Yeah... I think Viktor-- er, Jimmy-- er, Saul making shit up sometimes is probably not out of the question.
"I caught my second wife screwing my step dad, it's a cruel world, grow up!"
Saul Goodman, Breaking Bad.
If taken at face value, I've got a feeling this line is going to prove troublesome for the writers later down the line.
Why exactly? The dad was confirmed to have died while Jimmy was still young. Jimmy didn't move to New Mexico until he was 31. It's entirely possible that he married twice and divorced twice in that time. Honestly, I don't think they'll go into it either way. Unless Chuck is involved, I don't see how it would matter to the plot.
Does anyone other than Chuck ever interact with Jimmy and not end up liking him. The dude has like max charisma stat or something. Lol. I mean, the simple answer would just be that Jimmy is a resourceful guy who, when freed from the constrains of "legit" legal work, becomes useful for people doing criminal stuff. Why wouldn't Mike keep in contact with him? Also, having a liaison to connect people who isn't in Gus' pocket could be very useful for Mike too. Given how he doesn't completely trust anyone.
Does anyone other than Chuck ever interact with Jimmy and not end up liking him. The dude has like max charisma stat or something.
On that note then, Chuck and Jimmy's relationship continues to get pushed further and become more frayed. You can only go so far here. Breaking Bads third season is when things really started to accelerate. With that show you had a set five-year plan that you more or less stuck to. Now that youre three seasons into Saul, do you know how long this show is going to end up running?
You're exactly right. We couldn't really give you an exact amount of episodes. The reason beingand I'm not being coy hereits just hard to know exactly. But you did put your finger on something important. Just from watching this show you can tell that it's a finite story. And we know that even further from the fact that this show has to butt up against the beginning of Breaking Bad. So there is a finite nature here. But there's one difference in Better Call Sauls finite nature that wasn't there with Breaking Bad, which is that there is yet again the possibility of a whole other story to be told through the black-and-white beginnings of a post-Breaking Bad world that we've put at the top of each season. So while I think that there is a definite end in sight for the pre-Breaking Bad story, there still seems like there could be a lot in the post-Breaking Bad world. I'm kind of fascinated by that, simply as one of the first fans of the series. What could come out of that? No promises, but it seems to me that there's a little more opportunity for scope there than there even was in Breaking Bad.
Lastly, do you feel like this season of Better Call Saul carries a certain theme to it? Is there a great overarching sort of message thats being reiterated here?
Sometimes it's tough to know what the message of any given season is because in the writers room we sometimes can't see the forest through the trees. But I'll tell you, I can say without any fear of equivocation, this is our best season yet. I say that, and oddly enough this is the season where I've taken a bit of a step back and Peter Gould and all of the wonderful writers and people behind the camera are making the show with less involvement from me than in past seasons. I'm still obviously around. I say this with a great deal of pride, especially with this being our best season yet. So maybe a little less of an omnipresence from me is a good thing.
I think this season is a season in which fans of Breaking Bad are going to be really satisfied. This year, more than ever before, there's more of a conjoining and nexus of the worlds between the two shows. The best way that I can put it is that I was saying to Peter Gould after I finished watching the mix of an upcoming episode, "Man, I feel like I just watched the 63rd episode of Breaking Bad." I was so pleased and blown away. I think folks who love Breaking Bad are in for a real treat and on the other hand, folks who really only know Better Call Saul or perhaps Breaking Bad was a little too rough and violent for them, they're still going to love this season. It's still its own world and story. It's just the best of both this season, whether you're a fan of Breaking Bad, Better Call Saul, or somewhere in between.
Oh man, Vince is teasing a possible future of the show moving fully into a post-Breaking Bad timeline! That would be amazing! Better Call Gene?
Secret best show on TV right now.
I really wonder what remains of the Jimmy world after he comes Saul. Maybe they'll have him return and explore the remnants. Lots of potential.
Secret best show on TV right now.
While continuing to tell stories in the BB/BCS world is enticing on some level, I'm also a little wary of them stretching things out past their sell date or working in what feels like too much fan service. I don't think they've come anywhere near that yet, but the continued BB camoes on BCS could be an issue if they're too heavy handed. The creators are aware that this could be a problem, and they've discussed it on the podcast a few times. It's also good to hear Gilligan acknowledge BCS' finite nature. I just hope they're careful and continue crafting stories that stand on their own merits, as well as have the willingness to finish things when they need to be ended. So far, so good.
I never thought of Gene stories beyond just season openers, that would be too good to be true. I would love for it to do something similar to Breaking Bad, and jump forward to that to cap the series off for a few episodes and see what has become of poor Jimmy McGill.
Didn't really think it was a secret.
Some BB fans are totally sleeping on it. I've heard a couple times that people just could not get into it. Their loss.
While continuing to tell stories in the BB/BCS world is enticing on some level, I'm also a little wary of them stretching things out past their sell date or working in what feels like too much fan service. I don't think they've come anywhere near that yet, but the continued BB cameos on BCS could be an issue if they're too heavy handed. The creators are aware that this could be a problem, and they've discussed it on the podcast a few times. It's also good to hear Gilligan acknowledge BCS' finite nature. I just hope they're careful and continue crafting stories that stand on their own merits, as well as have the willingness to finish things when they need to be ended. So far, so good.
Not dissing Breaking Bad, but the proposition of "Breaking Bad, but with a funny lead instead of a mopey megalomaniac" was a total "Yes, please!"Sapiens said:Some BB fans are totally sleeping on it. I've heard a couple times that people just could not get into it. Their loss.
This show is weird for me- it's a slower pace and often less surface level "exciting" than BB, but....I think I actually like it more than BB. Saul, Mike, and now Gus and the whole cast overall are just way more compelling as far as backstories go than they have any right to be.
Yeah, I'm glad they made her self aware. That's actually a good way of doing exposition.Did some catching up.
Kim's morning montage was fun.
The plot to get the truck snagged at the border was clever and cool, if perhaps a little clever.
Kim referencing the sunk cost fallacy was fantastic, and unfortunately sums up a lot of her relationship with Jimmy.
I really do not see this as a five season show. Maybe seven.
While continuing to tell stories in the BB/BCS world is enticing on some level, I'm also a little wary of them stretching things out past their sell date or working in what feels like too much fan service. I don't think they've come anywhere near that yet, but the continued BB cameos on BCS could be an issue if they're too heavy handed. The creators are aware that this could be a problem, and they've discussed it on the podcast a few times. It's also good to hear Gilligan acknowledge BCS' finite nature. I just hope they're careful and continue crafting stories that stand on their own merits, as well as have the willingness to finish things when they need to be ended. So far, so good.
That would be too much, I think.
The slow burn that they have going is not conductive to five seasons if we are already at season three.
This is mega speculation, and I know I'm 100% wrong, but it feels like this season is all about Jimmy vs Chuck, maybe even getting to trial where they square off. It fails spectacularly, and then next season is Jimmy picking up the pieces as Saul. After that recent interview talking about Gene and maybe seeing more of that, it'd be neat if we get a fifth season of full on Saul, and keep seeing defeated Gene trying to claim some victory in his life.
I don't know why, but I feel like Chuck's story is done by the end of this season. Season 4 is Saul coming together, and Season 5 leads right up to Breaking Bad and then time jumps into present day.
I don't know why, but I feel like Chuck's story is done by the end of this season. Season 4 is Saul coming together, and Season 5 leads right up to Breaking Bad and then time jumps into present day to resolve the cinnabon stuff.
I really do not see this as a five season show. Maybe seven.
Chuck also does that though.You know, Chuck is a dick but... he sure is right about Jimmy. Destroys himself. Destroys everyone. RIP.
No new episode today?
- Promo for this week's episode.Season 3: episode 4 "Sabrosito"
Jimmy asks a favor of Mike; new complications disrupt Salamancas' business; Chuck and Jimmy struggle with a compromise.
Really enjoying this season, though in truth it's mainly because of the Mike stuff. Jimmy is a bit of a fuck up really, and in many ways, I see that as a problem because I'm struggling to see how he's going to turn it around and become this sleazy, but seemingly effective lawyer.
Also yeah, despite many people I know who loved breaking bad, very few have stuck with BCS. The glacial pace of that first season coupled with too much lawyering kind of killed their interest in it.
Hopefully, AMC will let it run its course, but I'm not envisioning it going beyond a fourth season.