This was something Jimmy pointed out at the hearing: Chuck's home was a fire hazard.
This was something Jimmy pointed out at the hearing: Chuck's home was a fire hazard.
Kim has been compromised by Jimmy's behavior, and seems to justify it to herself by believing she's keeping her hands clean. She's bending little by little beyond not just accepting his behavior, but sometime abetting it. She may actually love him more than we thinks she does.
I think Hector simply thinks Gus is the younger hotshot who's a threat to his old school operation. Hector killed Gus' partner, and it was only Gus' identity and reputation that saved him from death.
It's interesting more people don't see Howard as a proxy little brother for Chuck; the little brother he could be proud of and help study for the bar exam because he was worthy of the law. Howard was caring in a way that was similar how Jimmy used to indulge and protect Chuck, so the lawsuit certainly had to feel like…
My biggest surprise this year is that Lou Avery's office wasn't a stall in the men's toilet. California exile was much too good for him.
"Rumours are flying around like bats"!
I guess you haven't noticed his paunch.
I see what you did there.
That Simon, et al, did this was brilliant, but most of all, it was real. Stringer and Avon were rooted in the American Dream. They wanted better for themselves and their families, except Avon was more content than Stringer to remain a gangster. Marlo didn't care about being rich; he cared about being the best…
I think Brother Mouzone was supposed to be a "Five Percenter". This is a sect, at best, whose followers are a spin-off of the Nation of Islam, and whose "religion" is a mumbo-jumbo hash and corruption of Islam, Christianity, and perhaps Rastafarinism . Many Five Percenters have no qualms about criminal activity, but…
Yes. She never owned a TV and fiercely believed God would never let such a thing happen.
Harry knows television. That show probably would have been a hit.
I've said this probably too many times: Harry is a metaphor for TV in the '60: boorish, tasteless, lowest common denominator, and a great money maker. It probably wasn't until the late '60s that many businesses really started to understand the power of television and the riches it could generate. Like some executives,…
Nice catch.
“I hate to say, but I knew where to find you.”
Pete was talking to his girlfriend, not Don. Hells bells, if you need writers, I'm available.
That was Errol's dad on the bed. The two of them, along with LeDoux, Billy Lee Tuttle, and the guy the blew up on the booby trap outside the meth lab gives you five men.
I haven't seen anyone else mention this, but Marty's ex-wife had on a wedding ring when she came to see him. There was no mention of her being remarried, or having a different name.
That ending to "No Country for Old Men" was great, and appropriate. But that ending to "The Sopranos"….
Bob Benson is the darker shade of Don Draper. Don's a whore, but he does try to give you your money's worth. Bob is the manipulative whore who hates the people she screws, and exerts every pathology she can to extract as much out of them as possible. These guys have to wind up colliding at some point.
I was thinking the same thing about Don, that he would look like the current version of Ezra Klein and be teaching at the City College. I'm looking forward to Peggy's "Come to Jesus" go-off on the Neanderthals; I thought it would happen this season.