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James Ferguson
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Gavin is a fraud, whose answer to everything is to throw money at it, like sending Big Head off with $20 mil. Jobs knew what he was doing.

That was a great scene. Gavin is a like a grown-up version of Big Head. You have to wonder how he ever got to that position of authority.

It was an over gratuitous scene as it really didn't seem to serve any purpose other than to further remind us that Richard is wed to his computer and hopeless when it comes to sexuality of any sort. It seems, however, that the writers are open to a romance between Richard and Monica that has been long deferred.

I just love all the twists and turns in the show. I thought the Oceans 11 scheme would carry them for the rest of the season but the writers choose to have it all spill out by episode's end. Seems it was just a set up for Richard to finally make his stand against Jack, who, if IMDb is to be trusted, is now finished

All those little cups of espresso have bothered me from the start of the series. This really didn't become hip until the 80s. The 70s was the era of the automatic drip coffee maker with the eponymous Mr. Coffee being introduced in 1972. I suppose a fancy record label could have gone all in with an Illy automatic

I had a hard time staying with this show and gave up about 10 minutes into the finale when Zack has his little meeting with Galasso. Those tiny espresso cups just kill me. Maybe it was all the rage in NY at the time, but it just comes across as another silly pretense. Maybe I'm supposed to take all this as a joke,

Mike made a very telling comment early on in this series that not all criminals are bad and not all law-abiding persons are good, or words to that effect. I think it was to the guy peddling pharmaceutical drugs, but it applies across the board.

I hope so, because he has to know Chuck is going to use it against him. However, the war had already been declared.

Actually, he wasn't a bad person in Breaking Bad. He simply provided cover for others, an accessory to their crimes. He learned to justify it in his own way.

Chuck is an asshole. That has been made manifestly clear.

Chuck's pain is self-induced. He is the classic case of a person who uses "pain" to manipulate persons' emotions.

I don't know what there is to feel for Chuck, who brought this all on himself. In the end, he had no more than a bump on the head, but it seems he concocted this electrophobia for people to pity him, especially Jimmy, who he treats like a lapdog. I'm just surprised Jimmy didn't see that "Faraday Cage" for the third

I shouldn't even have to elaborate on them and won't.

Nice reply and points respectively taken. However, knowing that Chuck's prime goal is to get back at him, Jimmy should have seen all that aluminum foil for the ruse it was. You shouldn't be able to con a con man that easily, but maybe Jimmy decided it just isn't worth it. He implied as much watching his commercial,

I think it would have been better to have left it off at the end of episode 9 - the perfect cliffhanger. Episode 10 is a letdown, as Chuck's plan to ensnare Jimmy was so transparent that it is hard to believe Jimmy didn't see that coming. Howard was probably in on it, so that he can get back at Kim for dumping his

We have to wait till next week to see if Jimmy stands idly by or even if Chuck dies to see if there is the parallel you imagine. However, it was clear that Walter wanted Jane dead. Jimmy clearly doesn't want his brother to die.

No love for Chuck. I hate to see him go out like this, but what he did to Jimmy and Kim set up his fall.

True, it was an elementary school.

I'm just wondering if this was the high school Walter White taught at.

A little different in that Walter intentionally turned Jane over, knowing full well the consequences. Jimmy underestimated Chuck's tenacity.