Mike did also say that she needed to be killed but, in one of many bad decisions, Walter spared her life.
Mike did also say that she needed to be killed but, in one of many bad decisions, Walter spared her life.
He’s racked with guilt over forcing Chuck out over the malpractice insurance, even though Jimmy was the one who clued the insurance company
“Shut the fuck up, and let me die in peace.”
Yes! — In tonight’s final scene, we’re meant to recall that the HHM insurance problem goes back to Jimmy’s sly tipoff to the insurance company last season, right? Jimmy whistles gaily and lets Howard stew in guilt.
Howard isn’t perfect, but at his core he’s a good man. To even tell Jimmy and Kim that he thought he was responsible for Chuck’s possible suicide, takes a lot of courage. Then Jimmy just casually tells him it’s his cross to bear. Cold-bloodied.
Politics Corner - Trump Demonizes a Vulnerable Group while Spitting in the Face of Facts edition. Immigrants commit crimes at slightly higher than half the rate of the native born, including the undocumented, according to numbers. But who cares about numbers when you have biased emotions? I almost never go for Nazi…
5- The book was written by Kurt Vonnegut, and William was Shotinthegut.
Interestingly, two of the other books are “Moby Dick” (pretty obvious - William chasing a white whale that will eventually be his doom) and “Jude the Obscure” by Thomas Hardy which seems like a bit of a weird choice, it’s not the Thomas Hardy novel you’re made to read in lit classes (hello Tess of the…
Yes yes yes yes yes!! Thank you for making this point!!!!
Great catch. This review also totally misses the fact that the whole season has been building on an East of Eden theme and this episode just comes right out and says it via Ford, “Timshel. Thou Mayest.”
In that light, the fact that characters are “wandering around making arbitrary choices (not an exact quote)” is kind…
You should review this show. Maybe we’d get better insight into the show rather than:
Slaughterhouse five could actually teach the writers of this season a few key lessons on how to use non-linear storytelling in a more effective manner. Vonnegut has a tendency to go out of his way to SPOIL the events of his narratives as a way to force us readers to pay more attention to the specifics of his…
Right. When I read that comment in the stray observations, my mind went immediately to “Billy Pilgrim has come unstuck in time,” which seems like an obvious connection to a show with an intentionally hard-to-discern timeline.
From what I saw on reddit the scanner displays indicates that it’s looking for the explosive that they built into the spine. So a host that doesn’t have one (Maeve’s new body, potentially clone-hosts) should scan as clear. I don’t think he is one but I wouldn’t take that scanner as gospel.
I also doubt he could ever pass through any airport scanner or get any medicals if he was a host as their heads are literally hollow and their human anatomy is skin deep and they have ports and crystals in their body that are entirely not human. They also broadcast RF signals for their mesh network and you can plug a…
Made a similar comment down thread. Nice!
Well done. Thanks.
Bravo.
For those who are gnashing their teeth about little details (or “major” details as they might see them) that don’t make sense, or add up, or otherwise seem unexplained... Calm the hell down. You don’t know what you’re asking for.
He also says he would call his mother, who is halfway fluent, and practice his lines with her to see if he was pronouncing things right.