maryt
circejones
maryt

You say “The fourth paragraph is full of mistakes and misunderstandings” but your itemized list identifies precisely one “mistake or misunderstanding” (the cocaine vs meth thing). The rest of your list is a criticism of Donna’s piece because she didn’t write something consistent with your opinion of the episode. Your

I see, so you can casually dish out shit, but if anyone calls you on it in even in the mildest terms, you get all aggressive. You’re the worst kind of hypocrite.

Peter Gould said in an interview that Jeff’s muscled friend wasn’t there just for fun.

Among the many levels to the amount of misunderstanding in that sentence is just how thankless the job Jimmy assigns to Kim is.

Thanks for the correction, what you said about the AV club staff in that line was bitchy rather than snotty. I shouldn’t have been so polite about it.

But “maintenance” is what you do to service a machine (such as a vacuum adapter) after you buy it, not before.

I’m sorry for forgetting the faces of minor characters of a show that hasn’t aired in almost two years.

Mike doesn’t see himself as superior, he knows he is an amoral piece of shit. It is for this reason he doesn’t want to take the money. He is probably thinking that if he takes the money, something he doesn’t deserve, the result would be that he accepts that he is a horrible person and is okay with it.

I hope Chuck will come back in some flashbacks. I miss Chuck.”

I don’t know how to say this without seeming like an ass, but there was a multi-episode plot about how Mike avoided killing Tuco. Nacho hires him to kill Tuco and instead he baits Tuco into beating him up in front of a cop. It’s overt that this version of Mike wasn’t going to kill anyone, not even Tuco, for money. 

They wouldn’t introduce someone called Lalo this late in the series about Saul’s past unless it was a reference to the Lalo who we know troubled him in his past.

Mike took offense to Kai calling Werner soft in trying to suck up. The other guy knows Mike killed Werner and just punched the guy ahead of him, but he still said his peace that Werner was a good man and didn’t deserve his fate. Mike respects that.

I just finished watching the final episode, knowing there are at least two more seasons to go, available on Netflix anytime I want, and quite honestly, I have no idea if I'll ever watch them. I actually enjoyed this first season, as uneven as it was, even though it felt way too many times like each episode created the

I just finished the first season, and I'm genuinely intrigued how the reviewer's opinion can go from this to (nearly) straight A grades in season 3.

I just watched the first season and am commenting on an old review which means most likely no one will read my thoughts. On the season, I would say it was just OK. It really felt like every character, except maybe Cameron, was underdeveloped to me and the story felt rushed. Bosworth, in particular, had seemingly

You are correct. They don't know the difference between mystery and withholding.

The whole arc of the show is a meta-commentary on its role as a replacement for Mad Men.

"If only you realized earlier that a sense of humor is important and that Joe wasn't where all your investment should lie."

First of all, just a truly awful episode of TV.

Not a good finale. I really only found 3 episodes out of the season to be quality. Not enough to keep going on this particular journey but I will remember Donna with fondness. She was the hidden gem of this show.