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TopicSo this Breaking Bad show, it's pretty good.
SovietOmega
07/25/20 11:57:27 PM
#367:


Little weird for Saul and Howard to meet at this point in the timeline, here when Jimmy is now fully embracing Saul Goodman. Howard was from the before time, but here he is in this new era that has more of a Breaking Bad feel.

Brings up a fun point though...just what differentiates Saul Goodman from Jimmy McGill? Saul pitches Saul Goodman to Howard as if he were a superhero. Howard thinks he understands, but we know just how little he knows. If he did know, he'd probably not be offering anything positive to Saul. It certainly adds to the enormous pile of futures that could have been, though.

Quite the license that Howard's got too. Namast3. He really did go through quite the guilt trip, didn't he? He seems to have grown stronger for it, but even still, that's still gotta sting Saul.

Kiiiiiiim, stop fighting this! First she cleans up her bottle mess, and then she tries to help that stubborn guy with a wildly different proposal for branch location pitched to Kevin and Paige. You know, future knowledge here, but in a couple episodes we get 'Wexler v Goodman' which makes me wonder about her going so far as to have Saul represent Acker and her represent Mesa Verde and intentionally, but convincingly, throw in the towel.

Hah, some prime chicanery with Saul going 'that's not my client, THIS is my client' who is sitting in the back of the court. Now that Saul has embraced the sleaze, we get to see him have more court fun, which was always sorely lacking before.

Hank and Gomez having one of the most interesting conversations about culverts I've ever heard. It gets me curious to look the etymology of the word up. Turns out, nobody knows where the word comes from.

Was nice to see this operation play out, pure icing on the cake we already knew, but still welcome. I'm curious what Gus will say to the lead kid cleaning that fryer in perpetuity. My money is something along the lines of 'there was never an issue and this was a test'. As the end comes, we see that not even Gus is immune from everyone's deep seeded hatred against phones, crunching a perfectly good one in his hands. Sadly, he just goes classic Gus and says the dude can go home, the cleaning is 'acceptable'.

Bwahaha...Kim and Saul really are going to do the plan I thought they might. All it took was a little bit of bestiality.

Afterward, Saul decides to fuck up Howard's car with bowling balls. Why? o_O

Then Mike goes and lets himself get beat up. Could have gotten himself killed! Wakes up in a strange place. At least this kind of motivation I can kind of understand.


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