"Skyler I'm already in the check out line, what do you want me to do? No don't put Junior on the phone..yes…son, butterfinger, fine okay, put your mom back on. Orange Juice? Alright fine."
"Skyler I'm already in the check out line, what do you want me to do? No don't put Junior on the phone..yes…son, butterfinger, fine okay, put your mom back on. Orange Juice? Alright fine."
The moment you realize that Chuck is trying to kill himself! That final scene! I was really expecting an explosion, but eh, this is obviously Chuck's end, but I wonder if they left it ambiguous like that to preserve the possibility that a fire fighter pulls Chuck out in time, I hope not, but seeing Jimmy standing over…
I don't remember her saying she was from Nebraska, that's a pretty good theory. I'd like it if it was the last shot of the series, Jimmy is just sitting there at the table in Cinnabon, everything in black and white and Kim sits down a few tables over, their eyes meet and they just have that moment of recognition,…
I know he said that the shoe store wouldn't let him return them, but I bet they actually would. He hadn't worn any of them, they were all still new, I bet he returned the sizes he didn't need. This is probably something he would have asked them before buying them, especially after how much life has been screwing him…
Such a great episode, so much happened. I loved the trunk full of shoes, something only Jimmy would do. I really thought the scene where Kim almost wrecked her car felt unnecessary, very out of place for anything we've seen in the show so far. Then I saw her panicked state, running late for her meeting, and I knew it,…
I was thrown because in that big fight he referred to Jimmy as "Slippin Jimmy" implying that he hasn't changed and doesn't believe that he did what he said he did, this is Chuck's whole problem with Jimmy, but I suppose Chuck could see his efforts to be lesser if he did them online through some Samoan University.…
Well Jesus is technically dead, but you could say he lives in all of us, even in Canada :P
Maybe I'm wrong, but when Chuck and Jimmy have their first big fight, didn't Chuck call out Jimmy on his BS about the Samoan university he attended? I never looked into it, but I thought he implied that the university was not real and Jimmy forged the documents to speed along his schooling, but on second thought Chuck…
It's true that no one in real life would actually question their tip, but you see it so often in tv and movies it almost seems like something that would actually happen, even though it wouldn't. It's kinda like they just have the delivery guy vocalize what he's thinking for the sake of exposition.
They are both in the wrong in many ways, it's really turned into an all out war that has been building up for a long time. I'd say it all comes down to who drew first blood, and I'd really have to say it was Chuck. Jimmy was always unsavory, always a con artist, but his family liked him more than Chuck, he was jealous…
I didn't pick up on this either, almost thought he had some knowledge of what happened to her husband, or would develop the private investigator itch at that moment and track down his body. A lot of people seem to act like Walter left his body in the desert, but I'm pretty sure he was in the trunk when Pinkman came in…
I feel like if one of Jimmy's schemes inadvertently killed Kim, the Saul we know in Breaking Bad would be 50x darker than he was. I personally feel like this episode showed that they are being divided, I think Jimmy will cross a line that Kim will not stand for and she will leave him and New Mexico behind. This would…
I never got the impression that it was a "falling out of love with him" look, but now that you mention it I could really see that. I was focusing on how they framed the shot, Kim clear in the background and Jimmy blurry in the foreground, though they are sitting right next to each other. I took the shot to imply that…
Moments like that always drive me up the wall. I was surprised when Jimmy repeated the line about "could make it zero" back to the delivery guy, it's like he's totally helpless to change his circumstances and all he can do is regurgitate the supervisor's snide comment back to the delivery guy because he's the only one…
I got the impression that Mike thinks his daughter-in-law is somewhat delusional. Hearing gun shots where newspapers drop and seeing random holes in the house and rationalizing that they are gun shot holes, I think he got her a new house to make her feel safe, which is something he asked her about on the phone…
This show has such wonderful cliffhangers, really I hate them because they are so good. It's the kind of thing I would appreciate more if I could binge these episodes one after another, but because I'm watching in real time it's like Gilligan is trolling us with all the "I'll guess you'll have to come back next week…
I kept thinking that Huell had slipped a cell phone into Chuck's pocket and Jimmy would have someone call it while Chuck was on the witness stand, which would 1). make Chuck seem like he was lying the whole time and 2). show he had electronics near him the whole time and was unaffected, much like the show actually…
At the beginning of the episode I could have sworn I had seen it before. Was there a previous episode where Jimmy had dinner with Chuck and his Ex? Like a quick flashback? I swear I've seen that before.
What's crazy about this is that Chuck should already know it was all in his head, remember the episode when he's so wrapped up in his work that he wanders out to Jimmy's car to get case files only for Jimmy to snap him out of it as he stands on the driveway? I was surprised that he didn't immediately go back to work…
Could be that he doesn't want to be linked to his brother anymore, which is why he ditches the McGill name. He was riding his brother's coattails even though he put in the work to make it possible to even join HHM.