These guys should have tried to make a deal after the half-hour mark. I'm sure given the conditions Jeff would have allowed it.
These guys should have tried to make a deal after the half-hour mark. I'm sure given the conditions Jeff would have allowed it.
There's no basis for saying that. The man was in the army. Give him some credit.
That's just the nature of the beast with Survivor. Strong men are big assets in the early part of the game; but if they can't back it up come the merge they're almost always voted out first.
Speaking of Shawn, he and Burton apparently "bullied" Rupert too.
They just don't like Alecia. Is that such a crime?
Whatever.
This just struck me as a cheap bottle episode that was done mainly to save money. Considering how great last week's episode was, this one did not really match up. It was good, just not particularly great.
I suspect Nacho will be this show's Jesse Pinkman (a character who started off as an expendible semi-regular, but ends up being a de facto main character and making the finale).
Deer could be classified as "soft targets in light cover, behind cars, small diameter trees and the like…"
Fitting, considering the movie. That was one of the more precipitous drop-offs in sanity in my film-watching history.
I presume by "His Doucheness" you mean Walt? It's simple. Mike lives a boring life doing security for the chicken man's meth empire. Saul continues as the go-to legal aid for crack dealers and meth heads.
Chuck is Lawful Neutral. Jimmy is Chaotic Good. But what is Mike? He has his own sense of justice (one that doesn't necessarily fit with the Law), and he is very pragmatic…so I guess that makes him Neutral Good?
Mike already had his vengeance on the guys who killed his son. That bell was already rung, so to speak.
Hey. It's good enough for Atticus Finch.
If it's any consolation, that urophile armsdealer is still alive during the events of Better Call Saul.
Jimmy does indeed feel that "the ends justify the means." He can't really understand that other people don't feel that way. Even in the midst of his argument with Chuck, he says that the world IS just a series of "let's make a deal" situations.
"This is my ingrown conjoined twin."
The drug dealer with the Tampico Furniture shirt was Krazy-8.
Chuck has already broken the law. He used his brother's phone without explicit permission, in order to call Howard. He IS just out to get what he wants. "What he wants" can only be gained by playing a very long game though, and he's fine with that.
In the Pilot, Dennis bangs a dude (well, it was all hands, but still). In "Charlie Has Cancer" Dennis fondles a distinctly penis-shaped potato while arguing with Dee over how best to "help" Charlie. But all those things shifted to Mac pretty early on.