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TommyK
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They swear quite a bit. There's no nudity I can recall.

Don't ask me about my business. Don't ask me about my business! ENOUGH! . . . Alright. This one time. . . This one time I'll let you ask me about my affairs.

"I don't have to be CEO, right? Dinesh is gonna do that?"

The fact that this show is getting criticized is all the proof I need that we are living in a golden age of television. I, for one, am going to enjoy a very well done program without going out of my way to find fault with it. Which, I suppose, is why I'm not a professional TV critic.

No. The lawyer would try to imply the wife's guilt through cross examination at trial. Even then, you're not arguing she did it. Your just arguing she might have done it and the police didn't investigate throughly.

So no one will ever read this, but I need to express my outrage. So Tony hears that what's her name is kidnapped, so he cancels a job to help her. He then gets offered a lower paying job than the one he cancelled and immediately forgets about what's her name. Are the writers even paying attention at this point?

The "false admission" argument would be better than the "tape is fake" argument and very well could win the day at a disciplinary hearing. I don't think that makes the tape worthless. It has some pretty solid evidentiary value that Jimmy would have to overcome.

This is unlikely to be addressed by the show, but Chuck is himself in violation of the New Mexico Attorney Rules of Professional Conduct. An attorney that knows of misconduct by another attorney that calls that attorney's fitness into question is required to report it. Once Chuck learned that Jimmy changed those

You wouldn't get disbarred for a B&E. You'd more likely get a 6 month to 1 year suspension. It's not a crime that inherently involves dishonesty. It takes quite a bit to get disbarred.

Season 3 is good but has some of the silly story lines. Season 4 is where it really takes off.

Yes, those stories go away and focuses much more on Norman and his mother. I thought the first seasons were just okay, for the reasons you suggest (sex trade and drug story lines). These last 2 seasons are some of the best TV I have seen.

It would just be too annoying if he just walks free. I can't imagine the show runners would do that to us.

How does everyone think this ends for Norma/n? Here are the possibilities I can think of, in order from most to least likely (in my opinion):
1. Suicide
2. Goes to mental institution
3. Goes to Prison
4. Killed by Romero
5. Killed by Dylan
6. Escapes
7. Killed by Police
8. Killed by Emma
9. Killed by someone else
10. Found

What a lawyer would actually do is wait until trial. Then, when crossing the Sheriff, you ask about the wife. "She recently found out her husband was cheating on her, didn't she?" You try to imply they didn't investigate her throughly enough. You don't have to ever come out and say she did it. You just try to plant

Maybe, but he didn't try. He just left. If he had gone to the police with what he found and his suspicions, they may have at least watched Norman more closely.

I think Emma's realization that Norman lost control will make it easier for her to forgive Dylan. He's not supporting her mother's killer. He's supporting his brother and her friend, who lost control of his own body.

The prosecutor files the charges. The police would bring the case to the prosecutor. Maybe she meant that hadn't happened. The specific rules about holding suspects vary by State. I don't know what the rules in Oregon are.

I think the foregiveness would be for not telling her what he suspected. But I think the bigger issue is that she can't bring herself to stay with him while he's supporting the person that killed her mother, even though she understands it.

Because he knew (or strongly suspected) that Norman had killed and didn't tell anyone (except his Mom, who he knew wouldn't do anything) and took off. He could have prevented the murders that happened after that (including his mothers) if he went to the police when he found the earring in Norman's room.

No, she was there when he tried to blame it on the wife (the Norma look alike.). She orcastrated that.