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Rub Lowe
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Let's just get this out there:

Yeah, but it was a lot more subtle and never this overt. They're alternating the stupidity of Mac and Charlie in certain episodes this season for narrative reasons. Or maybe it's the way McElhenney plays it now.

..and don't forget the ever-growing number of illegitimate children! No but seriously, they wouldn't have spent a rouble on anything unless it was absolutely necessary. I would say the Americans were far more audacious with their spending. The cars were probably stolen, earrings far from flashy and everything else was

But she was carrying bread! How guilty could she be??

I do know what you mean and I've expressed similar sentiments about the direction of the COWT at the beginning of the season, but they're certainly not "filler". They are the less compelling parts of the show for most people and it's a shame the writers don't feel the need to reevaluate the concept, but you can see

I'm becoming a litte annoyed with people who, not just with this show but others, refer to parts of episodes they don't enjoy as "filler". Sure the case-of-the-week can sometimes be a little dull and the Samaritain episodes and arcs can be more exciting, but the COTW isn't filler- they're a large, fundamental part of

The blank review was a great conclusion to the episode. Very profound, Alexa.

Now that's just silly.

I'd like to think that they'll finally accept they're no different to the pestering, one-dimensional goo-balls that float around aimlessly looking for attention, and just slowly fade away into the ether.

It's won't matter, because in the end we find out that they were really just ghosts all along.

Would it please everyone if we could just have one with cross-dressing transvestites?

Right. Not only do they foreshadow (I think it was in the first episode where Elizabeth was having a bath and holding her breath?) and use continuity throughout the season with characters being shot in the same way from episode to episode, this season is very much focussed on ideology- not political but personal, a

I don't think it's about Philip converting, but more about him trying to recreate Paige in Kimmie. Will be interesting to see how this plays out.

I believe the thought process is "the sooner the better". The younger you are when you are exposed to something, the easier it is to learn, be moulded or remoulded, accept what you're taught and the position you've been put in. Think of parents trying to get their kids a jump on education as early as possible. The

Wow. They say that the best lies are the ones that have a hint of truth to them, but I posit this: was Philip truly lying? It seems completely unorthodox (pardon the pun) for him to try to seduce a teenage girl by asking her to pray with him, and at one point I felt it could have gone either way. I really think he

I don't think this episode should be seen as the norm, as there's definitely potential here for Saul to get into some shenanigans, with Nacho still on the loose and knowing his eventual fate. But I think it was kind of deceptive of them to begin the series with a Tuco cameo, as it sets the wrong message to BB fans,

I think people who expect "more happening" from this show are just going to be "more disappointed" as it goes on. This isn't BB with the drugs, cartels, ruthless murder, etc etc. The character development here is an essential part of the plot, which is what this episode was mostly comprised of. That coupled with

"But the important thing about that scene isn’t that it proves the
hypersensitivity is all in Chuck’s head, but that Jimmy is mad at her
for doing it…"
I don't think he was mad at her, or at least that's not how Odenkirk played it. He knew she was pulling a con but you could see he already knew the real nature of his

Mac's fake confession didn't feel appropriate with Dennis' mascara running.

I tried to come up with a funny and pleasant way to say that you envoked Godwin's Law but I couldn't find one, so now I just look like I have cable.