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Old Painty-Can Ned
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Eh. Delusional people, particularly smart ones, always will have some reason to wave away what to you is incontrovertible evidence that the delusion isn't real. Jimmy knows to save his breath.

I'm not convinced Mike isn't up to more than arguing about validation stickers in that booth.

Only in the Mexican equivalent with the non-union director.

This. Plus I could totally see fear of electromagnetism being a side effect of tweaker paranoia, hence ripped up fuse boxes being known to law enforcement as tweaker behavior.

Unless, of course, they've tried hiring other lawyers in the past, and either got laughed at/ignored, or couldn't afford the thousands of dollars it costs to get a lawyer to prosecute a patent application.

I think Chuck will have to go bye-bye before Jimmy can go full Saul. Jimmy seems far more concerned about his brother's health and respect than money at this point. Otherwise, he's have kept his head down and kept doing the PD work. It seemed to pay well enough, but he has to move past that, and quick, if he wants

I think that's what this episode was all about. Moving parts around, both to set Jimmy up as Chuck's protector, and to put Mike in position to use Jimmy as his attorney.

Upper-middle class old white lady privilege.

I would actually be a little disappointed. Nacho doesn't strike me as particularly stupid; he has to know that Jimmy was 100% correct that he did Nacho a huge favor by warning the Kettlemans. I could see him sending some guys around to rough Jimmy up a bit, but if they take it to the point of Nacho killing someone

Season 2 of Breaking Bad was incredibly boring in parts, and insulting to boot. Oh yeah, and entire episode of Jesse sitting around some tweaker's house. Give me more of that!

I think what sank the client visits scenes was the first one. I agree with your criticism, but I think a montage would not have conveyed what the scenes were meant to convey.

Yeah, that scene was absolutely pitch-perfect. Imagine sitting in an old woman's home, while she takes the 5 minute ride up the stairs, fumbles for a hummel, takes the 5 minute ride back down, and then takes another minute or 2 to make it back to the couch, only to give Jimmy another extremely convoluted bequest.

It was a moving pieces episode. A good one, sure, but moving pieces episodes tend to be exposition-heavy and can sometimes drag. They often look better in the context of the episodes which follow them, but we have to see where this is going before we can really judge. Absent context, though, I can see why some

I agree wholeheartedly, but I can also see why Donna docked the score for drawing out Jimmy's potential clients. I don't think a montage would suffice, but crazy secesh guy was drawn out WAY too long. Fetish toilet was a great bit, and I honestly think the scene with the elderly woman's will was drawn out for a good

Well-to-do old white ladies, to be precise.

I would agree, if it wasn't for the presence of a strange guy in a van casing the joint. An eyewitness reporting a guy casing the house a couple nights in a row, who then turns out to have blood in his van, is not the type of thing I think cops are going to toss aside in order to pursue a self-kidnapping theory.

The Kettlemans are pretty much morons, so it's not unexpected for them to do something nonsensical.

Oh, come on, then it would have obviously been the work of fucking amateurs. Hell, I can get you a toe by 3 o'clock this afternoon. With nail polish.

Sheldon doesn't really "respect" anyone, I guess that was a poor choice of words. Admiration would better capture it, but even so, it was clear before Sheldon ever came out and said it that Penny was someone who had value to him, far more than anyone else, even Amy. Everyone else he knows is book smart, and since he

There are 2 witnesses. 4 if the kids are listening in, which they almost certainly are.