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Chantal0007
chantal0007--disqus

I found this season disappointing. What I liked about this show was how it make you care about the characters. This season was too chaotic for much character development and what there was showed most characters in a negative light as they became more abusive to their hostages than their guards were to them. And

I don't remember it that way. Elliot offered him a job when Walt and Skylar attended Elliot's birthday party, which was after Walt had already begun cooking meth and after he murdered that guy [name withheld] in Jesse's basement.

If we rooted for Walt, it was because his opponents were often just as bad, or worse—like Uncle Jack and his gang and Lydia. I don't think anyone liked what Walt did to Brock, his lies to his family, his abuse and manipulation of Jesse or his decision not to save Jane.

Jimmy is doing the right thing for the wrong reasons.

This issue has come up fairly frequently and the answer is, no, a suspended or disbarred lawyer can collect his or her fee from settlement even if it is paid out during his or her time of non-practice.

It's a reproduction of Degas' ballerina. Sad that our art knowledge is so limited.

I don't watch every show on TV, but am wondering what show, over all, is better than this one. I like The Americans, too, but its production values cannot compare. It is shot in Brooklyn for a DC setting and there is little in terms of interesting camera work or use of the setting. Better Call Saul has really upped

Can't speak for now, but back in the day, college students did.

Many firms have non-equity partners who have no ownership share.

Wasn't Howard arranging a retirement party? It sounds like he thought he had forced Chuck out. I think at that point, Chuck would have a cause of action.

I don't think it would be that easy. There is no guarantee there will even be a settlement. The class could hold out for a trial—unlikely, but possible. And a settlement could be years down the road and in the meantime, Jimmy would be on the hook for repayment. Bridge loans are usually only for a short period of

For those who worry about the audience's reaction to Jimmy's transformation to a person who would manipulate a nice old lady for financial gain, Breaking Bad didn't lose any audience when Walt poisoned a child to try to manipulate Jesse into poisoning Gus.

To Jimmy's credit (sort of), he did try to convince Howard to settle before running his scam on Irene. And he was right; settlement was the right thing for the class, made up of elderly people who might not live to see the money if the case dragged on. Of course, his motives weren't pure, but neither were Howard's.

I think Dougie uncovered some insurance fraud with all of those scribbles.

While the Dougie/Agent Cooper story is interesting (and Kyle McLauchlan is amazing), I have to say, I think the rest of the show is pretty awful. I find Lynch self-indulgent in the extreme and quite undisciplined for a supposedly great director. Stories lurch from one set of characters and setting to another with no

But the plot went nowhere. Was it just put in to show how clever Elizabeth is in breaking into places?

Season 4 was the best. This season may rank below the others, but the others set a high standard. I am looking forward to Season 6.

I doubt if the guitar guys would have signed a contract. Since he is selling on the fly, he has to make deals on the fly. Love how he got even.

He got the full amount for the commercials ($6500) plus the guitar.

But the world would have been an even better place if Chuck had not tried to get Jimmy disbarred. Jimmy would have continued his Elder Law practice and never would have met Jesse or Walt.