He's absolutely mentally ill. He's been having psychotic episodes since like episode 6.
He's absolutely mentally ill. He's been having psychotic episodes since like episode 6.
Uh, yeah when you're reviewing art it really partly needs to be an editorial.
Yeah, but he did that because he didn't think he was crazy and he was so incredibly frustrated because he felt like he might be and he felt like everyone thought he was crazy.
How does divorcing Chuck 'forfeit her right' to shame Jimmy when he's being a jerk and he lied to her about everything that was going on in order to make a spectacle out of his brother so he could get away with a crime that he DID commit?
I mean, she would be there probably in the context of the show.
See. I don't… really get that? He only really became actively vindictive and punitive after the whole thing with Jimmy swapping the dates on the documents. Prior to that he'd been deceptive and reductive, but his keeping Jimmy out of the legal profession wasn't really payback or meant to screw Jimmy. I think at the…
Ah, okay.
She's his wife so she's obligated to take care of her grown ex-husband's daily needs for an illness he never told her about until just now?
Yeah he's standing behind Gus when Gus confronts Mike on the road.
Yeah that was my take on it.
>>>>This week we might have swung the pendulum a bit too far in the other direction. The commercial laundry where Gus will build his supervillain lab, Lydia Rodarte-Quayle (intoning one line: “Okay then”), and the public debut of Saul Goodman, all in one hour. That’s more fan service than we’ve gotten on this show in…
There's no way all those characters are going to die. At this point I don't even think Chuck is necessarily going to die.
I personally doubt that's gonna be what happens, and if it was it'd be both their actions that resulted in it.
I dunno that he loathes Kim necessarily. Most of his animosity towards her is business-related. His testimony here, their conflict over Mesa Verde. It's not personal, it's just him trying to protect his firm.
I'd like to see SOME of Saul's perspective on what was going on with him during the Breaking Bad years.
I am honestly super bloody fascinated with what's going on in his life at Cinnabon. At least after the season 3 teaser.
Or conversely, in order to protect her career, Kim has to leave Jimmy behind.
My theories on the future.
He's mentioned having at least one wife, I believe. In Marco.
And found Rebecca's address/contact information.