I wouldn't necessarily defend the montage, but I would fervently argue that any episode that features a Johnny Cash song is inherently better than it would have been in the absence of the Johnny Cash song.
I wouldn't necessarily defend the montage, but I would fervently argue that any episode that features a Johnny Cash song is inherently better than it would have been in the absence of the Johnny Cash song.
"Time-waster" Johnny Cash song? Seriously? You really wanna go there, uncultured trash?
I don't think that word means what he thinks it means.
Huh? Kim completely handled the Kettleman settlement. Sure, they flaked out, bailed, and Jimmy brought them back into Kim's fold, but that was behind the scenes. The visible legal work was all Kim.
I had my first Moscow Mules in the early nineties with my grandfather in California. They were all the rage at his club, and by all appearances had been so for many years. Along with PBR.
He and Chief Lou Diamond Phillips were quite convinced that the silly palefaces were no threat, until they thumbed through Columbus' man's sketchbook. Great, hilarious stuff.
Of course trying to cash the check would change everything, but there is no way that could be done anonymously and doesn't even merit consideration. Neither of the "marks" we have seen would say one word about their previous meetings, in the unlikely event that their paths were to cross. Just a little awkwardness.
I shudder to imagine the circumstance that might bring him to break out "Hurting Each Other," though I don't think "Top of the World" is in the cards.
So what's the downside? A little awkwardness? I don't think Viktor or Giselle need to worry about that. Jimmy has repeatedly demonstrated his ability to elegantly worm his way through any situation.
Uggh, there have to be a bazillion apps you could use for that.
Does Jimmy finally get the pattern? For the powers that be to love a commercial, he just needs to use Hamlindigo Blue®.
Visiting this forum and reading through speculation regarding Breaking Bad appearances is threatening to diminish my viewing of Better Call Saul. As soon as Saul dropped his coffee tumbler on the floor of his car, my mind immediately jumped to the idea that he was destined to get it cleaned at Bogdan Wolynetz's car…
It was interesting, but it too easily invited comparisons to The Americans, and did not stand up very well in that comparison.
I agree with @wilsonjo on this one. Paige is all about trust, and is struggling with being trusted by her parents. Were Pastor Tim to betray her fragile trust, he would be dead to her. Not that she would fall easily into her parents' lap, but she would surely accept that Pastor Tim was the bad guy.
Throughout Seasons 2 and 3, we were continually expecting Martha's end any week. The writers have miraculously and plausibly turned her Doomsday Clock back from 11:57 to perhaps 11:15. If they manage to get us to the point that it feels like it's 8:15, I suspect that she is doomed. Hopefully not to the music of OMD.…
I suspect that Chuck has tried to define the family history as a "Prodigal Son" dynamic, casting himself as the "good son," despite the fact that he was off on his own career while it was Jimmy that stayed behind with Dad in his final days. The cognitive dissonance defines Chuck's messed up reality.
I suspect that we'll see Los Pollos Hermanos long before we see Fring in the flesh.
For a brief flash I thought the silhouette was Angel Batista, before instantly grieving at the shame of conflating the Dexter universe with Breaking Bad.
He was undoubtedly paying off the corner boys for "security," a cost of business Daddy and Chuck would never understand.