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CRIMINAL Lawyer
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It did seem kinda obvious that he was gonna kill Victor, but the lack of full explanation was good. Was it because he didn't get there in time to prevent Gabe's murder, because the witnesses saw Victor, because he was the only one in the lab expendable enough to use as a prop in his this-is-the-shit-you're-in

Yeah
You'll sure as shit wish you were dead

With his willingness to completely embrace Jewish stereotypes (and come on, most of them are compliments anyway… ask an Irish guy trying to hook up at a bar how he feels about stereotypes) don't you think Larry would've noticed the major discrepancies between Berg's office and Katz's office?

^Obviously, I'm not asking if you concur with my description of my desires and motives for engaging in entertainment-related activities; you don't know me, so you clearly can't concur in that respect.

I'll tell you exactly how Breaking Bad can be the best ever, despite the existence of Mad Men. Mad Men comes off as a little too self aware in its faux sophistication - mostly in the fact that it gives off a vibe of "Hey, look at what we're doing here. If you're not appreciating this show, then you're just a cretin."

Amazing Jim - that is the best way to put this news.

I concur with Penis Warrior. And after typing that, I now have something new to write in public bathrooms.

I just re-watched it during the encore, and I think that Walt came up with the strategy while Victor was driving him to laundry place. Plan A: plead for your life and try to bargain. Plan B: pretend to give up Jesse so he can make one last phone call to save his own ass.

Gale's a hipster of magnificent proportions. Why the fuck would he drive his bike to the lab? Was he expecting to take a mid-cook ride around the middle of nowhere?

One more thing: the last scene was the perfect endcap for a season that truly cemented Aaron Paul's acting prominence among his generation.

Well, at least they were forthcoming about that element of the cliffhanger. My heart was beating like crazy towards the end of this episode, but I felt that the cliffhanger posited by the question of whether Jesse iced Gale was beneath this show. However, the other element of it that leaves us to wonder if Jesse can

It's important to note that Mike works for both Saul and Gus, and he has been shown to work for them in exclusive fashions. For instance, earlier this season when Mike asked Gus "Do we tell the lawyer?"

His killing of Emilio was pretty badass, and it should've killed Krazy-8, too. I still don't get how prolonged exposure to those fatal fumes killed one and not the other. It didn't even seem to cause him brain damage.

If only Mr. Legless had depressingly put an ice cream cone in his beadpan right before Walt and the DEA's came to his door.

Paul Rudd? You mean that guy from Friends?

Come to think of it, that's a great mixture of some of the best comedies in recent memory, especially since we're only considering the *good* parts of Entourage.

I'd say it's also got a touch of Eastbound and Down, except its characters are generally more accepting of reality than Kenny Powers was - up until the last 5 minutes of Eastbound's season 1 finale.

I was thinking that too, which led me to think that he might meet a fate similar to that of Stringer Bell when he tried to play his enemies against each other.

I'm pretty sure that Saul doesn't know about the twins. I don't remember exactly what Mike and/or Gus said, but I remember getting the point that Saul doesn't know they're after Walt.

I thought the strained look on his face was more along the lines of "what the fuck did I just get myself into?" We figure that Hank's gonna come down hard on Jesse, for good reason, but it's also pretty reasonable to think that he's gonna hunt down the origin of that phone call.