I love how his bingo plot is such a pathetic, low stakes version of what Nacho is up to, but works out perfectly while Nacho is left twisting in the wind with so much more at stake.
I love how his bingo plot is such a pathetic, low stakes version of what Nacho is up to, but works out perfectly while Nacho is left twisting in the wind with so much more at stake.
Based on their life circumstances, how old are we supposed to be pretending Kim, Jimmy, Chuck, and Howard are? I have been curious about how much I'm supposed to be suspending disbelief on this and I'd love to hear others' opinions.
How poignant is the end of Jimmy's apology from last week in light of what he did in this episode? "No one should ever treat his own brother like that. Not EVER"
I was assuming Nacho and whoever else knew where Mike would be setting up, and I guess there's no reason to assume that.
It's ok if I'm wrong - I don't mean this to be argumentative - but what makes you so sure?
I don't know - if Nacho was coincidentally standing in the way of Mike's shot, then Gus('s people) left that note, it was truly Hector Salamanca's lucky fucking day.
Since the consensus seems to be that Gus is involved, and I'm assuming Nacho had to be intentionally blocking Mike's shot (the note on the car isn't very effective unless he was), I'm thinking Nacho and Gus have talked. Nacho made a move against the Salamancas already, and it didn't go the way he'd hoped. Any reason…
I loved the hints over the last two episodes about Kim and Jimmy moving in different directions based on their staffing needs. Jimmy has little need for a team of paralegals, and Kim doesn't have the urgent need for a receptionist/someone to run interference with the old folks.
It may be debatable how malicious he is, but that pose he strikes as the Mesa Verde people show up is a smoking gun regarding his being a douchebag
I hope I'm not repeating much here…
The Pimento metaphor - the caviar of the South - something with a chasm between what it is and what it's called - do I have that right?
Lawyers - is the deal Hamlin offered Jimmy a fair one? I thought I picked up on some intimation from Kim that Chuck might have had a hand in having…
I'd have to rewatch the scene, but there seemed to be a consensus that Hamlin handled the mailroom scene with Jimmy (with the cake) as an insensitive prick above and beyond what was called for, didn't he?
I could be misremembering (or misinterpreting) part of this, but in the pilot, didn't Chuck's firm send a check to him through Jimmy, hoping to establish that he was still employed there, then when Jimmy rips it up, send a much much smaller check directly to Chuck? It seems like Jimmy didn't like them before then, but…
That would be pretty cold to have the cops busting down your (obviously disturbed) neighbor's door over a newspaper
So what is going to happen with Chuck in upcoming episodes? From the previews of next week's episode, it looked like the cops were coming after him. Does Hamlin lean on him over Jimmy's antics? Does Jimmy cause something bad to happen to Chuck?