y es muy irónico, por que se supone que el quería defender los antiguos valores pero termino vendiéndose por fama y contaminando su mensaje por dinero y así creo muchos monstruos como Hank
@@coloneljason9094 I think he meant wasn't able to murder in an acting scene. Killing in self defense and shooting an unarmed and defenseless man would technically be murder which is probably what went against his moral code of the time.
Formal is not really a great translation here. While, yes “formal” means formal in Spanish. The word means more in Spanish. In English it means just follow proper social etiquette but, in Spanish it also means like following the law or paying back one’s debts stuff like that.
I'm sorry but the scene where he meets young hank with the music rising is hilarious without context because it's just this super dramatic and tense sound and all you see is the guy from Twin Peaks de-aged
Im Mexican and we call this expresion: "Tener las tres efes". - Un verdadero hombre debe tener las tres efes, Feo Fuerte y Formal- (A real man must have the three eff's, ugly, strong and proper). They don't used it that much now days but i heard it many times in my childhood.
The second one is meaningful because he sees how he gave into the director's demands and killed Joey onscreen, and it reminded him of how he gave into the wasteland and became a killer in real life. This coupled with Lucy's kindness turned him around
@@sinqaid87 yes but Ghoul is a master shot, he knows he can shoot him non-lethally and still prevent him from shooting him in the head. Idk like blow his hand off.
@@tannisrootabsolutely NO ONE is that good of a shot, pal. That’s like shooting a dime with iron sights at 50 yards. Plus, the ghoul doesn’t have VATS cause he doesn’t have a Pip-Boy.
*I think we can all tell* that the moment he didn’t shoot the Mexican was foreshadowing that at some point in the series - Cooper is gonna have to kill the villain - only to realise that’s what the Wasteland wants (more violence) and he’ll redeem himself and become the cowboy that he was in the movies.
Coming off of this I think when he’s watching the movie and seeing himself say “you were ugly, strong, and had dignity.. at least you got 2 out of the 3.” he’s basically talking to his future self in that moment. He became ugly from becoming a ghoul and strong from surviving the apocalypse, but now he is more like the cowboy he acted like in his movies in the present over who he actually was in the past because he lost his dignity and is willing to kill now.
Right because it’s totally ok for cooper to kill towns people who had lives and families in filly, but he’s gonna stop and have a moral compass for the villain who NUKED shady sands? That’s silly lol
@@veeramdeosinghrathore1533 We don’t need a redemption arc for Cooper tbh. Besides that it’s already going against what you just said, he coerced a kid to pull on him in front of his father and killed in cold blood to make ass jerky. If him going after Hank makes him a good guy in your eyes you’re about as stupid as the karma system in Fallout 3.
@@veeramdeosinghrathore1533 He’s supposed to be a morally questionable character though, and he does still act like himself even if it’s the characters he played as and not the actual actor he once was. I honestly like his character because of how terrible he’s willing to be. They already show his more innocent/still there side with dog meat and he shows his reasoning (more than what most evil people do) why he does what he does (as for my examples the kid was contemplating killing him already and he was just hungry for ass cheeks)
This is probably my favorite episode and scene this season. Especially when he watches this scene at the end of the episode. Realizing that like the villain in the movie, Cooper now has 2 out of 3 being ugly, strong but now lacking dignity. It's almost like his past self is talking to him in the present and that hits him hard. Great writing and very fascinating character arc.
It’s cool how this literally describes himself later down the line he’s ugly strong and has some form of dignity with people respecting him out of fear
Anyone else notice how he’s going to pull the trigger on the sofa but can’t due to the missing finger? Seems to realise in that moment how much he’s changed, now he’s on the other side be of the gun.
I just realized. I think he popped him with the listening device. That might be how he finds him later in the series. Because I'm 80% sure he used the listening device as a shell in is sawed off.
I don’t care what anyone else says regardless if it’s an opinion or not, the ghoul version of himself watching it on the TV was the most bad ass scene in the show.
I wonder how high Henry was on the secrecy ladder, or if the plan about the bombs were just made. It’s kinda odd to ask for an autograph if you have knowledge about the bombs dropping soon.
No, it's really an old mexican saying, albeit one not used nowadays. I can tell that as I'm mexican. Heck some even recognize it in an episode of El Chavo del Ocho. I'm looking for movies that have it as well.
@@CarlosRojas-e7u pendejo soy mexicano también, un verdadero hombre debe tener las tres efes, lo decían mis abuelitos y una que otra película de la era de oro mexicano ajhsjas
I really think this is because of creative liberties taken by those pre-War films. The Red Scare got pretty intense so it figured they would find a way to include that in Westerns, even if it's anachronistic as fuck.
It’s based on 1950s red scare in an era where the Cold War still goes on. Of course there were ‘commies’ but ironically most weren’t even commies, the state just called them that whenever they called out US BS. Same thing happened in the USSR or Mao’s China, call out their bs or criticise, you’re a capitalist pig or whatever. And movies especially back then would include this stuff despite it being illogical. It could range from subtle as fuck to ‘wow this movie is a shill for (insert superpower here)’.
Waaaaiiiit lads.... i think this might be some master level foreshadowing on cooper meeting the goat vaquaro its just a guess but i feel like raul and cooper are going to battle with this being the end result but with cooper sparing him
It's an old saying used from years ago, not currently used, but it was meant to define the three ideal characteristics of a man: he has to be "ugly, strong, and formal". With ugly pictured as a man that works the land and just have the time to take just the basic care of himself, without recurring to lotion or so. Strong is pretty clear, and formal as someone mentioned above means he has to follows proper etiquette but also someones who is a decent person to others, a man of word, that pays his debts, that follows the law, etc. Probably picture actors like Pedro Infante or Emilio "El Indio" Fernandez as the archetype. Or even Danny Trejo in his real life self, he's a really nice man.
He goes from a guy who can't even k*ll people in an acting scene to the brutal ghoul hundreds of years later.
y es muy irónico, por que se supone que el quería defender los antiguos valores
pero termino vendiéndose por fama y contaminando su mensaje por dinero
y así creo muchos monstruos como Hank
He is more able than killing people since he was in the Marines prior to his acting career.. :D
He live 200 became ruthless
@@coloneljason9094 I think he meant wasn't able to murder in an acting scene. Killing in self defense and shooting an unarmed and defenseless man would technically be murder which is probably what went against his moral code of the time.
@@coloneljason9094i think he just didn't want to promote killing as being something cool after being in war
My favorite eulogy ever. I said it to my bos yesterday exactly as Cooper says it. He smiled, then I got fired today 😮
Feo, fuerte y formal
So it backfired?
Should have said "cabron, I need to see your BALLS"
It was a eulogy for your job...
So funny 😂😂
Feo=ugly(masculine)
Fuerte=Strong
Formal=Formal(literally formal)
All I hear is feo (ugly), fuerte (strong) y formol (formol).
I laughed quite a bit because of it
formal... maibe because he has education even in death, so is dignity
Formal is not really a great translation here. While, yes “formal” means formal in Spanish. The word means more in Spanish. In English it means just follow proper social etiquette but, in Spanish it also means like following the law or paying back one’s debts stuff like that.
@@coleball6001 en efecto, cuando llamas a alguien formal significa que puedes confiar en su palabra
@@coleball6001as a Spaniard myself that's exactly what I was going to say
I'm sorry but the scene where he meets young hank with the music rising is hilarious without context because it's just this super dramatic and tense sound and all you see is the guy from Twin Peaks de-aged
When i first watched that scene i was so confused about why it was so tense, like who is this man and why does his mouth look so weird l?
Loved Twin Peaks. Kyle and Walton are the only reasons I'm watching the show. I like seeing Kyle play the bad guy though.
@@greenytaddict twin peaks season 3 vibe
el actor tampoco ayudo ¿era tan difícil buscar uno que se pareciera a una versión joven? "Dark" lo hizo con 30 personajes, aquí solo necesitaban 1
Tbh I liked how the cgi made Hank look so weird and inhuman lol. It added to the scene for me.
Im Mexican and we call this expresion: "Tener las tres efes". - Un verdadero hombre debe tener las tres efes, Feo Fuerte y Formal- (A real man must have the three eff's, ugly, strong and proper). They don't used it that much now days but i heard it many times in my childhood.
Thats cool, in what context would you use it in?
@@cbmazo9229 Ah you can use it to denote the virtues of an honorable man, the term ugly in this phrase means ugly in a manly way.
@@effingclexiss1337that pfp 😂😂
@@cbmazo9229 feo: no tiene nada que esconder
fuerte: no solo se refiere a lo físico, sino también a su voluntad
formal: puedes confiar en su palabra
Yo también bro
The second one is meaningful because he sees how he gave into the director's demands and killed Joey onscreen, and it reminded him of how he gave into the wasteland and became a killer in real life. This coupled with Lucy's kindness turned him around
Okey dokey
But he kills a young boy in front of his father after that...
@@tannisroothe was gonna try to shoot him in the back or something ghoul knew it.
@@sinqaid87 yes but Ghoul is a master shot, he knows he can shoot him non-lethally and still prevent him from shooting him in the head. Idk like blow his hand off.
@@tannisrootabsolutely NO ONE is that good of a shot, pal. That’s like shooting a dime with iron sights at 50 yards. Plus, the ghoul doesn’t have VATS cause he doesn’t have a Pip-Boy.
As a spanish speaker i find it halaroius how he pronounces both feo and Fuerte very good but absolutely buthcers the word formal
Cause he skips the R. FoRRRRRmal.
"Fohmal"
Perfect payoff when he rewatched his own movie.
el ayudo a crear ese mundo, al vender así los valores que quería defender, creo muchos monstruos como Hank, capaces de apretar el botón
Walter Goggins killed it in this role, but then again so did everyone. What a balls-amazing season of TV.
*I think we can all tell* that the moment he didn’t shoot the Mexican was foreshadowing that at some point in the series - Cooper is gonna have to kill the villain - only to realise that’s what the Wasteland wants (more violence) and he’ll redeem himself and become the cowboy that he was in the movies.
Coming off of this I think when he’s watching the movie and seeing himself say “you were ugly, strong, and had dignity.. at least you got 2 out of the 3.” he’s basically talking to his future self in that moment.
He became ugly from becoming a ghoul and strong from surviving the apocalypse, but now he is more like the cowboy he acted like in his movies in the present over who he actually was in the past because he lost his dignity and is willing to kill now.
Right because it’s totally ok for cooper to kill towns people who had lives and families in filly, but he’s gonna stop and have a moral compass for the villain who NUKED shady sands? That’s silly lol
@@veeramdeosinghrathore1533 We don’t need a redemption arc for Cooper tbh.
Besides that it’s already going against what you just said, he coerced a kid to pull on him in front of his father and killed in cold blood to make ass jerky.
If him going after Hank makes him a good guy in your eyes you’re about as stupid as the karma system in Fallout 3.
@@veeramdeosinghrathore1533 He’s supposed to be a morally questionable character though, and he does still act like himself even if it’s the characters he played as and not the actual actor he once was.
I honestly like his character because of how terrible he’s willing to be. They already show his more innocent/still there side with dog meat and he shows his reasoning (more than what most evil people do) why he does what he does (as for my examples the kid was contemplating killing him already and he was just hungry for ass cheeks)
@@bradyking4299 i agree , thanks .
This is probably my favorite episode and scene this season. Especially when he watches this scene at the end of the episode. Realizing that like the villain in the movie, Cooper now has 2 out of 3 being ugly, strong but now lacking dignity. It's almost like his past self is talking to him in the present and that hits him hard. Great writing and very fascinating character arc.
*Us cowpokes, we take it as it comes...*
you poke cows?
@@ShannonBeckett no, he cows pokes
@@ShannonBeckett ass Jerky don't make itself
micah bell???
Don Ramon would be proud
JAJAJA 😂
Loved his role in vice principals but glad to see a switch from comedy to drama.
Bros never seen a Tarantino movie
He’s awesome in Justified
He's been in tons of dramas, where have you been?
@miken8875 Guess I always preferred comedy TV, actually Had no clue who he was until vice principals. Also, I forgot about his role in Django. 🤦🏽♂️
Bro, you NEED to watch Justified and The Shield. His best work are in these two shows.
It’s cool how this literally describes himself later down the line he’s ugly strong and has some form of dignity with people respecting him out of fear
You either die a hero or live long enough to become the villain
In spite of everything you’ve done for them, eventually they will hate you
Green Goblin, 2002 Spider Man
Anyone else notice how he’s going to pull the trigger on the sofa but can’t due to the missing finger? Seems to realise in that moment how much he’s changed, now he’s on the other side be of the gun.
This is literally what Western Movie Icon John Wayne wanted on his tombstone. Goes to show how much Cooper was inspired by John Wayne.
Gotta say that super duper mart scene is one of my favorite scenes if not my favorite scene of the whole series.
"A little snip snip here!"
I just realized. I think he popped him with the listening device. That might be how he finds him later in the series. Because I'm 80% sure he used the listening device as a shell in is sawed off.
It's unlikely, although Coop is still wearing his cowboy outfit from prewar. However I never noticed that.
That "Do i really have to kill him?" line truly shows he is a former soldier, no soldier wants to kill anyone after they leave service
Im Mexican. First time i hear that Mexican Eulogy.
Pretty aure they made it up, but still cool nonetheless jaja
Edit: apparently it's not a made up phrase and it's a very old-school saying ✨
It was invented in 2031.
You are kidding, right? I have heard it hundreds of times, grandparents said it a lot
Nah, they didn't make it up. Lot of parents and grandparents say it: las tres F's 🤙🏼
Reportedly, John Wayne wanted that for his tombstone.
Vi toda la serie en español latino. No pensé que realmente dijeran la frase tal cual en el idioma original, hasta que vi este video.
Nice to see that Dickie Bennet and Boyd reconciled. What an optimistic and forgiving world they must live in!
Man I’ve NEVER heard a YEEEEHAWWWW as good as 1:50 Coop you’re a real cowpoke !
Never played plants vs zombies then
@@traffic9518 nope but if there is a yeehaw as good I’ll pour an extra one
Out for you
that's the same sound effect used in plants vs zombies 1 for when a bungie zombie arrives
Feo, Fuerte y Formal
I don’t care what anyone else says regardless if it’s an opinion or not, the ghoul version of himself watching it on the TV was the most bad ass scene in the show.
1:52 RATINHOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
"...y formol" xDDD
Don Ramon
Obrigado Seu Madruga por me ensinar essa frase 🙏
1:51 that *bungee zombie* from Plants vs Zombies 🧟♂️ lmao
I literally laugh when young hank comes in. CGI LISAN AL GHAIB
Cooper is completely based on John Wayne
That Yeeehaw from 1:50 yep
He didn't betray Charlie Whiteknife, so no, no John Wayne thank God Edit: He's more Clint Eastwood
He was a Gene Autry cowboy who got pushed into becoming a Clint Eastwood cowboy. I don't see much if any John Wayne.
No he's not
The sheriff of Red Rock ain't enjoying some Mexicans after what happened in the prequel
That's a mexican eulogy? I spend my whole life thinking it was an original quote from El Chavo Del Ocho 😆!
1:45 me when someone asks why we don’t have free healthcare
I will give you two out of three on that front...
what are the two???
@@alexanderkurzeja4063 you tell me
@@alexanderkurzeja4063
Feo y fuerte
El Chavo: _Osea que a usted solo le falta ser fuerte y formal, osea que le falta poco para ser hombre..._
My kind of western.
I wonder how high Henry was on the secrecy ladder, or if the plan about the bombs were just made. It’s kinda odd to ask for an autograph if you have knowledge about the bombs dropping soon.
It's weird and funny cuz my surname is Fuerte
Quiero ser Howard Cooper
In México theres no something like strong, ugly and formal, can be a reference for ugly, bad and good.
For the clint Eastwood movies.
No, it's really an old mexican saying, albeit one not used nowadays. I can tell that as I'm mexican. Heck some even recognize it in an episode of El Chavo del Ocho. I'm looking for movies that have it as well.
@@Johnnywilsonforever i am from México 😂😂😂
@@CarlosRojas-e7u pendejo soy mexicano también, un verdadero hombre debe tener las tres efes, lo decían mis abuelitos y una que otra película de la era de oro mexicano ajhsjas
@@nadaespecial4198 si las tienes fendejo, fuñetas y futo 😂😂😂
@@JohnnywilsonforeverDon Jamon said it didn't he ?
I thought he was saying “Feo, fuerte y fumón” meaning “ugly, strong and a big smoker”
They had commies in old west days?
I really think this is because of creative liberties taken by those pre-War films. The Red Scare got pretty intense so it figured they would find a way to include that in Westerns, even if it's anachronistic as fuck.
That's the joke
It’s based on 1950s red scare in an era where the Cold War still goes on. Of course there were ‘commies’ but ironically most weren’t even commies, the state just called them that whenever they called out US BS.
Same thing happened in the USSR or Mao’s China, call out their bs or criticise, you’re a capitalist pig or whatever. And movies especially back then would include this stuff despite it being illogical. It could range from subtle as fuck to ‘wow this movie is a shill for (insert superpower here)’.
They say the old West ended in 1895, which was like a decade after Karl Marx died, so I suppose it isn't impossible lol.
No but they certainly did make Westerns with anti communist messages during the Cold War days
Waaaaiiiit lads.... i think this might be some master level foreshadowing on cooper meeting the goat vaquaro its just a guess but i feel like raul and cooper are going to battle with this being the end result but with cooper sparing him
1:43 am i the only one that died after hearing this line in an old western movie
Feo, fuerte y formol
Jaden Canyon
Feo, fuerte y "fouma"
Don't get me wrong, i love the show but i found funny how Cooper can't pronounce "formal"
"If I were that intelligent, I wouldn't be a movie cowboy". He's aware he's not the sharpest tool in the shed, but he learned how to survive
Does feo, fuerte y formal align with 3 mains?
Ghoul being the Ugly
Maximus being the Strong
Lucy having Dignity
god i wish the music wasn't in the back ground
Us cowpokes, we take it as it comes
Constantin Spurs
1:52 dança gatinho, dança
Gulgowski Club
The last one is awesome
Thats a song from spanish singer Loquillo
In México we have been using that phrase since before the 1960's, is just not that common nowdays.
@@effingclexiss1337 interesante
Georgette Lodge
el chavo del 8? no one?
Jakubowski Courts
Fay Valley
which of the two did he give him???
Garcia Linda Williams Donald Wilson Joseph
I speak spanish and i didn't understand a single fucking word of that on the series
Because You are cholo...porque yo soy real: feo, fuerte y formal
What's the significance of it though?
It's an old saying used from years ago, not currently used, but it was meant to define the three ideal characteristics of a man: he has to be "ugly, strong, and formal". With ugly pictured as a man that works the land and just have the time to take just the basic care of himself, without recurring to lotion or so.
Strong is pretty clear, and formal as someone mentioned above means he has to follows proper etiquette but also someones who is a decent person to others, a man of word, that pays his debts, that follows the law, etc.
Probably picture actors like Pedro Infante or Emilio "El Indio" Fernandez as the archetype. Or even Danny Trejo in his real life self, he's a really nice man.
@@Johnnywilsonforever good answer!
I suppose it’s like though the worker. Communists always talk about the worker.
@@Johnnywilsonforever interesting! so it's definitely not just made up for the show?
Strong silent type. Think Gary cooper
Young Nancy Martin Sarah Miller Jennifer
Young Mary Allen Angela Brown Karen
Song ?
feo, fuerte y formal - fallout serie ost
What does fomol mean ?
says "formal" search it
@_Diego96 yeah I mean it's doesnt sound like formal, lit he says fomol
Im so proud of this cause im mexican! 👍👍👍
No manches, viva la raza