It wasn't until much later that I realized he did many of the puppet voices.
It wasn't until much later that I realized he did many of the puppet voices.
The issue wasn't that he personally didn't remember — who could be expected to? — the issue was that the document had it wrong (thanks to Jimmy, but in court it appeared to be a mistake at the firm) and that Chuck insisted that he'd gotten it right — that he couldn't have gotten it wrong.
Are you kidding? It was brilliant!
Present-day Jimmy is a wonderful Christmas present under the tree, that we're only going to be allowed to unwrap when the day comes, and not a moment before.
Again, it doesn't matter what the reality is; it matters what Chuck believes. (Jimmy had to know that Chuck wouldn't just smirk and say, "Come now, we all know a disconnected battery is electrostatically inert.")
Does a battery, by itself, not connected to anything, provide any kind of electromagnetic/electrostatic emissions at all?
They had a whole series of great shots that made Chuck look satanic, distributed through the episode.
That makes sense. Thanks.
So what was "bingo"?
God damn it! Then they do an episode that spends 30 minutes on Gus and Mike and a bunch of commenters complain, "This is supposed to be a show about Jimmy/Saul, not Gus."
The crosscutting between the two eras is so important to how the book works, and both filmed versions ditch it. Too bad.
There's something really wrong going on around here…
He played his dad
Interesting that they cast a model but a) not one that looks all model-y (like, say, Rosie Huntington-Whiteley) and b) found one who can talk.
He's not Trump, he's Ballmer. (Or not even, because he founded Hooli.) And Ballmer is Steve Jobs compared to Trump.
Agreed! He got a little tiresome during stretches of S3, but basically he's fantastic. (Especially since the original intention was for there to be an elaborate yin/yang backstory and conflict with Peter Gregory, and now he's got to handle that "first-generation mogul" concept alone.)
Some nice adjustments to the opening-title animation. Lyft and Uber balloons colliding, the Facebook sign is moving around inexplicably, and something's happening on Yahoo's roof that I can't figure out. (Also, there are FBI trucks around.)
But it wasn't a laptop, it was an MS Surface.
Oh come on
Those were coffee cartridges for a Kuering, not creamers!