I think an important part of this scene is when the guy actually pays Jimmy. It's one of the few times Jimmy gets rewarded and I think it sets him on the path to working with "criminals" and turning on the system
The legal system is not honorable people defending society, it is charging a fee and maintaining the status quo. To run a profitable legal practice you don't need good clients you need a** holes! They are the people who will drag in the suckers who you extract the cash from. In this case jimmy just extracted a cut from an Ahole drug dealer, and played the sucker who thought he was a tough guy. Jimmy because this guy knows that he may need him again and if he doesn't pay up, he will find himself on the end of some slipping Jimmy pain.
"Law abiding" citizens usually think they are in the right, therefore shouldn't be charged for doing the "right thing". Criminals know they're in trouble if they go to court, so will pay whatever you ask because it's better than years of prison.
I'm not sure how much it concerned him, TBH. Sure he was concerned enough to block his career. But he didn't seem to think it was worth the effort to actually talk to him about it. Instead he just delegated the bad guy role to a subordinate. Ultimately I think he was more concerned with Jimmy becoming equal to him in the one place he felt important.
Do you guys remember when Walt wanted to stop Jesse from carrying out his plan and poisoning the two drugdealers? He told Saul that he should put him away temporarily, not like in a 'proper jail', but in 'one of the situations when people are in an orange jumpsuit picking up litter along the highway'. To which Saul replies 'Yeah, that's jail'. I think this BCS episode is a reference to that. Saul was doing exactly what Walt described later.
@@coder9928 It is essentially still jail. Community service of one's own volition is exactly that, a service. Required community service legally-enforced under threat/penalty of arrest...is jail.
@@Wonton-the-Sea-Snail Labor Unions are very useful, unfortunately due to corporate corruption and the complete failure of the US government to actually enforce fair labor laws most unions in the USA aren't labor unions, they're for-profit institutions. If you can find a Union that is run by the workers it represents, you'll have a good union.
@@kethmarhkfy7luf.263 No, it's not. Acting as a state agent does not make one immune to lawsuits, especially ones for negligence or some of the other things Jimmy was talking about. The STATE is immune to lawsuits, but not an individual working for the state. Besides, this guy didn't work for the state anyway. He worked for the city. Do try to keep up. That would make him a CITY Official or Agent, not a STATE agent. Also, even if the lawsuit didn't win, Jimmy still has the right to file it. Being that Jimmy is indeed a lawyer, I'm certain he'd know how to drag it out long enough for that man to become penniless in the process. Educate yourself. You sound like an idiot.
The thing that’s so great about this show is how Saul is a great salesman. Not just in his ability to persuade but how anyone who’s in sales notices his skills
Lawyers are salesmen. They supply you with a service (their knowledge of the law and helping you with legal problems) and know how to extract money out of you
It's amazing what can be accomplished when you know the law, or at least convincingly pretend to, and the person you're talking to doesn't. It's exactly how cops can scare people to consent and comply to otherwise unlawful acts and orders. Like you consenting to them search your car without a warrant, or giving up your ID when ordered even if the officer doesn't have reasonable articulable suspicion that you've committed a crime. The lesson, don't be ignorant to the law.
Here where I live if you don't have an ID with you, the cops like to scare you and say that you can be arrested for not having it, but that is utterly bullshit, just like almost everything they say, they can only do something IF you refuse to identify yourself
@Sup bro whoa, you want everyone to go to law school? Yeah right. And ignorance of the law is a valid excuse...precisely because not everyone goes to law school and there are a 🤬 load of laws out there...
@Sup bro that’s like saying we little people could understand whatever law gibberish the cop throws as us, even if it simply equates to 2+2=4. The point is that it’s hard to make head or tails of BS, not that we couldn’t understand basic common sense.
@Sup bro Michael R this bro really just went and change the topic to “no we not talking about common sense, this is bigger than that” without giving a straight answer to Master Procrastinator’s retort 💀😂, well played 👏👏👏
I have a feeling a judge would dismiss that suit pretty quickly, but the guard doesn’t know that. And if the judge DOESN’T dismiss the suit, the guard would be as bankrupt as Saul predicts. It would also force the State of New Mexico to establish clear guidelines about guards’ personal liability - which would cost a lot of money for the state to codify. If Saul had thrown in that last part - the guard would have let the young fellow go AND sent Saul to the hospital right away.
Thank God Bob Odenkirk is back and doing well. Just makes it more anxious to see what's going to happen in the season finale! Oh we're getting closer and closer to the Breaking Bad timeline.
It was a bluff a very convincing one. He just knew the guy would never want to deal with this bs it wasn't simply worth it. Usually he can bully people around, but Saul is not just some guy, he is a great lawyer, he didn't stand a chance. Fear wins over everyone eventually.
Not true, bs lawsuits do happen and sometimes those people actually win or if they don't it's dragged out for so long it financially cripples the defendant, the guard did not want to take that chance, not worth it.
@@voluntarism335 the question isn't if they happen, it's if Jimmy will actually go through with it. SLAPP suits only work if the person filing them has significantly more money (or at least more they can stand to lose) than the defendant. Saul doesn't, he'd go broke and take himself down alongside his target, but they don't know that.
Look, I love this show, but nothing about this scene is convincing. Both _Better Call Saul_ and _Breaking Bad_ are on better footing with Jimmy when they present his opponents with at least a bit of verisimilitude and force him to sink even lower. No one in that guy's situation would roll over that quickly.
@@MegaZeta Yes he would, the bully is miserable, why else woul he supervise some people picking up trash. He is a failure, a small fish. Saul knew it, otherwise it would have never worked. Fear stops you from being rational sometimes, the scene was greatly showing it. If you are still not convinced, consider some workshop where you can learn to read people properly.
They really should've included the part where the guy actually pays Jimmy. That's very important to Jimmy's character development, incentivizing him to break the law rather than uphold it.
People associate confidence with being correct, and Jimmy is charismatic to appear completely confident no matter how wrong his statements may be. The end is people assuming his confidence is earned and he clearly must know something they don't, and even if there are questions the consequences of his statements are severe enough they don't want to risk it.
@@trianglemoebius I don’t know the law well enough to say if Jimmy is right or not but he is a lawyer and if what he’s saying isn’t true it’s probably at least inspired by the truth
This scene is a perfect reminder that lawsuits are not always about winning. Sometimes they're about draining bank accounts and financially crippling the defendant. Winning the lawsuit would just be pouring salt on the open wound.
@@matthewriley7826 depends on where that proverbial "machine gun" is pointed at. when pointed at people like the douchebag from the video, or Chuck himself and other stuffy lawyers like him, it's both useful and even righteous to a certain extent. when pointed at people like Howard or even Brock, it's Chuck McGill's self fulfilling prophecy.
@@comedownmachine4682 yeah but Jimmy loved his brother and it was because of Chuck getting him out of his charges in Cicero that he stayed straight and wanted to win his approval
3 ปีที่แล้ว +45
@@Michael-dt2ln Self-fulfilling prophecy. If Chuck had supported his brother and not hinder his career, he wouldn't have been as desperate for money as we saw in S1. And If he wasn't desperate for money, he wouldn't have seeked connections to the criminal world.
Odenkirk nails the character of Saul Goodman. They really couldn't have come up with another actor. There's so many complicated layers and circumstances that human beings encompass and he exudes all of this on the show. Great screenplay & writing!
I think Sharlito Copley would have made a great Jimmy/Saul (granted he could hide his South African accent), but you're 100% right Odenkirk nails it. While I think Copley could do it, I've never wished they hired him instead because Odenkirk is so perfect at the role.
Just yesterday I watched this episode with my brother!! He's about to finish S3. I'm so glad I made him watch this show, also I got an excuse for rewatching it!! It's a win-win
@@EldenLord1142 no you aren’t “spitting straight facts” you’re being unnecessarily rude. This person was doing nothing but expressing that they and their brother watched a show together and enjoyed it and you decided to take the time out of your day to say something gross and weird in an attempt to make fun of them. That’s incredibly rude and you’re being an asshole. Be better then this. You are better then this.
Lawyers. They take advantage of their greater knowledge of the law than the other party to convince/coerce them. Even when they're wrong, they're right.
@@bepowerification it wasn’t about having a lot of money, it’s that saul is a lawyer, he makes money from going to court. While the other guy has to pay to go to court.
@@justliving920 in some countries like the u.s. our enables it and is complacent in that system by crafting policies to protect the corrupt billionaires. How come the corruption has gone unchecked in comparison to other countries which have their white collar criminals in prison instead of saying "well if you pull yourself up by the boot straps and have alot of money these things are okay" while useful idiots chastise the poor for doing things like smoking a plant and refuse to criticize those with money and power unless it's one they politically disagree with.
@@Pittip2 strength - more like 4, he can't stand against, like, Jesse. Intelligence - not 10, Walter would get 10, he's top, and Jimmy is not a genius in intellect way, but still... 7 would be true, i guess.
Im getting pissed knowing plenty good actors are dying left, right and centre. Glad bob is doing ok and recovering very well. I want this series to continue but its last season hopefully it continues with the other characters in the franchise. Next should be gus fring
This was back when he was still more Jimmy than Saul. The gradual transformation of the character was some of the best acting ever. I know people have already said this, but Bob was made for that role
They don't even need to sue for this to make them insufferable. I'm an attorney and the amount of people who think they can tell me how to do my job because they watch something like BCS or Law & Order is insane. People will flat out explain my job to me in the most condescending tones, because if THEY were there, you see, they would have done this... Like, we know the laws these people are citing. We've considered them, and dismissed them for reasons beyond just "we're dumb". Funny enough, after I commented this I got one of those guys in this comment section telling me I'm "wildly wrong" on if Saul could be debunked by the cop knowing about Qualified Immunity. They know, of course, because they've read an article on it.
I scrolled pretty far down the comments and haven't seen anybody else noticing that. $700 bucks were the same amount jimmy would get representing someone as a PD (in the first episode of the series). So the comparison here is the amount of work he had to do legally (discovery, trial, research, and all other stuff probably close to 20-30 hours) vs the 3-minute talk he gave the agent to get the same amount of money in an "illegal?" way. Best Show ever
Okay, maybe I'm thinking about this too much, but Jimmy said that if he managed to get both of them out of community service, the other guy would have to pay him $700. In the first episode of BCS, the woman at the desk told Jimmy that each case he does gets him $700. Maybe that's why Jimmy asked for $700. That would be how much a case is worth, (Kind of).
Saul telling the supervisor how expensive a lawyer is made it so easy for the supervisor to push back on him. The supervisor could have said, same goes for you dumbass you're gonna have to pay a lawyer and court costs too and judging by the fact that youre picking up used diapers by the freeway, i would say you probably couldnt even afford bail.
Since he doesn't know Jimmy's crime, that would be easy enough to counter. Bail is very often not set on cases where the court cannot impose meaningful financial loss on an individual, ex if the client is a billionaire no fine they can impose is going to keep them in place. So Saul has a very easy comeback to continue his bluff. Remember, he doesn't need to actually win this debate, he just need to convince the other guy that losing is his best option.
If Jimmy pursued that lawsuit I think it would tarnish his reputation enough that he wouldn't be able to maneuver as much as he does later in the show.
I'm sure Jimmy would have come up with some genius con to come out on top. Jimmy's faced what should have been reputation death many times and every time twisted things to his advantage, after all.
Hopefully Vince Gilligan will make another show when Better Call Saul ends. Maybe something taking place in present day, like who's running things now? With Walt and Gus and everyone gone, who's the new generation of mobsters and dealers?
art imitates life and life imitates art....I think I am smart enough not to get conned by anyone but I have encounter people like Saul and did get conned....it is amazing how matchstick/flim flam con artist folks can be so persuasive... and sometimes believable.... they work for big corporation sale departments.
i always expected to see more scenes like this from his community service, i think it's an error to just have 2 or 3 scenes of it when it took 6 months for Jimmy to complete it
He could've kept David & Main job, do good as a lawyer for a few years and prove Chuck wrong. Instead he did everything exactly as Chuck predicted. He was right about him and this scene illustrates that. 'A chimp with a machine gun'.
Jimmy is proof of the saying “In any interaction with another person there is a perfect combination of words and tone that will get you anything you want out of the interaction. It’s up to you to find those words.”
I think an important part of this scene is when the guy actually pays Jimmy. It's one of the few times Jimmy gets rewarded and I think it sets him on the path to working with "criminals" and turning on the system
This is a great interpretation, but: "This is where Walter became Heisenberg."
The legal system is not honorable people defending society, it is charging a fee and maintaining the status quo.
To run a profitable legal practice you don't need good clients you need a** holes! They are the people who will drag in the suckers who you extract the cash from. In this case jimmy just extracted a cut from an Ahole drug dealer, and played the sucker who thought he was a tough guy.
Jimmy because this guy knows that he may need him again and if he doesn't pay up, he will find himself on the end of some slipping Jimmy pain.
Nice observation
Basically every non criminal has screwed Jimmy over at this point, makes sense that he starts turning to this life
"Law abiding" citizens usually think they are in the right, therefore shouldn't be charged for doing the "right thing". Criminals know they're in trouble if they go to court, so will pay whatever you ask because it's better than years of prison.
Chuck was right to be concerned. Slippin' Jimmy with a law degree is unstoppable.
Chimp with a machine gun
"Chimp with a machine gun"
All the more reason to keep him close and on the straight and narrow, like the retirement home case. 👍🏻
I'm not sure how much it concerned him, TBH. Sure he was concerned enough to block his career. But he didn't seem to think it was worth the effort to actually talk to him about it. Instead he just delegated the bad guy role to a subordinate. Ultimately I think he was more concerned with Jimmy becoming equal to him in the one place he felt important.
The law is sacred!!
Bob was made for this role. God bless his health.
Forgot to mention how underappreciated he is, and possibly ask if you were the only one feeling that.
He's feeling better. Hopefully he'll stay with us for many years to come.
@@beccas.7762 What happened to him
@@jerycaryy4342 Heart attack on set recently
I thought you were joking about his back for a moment
Jimmy has superpowers. He can literally talk anyone into doing pretty much anything
He’s like a god in human clothing. Lightning bolts shoot from his fingertips
He's a Magic Man
He talked a death sentence down to 6 months probation once.
All of that and yet he still couldn’t get pass Mike’s toll booth
@@pooklisss because he didn’t have enough stickers lol
Do you guys remember when Walt wanted to stop Jesse from carrying out his plan and poisoning the two drugdealers? He told Saul that he should put him away temporarily, not like in a 'proper jail', but in 'one of the situations when people are in an orange jumpsuit picking up litter along the highway'. To which Saul replies 'Yeah, that's jail'. I think this BCS episode is a reference to that. Saul was doing exactly what Walt described later.
Walter was referencing a chaingang, not community service, but it is a neat little nod
Saul isn't in jail here, he's not even wearing a jumpsuit; he's just doing community service, but what Walt was describing was in fact jail
Saul was wrong. This is the community service that you do instead of actual jail.
@@lauradewey5748 Saul probably did not mean it literally, he probably said it because it felt like jail to him
@@coder9928 It is essentially still jail. Community service of one's own volition is exactly that, a service. Required community service legally-enforced under threat/penalty of arrest...is jail.
Please take care of yourself Mr. Odenkirk we need you around for a long time.
Indeed we do!
We need to fortify him like they did to Mario creator,
@@robinmathew9029 more info on that?
In another timeline:
"Im suing you personally"
"Ok bring it on in in the union they'll provide me with their own lawyers"
you know thats another timeline because it actually involves the unions being useful
Civic action lawsuit, neither the state or any Mafia Union is obliged to provide legal support
@@Wonton-the-Sea-Snail Labor Unions are very useful, unfortunately due to corporate corruption and the complete failure of the US government to actually enforce fair labor laws most unions in the USA aren't labor unions, they're for-profit institutions. If you can find a Union that is run by the workers it represents, you'll have a good union.
@@Wonton-the-Sea-Snail A scab for jh blair
@@kethmarhkfy7luf.263 No, it's not. Acting as a state agent does not make one immune to lawsuits, especially ones for negligence or some of the other things Jimmy was talking about. The STATE is immune to lawsuits, but not an individual working for the state. Besides, this guy didn't work for the state anyway. He worked for the city. Do try to keep up. That would make him a CITY Official or Agent, not a STATE agent.
Also, even if the lawsuit didn't win, Jimmy still has the right to file it. Being that Jimmy is indeed a lawyer, I'm certain he'd know how to drag it out long enough for that man to become penniless in the process. Educate yourself. You sound like an idiot.
The thing that’s so great about this show is how Saul is a great salesman. Not just in his ability to persuade but how anyone who’s in sales notices his skills
Lawyers are salesmen. They supply you with a service (their knowledge of the law and helping you with legal problems) and know how to extract money out of you
Yeah, Saul was terrible at negotiating parking lot stickers, though.
Unfortunately for him, the rules for parking are very simple. Most ppl get it the first time in fact!
@@sludge8506you really can't negotiate with someone like Mike XD
@@Johsther Good point!!! 👍👍👍
It's amazing what can be accomplished when you know the law, or at least convincingly pretend to, and the person you're talking to doesn't. It's exactly how cops can scare people to consent and comply to otherwise unlawful acts and orders. Like you consenting to them search your car without a warrant, or giving up your ID when ordered even if the officer doesn't have reasonable articulable suspicion that you've committed a crime. The lesson, don't be ignorant to the law.
Confidence is good too.
Here where I live if you don't have an ID with you, the cops like to scare you and say that you can be arrested for not having it, but that is utterly bullshit, just like almost everything they say, they can only do something IF you refuse to identify yourself
@Sup bro whoa, you want everyone to go to law school? Yeah right. And ignorance of the law is a valid excuse...precisely because not everyone goes to law school and there are a 🤬 load of laws out there...
@Sup bro that’s like saying we little people could understand whatever law gibberish the cop throws as us, even if it simply equates to 2+2=4. The point is that it’s hard to make head or tails of BS, not that we couldn’t understand basic common sense.
@Sup bro Michael R this bro really just went and change the topic to “no we not talking about common sense, this is bigger than that” without giving a straight answer to Master Procrastinator’s retort 💀😂, well played 👏👏👏
I have a feeling a judge would dismiss that suit pretty quickly, but the guard doesn’t know that. And if the judge DOESN’T dismiss the suit, the guard would be as bankrupt as Saul predicts. It would also force the State of New Mexico to establish clear guidelines about guards’ personal liability - which would cost a lot of money for the state to codify. If Saul had thrown in that last part - the guard would have let the young fellow go AND sent Saul to the hospital right away.
I think in reality the guard would tell him to get fucked and go about his business. Totally unrealistic response.
@@DudeRevolution yes, I agree.
@stirange - Fine! Ruin my suspension of disbelief! You’re no fun!
@@thetooginator153 I'm all for suspension of disbelief, I hate being "that guy". But this is a bit of a "Gary Stu" scene.
The lawsuit would be dismissed right away, a simple motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim would end it.
Thank God Bob Odenkirk is back and doing well. Just makes it more anxious to see what's going to happen in the season finale! Oh we're getting closer and closer to the Breaking Bad timeline.
@Pixel Punisher he was vaxxed then rushed to hospital days later
Think he had a heart attack or something similar
@@guessowii He had a minor heart attack months after getting vaccinated
He got vaccinated and contracted autism
@@YaNoAwantoMas lol
This guy could sell crutches to Usain Bolt 🤣
Reported
@@jakelee5096 reported for what? 👀
@@sjacrane For ligma
@@jakelee5096 “Laugh and the world laughs with you. Cry and the world laughs even harder.”
@@jakelee5096 did the report come back yet? 👀
It was a bluff a very convincing one. He just knew the guy would never want to deal with this bs it wasn't simply worth it. Usually he can bully people around, but Saul is not just some guy, he is a great lawyer, he didn't stand a chance. Fear wins over everyone eventually.
Not true, bs lawsuits do happen and sometimes those people actually win or if they don't it's dragged out for so long it financially cripples the defendant, the guard did not want to take that chance, not worth it.
@@voluntarism335 the question isn't if they happen, it's if Jimmy will actually go through with it. SLAPP suits only work if the person filing them has significantly more money (or at least more they can stand to lose) than the defendant. Saul doesn't, he'd go broke and take himself down alongside his target, but they don't know that.
Look, I love this show, but nothing about this scene is convincing. Both _Better Call Saul_ and _Breaking Bad_ are on better footing with Jimmy when they present his opponents with at least a bit of verisimilitude and force him to sink even lower. No one in that guy's situation would roll over that quickly.
@@MegaZeta Yes he would, the bully is miserable, why else woul he supervise some people picking up trash. He is a failure, a small fish. Saul knew it, otherwise it would have never worked. Fear stops you from being rational sometimes, the scene was greatly showing it. If you are still not convinced, consider some workshop where you can learn to read people properly.
Yeah, Saul was terrible at negotiating parking lot stickers, though.
They really should've included the part where the guy actually pays Jimmy. That's very important to Jimmy's character development, incentivizing him to break the law rather than uphold it.
Meh, the first episode we see him do community service he has the worst incentive to really be upholding it
I think you are right
The horseshit that comes out of Jimmy’s mouth lol. Christ he can mess with anyone
75(speech) [persuade / lie] success
@@jakobinobles3263 yes but this checkpoint only required 75 to pass
People associate confidence with being correct, and Jimmy is charismatic to appear completely confident no matter how wrong his statements may be. The end is people assuming his confidence is earned and he clearly must know something they don't, and even if there are questions the consequences of his statements are severe enough they don't want to risk it.
@@Dilllonm I'd argue 37 or 38.
@@trianglemoebius I don’t know the law well enough to say if Jimmy is right or not but he is a lawyer and if what he’s saying isn’t true it’s probably at least inspired by the truth
"The land of the free and the home of the lawsuit" is now my new favourite quote from the show.
The traditional line is "the price of liberty is eternal litigation".
This scene is a perfect reminder that lawsuits are not always about winning. Sometimes they're about draining bank accounts and financially crippling the defendant. Winning the lawsuit would just be pouring salt on the open wound.
Or just the threat of that!
love this moment. shows how jimmy still cares for others while showing how good he at talking and being a lawyer.
He did it for the money lol
He got paid.
@@thebeast8429 and to knock that supervisor down a peg or two.
i feel like you've commented on the wrong video about the wrong show...
Cares about others so long as he gets paid. Twisted.
Missed the best part! The mug Mueller says that was like Jedi mind tricks.
You combine street smarts with book smarts and you get the perfect (criminal) lawyer
And a lot of broken lives and ruined careers…
@@matthewriley7826 depends on where that proverbial "machine gun" is pointed at. when pointed at people like the douchebag from the video, or Chuck himself and other stuffy lawyers like him, it's both useful and even righteous to a certain extent. when pointed at people like Howard or even Brock, it's Chuck McGill's self fulfilling prophecy.
Or the perfect lawyer criminal.
he is such a genius i wish he believed in himself maybe the cops wouldn’t be after him
Maybe if Chuck wouldn’t put him down every time...
@@KAzik10001 yeah but if he believed in himself he wouldn’t let his mentally ill brother ruin his life
@@KAzik10001 well chuck was right, look where he is now
@@comedownmachine4682 yeah but Jimmy loved his brother and it was because of Chuck getting him out of his charges in Cicero that he stayed straight and wanted to win his approval
@@Michael-dt2ln Self-fulfilling prophecy. If Chuck had supported his brother and not hinder his career, he wouldn't have been as desperate for money as we saw in S1. And If he wasn't desperate for money, he wouldn't have seeked connections to the criminal world.
Odenkirk nails the character of Saul Goodman. They really couldn't have come up with another actor. There's so many complicated layers and circumstances that human beings encompass and he exudes all of this on the show. Great screenplay & writing!
I think Sharlito Copley would have made a great Jimmy/Saul (granted he could hide his South African accent), but you're 100% right Odenkirk nails it. While I think Copley could do it, I've never wished they hired him instead because Odenkirk is so perfect at the role.
He always passes the charisma check
Just yesterday I watched this episode with my brother!! He's about to finish S3. I'm so glad I made him watch this show, also I got an excuse for rewatching it!! It's a win-win
Woah did you guys did it afterward in bed while mum and dad watched that is so cool
@@EldenLord1142 why are you so rude? you’re better then this. Be better then this.
@@August81804 im not being rude just spiting stright up facts
@@August81804 hes prolly like 8
@@EldenLord1142 no you aren’t “spitting straight facts” you’re being unnecessarily rude. This person was doing nothing but expressing that they and their brother watched a show together and enjoyed it and you decided to take the time out of your day to say something gross and weird in an attempt to make fun of them. That’s incredibly rude and you’re being an asshole. Be better then this. You are better then this.
Lawyers. They take advantage of their greater knowledge of the law than the other party to convince/coerce them. Even when they're wrong, they're right.
Yeah, Saul was terrible at negotiating parking lot stickers, though.
@@sludge8506 because Mike already knew all of his tricks
@@Invi--- 👍👍👍👍👍
Jimmy can be intimidating when he needs to be. He knows law inside and out and can really throw the book at people.
Yeah, Saul was terrible at negotiating parking lot stickers, though.
@@sludge8506 It's more that the other guy was impossible to negotiate with
@@yogetrekt8243 👍👍👍👍👍🤪🤪
Actually, it does illustrate very well "know well what you can do, know well what others can and/or will do" principle
It also illustrates that with enough money you can ruin peoples lives. Especially in the USA
@@bepowerification it wasn’t about having a lot of money, it’s that saul is a lawyer, he makes money from going to court. While the other guy has to pay to go to court.
@@kingarthurthe5th I know. But with money you can hire lawyers..
@@bepowerification
It goes for everywhere. Money is power, with enough of it regardless of nation, you can fuck up someone's life.
@@justliving920 in some countries like the u.s. our enables it and is complacent in that system by crafting policies to protect the corrupt billionaires.
How come the corruption has gone unchecked in comparison to other countries which have their white collar criminals in prison instead of saying "well if you pull yourself up by the boot straps and have alot of money these things are okay" while useful idiots chastise the poor for doing things like smoking a plant and refuse to criticize those with money and power unless it's one they politically disagree with.
I remember watching it for the first time, such a legendary moment. There are lot of legendary moments in BCS btw, this show is mad underrated
Is very underrated. More than Breaking Bad.
@@omegajrz1269 Breaking Bad is overrated.
@@rs-qt1qg Subjectively no.
@@omegajrz1269 objectively yes
@@rs-qt1qg You win
Such a great scene - getting Lil Pump outta community service.
This was the exact moment when huell defecated through a sunroof
And he saved him, what a delightful surprise!
He's the 100 speech levels person in real life
Jimmy maxed out his speak stat, got all the perks, and kept going.
I love saul; he’s so charismatic
I like it better here than in Breaking Bad
@@omegajrz1269 He hasn't fully transitioned into being a self-imposed caricature.he's still Jimmy a bit, not yet completely transformed
@@TheBfutgreg But I like his charisma here and how he evolves
Strenght 4
Perception: 10
Endurance 4
Charisma: 10
Inteliggence:10
Agility: 2
Luck 1
that's how you build your character in RPGs. S.P.E.C.I.A.L
Spelling skills: 0
Nah he’s more like
Strength: 2
Perception: 4
Endurance: 3
Charisma: 7
Intelligence: 7
Agility: 4
Luck: 1
@@coachacola3755
Strength: 5
Perception: 9
Endurance: 5 (walk in the desert)
Charisma: 10
Intelligence: 10
Agility: 5 (can outrun 3 Guys half his age)
Luck: 1-10 (he got Kim)
@@Pittip2 strength - more like 4, he can't stand against, like, Jesse.
Intelligence - not 10, Walter would get 10, he's top, and Jimmy is not a genius in intellect way, but still... 7 would be true, i guess.
You left out the best part: "That was some Jedi mind shit right there..." 😆
And the guy went out to meet his -homies- daughter happily lol
Welcome back Bob!❤️ Wishing you good health and love
“Land of the free and home of the lawsuit.” Lol that’s good ,I’m gonna steal it, it’s mine now.
"Out here you might be King Douche Nozzle, but in court you are 'little people´."
That dude seriously needed a wacke up call.
He wasn’t prepared to lose his reputation at the bowling alley on glow ball Sunday’s.
*wake
I love the framing of the shot at 0:46. The drug dealer even looks down at right so it's clear that he's talking to an ass.
Bravo vince
VRAVO BINCE
I love watching these in TH-cam instead of netflix, just for its comments. You guys are great!
"I'll represent myself."
Congratulations. You played yourself.
Im getting pissed knowing plenty good actors are dying left, right and centre. Glad bob is doing ok and recovering very well. I want this series to continue but its last season hopefully it continues with the other characters in the franchise. Next should be gus fring
Ju talkin bout Fring??
They are dying left and right because of the 💉💉💉.
If they used their notoriety to promote it to people like Bob did... well...
@@alainportant6412 Bob is using Heroin?
@@bacon__ liquid meth
I'm more worried about Jonathan Banks. He's quite old now. I have no idea what the writers would do if he passed away before the finale came out.
On most legal systens, you can not sue the public servant. You sue the City and then the City, if it loses, sue the servant for damages.
But that guy probably doesn't know that.
It cut the funniest part. “We’ll go on. Get outta here”
They know that, they just want you to watch the full episode.
@@nathandelagarza4898 ahh that’s smart
"Dude! That was some Jedi mind trick shit.... Best $700 I ever spent! I'm off!"
Forget a silver tongue, Saul's is made of Unobtanium.
I strongly recommend calling the supervisor first as duty to supervise is another personal claim
Such great writers and the delivery by Bob Odenkirk was priceless. 👏👏👏
If only the rest of the cast and crew weren't so incredible we could joke his back his sore from carrying the show.
“Leave me alone yo” thought sal was getting his own Jesse
Jimmy Mcgill and Tyrion Lannister would make a real devious duo.
"That's what I do. I litigate and I know things."
"You're not on trial for defecating through a sunroof."
"Oh, yes I am! I have been on trial for that my entire life!"
S8 Tyrion lannister
Flat out why our justice system doesn't work. Justice should have nothing to do with currency.
" A lawyer vd his suitcase is more dangerous than a thousand thugs vd automatics".
Don Veto Corleone.
"That wavers gonna mek swiss cheese look solid, and in a personal lawsuit it's a fart in the wind!" That is my favorite line in the whole show
1:26 "The heeeellllllllll is this?" love how it switches to western themes with different local yokels.
I am sorry for that guy. As he said, he's literally just trying to get his shift done.
Chuck on his best day never earned $700 in 3 minutes. Slippin' Jimmy lives!
This was back when he was still more Jimmy than Saul. The gradual transformation of the character was some of the best acting ever. I know people have already said this, but Bob was made for that role
When you roll a 20 in speech check.
A natural 20 at that! 😁
It's series like these that makes people think they're law experts and start suing for eveything
They don't even need to sue for this to make them insufferable. I'm an attorney and the amount of people who think they can tell me how to do my job because they watch something like BCS or Law & Order is insane. People will flat out explain my job to me in the most condescending tones, because if THEY were there, you see, they would have done this...
Like, we know the laws these people are citing. We've considered them, and dismissed them for reasons beyond just "we're dumb".
Funny enough, after I commented this I got one of those guys in this comment section telling me I'm "wildly wrong" on if Saul could be debunked by the cop knowing about Qualified Immunity. They know, of course, because they've read an article on it.
The slipping Jimmy with law degree is a guy like machine gun , Chuck was right about that haha
*like a chimp with a machine gun
“If you abuse that power people can get hurt.” True but sometimes the right people need to get hurt.
Yeah, Saul was terrible at negotiating parking lot stickers, though.
And knowing is half the battle
GI JOEEEEEE~
"I'll represent myself"
"WHAT A SICK JOKE"
This is my favorite scene from the series.
“Out here, you might be King Douchenozzle…” I am salivating for the opportunity when I can use this gem on someone.
This man could sell snow to an Eskimo!
“Slippin Jimmy with a law degree is like a chimp with a machine gun”
I scrolled pretty far down the comments and haven't seen anybody else noticing that. $700 bucks were the same amount jimmy would get representing someone as a PD (in the first episode of the series). So the comparison here is the amount of work he had to do legally (discovery, trial, research, and all other stuff probably close to 20-30 hours) vs the 3-minute talk he gave the agent to get the same amount of money in an "illegal?" way. Best Show ever
I worked in a prison and was threatened with lawsuits all the time. It never phased me.
I wish I was watching this show for the first time again. Amazing!
Okay, maybe I'm thinking about this too much, but Jimmy said that if he managed to get both of them out of community service, the other guy would have to pay him $700. In the first episode of BCS, the woman at the desk told Jimmy that each case he does gets him $700. Maybe that's why Jimmy asked for $700. That would be how much a case is worth, (Kind of).
Saul telling the supervisor how expensive a lawyer is made it so easy for the supervisor to push back on him. The supervisor could have said, same goes for you dumbass you're gonna have to pay a lawyer and court costs too and judging by the fact that youre picking up used diapers by the freeway, i would say you probably couldnt even afford bail.
Guard did not want to take the chance it was just a bluff.
Since he doesn't know Jimmy's crime, that would be easy enough to counter. Bail is very often not set on cases where the court cannot impose meaningful financial loss on an individual, ex if the client is a billionaire no fine they can impose is going to keep them in place. So Saul has a very easy comeback to continue his bluff.
Remember, he doesn't need to actually win this debate, he just need to convince the other guy that losing is his best option.
If Jimmy pursued that lawsuit I think it would tarnish his reputation enough that he wouldn't be able to maneuver as much as he does later in the show.
He was never planning to pursue it
He was bluffing and the other man folded.
I'm sure Jimmy would have come up with some genius con to come out on top. Jimmy's faced what should have been reputation death many times and every time twisted things to his advantage, after all.
The litter on the ground is seriously an underrated actor. I think it really shows how littered the ground is.
This and breaking bad will go down in history as great shows
Hopefully Vince Gilligan will make another show when Better Call Saul ends. Maybe something taking place in present day, like who's running things now? With Walt and Gus and everyone gone, who's the new generation of mobsters and dealers?
Slipping jimmy in all his splendor and glory.
art imitates life and life imitates art....I think I am smart enough not to get conned by anyone but I have encounter people like Saul and did get conned....it is amazing how matchstick/flim flam con artist folks can be so persuasive... and sometimes believable.... they work for big corporation sale departments.
Just got lawyered, son!! Or, at least, Jimmyed!!! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
i always expected to see more scenes like this from his community service, i think it's an error to just have 2 or 3 scenes of it when it took 6 months for Jimmy to complete it
What else do you think the writers should have done with Jimmy's community service?
No es un error.
@@PR--un4ubprobably a montage of sorts.
"Land of the Free, Home of the Lawsuit" what a remarkable comment by Jimmy 😆
Shame you didn't include the rest of the clip when the guy says best 700 I've ever spent 😂
Damn, had Chuck left Jimmy alone, he would've kept helping good people
He could've kept David & Main job, do good as a lawyer for a few years and prove Chuck wrong. Instead he did everything exactly as Chuck predicted. He was right about him and this scene illustrates that. 'A chimp with a machine gun'.
If you're good at something never do it for free. - Joker
This is what happens when you put all your points into Charisma
The most unrealistic thing about this scene is the guy actually paid him
This is by far my most favorite better call Saul scene. Just awesome
Saul could BS his way out of Hell.
You know Saul or Slipping Jimmy could sell water to a 🐟!!!😂
Which Is why I feel I should re-watch BCS over BB. I love Walter, but I love Saul more
“A chimp with a machine gun”
This obviously wouldn't stand, he knows that and I'm sure the writers knew it too. They did it because he was just trying to scare him
Is that the quickest $700 of his life? Knowing Slippin' Jimmy, it's doubtful 🤣
When Saul said "I am Better Call Saul" I cried out of joy
Moments like this are what make me watch the show
Jimmy is proof of the saying
“In any interaction with another person there is a perfect combination of words and tone that will get you anything you want out of the interaction. It’s up to you to find those words.”
Hey! That’s the pilot from Manifest
Except the corrections officer will know that he has qualified immunity.
Man I never bought these scene, the shenanigans to the absurdly high amount of 700 💲that the person was willing to shell so casually
Bro he worked for gus and their during the 500,000 $ drug seizure bit
Thats what I love about my country. When you wrongfully sue somebody, and you lose, you will pay their lawyer too.
Land of the free and home of the lawsuit lmao 😂
Yes speech skills, mr. Goodman!