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RogerG
avclub-268007497d9b716941a9ac3da4480108--disqus

What happened to Saul Goodman's money?  Shouldn't he be a multimillionaire based on his cut of the profits from Walt's business?  Or did I miss something?  Why is he talking about managing a Cinnabon in Omaha? Couldn't he buy a chain of them—maybe a laser tag place?

Sorry if this has been pointed out already, but there's a wonderful symmetry between Walt's showdown with the Schwartzes and with the Aryans.  In both cases Walt is unarmed in a room with his enemies.  In the first, there are two "hit men" outside (Badger and Skinny Pete) with no guns, just laser pointers; in the

Like Macbeth, Walt is tormented by the thought that his power and wealth may
never pass to his descendants.  Walt Jr.
will never inherit his throne or his money. 
Part of what “Granite State” does is to confirm this reality in the
harshest possible way: his only remaining “friend,” Ed the Disappearer, refuses
even to