That was I.
That was I.
Except for Sansa, who is so damn hot I don't know what to do with myself.
Not to mention that half of them probably bitched and complained about moving there, just like a kid who doesn't want to go to school. Remember Tony and Carmela taking Livia Soprano to see Green Grove? I laughed so hard, it was the spitting image of my own crotchety grandma.
I know who could ring the bell!
They didn't show Kim's eyes drooping, or car drifting or any other signs of doom, and it's so brilliant that they chose not to do that… The static camera showing her in profile, still awake, cutting suddenly to the crash, is not only more shocking for the viewer, but a perfect realistic depiction of Kim's own…
Yes, in his very first BB episode… OK OK I see what you all are saying, but I still think he retained shreds of decency.
Saul's face after that call was clearly disturbed by the horrible thing they just did. And nobody even got actually hurt. (Murder, on the other hand, is perfectly OK if called for… So yeah he's no saint.)
Let's remember, that even late in the game on Breaking Bad, Saul never entirely lost his good side; he was not a complete sociopath. He seemed to feel genuinely shitty about the ruse to get Hank away from the RV (a fake call about Marie being in hospital) for example.
I wonder if Mark Margolis (Hector Salamanca) would be in it. I know neither he nor Esposito is a native Spanish speaker, but I find them both highly compelling in these roles. The flashbacks on BB with Hector were all fantastic.
Agreed, although he does have just a bit of a cyborg feel to him. Also I imagine him doing a morning regimen à la Patrick Bateman.
Not to mention his biggest lie of all: he claimed that he made the cookies!
Lydia puts the GAL in MADRIGAL.
Oh, Golem… Yeah, that makes more sense. Of course my brain only heard Gollum.
Jimmy McGill: Not above throwing an old lady under the bus. There's the Saul Goodman we know!
If this were Law & Order, Stone or McCoy would find some damn way around it!
Funny you say that — the Witty Zinger was one of his favorite cocktails. It has an immediate bite to it, but zero aftertaste, like you don't even remember it.
My favorite Mike Myers anecdote is from Brandon Tartikoff, the big shot at NBC and Paramount who sat down with him after Wayne's World was a hit. He asked, if you could pick anyone to collaborate with, who would it be? Myers responded, "Fellini". Tartikoff figured this was a joke, but Myers went on to talk about…
So long as Vince Gilligan (via Adam Bernstein) could still get his long shot from the soy milk's perspective.
Whoa whoa whoa! Whoa! WHOA.