"The wheel is gonna turn. It always does". I wonder if Saul remembered those words when calling the disappearer, or when sitting in that lockup in Omaha.
What’s wild to me is thinking about that and then thinking about how after everything he still could have just had a measly 7 years in a nice (compared to others) prison…
12:17 “Always on a high horse, always trying to make me feel like I’m…!” I like this scene, because Jimmy likely isn’t faking his anger, it’s the kind of anger he feels at Chuck for berating him and his law practice.
It wasn't just Chuck, it were the likes of him. People who feel superior have beaten Jimmy down all his life. It's hard faulting him for turning into a crooked lawyer after he had been treated so badly.
The thing about it is that Chuck was absolutely 100% correct in everything he said about Jimmy. Now he could have tried to mentor him to change his path, but the ending is exactly what Chuck predicted. Funny how the REAL bad guy was beloved by all, including me. Same with Walter White. Vince Gilligan is a genius.
@@MusicGunnFor me Walt lost all his redeeming qualities as it was said he’s bad person deep down but grew up good. Jimmy was more tragic as Chuck saved him but he refused to truly “save” him. Jimmy legitimately took his second chance to heart and went straight only for Chuck to never truly let him achieve redemption leading to Saul taking over Jimmy until the end.
I swear watching him in the early seasons of Breaking Bad feels different after watching Better call Saul. Feels like Saul buried his soul in those scenes
@raptordoniv6779 I don't know. I think it's at least partially sexism and people not allowing those characters to have their own stories. The hate for Skyler in particular has always baffled me. She was written that way on purpose, at first to show that Walt had to hide what he was doing, and then how many people will go to great lengths to try and save face and their marriage.
Good alternative. I'll take that over a creepy voice cheering me on every time I take a dump. The user would be motivated to defecate slowly so the score can go up (depending on how accurate the detector is)
Not quite. For context (spoiler warning), Jimmy is intentionally manipulating them by giving them false info about Howard Hamlin that he knows they're going to take to other lawyers (specifically Clifford Main who he mentions offhand to purposely give them the idea) in order to frame Howard as a drug user. Jimmy's point at the end that if they reveal where they got the info, he'll get a cut of the case is specifically added so they won't tell those lawyers that he had anything to do with it, which is important because if they know the info originated from Jimmy, it'll be disregarded because everyone knows Jimmy and Howard have serious beef. Jimmy is 100% playing a master manipulator here, knowing that the Kettlemans are going to take his info to other firms, and it plays right into his plans to discredit Howard.
This fact was established by the end of the first season of BCS. Howard offered him a job after Chuck's death in part because he felt guilty over how he had been forced to treat Jimmy in the past. Unfortunately by this point, Jimmy was well into his downward spiral into becoming an actual con man representing cartel interests and other major criminal enterprises. He also blamed Howard for Chuck's death, so there's that.
When they offered an alternative solution to calling the cops. In a real accident, the victims wouldn't be interested in helping the driver weasel out of facing the consequences of hitting them.
That one is Breaking Bad I'm pretty sure because I remember the scene but for the future you can just look up the episode name because its displayed at the beginning. Edit: I also just realised the logo of the show is in the bottom left of the scene aswell. (when the episode name shows up)