Saul Gets The Better Of Jesse's Parents | I.F.T. | Breaking Bad
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- Опубліковано 11 гру 2024
- As he finds Skyler is dead set on getting a divorce, an unwitting Walt lands squarely in the crosshairs of a pair of Mexican drug cartel hit men set on revenge.
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Season Three - Episode Two: "Caballo Sin Nombre"
Episode Description:
Walt tries to reconcile with Skyler, but when his advances are rejected he takes drastic action to bring his family back together. A confused and angry Walter, Jr. lashes out at his mother. With the help of Saul, Jesse makes a significant investment.
Episode Overview:
Already near the breaking point as a result of the divorce, Walt is pushed over the edge when he is stopped by an Albuquerque cop because of a broken car windshield caused by debris from the recent airline disaster. Arrested for his pigheadedness, Walt calls Hank to help him out of his jam and, after apologizing to the arresting officer, returns to his motel to find Saul Goodman, the lawyer who helped him and Jesse sell their meth supply to Gus. Though Walt wants no part of any more drug deals now that he is trying to win Skyler back, Saul urges him to keep an open mind. And to make sure Skyler doesn’t interfere, Saul sends his private detective, Mike, to follow her. Meanwhile, after returning to his parents’ house, Jesse discovers that they are putting it up for sale.
In the face of Marie and Hank’s questions about the divorce, Skyler refuses to reveal anything about Walt’s involvement with drugs. As Mike monitors Skyler’s whereabouts, Saul delivers Jesse’s share of the drug deal cash and asks him to keep an eye on Walt. However, while Jesse is noncommittal about keeping tabs on his ex-partner, he does have a job for Saul. Meanwhile, at a New Mexico nursing home, the cartel hit men, the Cousins, listen as Tio Pepe, the uncle of the drug boss Tuco, fingers Walt for his nephew’s death. And as Skyler looks to put her life back together, she discovers that she still must contend with the financial misdeeds and romantic interests of her boss, Ted Beneke.
Still unhappy over his dad being thrown out, Walt, Jr. comes to live at the motel. Yet, seeing it as an opportunity to talk with Skyler, Walt insists on bringing their son home. Meanwhile, on behalf of a client, Saul offers the Pinkmans half of what they are asking for their house. And after the lawyer threatens to reveal that it used to be home to a meth lab, he gets his low ball price for his client - Jesse. Finally, unable to convince Skyler to discuss his returning home, Walt breaks in after he just misses catching Mike placing a listening device in Skyler’s house - and narrowly avoids being killed when the Cousins’ mission is called off at the last minute.
#BreakingBad #JessePinkman #SaulGoodman
Jesse lost the house to his parents because meth was cooked there, and then he gets it back because meth was cooked there.
I love this show.
Different house
@@yeetwchybaban You sure about that?
@@yeetwchybaban it was Jessie's Aunt's home. He took care of her and after she died he kept living there and that's when the mom went over there to kick him out because legally the house went to her instead of Jessie
@@discofraud was his na's house but yer na is ur da so no
@@Alejandro_87 wrong, yer da sells avon and yer da is ur ma who isn't ur na therefore ur incorrect
After watching BCS, I can understand why Saul is so cool with these "high end" attorneys. He dealt with Chuck and Howard for years....
Dorcia Yeah I bet he enjoys knocking these elitist lawyers off their high horse just as much as he does running a con.
Matthew Riley “How bout it counselor? Do you concur?😁” brilliant
I wouldn’t call that lawyer high end.
Howard's not that bad.
“Howard, you’re a shitty lawyer, but a terrific salesman.” - Jimmy
You're telling me a house just happens to be sold like that? No! He orchestrated it! Jimmy!
I AM NOT CRAZY!
@@mentalillness1574 Enough is enough! I submit that Mr mental illness's mental illness is not at issue here!
Not our Jimmy! CoULdN’T Be PrEciOuS JiMmY!!
Chuck will never be not made fun of lol
@@MaCabaret StEaLiNg ThEm BliNd!!!
I love how he takes his time in revealing his purpose, waits till they're half way out the door, they've totally written him off and their guard is down in a way. He weakens them when they think they're in their strongest position. Kind of masterful, but just another day for Saul Goodman.
Yes, it was very Columbo-like.
He must have read Dale Carnegie
He did the same with Chuck. Its great
Apear weak when you are strong ~ Sun Tzu
Only the best…
And to think, most of the people in the show interact with Saul with no knowledge that he defecated through a sunroof.
Lol ikr
And drank his own piss in the desert
In front of children!
Chicago Sunroof!
This.. this. Chicanery!
Saul's such a great character. He deserves his own spinoff show.
I don't know if that could work, mate. I mean, he's a good character. But there's no way he could hold more than 2 seasons...
@claus winkelstein If you think he is not aware of the Better Call Saul series, please, go back to school and learn grammar.
@@SparrowPlays. you have some thick head bro
I agree
Your stupid
The beautiful thing about this is, one originally assumes he’s an incompetent buffoon, but he’s actually a massively skilled lawyer.
It's part of the facade. It throws people off.
@broomsterm
He is skilled. Chuck had a better mind and probably better memory for details, but Jimmy was always able to come out on top due to his unpredictable schemes.
He acts like a buffoon but he uses that facade to screw you over when you least expect it.
@broomsterm
That would not have happened had Chuck not sabotaged Jimmy's career since the beggining. Jimmy was an honest man when he worked at the mailroom and he did not cheat his way out of things for over 10 years. The only scam he did was when he was broke and couldn't progress due to having to care for Chuck. When he could have stolen half a million, he just returned it because he wanted to honor Chuck. It was only when he realized that Chuck was against him and never believed in him that Jimmy returned to being Slipping Jimmy(doing minor scams that eventually got worse) and later became the infamous Saul Goodman.
@broomsterm
Like I said, Jimmy did not commit any dishonesty for ten years once he started working on HHM.
He honored his promise to Chuck until he was almost broke due to dedicating himself to take care of Chuck for one entire year(even Howard was surprised of the things Jimmy did daily).
Even then, had Chuck allowed Jimmy to be a partner once he brought the Sandpiper case(it's understandable he didn't want to hire Jimmy at first due to his record, I wouldn't) Jimmy would have left behind his life as Slipping Jimmy. He only reverted back when he realized that all he cared about, making Chuck proud, would never happen. Hell, the only reason he even got interested in the law was because of Chuck and wanted to be closer to him.
Even Chuck's actor said that Chuck was a horrible person.
He's a predator disguised as prey
"let me guess, flat fee clients am I right?"
Love that, the reason the lawyer wants to get the meeting done quicker because he isnt getting paid hourly XD
Lol at first I thought it was just because of his disgust for Saul.
I think he said “flat feet” not flat fee
I dont know why theyre flat fee clients. They're pretty rich, so they should be able to afford an hourly attorney.
@@SegaGenesis92 It's just a real-estate deal. You pay a set price to handle it.
Thanks for the explanation. I couldn't put that together without you...
I love the “do you concur”. Saul relishes burying people who look down on him.
Chuck would concur..
it’s like his way of getting back at Chuck without actually being directly at him, he returned to the Slippin’ Jimmy who retaliates to those who disrespect him, the persona Chuck absolutely disrespects
Literally
What he communicates with that is, “we’re brethren, both members of the bar.”
After BCS it makes sense why he took a lot of smug satisfaction wiping the floor with this pompous attorney.
"Some would call that fraud for hiding a felony. But I, myself, am more open minded"
That's literally the definition of Saul's character. Amazing.
Jimmy would disagree :D
Kris Tran agree to disagree here
You can’t put quotation marks around words if they aren’t the same words spoken by the character. You’re paraphrasing, which is fine, but without the quotes.
“Now, some would call that fraud in service of concealing a felony. I, myself, I’m more open minded”.
HomeTown Medic ok
Chuck: The Law is sacred!
Jimmy: The Law is guidelines.
Saul: It's free real-estate.
Lol yeah
Cheap real estate* in this case
You know, the meme comes from a Tim & Eric episode in which Bob Odenkirk probably starred.
@@jonathanengland1 Yeah, I know he was in the show, but not in every episode. In fact it seems I was wrong, the "Free real-estate" bit is in the "Presidents" episode, and Bob wasn't cast in that one, according to IMDB.
@@ekathe85 ah, yeah. I getcha. you were talking about that specific episode. Yeah it's funny b/c so many BB fans have no clue about Bob's major contributions to Tim and Eric. But for me it's the opposite: I'm a Mr. Show / Tim & Eric fan and that's actually how I came to learn about Breaking Bad in the beginning.
I loved that scene where Jesse tells Walt:
"When the going gets tough you don't want a criminal lawyer. You want a C R I M I N A L lawyer." lmao
I love lamp
@@mkultra2456 lämp bröther
One of my favorite quotes from the entire series 😂
He is friend of the cartel! Thats it😂
amigo del cartel 😁@@deathchronicles6960
Jesses parents lawyer is everything that jimmy hated about chuck
Good God, man. You're absolutely right.
Watching Better Call Saul really sheds new light on this scene
FUCK CHUCK!
Basically true, I think he hated the real stick-asses in any profession having always sort of enjoyed talking his way out of things more and/or just finding creative solutions to the same problems that Chuck would just tell him "There's no shortcut, just work! HARD work!" and that is exactly why Saul is who he is and Chuck is who he is. And yeah I love that Chuck was a character to actually give us that exposition, it's never blatantly said but yeah I think you're right that he resents the hell out of anyone that smells too "legitimate".
At 0:13 you can tell how much their lawyer hates Saul Goodman and his cheesy late night ads and personality.
Bob Odenkirk is insanely talented.
I've been watching Mr. Show. There's some comedy gold in that
Couldn’t agree more. It’s crazy to think he was next in line for Michael Scott for the office, too. Although no one does better than Steve Carrell, Bob definitely would do the role justice.
Mr show ftw
He also was one of Conan's writers
See him in his early days as a boyfriend for Elaine in "Seinfeld."
The Breaking Bad Junk Man and Bryan Cranston were also on "Seinfeld" in small parts.
"You are without a doubt the worst lawyer I've ever heard of"
"But you have heard of me? 😏"
Yes ... Lol!
"“This is the day you will always remember as the day you almost bested Saul Goodman, Esq.”
"how 'bout it counsellor... do you concur"..
Counseller: 'Thats gotta be the best damn lawyer i've ever seen"
Why is their lawyer there?
@@samanthab1923 lawyers usually represent their clients during these proceedings
I love the way Saul takes a subtle jab at the parents' attorney at the beginning when the lawyer tells him to cut out the small talk and get down to business. Saul dead pans, "I get it. Flat fee clients, am I right?" He's insinuating the guy's not good enough to charge by the hour. The look on the lawyer's face is priceless as he glances over at his clients.
thank you I noticed that too. This show's so detailed, it's amazing
Wrong, he means they need to do it fast because the clients won't be paying more if it takes longer. Not a hard concept to grasp.
@@seootea6679 that is what he said. The other lawyer wants to hurry it up because he’s not good enough to charge by the hour. So allow me to tell you that you are *WRONG*
@@seootea6679 that’s literally what he said
@@seootea6679 Reading comprehension bro. Learn it. Use it.
It was at this moment Saul became my favorite character.
Bob Odenkirk plays the shit out of this character
Saul and Mike are my favorite cahracters in the BB universe
"When you're such a good actor, they write a show around your character, after the original series end", Where's Odenkirk's damned Oscar!
The Green Reaper oscars are for movies. Tv stars win emmys
@@thegreenreaper6660 the emmies are a joke anyway
it was at this moment Saul became Heisenberg
Saul's basically the lawyer version of Jack Sparrow: appears to be a charismatic buffoon, hiding an insanely clever man who's good at getting what he wants.
It does seem that way 🤣
They’re both ENTP’s
I love characters like that. So unassuming, then wham! They got you.
Jack Sparrow has godlike luck though haha, can't say the same about Jimmy
Well I bet they both love weddings and wine so very much lol.
University of American Samoa vs. Harvard Law
Bassmaster86 😆
🇼🇸🇼🇸🇼🇸🇼🇸🇼🇸🇼🇸🇼🇸
Distance learning btw
@@Sujay95 what's that online?
Go Landcrabs!
Never noticed the $400,000 offered was basically the half Jesse had originally negotiated to get from his parents by splitting the sale 50/50 as he had residential rights given by his aunt.
Cool, consistent writing.
I completely forgot about that
The $400,000 is actually all the money Jesse had minus the 20% cut ($80,000) for Saul. His half of the first sale to Gus was $480,000.
The house was promised to Jesse for looking after his aunt, his parents stole it and put 400k in to renovations so he's effectively giving their cash back and he then gets what's rightfully his
@@bigbuffguy9589 In earlier episodes, and you can easily find the clip in YT, when Jessie´s parents talk about selling the house and kicking him out, he talks about their previous deal being he got to keep half of the house since he had living rights given by his aunt as he was the only one willing to look after her. With their original selling price being 800k, Jesse's half would have rightfully been 400k. Perhaps not a mutually exclusive statement with yours, but an explanation of my own statement.
@@YoBigAndy yeah but there’s still a sale tax so they lost plenty of money…nevertheless, it was still justified
the "do you concur" line is so perfect directed to the pompous, stuffy lawyer
After watching Better Call Saul you can see why Saul would have an even bigger issue with pompous lawyers than most people
the lawyer was a dick from jump. he obviously knew about Saul from TV and rep and barely
tolerated being in the room with him. til Slippin Jimmy lands a haymaker.
He gives that lawyer the stink eye, too, when he acts like a pretentious ass towards Saul.
That's lawyerese for "Try to cross me. I dare you."
Emphasis on con and cur. 😁
It's actually genius, this way his parents didn't actually lose any money but also didn't gain any while his aunt's place was still renovated nicely
Exactly. It's like they renovated the place for Jesse so that he can move back into a nicer place. lol
I guess for $400,000, they installed gold plated appliances instead of boring old Stainless Steel…
@@BradfordMcEwenVARENNA they installed plastic bath tub so there wont be any incidents
@@babyragegekyume4132 POLYPROPYLENE BATHTUBS…”butt” the added bonus is they are “fart proof” as well…
they definitely lied 400k to renovate, the house had rotted subflooring and drug fumes in the basement. it wasnt swept away by Katrina.
The moment when Jesse pulls up on the house and walks right on in in front of his parents was the most amazing, satisfying moment for me.
Agree!
Why? They loved their son and he abused that love and trust for many years. Who exactly is the victim in their relationship?
@@barrygoldwater2441 because it's a show and you're supposed to root for the main characters, and Jesse just happens to be, to me, one of the only actually good people in the show. He's not like Walt, or Gus, or Mike, or any of them. He doesn't enjoy killing or anything like that. He's not a bad person.
their love and trust?
They abandoned him at the first sign of him doing drugs. A teenager in a meth city.
Then when he came to them trying to better himself, they threw him out without any hesitation for something that wasn't even him.
They're shit parents and you are a dipshit for thinking anything good about them
I think it's made pretty clear throughout the series that Jesse's parents failed him big time and turned their backs on him when he needed them the most, blaming him for everything that had happened. Despite that, Jesse never once truly tried to screw them over, and this moment was just him taking back what was his. You can't frame Jesse as being the bad guy here when it's the complete opposite.
Chuck made Jimmy the way he is. The irony is that he failed to realise it. If Howard had his way, Jimmy McGill could have been a genius lawyer working for good.
That's the most tragic part of the series, in my eyes. If Chuck had supported him, I am convinced that Jimmy would have been able to make a true change for the better. Unfortunately, Chuck's ego was too great to allow Jimmy to rise to become his equal.
No, that's not right. Jimmy always had it in him. Chuck was right about Jimmy all the time. He destroyed the life of many until he finally at the very end realises it and for the first time in his life took the hard path by being honest to his self. When he finally realises that all he has ever done is taking the shortcut and that that only would cause more damage to the life of others. The last episode is about regret. Chuck saw what Jimmy was and Jimmy saw what Chuck was.
They both had tremendous psychological issues. But it is not that Chuck made him the way he became.
@@kjetilhansen5363 that’s honestly the moral of both series - BB is about the destructive decisions an ego brings, BCS is about the way narcissism scars the people around you
@@alonzoharris7836 I don't think the ending was about regret, the gene stuff was about "regret" if someone is convinced they can't change they definitely won't be able to change and it'll allow them to repeat the same bad behavior.
@@alonzoharris7836 I think that's the pigmalion effect. Chuck always looked down on Jimmy, considering a criminal. By living knowing his big brother and mentor considered him a failure or a danger to the law, Jimmy matched with Chuck's vision and became what Chuck tought he would become
I love how addicted Saul is to the win; once he knows he has victory in the bag he lets his opponent think they're in control for as long as possible, up to the very last second he can, because it means he gets to see them fall farther. Did it here, did it when he destroyed Chuck's career in the courtroom, he lives for it
jimmy is actually a good guy. it makes even more sense after seeing better call saul. he wanted out during breaking bads timeline too. deep down, compared to walt, jimmy is a guy who wants to help. walt is the opposite, thus he died.
@@bunnyswallows Compared to Walt, sure, but in general, Jimmy is extremely far from being a good guy
I love your description of his addiction to the win, it couldn't be any truer.
@@robinmontgomery9160 not really. At least in better call saul he is mostly a nice guy
@@K-Dot94 Nope
Saul Goodman was Kevin Costner’s finest performance .
Oh wow, i never noticed how much they look alike
Hahahaha.. 🤣
because I believed it
🤣😂👍
Greatest catch of all time!
Better Call Saul has made me like Breaking Bad even more. I thought he was a great character but never expected this spin off to be as good as Breaking Bad, and it is for for sure.
One of the few times a spin off felt necessary and beneficial
I honestly enjoy bcs MORE than breaking bad. Best show on TV right now
I felt like bcs was way more mature , I think thats why a different audience liked bcs more instead of breaking bad as it was more chaotic
Better Call Saul improves aspects of Breaking Bad. Performances, story, script, photography...
BCS definitely enriched BB world to the maximum. I love the spin off so much and all the prequel stuff before BB.
I love how Saul puts the pompous attorney in his place. The guy playing the pompous attorney did a fantastic job too. There are a lot of attorneys that act just like him.
attorneys are absolutely the biggest wastes of skin on the planet....every form of attorneys including those wearing black robes
I had a landlord who was a retired attorney. He was similar and very annoying to deal with.
Saul had to deal with his brother, the arrogant of the most arrogant. This lawyer was probably a small fry for him.
Where did he act pompously? He barely talked a couple sentences and said or did nothing flashy.
@@bugratasali4326 You blind or somethin?
This scene was a masterpiece when it existed solely in Breaking Bad, but somehow it's even better once you come back and watch it again after seeing Better Call Saul. Jimmy's backstory is present in almost every line, and the scars left behind from his relationship with Chuck are almost worn as a badge.
and the thing that blows my mind the most that his backstory didn't even exist back then, and yet when rewatching his scenes it feels like it was all there already.
@@glanni There sure was a backstory, good writers know that you need one for every character to build depth, even if it isn't mentioned.
@@sanricasoli the only backstory that existed for Saul back then was that he's of Irish descent and that his real name is McGill. And that he's had 2 marriages at least (3 if you count the deleted scene). Even though they retconned this, it was meant seriously back then. They even talked about how this is the thing they regret the most because it doesn't fit the new character of Jimmy McGill, while it did work with the Saul they had written for BB.
Most of his backstory was done to make Jimmy a more likeable character, a thing they didn't care about in BB.
It is even possible they hadn't even given him a first name yet (at least in season 2), since he only tells Walt his real name is McGill and he talks about a different Jimmy in the very episode he first appears.
Saul was not meant to appear as often as he did in the end. There was no reason to write a whole backstory for him when they made the character. Also Vince and Peter tend to not think ahead too much if possible because filling in the gaps allows for more freedom later on.
I agree that most good writers have a backstory for most of their characters, but mostly main characters. Also, Peter and Vince are very good "discovery writers" who are skilled in making things up on the fly.
I personally could never do that because I plan everything through early on, so I generally agree to your point that most writers should plan out backstories.
I just really don't think they did this for Saul in BB.
@@glanni Didn't remeber that he has 2 ex-wives, I love what they did with his character, hope we get a not so rough closure for Kim.
@@sanricasoli I love Jimmy (and Saul too, always have). I also hope they'll get something resembling a happy ending, please? lmao
When they first introduced Saul I thought he was a character they'd kill off quick; an idiot who is just there for comic relief and very bad at his job.
Boy, I couldn't have been farther from reality.
Ah originally he was only supposed to be in three episodes but was liked enough to be heavily expanded. That happens.
And now we have the other greatest show purely based on Saul..salute to the creaters.. Vince and peter are legends
I still saw him as comic relief when they spun off Saul, so I had low expectations of the show. Also, we'd gone from meth cooking to, well, lawyering, how dull would that be? But I have to say I like Saul AT LEAST as much as Breaking Bad. Odenkirk is such a great actor, and while I enjoyed Walter White, I never felt sorry for him, not really, the way Saul makes you feel for Jimmy
You don't need a Criminal Lawyer you need a "Criminal" Lawyer
When he was first introduced too BB I loved his character...I loved his Character so much that day that I changed my F.B profile pic of him lol....
whoever decided this dude plays Saul is a genius for the casting decision. No one in the series plays their character better than this guy.
Everyone on the show was exceptionally well-cast. I don't think any one actor on the show played their character "the best".
Bob Odenkirk played Saul Goodman só well, that AMC wanted the same directors as from BB, to give him his own Spin-off show!
If that's not a statement to 'Triple-A status acting', then i dont know what is.
Watch mr. show to see where his style originated
You can thank Peter Gould for that
Yes. I think he's tacky but cool at the same time.😂
“I get it.”
“Flat fee clients, am I right?”
👀 The look on the attorneys face was priceless.
what does this mean?
@lorddoosworth8175
A flat fee for a lawyer is a payment of a lump sum rather than hourly on their services for the completion of some contract.
Saul is saying the parents paid a flat fee, but have at this point used enough of the lawyer's time that they would be paying him more had it been an hourly contract. As a result, the lawyer is trying to get their house sold quickly as he is now effectively losing money through time he could be spending on hourly clients he would be able to charge.
@@littlesisterlover9105 ah okay I see! Thank you 👊
@@littlesisterlover9105 Genius line. It's an insult to both Jesse's parents and the lawyer at the same time. It implies Jesse's parents are low tier clients whose budget is akin to clearance-bin diving, and the lawyer for his desperate to accept such a client.
I always thought he said "flat feet" and didn't understand. thanks for explaining
I love how Jesse's parents are talking with Saul casually, without knowing he once drank his own pee in the desert.
Best episode yet
Lmao. I can't stop thinking.
Honestly it's kind of weird how Mike and Jimmy apparently have so much history. I mean you wouldn't know if from their interactions in Breaking Bad.
@@darksideofevil13 so far the show has kept that balance I think, at the end of the day all that was just business, mike would still do whatever he has to saul if it conflicts with gus's insterests. I think the only way the show can go too far is if kim gets killed by the cartel, which is the direction they seem to be going in. in breaking bad saul didn't act like such a traumatic event happened in his life. Unless she gets killed but saul never finds out/only finds out after the breaking bad timeline
He... DEFECATED through a sunroof!
Jesse was promised that house and his parents stole it from him, they spent $400K renovating it, and then Jesse gets it back for the cost of those renovations.
Justice was done.
Threw him to the streets and then tried to profit off of their son's misery.
Jesse wouldn't have ended up the way he way he did if his parents weren't such assholes honestly
Not really, Jesse was a drug addicted felon. How can you say he deserved the money they earned
@@pleaseno779 remember how he was only kicked out of his house and had to get back to seeking drugs? Remember how that happened? Yeah it's his shit brother weed.
@@pleaseno779 Oh hey, nice British Union of Fascists logo pfp. You scumbag.
"Why don't you wiggle on down to $400k" LMAO
"And you got yourselves...a deal."
His confidence.
The little hand motion he does while saying that gets me every time
"Four hundred thousand! Is that a joke?"
@@chrishansen3278 No, that's my offer.
We ride at dawn
This was probably saul’s defining moment where we get to see how good of a lawyer he actually is and not the clownish bus bench lawyer the show makes him out to be.
Its always implied how good of a lawyer he is i mean his whole role in bb was getting guilty people off or in the least a sweet deal
the show always made him a good lawyer since the beginning, he looks like a clown to other lawyers and the government to make them underestimate him
Can’t be a “criminal” lawyer for long if you’re not good at it.
He is so good to the point hes able to bargained his jail time down to 7years+ in the final season of BCS. Shows that he is the best lawyer ever but he knew, no one is above the law in the end of the day. So he confessed his crimes and got 86 years in return.
@@set7618 "No one is above the law"? Hardly. He confessed to protect Kim. Jesse was gone, Walt was dead, and they needed SOMEONE to pay. If he got away with 7 years, the hammer would've been brought down on Kim. He confessed to save her.
I love how Jesse's parents look at their lawyer like "is he serious?" And their lawyer has this "Oh shit." look
Actually if you look again that lawyer is giving Saul a death glare. He knows he's been had and there goes his commission. There's nothing he can do and he's pissed.
@@shawnreynolds2728 His commission is a drop of piss. He could be disbarred. That's what the look was
Apparently not all elitist lawyers like Chuck and Howard live up to the standard.
Well, do you concur or what?
He was dumbfounded and probably told them to take the deal
The sheer look of disgust in the other lawyer's face watching a fellow attorney blackmail his client. Jimmy became everything Chuck feared he would become.
Lawyer's are supposed to lookout for the best interest of their clients, Jimmy was looking out for his in this case.
A thousand lawyers drowned in the ocean is a good start says an old joke. Chuck and Howard were no different than ol slippin Jimmy,they just had the moral high ground our society provides someone with a degree. Chuck was scared to death of Jimmy because Jimmy had an insane natural talent for the things he had to study for years to develop,protecting interests and screwing people over. Chuck and Howard going up against Jimmy was the equivalent of a gang of pickpockets going up against the Mafia,they were enforcers on a shitty pro hockey team. Jimmy? Jimmy was all three Hanson brothers rolled into one man. Chuck knew that and it really didn't take Howard all that long to figure it out. Howard always left himself an out when dealing with him. Chuck was a terrible person who held himself in high regard, Jimmy and Howard knew what kind of people they were and had no illusions about it.
Chucks fears about the Law and Jimmy are the LEAST of what is dark in this world, Let Chuck see the other side of the story, you know the one with Cartels and drug kingpins, he was afraid Jimmy would become a Monster corrupted by power, all Jimmy would have to do is to reach out to Mike, and Chuck would be given an education on what power really is.
Suppose Jimmy traded favors with the likes of Nacho, Tuco, Mike or Gus, how difficult do you think it would be for them to incentivize or scare Chuck into submission? Here's a hint he wouldn't last two minutes.
@@stevesmith2171 show Chuck the likes of tuco or Gus, see how harmless slipin Jimmy looks.
It can be argued that it is Chuck's distrust drove Jimmy further to Saul, his eventual manifestation.
But with Chuck gone refusing to give closure to his brother, we would never know which is the chicken and which is the egg now
They spent 400k on renovations? Did they build a second house next to it?
Yeah, that part was a bit unbelievable.
Or just do a bathroom and kitchen without competing bids.
Well if I remember correctly, it did have a brand new hole in the upstairs bathroom in the EXACT spot the tub once was. That would mean fucked up plumbing. Fucked up floors. Fucked up support beams. Maybe fucked up electrical work. And if they are REALLY stupid, they didn't try any competition, though I suspect they just went with the first guy who didn't ask questions which would undoubtedly raise the price.
@@Blasted2Oblivion no it wouldnt
@@andrijaas2095 okay...which part?
Every Saul Goodman scene hits different after 6x09
Haha…. Sniff…. Yea
And when you realize that Saul Goodman is only a coping mechanism for all the trauma he has faced in his life
@@toby2k75 Even more if you see the poster of the 4th season
What does this even mean?
“How bout it counselor. Do you concur?”
Best Saul Goodman line ever.
Concurrrr
savage
Agree, this had me rolling!!! Burn!
I don't understand the joke, can anyone explain it?
@@BisshaktoManush Saul's always casual, but here he uses specifically "lawyer language" to burn the other lawyer, who seems to be the "Harvard law school" fancy high fee lawyer.
So Saul is showing he knows his stuff and can "battle it out" on the law end, and that he is more than meets the eye
This is where the audience learned that Saul was a skilled lawyer. He knows what he is doing
Adam Lee yeah basically Saul
Yep. Now we’ve seen in Better Call Saul that he can make some bad choices, but he is by no means stupid. Quite the opposite actually.
I would say that Saul, Mike, and Walt are all God-tier in their respective fields. Just some unbelievably talented people randomly living out in Albuquerque.
John Lee don’t forget Gus
John Lee Jimmy is not a more knowledgeable lawyer than someone like Chuck, but the shit he does gets him on top everytime
at least they got the termite inspection
I wonder if they hired Ira
Plot twist: the inspection was done by an exterminator/drug front just like in season 5.
Damn. I've watched BB three times from start to finish. This clip makes me wanna go back and watch it all again.
done by Vamonos Pest Control
Also, when Jesse was trying to get his friend to let him crash for a few nights at his place after getting kicked out of his house by his parents, he claimed that the problem was exterminators were working on his house.
“How bout it Counselor , so you concur ?” It’s always so satisfying watching him deliver that line
"how bout it counselor, do you concur?" knowing what we know about Jimmy's insecurities regarding his legitimacy brought on by his judgmental brother makes this scene a lot more satisfying. Saul hates people like this guy for looking down on him and relishes any moment to checkmate them.
I thought the same! After watching Call me Saul, this scene it feels more powerfull than the first time i watched it. And it show, how well the character is played by this actor, brilliant.
At the very end of the video, that lawyer is thinking to himself "Fuck!".
You know Saul work for drug bosses right ? I mean u know that
Exactly, makes me love this scene even more
He's being smug as shit because he completely has this guy over a barrel. If Saul reported this the lawyer's absolutely getting disbarred, and might even end up in prison.
"You don't need a criminal lawyer, you need a Criminal lawyer!"
You mean a criminal lawyer that's a criminal ;)
@@mickeydrago9401 way to ruin the joke mikey 👍
@Mike K
"k a r i m i n a l criminal lawyer"
A lawyer that is not only a criminal defense lawyer but is also a criminal as a criminal lawyer for criminals and their own crimes making them criminals, lol
KA RIM A NAL LAWYER
@@mickeydrago9401 I don't get it. He's just a lawyer that defends alleged criminals, right?
The pure hatred in the Pinkmans' lawyer's eyes at the end is just gold.
Pinkman's lawyer is Saul Goodman, right? I didn't see hatred, I see a mix of disgust at hypocrisy of the good guys, + a bit of satisfaction at shoving it up their ass.
He's talking about the Pinkmans, Jesse's mom and dad's lawyer.
TK what the fuck is that impotent bitch going to do
Haha no doubt, on an unrelated note, I applaud your understanding of the dreaded apostrophe S rules that most people struggle with so badly
It's not hate in eyes. It's something much more evocative; it's the face of an arrogant posh lawyer realising his mistake of grossly underestimating Saul Goodman. Great scene
I always love how Jessie's parents do this whole high and mighty approach, only for it all to shatter once someone does even a little bit of digging.
“One lawyer with a briefcase can steal more than a hundred men with guns.” ― The Godfather by Mario Puzo
Reminds me of Bane's line from "The Dark Knight Rises":
Stock broker: "You idiot, this is a stock exchange. There's nothing here to steal."
Bane: "Then why are you people here?"
@@Durwood71 that line belongs on r/im14andthisisdeep
"I got the shotgun. You got the briefcase. 'Sall in the game though, right?" - The Wire, Omar Little
@@disturbedrocks1996 that comment belongs on r/ihavereddit
Redditors deserve to be gassed
Jesse's Parents: What are you talking about?
Saul: Well it's 4 with 5 zeros, and it's preceded by a dollar sign
“You’re gonna want to watch this, your son is in it” Jessie:YUUUUUUP
That scene was so uncomfortable lol
lmao
+Isaiah Lot Of Things
But it was so funny.
Good reference!
" Now some WOULD call it a fraud in service of concealing a felony. I, myself, I'm more open minded. "
Lmao you gotta love this guy. Best CRIMINAL lawyer around.
I love how Saul shoved it up the poop chute of the other rather disagreeable Lawyer. Especially when he said with a twinkle in his eyes, "How about it counselor, do you concur?" Gotta love Saul.
but it is tricky
saul was a gambit with his wordplay
bro WHY so many words CAPITLIZED
@@carthisan Two. Two words. Calm down.
I love the "do you concur" line. The actor playing that other attorney was perfect for the role.
He knew he lost
The best thing about this show is how EVERY Character "broke bad" in some kind or form. even the oh so professional lawyer and even jesses parents who clearly tried to commit a fellony
While he technically broke the law, Hank is the only one to never shift his morality.
@Xicor The Lit God and turned himself in
Some might argue characters which were more good or innocent, like the baby (Holly). But I would go a different direction, and say.. Tuco.
That dude never broke bad, because he was bad from the beginning.
@@rickyhyppa7960 If I remember correctly, there was a scene where Hank and Walter were discussing where do you draw the line. I think Hank was offering Walter illegal cigars or something, and Hank was smoking it himself. A DEA agent! Every one has their own definition of what legally right/moral, and what's right/moral in substance over form.
@@TheAdarshMehta Cuban cigars had just been made legal
It was so satisfying watching jesse walk up as his parents grabbed their final belongings b4 the move, "Hey Jesse the house has been sold, you can't go in there!" " I know I bought the place." Slams door 😂
Danzig!
Zap!!!
@Zain844 no they weren't. they tried to discipline him but he keep going back to his scummy ways.
@Zain844 how were they horrible to him?. I swear this fanbase is so backwards minded.
@Zain844 of course his parents loved him, if they didn't then they wouldn't want him to change and stop being an addict.
I thought of Saul as comedy relief until this scene. Total badass!
this is comedy and witty badass at the same time.
I love how he gets a kick out of saying the catchphrase. So relatable.
God I love Saul’s constant finger guns when he introduces himself.
I get it all the time!
Better Call Saul! 👉🏼👉🏼
Jesse’s parents trying to capitalize on kicking him out is probably why Jesse wanted to bring it down so low and is totally the reason why seeing their shocked faces is so delightful
for the price of the renovations alone too, got the thing back renovated lol
@@stevie8271 Well if you are selling something for almost a 1 million dollars you should RENOVATE it!
Actually, he gave them enough to cover their costs. He basically just got his property back by covering the renovations. His parents weren't cheated.
As someone who got kicked out because my former landlord wanted to do that same thing, it was super satisfying to watch.
Not only that, but they tried to break the law selling that house even after lecturing Jesse about his criminal ways. Apparently it doesn’t apply to them.
If i was a criminal i wish i had a lawyer as crafty, creative, chill and reliable as saul goodman
You dont need to be a criminal, but you do need a lawyer that will win you cases
@@Krasses but saul mainly deals with criminal law. Helping criminals is his forte. His clients arent ned flanders type people.
Sal Goodman is a fine lawyer but I'd rather have Saul Goodman :)
You would also get 50% off on non violent crimes
If you were a real criminal, most of the things Saul do would bring you and him serious consequences afterwards.
This scene was so badass, but the moment when Jesse gets the keys and strolls back into the house was one of the most understated moments of badassery in the entire show.
The word "underrated" is overrated
@@wuzzs It is, but it also needs to be used correctly. If something is perpetually overshadowed by a similar or related thing, and / or if people tend not to discuss something that the claimant feels deserves more attention, then I think the term "underrated" is warranted. EDIT: also just realized that I didn't even use the word "underrated" in the post you're responding to, I said "understated". I stand by the comment either way.
@@wuzzs (Yes, I would be happy to see that word disappear from every comments thread.)
I hoped that part would be included here. 😄I hope it is online somewhere.
the little transition of saul's face from happy and funny and friendly at 01:26 to a serious face showing dominance and control is absolutly amazing.. its the little details that make this show extremely intresting. damn just pause at 01:29 like his face is screaming "i own your ass"
Seeing how he started off in BCS makes this even better.
Saul loves it when people underestimate him because it’s the perfect setup for him to turn it around on them
like when Kevin Wachtell tries to ban him from the country club & then Saul turns it around by making Kevin look like an antisemite 😭
@@trashketchum9782 He’s like the Jack Sparrow of the Breaking Bad universe, lures the opposition into dropping their guard by acting like a stupid buffoon, and then turns everything around when they don’t expect it.
@@alexman378 I also thought he was like Jack Sparrow
"How bout it counselor, do you concur?" You can see the hate in his eyes for mainstream law in this scene.
No babe, that's his hate for Chuck playin out there
That’s his disgust for an uppity ass lawyer who thinks he’s smarter and above Jimmy.
What is "mainstream law" LOL :D XD
Yeah bad choice of words lol. what I meant was pretentious douch bag lawyers
EnliveningJustice all because of chuck
"How about it, counselor? Do you concur?"
God, never get tired of rewatching this
That line was taken straight out of the movie Catch Me if You CAN with Leonardo De CAPRIO wherein he was studying to be a lawyer..pretty sure it came off an episode of Perry Mason
@@kurtsmith390 Similar. But Bob Odenkirk did it better and more convincing.
@@kurtsmith390 Chuck compares Jimmy's chicanery to an episode of Perry Mason. Funny how things come full circle.
Yeah. That comment was Saul rubbing it into the Ivy League lawyer who belittled him throughout the process.
@@kurtsmith390 Doctor actually. The part in Catch Me If You Can where Leo keeps saying, "Do you concur," was when he was posing as a Doctor, not a lawyer.
Jimmy is just seeing Chuck everytime he deals with other lawyers isnt he? Especially this guy 😂
Makes sense, that’s why he takes some smug satisfaction in flooring him here.
You’re not that lawyer on late night television are you?
Better Call Saul. Mondays at 10 on AMC.
They should use this as an ad
Lol
Lol I read it in the deep voice
Your name is Dan what?!?
@@davidsp88 Google NYC fire commissioner.
I like how everyone thinks it's unfair of people to treat Saul like a clown when he's actually cunning and capable. That's his whole strategy: get people to underestimate him, not take him seriously, and then floor them with his actual capabilities when it matters. They get all confident, cocky, etc. and then he makes them eat shit for it. Everyone who actually knows what he can do keeps him around or avoids them like the plague for a reason: Lalo, Mike, Walt, Gus, Hamlin, Chuck etc
This is my absolutely favorite Saul scene, which demonstrates his knowledge and ability as a lawyer. When he says he can stall proceedings, he's not kidding -- he's threatening a lis pendens, which would freeze the sale until issues such as "illegal meth lab" were worked out, among others, such as their lawyer's entitlement to hang onto his license to practice law. The parents' lawyer knows he not only can't proceed but that his license might be in jeopardy for allowing his clients - who now have prima facie criminal exposure to felony charges -- to conceal a felony in the disclosures. Brilliant research and writing by BCS writing staff -- which is their standard.
I love how you say BCS but this isn’t that show yet it’s still BB
>>which would freeze the sale until
@@alexmuenster2102 They put the house on the market. All Saul did was give them an offer for the house.
But any deal means that are all now definitely concealing a felony.
I like this even more considering how Saul can bat away a pompous lawyer with ease now that he's dealt with his brother and Howard previously
How I envy that skill. Tho it was hard won.
This is by and far my favorite scene in Breaking bad. As much as I understood where Jesse's parents were coming from I always looked at them as jerks. Jesse was a very tragic character and it was good to see him get a win here.
The parents were totally in the wrong. Jessie was entitled to half of the house if in the event they decided to sell it, regardless of whether or not they approved of his lifestyle. They rationalized that they were in the right to take the house for themselves as a result of Jessie's lifestyle, which is pretty messed up. The mom also suggested that if Jessie got cleaned up he would once again be entitled to half of the house, which she said was unlikely, but when Jessie came by to say hi to his dad and was clearly totally cleaned up the offer was apparently off the table, which is when Jessie went to Saul and bought the house from under them.
A side note - I get the impression that the father was a rigid authoritarian. Based on the little info we've been given, his brother will likely rebel and go down a similar path.
@@dinglbarry1275 wait how? That’s their house. Parents aren’t obligated to leave anything to their kids if they don’t want to
@@nikkiralaniakea9527 - it was his aunts house. It was Jessie's position that his aunt gave it to him for taking care of her when she had cancer. Apparently no one in the family took care of his aunt except him and his mother didn't challenge him when he said this, rather she slapped him. The parents position was that her house was never Jessie's rather it was all of theirs, so in the event it was sold they would split it and Jessie would get his half of the house. The mother said if Jessie ever cleaned up his act, which she doubted he could get his half. Either way the parents were in the wrong, because they completely swiped the house out from under Jessie.
@@nikkiralaniakea9527 The house belonged to the aunt, as the other commenter said.
@@dinglbarry1275 Didn't the younger brother have some drugs on him and Jesse pretended it was his to cover for him?
So many good quotes in this scene but “Oh! You got your termite inspection. That’s good!” kills me every time 😂
German home owner be like: "What would I need a termite inspection for? I'm not living in a cabin in the woods!"
The termites line ! Saul is the OG
I feel like the didn't actually get the termite inspection. Not only do we know they are willing to lie (at least by omission), but having a termite inspector doing his job would risk revealing stuff they didn't want known. I read that line as him hinting that there are other things he can add on if he reports them, just to hammer home how screwed they are.
Nowadays, termites eat concrete :)
@@andre_santos2181 I mean, in this economy, it's all they can afford.
2:02 the casting is so on point that "Jesse's parents" especially his mom looks like him.
Absolutely correct.
Ok so what about Marie and Skylar
This has to be one of Bob Odenkirk best scenes. He just outright outplays everyone in this situation.
"I get it. Flat fee clients, am I right?"
Friggin gold.
feet*
Zepher Tensho no it’s fee he’s implying that the other lawyer is in a hurry because he’s not being paid by the hour
@@zephyfoxy it's fee
Its FEE. Meaning the lawyer doesnt want to waste time talking cause its flat fee, not hourly so wants to get it moving.
centozo what’s that profile pic bro
I know this is old but sellers MUST disclose anything adverse relating to the sale of homes especially in Texas. My wife and I purchased a home in Texas and they were asking 125k, this was 20+ years ago, the house was 2 blocks from where we were living and my wife already had her eye on it. The sellers failed to disclose the fire that damaged the home when they were renovating for the sale. I was a firefighter in that town and was one of the first on the scene so the information was not secondhand or hearsay. When we went to close we asked if there was anything they needed to disclose other than what was on the list before we signed, they said no. I pulled my hold card in front of the Lawyers and they folded. We got the house for 65k. The appraiser showed up to do the guarantee appraisal and could not believe it and approved the house for 125k. Always remember to tell the truth when selling a house or property.
jeez. goes to show the ridiculous attention to realism bb has
That's a terrific story man. Well played.
so if they disclose the fire, it's still worth 125k just like when you have it appraised?
@@officialspock Paying the $125K is up to the purchaser. Just like any large purchase, negotiation is up to the market."What happens if someone lies on a home disclosure?
A seller is supposed to be truthful when answering the disclosure statement for the buyer. ... And, if a seller lies, the buyer is entitled to go after the seller for damages sustained because of an omission in the disclosure statement given to the buyer." Meaning they can pay me now or they can pay me later.
You 'just happened' to be a firefighter who dealt with the fire. 😂 What absolute bollocks.
Absolutely love this scene. And the moment when he tells his parents he bought it and proceeds through the front door and closed it behind him. OMG such poetic justice considering the way they treated him. Small Victories
This is one of the more satisfying moments in the show, particularly the scene shortly thereafter when Jessie walks up to the house with his parents there and unlocks it with his key.
Saul is one slimy little dealer. I seriously can't wait to see Jimmy finally become what he is in this show as Better Call Saul continues.
Same haha
Its especially funny when you realise it was all a bluff. Saul couldn't have actually exposed the fact there was a meth lab in that house to the authorities because that would put Jesse in jail, but since the parents didn't know his client was Jesse they thought he had just found out somehow and would do it. If they just refused and left Saul would have failed.
I’m tired of the idea that there will be a moment where he “becomes Saul.” Saul Goodman is just another name for Slippin’ Jimmy. He won’t radically transform because of a bad experience. We’ve seen Saul this entire time.
Is this season going to be the last? Fuck it! I'm Brazilian, the episodes aired on me on tuesdays. :(
TD slimy? no, he's a brilliant attorney
Parent's lawyer: "why don't we stop the Clown act."
Saul: "Oh this clown is the most expensive clown you'll get and it will cost you your 400k returns."
$450,000 to be exact!
This is the moment that the Pinkmans decided to sell their home.
pinkmen
"Decided" is a good way to put it.
And throw in the appliances & furniture!
This is the moment the loser lawyer concurred
This is the moment the house became sold
Jesse's parents giving big Kettleman energy in this scene.
Seriously, how can you hate Skyler when the Kettleman and Jesse's parents exist
@@KikoZenzen I can multitask.
yeah the big breast too
I don't know... Mrs Kettleman is a unique kind of freak.
The contempt on the old attorney's face when he realizes he's been had by a "shithouse lawyer" is classic, and is one of my favorite moments in the entire series. And if you haven't watched "Better Call Saul," you need to!
It's actually more that he knows who the buyer is in that instant.
@@Folsomdsf2 The lawyer nor Jesse's parents knew that Saul was representing Jesse. They had no idea who the buyer was until after the deal was closed.
@@Folsomdsf2 his parents didn't know it was Jessie until Jessie unlocked the door
"shithouse lawyer" lol?
What the fuck is a "shithouse lawyer"?
@@Vichedges It's someone who gives legal advice without having any education/training/experience in the legal profession. Kind of like a "jailhouse lawyer," same thing.
And, we now know, that last line was delivered directly to Chuck...
It's almost like they had the entire BCS plot thought out when they made this scene.
@@magentuspriest the whole BB universe is so tightly woven together
In what episode of BCS did Jimmy say this? Just wondering so I can check it out!
Not really. This lawyer is nothing like Chuck.
Chuck would NEVER EVER agree to fraud like this.
@@chasecummings2353 This is from Breaking Bad Season 3, Episode 3 "IFT".
Jessie's parents were such crummy people, and this scene is just amazingly satisfying because of that.
I think they were just loving parents who hated to see there son like that they were good people
@@anitabonghit7606 check the car when they are packing
They loved only the other son
It was cool when Jesse strolled passed his dad, into his house.
Yeah his parents were pieces of shit in my opinion.
If u were them im sure u would be the same way.
"...oh! But you got your termite inspection... that good..." Nice little jab there...
At 0:47 you see the moment Saul decides he's gonna savor punking out this haughty prick attorney.
And at 1:25 Saul's determined glare at the lawyer is perfect. It even persists after the camera angle changes.
This nicely directed scene, with all of its nuance, shows Bob Oldenkirk's artistic ability.
At 0:51 the way his eyes narrow for a second, it's amazing that even though he's about to punk the lawyer as you said and does it in quite a comedic fashion, that look is a bit like an eagle that saw a prey. really sharp and calculated, getting ready to set the trap. That shrewdness/slyness isn't always what you associate with Saul's wear-your-heart-on-your-sleeve demeanour which tends to imply impulsivity.
Saul - “How bout it Chuck, do you concur?”
Old guy - “Who?”
Saul - “Uh... sorry... force of habit....”
LMAOOO
the way he says "I know, in this economy..."
I know man, it's little things like this that add more realness to the character
Chabili Hicham
To the whole show...
The attention to detail in both Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul is literally unmatched in tv history...
Its lube for the inevitable lol
Obummer 🤷♂️ well considering the year bush/obama, but hey good use for the time before Trump!! ☕️
“How about it councillor, do you concur?”
What a line, what a character, WHAT A SERIES. God, breaking bad is the best.
“I applaud your cojones” lmao
jajaja me encanta
Good try of sneaking a METH-contaminated property past the buyer, could have been a good deal for you... too bad
@@tvalla Si
"I myself am more open minded" lol
The cold sarcastic tone he keeps. In very kind words he just says 'No, you're not going to say Fuck you to me, i'm gonna say fuck you, to YOU! And you wil ltake it from me, or you can take it from the Judge that will be handling this fraud-case!"
It is tricky...
Classic Saul Goodman.
"How 'bout it counselor, do you concur?" - Just beautiful!
Saul’s salesmanship is spot on in these scenarios. Like how he brings up the price, he doesn’t stutter, shake or fearful bring up the price. It’s more like “the problem right now is the price” firm but no hesitation and he also waits for them to speak first after bringing up the price, seriously great selling.
That look Saul gives Mr. Gardner at 0:50 is just teeming with the hatred he must have for the smug-ass lawyers he's had to deal with in the past. I know this was filmed a long ways before BCS, but I see so much Jimmy McGill in that moment. It's uncanny how they captured that before the prequel was even a thought.
PutnamentalAnimation you think too much. They didn’t think of a prequel at the moment for sure.
@@charlesxav6817 Didn't he just say that in his last sentence? "before the prequel was even a thought". What they do though, is think about a characters history and backround, even if it's not explicitly shown in the episodes, to make them more complex and have a motive for action.
PutnamentalAnimation pll
PutnamentalAnimation llllllllll
Vrabo Bince
That “flat fee clients” line is so underrated 😂
Ahaha That one flew over my head… Genius !!!!!
I agree Joel. I think a lot of people might’ve missed that subtle line but it was absolutely hysterical
I don't understand?
@@m7jnu When an attorney bills as a flat fee instead of by the hour, he wants to rush things along because he's getting paid a set price whether it's five minutes or five hours.
Yeah, they walk in there acting so high and mighty, then Saul makes his first tiny pinprick into their bubble with that line. All 3 of them are embarrassed that he is onto them, but they still don't see what's really coming.
The casting of Jesse's parents is awesome. Jesse has the same eyes as his mother, and the same face shape as his father. Good job.
thank you.
$400k for renovations? The real criminal is the contractor.
IKR
Stuff like this is child’s play for jimmy
If he could do what he did to Kim at the Mesa Verde meeting, he can literally do anything
Slippin' Jimmy with a law degree
American Samoa???
Lee Reed you beat me to it! 😁
Marq 23 What a joke!
@@P8P89 didn't seem like the lawyer and jesse's parent were laughing at the end there.
A “criminal “ lawyer
- Do you concur??
Damnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnn
He spread those cheeks wiiiide and then laid that "concur" spit on the button. Saul's yo daddy!
Whilst holding a lawful 'shotgun to his balls': Refuse, and i'll sue your ass, and have your disbarred for this!
I love that they made him such a legit good lawyer and not some clown just because he came from a comedy background.