
The ratings have fallen a bit from season 2 but they're still decent for a cable drama and higher that Breaking Bad's season 3 ratings. Plus it's the only show on AMC still getting Emmy attention and AMC is desperately trying to maintain its perception as a prestige channel. Doesn't make any sense for them to cancel it.
That being said, AMC is notoriously bad at being a network and making sensible decisions, so...we'll see.
I was wondering, what if next season is about Chuck's Will and both Howard and Jimmy want the money, while blaming each other for the death of his friend/brother.
I think that could be interesting to deal with.
We know you're not ending the series here. We know the show does well for AMC. What is the hold-up on the official renewal for a fourth season?
Gilligan: Honestly, it's obviously not a secret that Zack Van Amburg and Jamie Erlicht left Sony TV and there's just a little bit of reorganizing going at Sony, but the ship, there's still folks at the tiller and and it's just a matter of Who the f--- knows? (Laughs.) It's gonna be fine. The timing was a bit unfortunate in that there's a little bit of stuff up in the air over at Sony, but it'll all get worked out. A couple of good guys left Sony, but there's a lot of good people still at Sony and it'll all get worked out. We're going forward with the certainty that there is gonna be more and it's just a matter of logistics as to when, exactly, it gets going. We're not worried. I say that having absolutely been worried in the past. I'm not worried at all right now. We're gonna forward. There will be a season four. The only question is when will it go on air.
Gould: I think we feel very supported by Sony and by AMC.
Gilligan: And that's the important part.
Gould: We now have a 10-year relationship with these two companies, which is something so special and rare in show business. There's been definitely some folks coming and going and anyone who reads the trades can figure that out, but I think we feel really good about where we are. It's just a matter of time.
Gilligan: In years past, it was often a matter of "if." This year it's not a matter of "if," it's just a matter of when. Our blood pressure is pretty low here, relatively speaking. Certainly compared to previous seasons of Breaking Bad.
Yeah still waiting for that mini cameo of the White family in the background in a Wall Mart or something like that. Just a little nod. You know.
Great show tho
I was wondering, what if next season is about Chuck's Will and both Howard and Jimmy want the money, while blaming each other for the death of his friend/brother.
I think that could be interesting to deal with.
Also, Chuck was pretty clearly not in his right mind for many years before he died, which means the easiest route to challenge a will would be to claim he was insane at the time that he made it. That would certainly lead to some interesting court scenes.
What?!!? Shieeeeeet. Easily looks like she's in early 30's.
When was the last time you guys watched Breaking Bad? I'm rewatching with my GF. By episode 3, they already have a more interesting relationship than Jimmy and Chuck.
When was the last time you guys watched Breaking Bad? I'm rewatching with my GF. By episode 3, they already have a more interesting relationship than Jimmy and Chuck.
looking back on this season and all the events that occurred it does feel like this could serve as a series finale. and maybe they were thinking this because of how poor the ratings have been this season.
I'm pleasantly surprised not a single person here mentioned how good Rhea looked in her PJs. It was all over Reddit in a good-natured way.
She's 45 years old. She's stunning.
Mike knew about Nacho's plan. I just assumed Mike would have told Gus already.
I'm pleasantly surprised not a single person here mentioned how good Rhea looked in her PJs. It was all over Reddit in a good-natured way.
She's 45 years old. She's stunning.
I'm pleasantly surprised not a single person here mentioned how good Rhea looked in her PJs. It was all over Reddit in a good-natured way.
She's 45 years old. She's stunning.
I'm pleasantly surprised not a single person here mentioned how good Rhea looked in her PJs. It was all over Reddit in a good-natured way.
Kim's ass in those pyjamas. Yum.
Oh, I noticed immediately. I'm a big fan of all of her scenes wearing those nice, tight jeans. Her ass looked amazing in those PJs.
You just have to be careful around here when talking about being attracted to women.
No, you just have to be careful not to sound like a massive creeplord
No, you just have to be careful not to sound like a massive creeplord
Tidbit from the insider podcast: her skirts / pants never quite match her jackets. It was a choice made by the wardrobe director (I may be mistaking the title) -- the thinking is that Kim still shops at places like Marshalls for her attire and has to mix and match off-the-rack pieces. It's part of her character since she came up through the mailroom and is basically trying, but not quite succeeding, at fitting into a different social / economic class. And what's more interesting is that it's not so much for the audience (we can't really tell), but rather for the actress as part of embodying the character.This.
That being said, I like her business skirt/suit selection. Besides sounding like a creep, they really fit her well.
Sepinwall and Grubb spent a while talking about BCS on their podcast this week. A couple of things that they brought up.
1) How involved is Howard next season? They'd be stupid to not continue on with him in some fashion, but it's not immediately clear how that would happen. His personal reaction to Chuck's demise is important on some level as is probably dealing with the legalities of this, mainly where Chuck's money ends up and where things stood on the HHM buyout.
2) How much material do they have left in the current time period and Jimmy's transformation into Saul?
3) What are your priorities in terms of what the show has left to cover. Grubb said that Kim's fate and the Jimmy to Saul transition were the two most important to him. Mike seems like he's in a place where they can continue to use him on the show, but I'm not sure there's that much necessary material to bridge from here to when we meet him on Breaking Bad. There's more to tell about Nacho, though it's not critical that we see it.
They also brought up that if this is the incident that does the damage to Hector, he won't have any more speaking lines on the show. *ding*
Yep. The other show I remember seeing this level of care in a purely realistic wardrobe was Mad Men. It even inspired an entire column about the clothing choices for each episode.Tidbit from the insider podcast: her skirts / pants never quite match her jackets. It was a choice made by the wardrobe director (I may be mistaking the title) -- the thinking is that Kim still shops at places like Marshalls for her attire and has to mix and match off-the-rack pieces. It's part of her character since she came up through the mailroom and is basically trying, but not quite succeeding, at fitting into a different social / economic class. And what's more interesting is that it's not so much for the audience (we can't really tell), but rather for the actress as part of embodying the character.
The level of care and thought that goes into this show is impressive.
Don't judge me.
Yep. The other show I remember seeing this level of care in a purely realistic wardrobe was Mad Men. It even inspired an entire column about the clothing choices for each episode.
Same here, sometimes I'd look forward to it almost as much as the episode itself.That column is incredible reading. I read it every week the show aired once I discovered it.
Said what we were all thinking lad.Too late.
Said what we were all thinking lad.
Great season, excellent finale. Every scene with Irene was killing me.
I am dreading how the show creates the inevitable schism between Jimmy and Kim.
Nacho wasn't poisoning him. He replaced the medication with a placebo. The point was for Hector's heart condition to go unchecked until he had a heart attack/stroke.
I don't know.
I take it that Jimmy does feel a measure of empathy and regret for what he did, not just because it wasn't the way he wanted it to happen for himself. If nothing else, it feels like it'd take an incredible amount of integrity to give up a million dollars because you don't feel you personally did a job right.
I feel it's more that the characters these particular showrunners write go through a series of micro arcs rather than one big arc from A to B. By the end of BB, we could conclude that Walter White was firmly a monster (and even then, there are debates about how pure he was in that regard), but over the course of the show he'd just constantly swing back and forth. Here he is doing something for his family, here he is escalating things needlessly, here he is being selfless, here he is being selfish.
I think it's something like that. This arc had Jimmy come closer to Saul than any other previously, but it ended with his most unselfish act thus far. And it will go on like that. From here, something will prompt him to act selfishly again, then decently, then selfishly again and so on until we end up at Saul Goodman.
And I feel like that's something that would be a detriment to most other shows. But here, it just makes it feel real. All these random real life events that pull the characters this way and that, changing people but not really changing, conflating motivations, etc. It makes it really compelling.