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Milton Waddams
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Gross. They used to do combined reviews for all of the Fox Sunday night animated shows, and since I only watch Bob's Burgers, I hated it. Same with the combined reviews for The Middle and The Goldbergs; I (and seemly most of the rest of the commenters) only watch The Middle.

Laurie knows about quite a few, but she doesn't know about this one. Or at least, she doesn't know what he actually said to the reporter.

One of my favorite gags from the first season is the Initech logo floating around when Erlich is on his drug-induced company name vision quest.

I think the original concept was to be more of a parody of the real Silicon Valley, but it quickly turned into a comedy that is just set in Silicon Valley. It still has its moments of insightful satire, but being able to understand the jargon they use is by no means a prerequisite to enjoy it.

Just wait until the final season, when AMC breaks 12 episodes up into three four-episode mini-seasons over five calendar years.

The scene when he was introduced in Breaking Bad was really good. "You sure this is strictly for defense?"

I find it interesting how lots of people around here are categorizing the characters into Jimmy good, Chuck bad the same way so many did with Jesse and Walt.

What if Saul is born because Jimmy is disbarred? I doubt it happens that simplistically, but it's certainly possible that Jimmy practices law under a pseudonym because he can't practice law under his real name.

To be fair, Jimmy usually is. The fact that Jimmy finally used his con man game to sabotage Chuck probably means, in Chuck's mind (and mostly in reality), that there is no line that Jimmy will not cross.

I thought of that last week when Kim showed up wearing a Royals shirt. I assumed she was from Omaha, because things like that aren't an accident on this show. And back in the early 2000s, people didn't randomly choose to be Royals fans.

The whole scene was great, because the prosecutor and everyone else assumes Jimmy has gotten what he wants (except Kim, maybe). But he doesn't want to be James McGill, Esq., he wants to be Slippin' Jimmy. He loves the hustle, on the streets of Chicago, in the courtroom, or at the retirement home.

And then there is this gem, also from Duke, proving that the university has certainly not learned how to deal with alleged sexual assault. When asked if two drunk students had sex, could they both be found guilty of simultaneously raping each other, the Assistant Vice President for Student Affairs and Dean of

The closing "where are they now" segment is really tragic. Nifong tried to ruin three people's lives, and ended up ruining his career. Mangum tried to ruin three people's lives, and ended up ruining her own. Gottleib tried to ruin three people's lives, and ended up taking his own.

I wish the documentary had spent a little more time on the reaction of the faculty and administration. It mentions the "Group of 88" ad/letter that essentially declared the accused students guilty, but never really explores the implications of faculty turning against students without knowing the evidence.

I can't believe no one has mentioned my favorite line of the night, when Jimmy looks at one of the film students and asks, "Does anyone like you?"

AP doesn't matter for delivery, it's local content. And big regional papers usually do multiple editions - earlier for outlying areas, later for in-town delivery. When I worked at a paper, the early edition printed about midnight, and later editions printed a few hours later.

And the perfect compliment to Tuco, who swings radically from doting grandson to unhinged psychopath in seconds.

I think Chuck definitely resents Jimmy, because he thinks Jimmy cuts corners and lucks into his success, while Chuck earned his. And he probably didn't see Jimmy becoming a lawyer as a sign of admiration but of Jimmy riding his coattails.
It's like an older brother who always beats his little brother in basketball in

But Colbert is tanking in an apples-to-apples ratings comparison. You might assume he would beat the Jimmies in time-shifted viewings (I don't) but really, losing to Seth Meyers by any metric is still embarrassing.

I think In-N-Out is most beloved by people who have simplified their opinions about burgers to "messy=good." Seriously, if you order it animal style, I think they dunk the buns in water to make sure they completely dissolve before you're half way done eating.