These people all want to kill me.
These people all want to kill me.
Unless you’re on the clock (aka being paid) during your commute, don’t do work. Use it as a transition from home to work or work to home. Time to shift mental gears.
Why, yes, Mangochin -- yes, Doug Jones is a treasure, but these days he’s more an interplanetary one....
He’s better than that show deserves.
By far the best evidence that Kim isn’t around, for sure! She also just outed herself as the inspiration behind the classic Cadillac. If she is all the way in on the presentation of Saul as a character (and when is Kim not all the way in), I suppose it isn’t impossible she’d be fine with living in that place, either.
Yeah I think it was hinted at before but now as we enter the endgame, it is apparent to me that whatever happens to Kim (jail, death, completely disappears) is what finally makes Jimmy “break bad” fully into Saul.
I was watching the “usually” misleading upcoming teasers at the end and it almost seemed like they were trying to set up Kim to take the fall (legally) for something Jimmy did.
I didn’t get the feeling that Lalo was intimidated/stunned by her at all—-more like, he couldn’t prove what she was saying was false in that moment, and he could see a use for her in the future, or at least he saw no benefit to slaughtering both Jimmy and Kim at that moment.
Gold toilets and Kim are mutually exclusive.
It’s true and I expected it, Jimmy doesn’t like violence, literal or even used in words, he rather con people with a smile or at least even self-pity (which he did to get rid of the Kettleman problem in season one. Kim acted like an enforcer here. She gained a hell lot of self-confidence during her almost year at…
The money he makes with Walt is insane, especially after Jesse leaves and all goes well for 3 months or so with Todd. In the montage in “Gliding All Over”, we see him getting drop-offs after drop-offs, which are bigger than his forced upon 5% from when Walt worked for Gus officially (he made a bigger cut from the meth…
...except for the 20 pro bono cases.
That’s the same problem BB season 5 had...rushed.
I was just as disturbed as Jimmy! I think Kim’s public defender work is evidence enough of her compassion, but with the Kettelmans, she had to play Bad Cop to Jimmy’s Good Cop. I really enjoyed the Kettlemans this episode (“press 9 to dail out”) but I was losing my patience with their stubborness too. Kim went hard on…
Thanks! I think Vince got a little carried away with this premiere. Everything about Nacho’s situation and Gus’s plans concerning him in that Motel was confusing as fuck. So I checked out your link to Donna’s recap looking for clarity, and turns out she was just as confused about it all herself!!! I really hope the…
Did you notice that the same old lady leaving the Kettlemen’s trailor in the last scene was driving the same white Cadillac that Saul apparently drives in the cold open?
Kims downfall will probably involve her somehow (unintentionally) screwing one of her precious pro bono clients over.
What possible compassion would someone owe the Kettleman’s? They stole $1.6m and played the victim card throughout - they still believe themselves innocent. And now they’re defrauding helpless people of money. They are absolute trash people and deserved the takedown Kim gave them - honestly they deserved to be put in…
That’s one way to look at, but it seemed that the way they framed that entire scene with Jimmy looking disturbed, that we were supposed to feel for the Kettlemans. Otherwise, to me, the scene doesn’t really make sense, unless its some kind of commentary on how Jimmy only lives in the moment and never sees the big…
She saw what the Kettlemans were doing to vulnerable people, like the little old lady she sees in the parking lot. So she does have compassion - just not for the Kettlemans.