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Suzaku
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Look at all you guys, changing heart and minds right here with this grass roots political debate between anonymous strangers, beneath a sure-to-be-Pulitzer-winning AV Club op-ed.

That's what I took it to mean too, but I think it might have actually been footage of insects swarming in the dark.

I hear if you collect seven of those you can summon a wish-granting dragon.

She did the same thing in either the first or second episode of the season.

I think they could, but suspect they're aiming for 5-6 seasons, like Breaking Bad.

Sure. I got the feeling that it was less that Chuck was knocking over the lantern, and more like he was daring it to fall over.

I'm sure he also wants Hector to survive so that he can inflict more pain on him. Gus had countless opportunities to kill him over the years, and clearly relished every opportunity to hurt him in Breaking Bad, up to the point that it became his undoing.

The Electromagnetic Hypersensitivity Disorder Research Fund.

Rhea Seehorn is a remarkable actress, and if you listen to the podcast and interview, obviously very dedicated to the craft (not just acting, but television production in general), but it's true that she hasn't really gotten any of the powerhouse moments yet.

Even if his survival instinct kicked in, there's no guarantee he'd be able to make it out of the house alive. Especially with how cluttered it was.

As of BrBa he claimed to have been married at least twice, and claimed that his second ex-wife cheated on him with his own step-dad.

I'm not going to say it's impossible, but Kim seemed pretty turned off by the Saul Goodman persona when she saw his commercial. I'm not sure she's up for a relationship with that guy.

Sure, it was obvious that the house would burn… but did you really see it being a deliberate suicide attempt?

I think Mike is going to take a bit of a back seat while they give Nacho some more time to shine. He's meant to be the tritagonist of the series, but up until this season he's definitely fallen well below third in billing.

He's also gotten his first taste of plying his trade for the sake of the criminal element, and his first wad of drug money.

I believe it was actually, "There are some lines we never cross."

Shoutout to the kid in the cold open for completely nailing Chuck's tone and measured cadence. Sounded almost like ADR. It also highlighted their obvious age difference, which for some reason I had never given much thought to before. Really helped drive home why Chuck loomed so large in Jimmy's psyche.

They certainly would exist in this universe, but even within their own religions they are, conceptually, beings that exist beyond the comprehension of mortals, and who only interact with the physical world via abstraction. So, it's not like they would have physical personifications (beyond Jesus, depending on

He insulted them in a general way about being country bumpkins and having lower standards of law enforcement, but never questioned Dale's techniques or the bizarre things going on.

It has gotten better with each episode, but the problem is it didn't start to break even with the first two seasons until like episode six, IMO.