KIm brought in the Mesa Verde account because of personal connections she had with one of the heads of staff there. She was at school or college with the brunette or something wasn't she.I think she had brought in the firm to try to get her advanced from the backwater role she'd been demoted to. & wasn't very happy that she hadn't been put on the account she had brought in. Am I remembering that right?
So since she had the personal connection which is how she had brought in the account originally the account going with her would probably be more natural except for the reasons that Chuck had brought up. That is the new law firm might just be a little small to give the large account the attention it needed, Chuck should be able to ensure taht several people were wroking on it at any one time. But has Kim decided that she is going to be spending all of her time on the account, which would mean trying to run a small law firm wouldn't really be remunerative realistically would it? Not quite getting that bit since the new law firm isn't actually running yet.
― Stevolende, Wednesday, 13 April 2016 13:25 (ten years ago)
Part of Kim's pitch was that Mesa Verda - which she researched and wooed and brought to HHM, only to get coldly kicked to the curb by Howard - would be her sole client, and that she would dedicate all her time strictly to them.
Chuck's involvement is where if not ethics then morality gets involved. Howard was prepared to let Mesa Verde go, and let Kim have it, but Chuck's vindictiveness would not let him leave it at that. He risked his health not really to get Mesa Verde but to get it away from his brother, which Jimmy recognized. So was Chuck within his rights to get Mesa Verde back? Yes. But Jimmy was also right that it was about more than that.
― Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 13 April 2016 13:32 (ten years ago)
https://twitter.com/petergould/status/716331573197451264
― ulysses, Wednesday, 13 April 2016 13:33 (ten years ago)
Man, CGI is scary.
http://i.imgur.com/LXOz8W2.jpg
― pplains, Wednesday, 13 April 2016 13:37 (ten years ago)
Great framing in this ep of Chuck as king on this throne, throwing off his robe as he addressees his subjects.
― Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 13 April 2016 13:38 (ten years ago)
yeah, that was brilliant. little bit of GoT creeping in.
― draxx them sklounst (dog latin), Wednesday, 13 April 2016 13:41 (ten years ago)
Chuck's illness is very real, although probably completely psychological unless the story's world chooses otherwise. I'd venture to guess that we're going to see another flashback to his married days that explains its genesis. The dinner scene with Jimmy had a moment of Chuck tinkering with the lightbulbs before his brother arrived.
― μpright mammal (mh), Wednesday, 13 April 2016 13:44 (ten years ago)
I think the contrast between Jimmy and Chuck has been interesting. Jimmy is painted as this guy who cuts corners and gets into some pretty dark gray legal areas but who ultimately has his heart in the right place and strives to do right by Chuck, while Chuck is always on the level and doing things above board but is ultimately a spiteful and vindictive little shit who has no compunctions about holding Jimmy back or screwing him over.
― I Pith On Your Quip (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 13 April 2016 13:46 (ten years ago)
he has a lot of markings of obsessive-compulsive disorder, or the pure-o version, which is part of why he _knows_ he couldn't have screwed up the address on his own -- his world view is that he's a perfectionist, and his obsession turns that into a self-fulfilling state
― μpright mammal (mh), Wednesday, 13 April 2016 13:46 (ten years ago)
imo the electromagnetic sensitivity thing works well as a shorthand for the fact that no matter how much Chuck has to have things completely by the book, clean and tidy, the world doesn't really work that way and is full of the harsh noise of legal/moral gray area
― μpright mammal (mh), Wednesday, 13 April 2016 13:48 (ten years ago)
xxp Chaotic Good vs. Lawful Neutral
― a spate of non-fatal hammer attacks (GOTT PUNCH II HAWKWINDZ), Wednesday, 13 April 2016 15:08 (ten years ago)
Lawful EVIL sorry
― a spate of non-fatal hammer attacks (GOTT PUNCH II HAWKWINDZ), Wednesday, 13 April 2016 15:09 (ten years ago)
I don't think you could really blame either Mike or Jimmy for the consequences of their actions in this episode, ie the good Samaritan getting shot and Chuck passing out
Also if I remember right Jimmy found out that Chuck's condition is 'all in the mind' in the hospital in the first series but didn't tell anyone. Has he just been holding on to that information since then?
― paolo, Wednesday, 13 April 2016 20:06 (ten years ago)
That's what I'm saying, I imagine it wasn't really news to him that it's 'all in the mind' but he never brings it up. IIRC he mentioned something in that ep about it being real enough to Chuck and that's what matters, or something of that ilk?
― kinder, Wednesday, 13 April 2016 20:15 (ten years ago)
Oh I think it's common knowledge that Chuck's condition is largely psychosomatic, but everyone kind of humours him out of respect for his position.
― the joke should be over once the kid is eaten. (chap), Wednesday, 13 April 2016 20:17 (ten years ago)
Liked the contrasting reactions from Jimmy and Mike after being called out on their duplicitous actions; Jimmy tries to weasel out of it, Mike just shrugs and is like "yeah, what you gonna do?"
Very satisfying ep.
― the joke should be over once the kid is eaten. (chap), Wednesday, 13 April 2016 20:19 (ten years ago)
Doesn't make it less real. You could tell Chuck it's psychosomatic every day, but it might still have the same affect. xp
― μpright mammal (mh), Wednesday, 13 April 2016 20:19 (ten years ago)
Oh I know, I'm responding to -
― the joke should be over once the kid is eaten. (chap), Wednesday, 13 April 2016 20:22 (ten years ago)
Jimmy tries to weasel out of it, Mike just shrugs and is like "yeah, what you gonna do?"
Mike had leverage over Tuco that Jimmy didn't over Chuck tho
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 13 April 2016 20:22 (ten years ago)
er over Nacho
Final scene of penultimate episode of season two = watching Jane die
jane was a decent person. chuck is an asshole.
― japanese mage (LocalGarda), Wednesday, April 13, 2016 1:03 AM (20 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
just noting that they are broadly similar scenes, and arguably in both the focus is more on the protagonist's watching than the character's dying(/having a nasty fall)
and like from the protagonists' pov, jane was some random girl that introduced jesse to heroin and was trying to shake walt down, this is jimmy's fucking brother
agree that we the audience give much less of a shit about chuck going down
― Kevin Ageusia Smith (wins), Wednesday, 13 April 2016 20:28 (ten years ago)
the noise when his temple hit the counter, sheesh
― ulysses, Wednesday, 13 April 2016 20:29 (ten years ago)
― Kevin Ageusia Smith (wins), Wednesday, April 13, 2016 3:28 PM (1 minute ago)
Not everybody in we the audience, though. My wife's BCW sympathies are firmly with Chuck over Jimmy. We kind of avoid having conversations about this show anymore because they get a little uncomfortable.
― Honor thy pisstake as a hidden intention. (WilliamC), Wednesday, 13 April 2016 20:32 (ten years ago)
*BCS sympathies, rather
interesting my wife's sympathies are def with Jimmy, whereas I see both characters as occupying a moral gray area, closer to OL's estimation upthread. Of course I find Jimmy more likeable in a lovable scoundrel kind of way.
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 13 April 2016 20:36 (ten years ago)
Mike just shrugs and is like "yeah, what you gonna do?"
I think Mike felt bad about what happened, he seems to be a decent guy under the badass exterior. If I remember right he's never hurt any innocent bystanders
― paolo, Wednesday, 13 April 2016 20:37 (ten years ago)
Nobody in the audience wants Kim hurt, though, which is the real crux of the Jimmy/Chuck drama.
― Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 13 April 2016 21:26 (ten years ago)
Hell, everybody on this show prob means well, to some degree, in their own estimation---we know from a flashback on BB that the pre-stroke uncle thought he was doing stuff for the kids, raising his twin nephews to avenge the family honor etc. But in the outside world, the ones outside their heads, several of them are pretty fucking dangerous. "Jimmy has a good heart, " Chuck tells Kim, seemingly sincerely (although of course, everybody here's got levels), but he (supposedly) helped ruin their father by stealing, even though he cried at the funeral, and his "twisted romantic gesture," as Chuck calls it, has helped to send Chuck on his way perhaps (not that Chuck's own mental maze and Bad Choices didn't seal the deal). And he was something of a sense-talking, partial enabler to Walt and Jesse's careers of evil. Think both shows are mostly about this kind of thing (even, among the cartoon bikers, the little bland blond guy is just doing like he's raised to do, while dreaming of Lydia the helicopter mom with a few propellors missing [stole that last bit from some recap])
― dow, Wednesday, 13 April 2016 22:49 (ten years ago)
Jesse loses all illusions, if he ever had 'em, about what he's doing, way before Walt/Heisenberg, who only seems to consciously reintegrate at the very end--first by admitting that he didn't do it to provide for his family, but "because I liked it," and then petting his beloved meth cooker like it's baby Holly, right before he dies (spoiler)
― dow, Wednesday, 13 April 2016 22:54 (ten years ago)
back to this show: Mike looks a bit sick when Nacho tells him about the Good Samaritan getting killed; I think he might be planning to atone by fucking these punks up---or maybe he gives up and goes even further to the dark side, more money for his granddaugher xpost whattayagonnado
― dow, Wednesday, 13 April 2016 22:57 (ten years ago)
Chuck's complete lack of nuance or human understanding extends to his dad. I mean, Jimmy would swipe a few bucks from the till back at the store, but his dad would give the same few bucks to any grifter who came through with a sob story. And the thing is, not all of them were grifters, and sometimes the cost of helping people genuinely in need is falling for the occasional grift.
It's not like anyone ever big-time swindled him, and Jimmy is never really shown swindling anyone who's poor or really in needy in flashbacks of now -- it's greedy drunks who would take a fake Rolex or hedge fund dickheads who think they're coming out ahead.
Chuck not being able to differentiate, and assuming Jimmy has some innate character flaw, is the splinter in his eye
― μpright mammal (mh), Wednesday, 13 April 2016 23:01 (ten years ago)
My favorite part of this episode was Kim immediately concluding that Chuck was right about Jimmy forging the documents.
Which in turn reminded me of how Skyler never for a moment bought any of Walt's lies, even though she didn't know the truth until relatively late in the game.
― a serious and fascinating fartist (Simon H.), Wednesday, 13 April 2016 23:06 (ten years ago)
Jimmy is never really shown swindling anyone who's poor or really in needy in flashbacks of now -- it's greedy drunks who would take a fake Rolex or hedge fund dickheads who think they're coming out ahead.
reminded of some bit in one of Iceberg Slim's books where he notes that every con requires a mark that's eager to rip off the con man. the con requires a greedy mark.
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 13 April 2016 23:06 (ten years ago)
Which in turn reminded me of how Skyler never for a moment bought any of Walt's lies,
? I must've been watching a different show, she bought all kinds of lies in the first couple seasons.
OK, maybe some of the more innocuous early ones, but her bullshit detector started going off a lot earlier than it could've.
― a serious and fascinating fartist (Simon H.), Wednesday, 13 April 2016 23:19 (ten years ago)
Good point about Dad, assuming he was really as naive as presented--is this the way Jimmy remembers the moment of insight--which might be a lot of notions, moments, ect., compressed into a personal fable. Anyway, re comparisons of Chuck and Jimmy, was Slippin' Jimmy always that discriminating in his flopper scams? Did he only rook the drivers of fancy cars? Some poor people drive those too, for a while. I thought Chuck was a dick but less dangerous, but come to think of it, maybe he will turn out to be as much of an enabler etc of careers of evil as Saul, or more so, however unwittingly(in some cases, carefully see-no-evil in others): like what if good old Gus, that pillar of the community and captain of industry, is a client of Chuck and Howard's firm, and/or Mesa Verde, for that metter? Might even be on the latter's board of directors.
― dow, Wednesday, 13 April 2016 23:31 (ten years ago)
I thought Skyler Wanted To Believe---first of all in good ol' Walt, then in perfect criminal Heisenberg (shoulda caught a clue from his choice of names)
― dow, Wednesday, 13 April 2016 23:33 (ten years ago)
https://imgur.com/a/U0UhP
― paolo, Thursday, 14 April 2016 08:12 (ten years ago)
Oops I don't think that worked
― paolo, Thursday, 14 April 2016 08:14 (ten years ago)
decent guy
― Kevin Ageusia Smith (wins), Thursday, 14 April 2016 09:45 (ten years ago)
yeah ok maybe he's not so great
― paolo, Thursday, 14 April 2016 10:12 (ten years ago)
I'd also forgotten about his past as a corrupt cop
― paolo, Thursday, 14 April 2016 10:13 (ten years ago)
― Οὖτις, Thursday, April 14, 2016 12:06 AM (12 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
I think I've seen that used as an excuse/validation for the con in a lot more places. Or put as you can't con an honest person since it's just redirecting their own force, sounds like a karate/kung fu using their force against them scenario really.
― Stevolende, Thursday, 14 April 2016 11:55 (ten years ago)
oh I'm sure Iceberg's not the only guy to use that line. but yeah it posits cons/scams as an exploitation of another's greed and therefore okay
― Οὖτις, Thursday, 14 April 2016 15:12 (ten years ago)
little bit of footage from the finale:
thr.cm/29XOfw
― “I hate my wife. She doesn’t even have a dick” (sunny successor), Thursday, 14 April 2016 16:07 (ten years ago)
well clearly in dont know how to paste links
I'll bet your brother sabotaged it.
― I Pith On Your Quip (Old Lunch), Thursday, 14 April 2016 16:17 (ten years ago)
Where's Ernie? We need to investigate.
― “I hate my wife. She doesn’t even have a dick” (sunny successor), Thursday, 14 April 2016 17:31 (ten years ago)
At first, the way the latest episode ends with a cliffhanger made me think that Chuck doesn't die, because why else wouldn't they have just ended the ep with his death? (So I thought he'd end up as paraplegic or something.) But then I remembered the same thing happened with Breaking Bad, in the final season episode that ended with the Nazi shootout cliffhanger, with Hank still alive, which made me declare he wouldn't die... And then they killed him in the beginning of the next episode! Still, if the next ep of BCS starts with "oh, and Chuck died", I call bullshit on that. It'd be just pointless milking of suspension.
One thing I found interesting is that they left in intentionally ambiguous why Kim lied to Chuck, saying she didn't think Jimmy forged the documents. Did she do it because she didn't want Jimmy to face fraud charges and go to prison, or because she wanted to keep Mesa Verde to herself, so any proof that she knew and accepted what Jimmy had done would make it more likely for Chuck to go after her as well? The former intepretation would be more in line with her characterization as a morally upstanding person, whereas the latter would be a clear break for her. But it wouldn't be completely out-of-character, because we already she's drawn to Slippin' Jimmy's ways on some level. And she probably feels Chuck tricked her out of the Mesa Verde contract, which should've been hers... So that might've be the final straw for her, because she tried the straight and narrow approach (in the previous ep, where she didn't even call Mesa Verde before she'd left her resignation, thus allowing Harry to contact them first), and that just didn't work.
So maybe, if Kim didn't lie just to protect Jimmy but to keep the contract as well, this was her "finally giving in to the devil" moment, just like the Good Samaritan was for Mike and forging those documents was for Jimmy... Which would make her character arc parallel to the other two leads, instead of her inevitably becoming collateral damage to one of Jimmy's scams, which I thought was gonna happen before seeing the latest episode. If this ep signals a change of direction for her, it'd certainly make the next season more interesting w/r/t her character.
― Tuomas, Friday, 15 April 2016 06:26 (ten years ago)
chuck's dead and kim lied to protect jimmy and keep mesa verde
― conrad, Friday, 15 April 2016 08:15 (ten years ago)