*** Better Call Saul - Season 6 ***

384,323 Views | 4308 Replies | Last: 1 yr ago by aTmAg
Teddy Perkins
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Speinwall's write up on the episode. https://www.rollingstone.com/tv/tv-recaps/better-call-saul-season-6-premiere-recap-1333400/

And his take on Nacho, the hotel, and bank statement from the safe. I missed the Peruvian transaction on the statement to throw the Salamancas off Fring's scent.

Quote:

At the same time, it's difficult to keep up with all the moves and countermoves at times, in part because Mike's agenda is not in lockstep with Gus'. Mike likes Nacho, and feels bad that Gus has placed the kid in such a difficult position, while Gus has nothing but contempt for Ignacio Varga. Both men, though, do not want Nacho to become a live prisoner of the Salamancas, knowing that he would reveal their role in the botched assassination attempt. Mike replaces Nacho's safe with an identical one, and plants falsified evidence of a Peruvian wire transfer to draw attention away from Gus, along with details about the motel. (Mike also removes all traces of Nacho's dad, understanding that Mr. Varga is a complete innocent in all of this.) His hope is that Nacho will simply get away, perhaps with his help, while understanding that death seems more likely. And Gus just wants Nacho dead as quickly as possible, and thus has arranged for Nacho to be placed in a second-floor room with no exit, and to have Tyrus monitoring the situation from afar until the Cousins arrive. The whole thing is deliberately messy we even see the meticulous Gustavo Fring knock over a glass in one scene but it's a lot to keep track of, especially now that Hector is feeling mentally strong enough to assist his nephews in all of this.
aTmAg
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Everything makes sense to me except for the timing on the twins showing up right after that phone call. Once Juan gets that info out of the safe, it's a mere phone call to dispatch the twins to the hotel. It's not like they would wait for a tip from gus. So I guess that is just lucky coincidence?

Also, I think it was Lalo following Saul and Kim. That's why gus's guys couldn't find him.
Tony Franklins Other Shoe
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Teddy Perkins said:

Keeping Nacho in the hotel room was initially to buy time for Fring to figure out the fallout and survey the playing field after the attack. They needed time to find out the details of the attack and it took them a few days to find out Lalo was still alive. Fring needed that time to figure out how best to leverage Nacho or if he needed to cash him in at all.
Gus was immediately suspicious when he found out all the hit men died at the scene. Very Fring like and so he needed to give it time to shake things out. Then he confirmed it once Hector shook his hand. Hector would rather spit on him than touch him and Gus knows that.

Person Not Capable of Pregnancy
Infection_Ag11
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Teddy Perkins said:

Speinwall's write up on the episode. https://www.rollingstone.com/tv/tv-recaps/better-call-saul-season-6-premiere-recap-1333400/

And his take on Nacho, the hotel, and bank statement from the safe. I missed the Peruvian transaction on the statement to throw the Salamancas off Fring's scent.

Quote:

At the same time, it's difficult to keep up with all the moves and countermoves at times, in part because Mike's agenda is not in lockstep with Gus'. Mike likes Nacho, and feels bad that Gus has placed the kid in such a difficult position, while Gus has nothing but contempt for Ignacio Varga. Both men, though, do not want Nacho to become a live prisoner of the Salamancas, knowing that he would reveal their role in the botched assassination attempt. Mike replaces Nacho's safe with an identical one, and plants falsified evidence of a Peruvian wire transfer to draw attention away from Gus, along with details about the motel. (Mike also removes all traces of Nacho's dad, understanding that Mr. Varga is a complete innocent in all of this.) His hope is that Nacho will simply get away, perhaps with his help, while understanding that death seems more likely. And Gus just wants Nacho dead as quickly as possible, and thus has arranged for Nacho to be placed in a second-floor room with no exit, and to have Tyrus monitoring the situation from afar until the Cousins arrive. The whole thing is deliberately messy we even see the meticulous Gustavo Fring knock over a glass in one scene but it's a lot to keep track of, especially now that Hector is feeling mentally strong enough to assist his nephews in all of this.



But again, this all glosses over the fact that IF you send the cartel after Nacho there's a chance he ends up in their custody alive before they kill him. And if that happens a fake bank statement won't save him.

It just doesn't seem like something someone as calculating as Fring would do. It's leaving his fate up to chance.
No material on this site is intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. See full Medical Disclaimer.
Tony Franklins Other Shoe
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Gotta admit, really would want to use that toilet in Saul's house just once.

Person Not Capable of Pregnancy
aTmAg
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Infection_Ag11 said:

Teddy Perkins said:

Speinwall's write up on the episode. https://www.rollingstone.com/tv/tv-recaps/better-call-saul-season-6-premiere-recap-1333400/

And his take on Nacho, the hotel, and bank statement from the safe. I missed the Peruvian transaction on the statement to throw the Salamancas off Fring's scent.

Quote:

At the same time, it's difficult to keep up with all the moves and countermoves at times, in part because Mike's agenda is not in lockstep with Gus'. Mike likes Nacho, and feels bad that Gus has placed the kid in such a difficult position, while Gus has nothing but contempt for Ignacio Varga. Both men, though, do not want Nacho to become a live prisoner of the Salamancas, knowing that he would reveal their role in the botched assassination attempt. Mike replaces Nacho's safe with an identical one, and plants falsified evidence of a Peruvian wire transfer to draw attention away from Gus, along with details about the motel. (Mike also removes all traces of Nacho's dad, understanding that Mr. Varga is a complete innocent in all of this.) His hope is that Nacho will simply get away, perhaps with his help, while understanding that death seems more likely. And Gus just wants Nacho dead as quickly as possible, and thus has arranged for Nacho to be placed in a second-floor room with no exit, and to have Tyrus monitoring the situation from afar until the Cousins arrive. The whole thing is deliberately messy we even see the meticulous Gustavo Fring knock over a glass in one scene but it's a lot to keep track of, especially now that Hector is feeling mentally strong enough to assist his nephews in all of this.



But again, this all glosses over the fact that IF you send the cartel after Nacho there's a chance he ends up in their custody alive before they kill him. And if that happens a fake bank statement won't save him.

It just doesn't seem like something someone as calculating as Fring would do. It's leaving his fate up to chance.
I don't see how Nacho makes it out of that hotel room alive. Even if the Twins corner him and wait him out, Nacho would put a bullet in his own brain before volunteering to get himself tortured.
Infection_Ag11
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Quote:

I don't see how Nacho makes it out of that hotel room alive


Literally the exact way things played out except his car doesn't make it through the barricade with a blown tire.

But the "how" isn't really the point. The point is it is CLEARLY a possibly, especially because Gus know a the cartel would want to take him alive if at all possible. They even told him as much. And the fact that it is a possibility (one of only three possibilities if you send them after Nacho) makes it an odd move for a guy who has been as meticulous as he has throughout both series.
No material on this site is intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. See full Medical Disclaimer.
aTmAg
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Infection_Ag11 said:

Quote:

I don't see how Nacho makes it out of that hotel room alive


Literally the exact way things played out except his car doesn't make it through the barricade with a blown tire.

But the "how" isn't really the point. The point is it is CLEARLY a possibly, especially because Gus know a the cartel would want to take him alive if at all possible. They even told him as much. And the fact that it is a possibility (one of only three possibilities if you send them after Nacho) makes it an odd move for a guy who has been as meticulous as he has throughout both series.
You think Gus should have figured out that Nacho would see water dripping from an AC unit, figure out he was being watched, and just so happen leave his room and be in that truck at the exact moment that the twins show up?

If they had made Gus THAT clairvoyant, then that would have been TERRIBLE writing. These writers are too smart for that.
Infection_Ag11
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
aTmAg said:

Infection_Ag11 said:

Quote:

I don't see how Nacho makes it out of that hotel room alive


Literally the exact way things played out except his car doesn't make it through the barricade with a blown tire.

But the "how" isn't really the point. The point is it is CLEARLY a possibly, especially because Gus know a the cartel would want to take him alive if at all possible. They even told him as much. And the fact that it is a possibility (one of only three possibilities if you send them after Nacho) makes it an odd move for a guy who has been as meticulous as he has throughout both series.
You think Gus should have figured out that Nacho would see water dripping from an AC unit, figure out he was being watched, and just so happen leave his room and be in that truck at the exact moment that the twins show up?

If they had made Gus THAT clairvoyant, then that would have been TERRIBLE writing. These writers are too smart for that.


But that's just one of a virtually infinite number of possible scenarios, many of which involve him getting captured.
No material on this site is intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. See full Medical Disclaimer.
aTmAg
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Infection_Ag11 said:

aTmAg said:

Infection_Ag11 said:

Quote:

I don't see how Nacho makes it out of that hotel room alive


Literally the exact way things played out except his car doesn't make it through the barricade with a blown tire.

But the "how" isn't really the point. The point is it is CLEARLY a possibly, especially because Gus know a the cartel would want to take him alive if at all possible. They even told him as much. And the fact that it is a possibility (one of only three possibilities if you send them after Nacho) makes it an odd move for a guy who has been as meticulous as he has throughout both series.
You think Gus should have figured out that Nacho would see water dripping from an AC unit, figure out he was being watched, and just so happen leave his room and be in that truck at the exact moment that the twins show up?

If they had made Gus THAT clairvoyant, then that would have been TERRIBLE writing. These writers are too smart for that.


But that's just one of a virtually infinite number of possible scenarios, many of which involve him getting captured.
Possibilities that total up to be 5% probability. If the twins kill Nacho (the 95% case), then everything is cleaned up perfectly (except Lalo getting away.. which he had no way of knowing). If Gus stages his death in another way, everybody assumes Gus did it.

Gus's plan (aka Vince Gilligan's plan) was genius. It took 2 extremely unlikely things to happen to mess it up. And even then, it didn't mess it up THAT bad since Gus lives into BB, meets with the twins, and all of that.
Duckhook
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Ok, I now understand Lalo killing the guy with matching teeth. But I guess I don't understand the timeframe. When did Lalo kill this guy in relation to the big shootout at the hacienda? After the fact, and then he drags the body back there and torches it before anybody else shows up? The husband and wife live on site or somewhere nearby?

I understand it, I guess, but seems a little too convenient plot device for me.
aTmAg
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Duckhook said:

Ok, I now understand Lalo killing the guy with matching teeth. But I guess I don't understand the timeframe. When did Lalo kill this guy in relation to the big shootout at the hacienda? After the fact, and then he drags the body back there and torches it before anybody else shows up? The husband and wife live on site or somewhere nearby?

I understand it, I guess, but seems a little too convenient plot device for me.
Nacho had no cell coverage at Lalo's house. So he lived in the middle of nowhere, and it's not hard to imagine that the cops would need to be called for them to show up. So he'd have all the time in the world (within reason).
Know Your Enemy
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Infection_Ag11 said:

Teddy Perkins said:

Speinwall's write up on the episode. https://www.rollingstone.com/tv/tv-recaps/better-call-saul-season-6-premiere-recap-1333400/

And his take on Nacho, the hotel, and bank statement from the safe. I missed the Peruvian transaction on the statement to throw the Salamancas off Fring's scent.

Quote:

At the same time, it's difficult to keep up with all the moves and countermoves at times, in part because Mike's agenda is not in lockstep with Gus'. Mike likes Nacho, and feels bad that Gus has placed the kid in such a difficult position, while Gus has nothing but contempt for Ignacio Varga. Both men, though, do not want Nacho to become a live prisoner of the Salamancas, knowing that he would reveal their role in the botched assassination attempt. Mike replaces Nacho's safe with an identical one, and plants falsified evidence of a Peruvian wire transfer to draw attention away from Gus, along with details about the motel. (Mike also removes all traces of Nacho's dad, understanding that Mr. Varga is a complete innocent in all of this.) His hope is that Nacho will simply get away, perhaps with his help, while understanding that death seems more likely. And Gus just wants Nacho dead as quickly as possible, and thus has arranged for Nacho to be placed in a second-floor room with no exit, and to have Tyrus monitoring the situation from afar until the Cousins arrive. The whole thing is deliberately messy we even see the meticulous Gustavo Fring knock over a glass in one scene but it's a lot to keep track of, especially now that Hector is feeling mentally strong enough to assist his nephews in all of this.



But again, this all glosses over the fact that IF you send the cartel after Nacho there's a chance he ends up in their custody alive before they kill him. And if that happens a fake bank statement won't save him.

It just doesn't seem like something someone as calculating as Fring would do. It's leaving his fate up to chance.
Precisely why Tyrus told Nacho to shoot anyone that came to the door. They expected to cousins to show up at the motel and Nacho to fire at them causing them to return fire and kill him.
Hello there
How long do you want to ignore this user?
I love when a show doesn't lay everything out neatly for the viewer. They trust the audience to have to work a little to put all the pieces together.
torrid
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
I'm guessing Mike holds onto Nacho's father's identity card, and he personally send the father off to some safe exile. A living one, not Belize. Or maybe that's where the "Belize" term from BB originates.
Hello there
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Vacuum repair?
Hello there
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Btw, I haven't seen a new episode drop just yet, but I highly recommend checking out the BCS Insider Podcast. A ton of great insight from the editor, directors, writers, etc.
Hwy30East
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Star this post if you are watching the BCS series, but have never watched Breaking Bad.

I'm just curious to know.
Ghost of Bisbee
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
aTmAg said:

Infection_Ag11 said:

aTmAg said:

Infection_Ag11 said:

Quote:

I don't see how Nacho makes it out of that hotel room alive


Literally the exact way things played out except his car doesn't make it through the barricade with a blown tire.

But the "how" isn't really the point. The point is it is CLEARLY a possibly, especially because Gus know a the cartel would want to take him alive if at all possible. They even told him as much. And the fact that it is a possibility (one of only three possibilities if you send them after Nacho) makes it an odd move for a guy who has been as meticulous as he has throughout both series.
You think Gus should have figured out that Nacho would see water dripping from an AC unit, figure out he was being watched, and just so happen leave his room and be in that truck at the exact moment that the twins show up?

If they had made Gus THAT clairvoyant, then that would have been TERRIBLE writing. These writers are too smart for that.


But that's just one of a virtually infinite number of possible scenarios, many of which involve him getting captured.
Possibilities that total up to be 5% probability. If the twins kill Nacho (the 95% case), then everything is cleaned up perfectly (except Lalo getting away.. which he had no way of knowing). If Gus stages his death in another way, everybody assumes Gus did it.

Gus's plan (aka Vince Gilligan's plan) was genius. It took 2 extremely unlikely things to happen to mess it up. And even then, it didn't mess it up THAT bad since Gus lives into BB, meets with the twins, and all of that.


This is overthinking
aTmAg
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
It's "overthinking" to say that the plan the writers came up with is fine? Rather than one that is more complex?

Okaaaay..

(Perhaps you meant to address the person I responded to)
johnnyblaze36
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Ghost of Bizbee said:

aTmAg said:

Infection_Ag11 said:

aTmAg said:

Infection_Ag11 said:

Quote:

I don't see how Nacho makes it out of that hotel room alive


Literally the exact way things played out except his car doesn't make it through the barricade with a blown tire.

But the "how" isn't really the point. The point is it is CLEARLY a possibly, especially because Gus know a the cartel would want to take him alive if at all possible. They even told him as much. And the fact that it is a possibility (one of only three possibilities if you send them after Nacho) makes it an odd move for a guy who has been as meticulous as he has throughout both series.
You think Gus should have figured out that Nacho would see water dripping from an AC unit, figure out he was being watched, and just so happen leave his room and be in that truck at the exact moment that the twins show up?

If they had made Gus THAT clairvoyant, then that would have been TERRIBLE writing. These writers are too smart for that.


But that's just one of a virtually infinite number of possible scenarios, many of which involve him getting captured.
Possibilities that total up to be 5% probability. If the twins kill Nacho (the 95% case), then everything is cleaned up perfectly (except Lalo getting away.. which he had no way of knowing). If Gus stages his death in another way, everybody assumes Gus did it.

Gus's plan (aka Vince Gilligan's plan) was genius. It took 2 extremely unlikely things to happen to mess it up. And even then, it didn't mess it up THAT bad since Gus lives into BB, meets with the twins, and all of that.


This is overthinking

Please tell me we aren't going to discuss NDA's again.
Hello there
How long do you want to ignore this user?
From Reddit:

Quote:

I think the use of "Wine and Roses" was an interesting choice (the episode title and the song played in the opening of the first episode) and some neat foreshadowing. The classic film *Days of Wine and Roses* seems a deliberate reference. The plot (spoiler alert for a very old movie): alcoholic man meets innocent woman, they fall in love, get married, man starts the woman drinking, she becomes an alcoholic as well, the man struggles with sobriety before ending up sober before the movie finishes while the woman descends further into alcoholism. What begins as the vice of the man becomes the vice of the woman and her ultimate downfall.

ETA: I can't help but add that *Days of Wine and Roses* is available on HBO Max, for anyone interested. From 1962, starring Jack Lemmon and Lee Remick in excellent performances, I highly recommend it.
johnnyblaze36
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
aTmAg said:

TCTTS said:

TV is maybe best it's ever been, with so many insanely great shows over the past couple years (this month in particular). But man, there is absolutely nothing like the tone, tension, and fastidious, clockwork precision of this show. It's just on a completely different level. Seriously, what a fantastic opening two hours.
Interesting.. I considered the golden era over and that BCS was the final show of that era. It's the only show I bother to watch live anymore.

What other shows are on right now that you think are at this level?
I'm not TCTTS but and don't know much that could be on BCS level but I have really high hopes for The Last of Us whenever it comes out on HBO. Best game ever made and a 10 million dollar budget per episode. It better be good.
aTmAg
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
johnnyblaze36 said:

aTmAg said:

TCTTS said:

TV is maybe best it's ever been, with so many insanely great shows over the past couple years (this month in particular). But man, there is absolutely nothing like the tone, tension, and fastidious, clockwork precision of this show. It's just on a completely different level. Seriously, what a fantastic opening two hours.
Interesting.. I considered the golden era over and that BCS was the final show of that era. It's the only show I bother to watch live anymore.

What other shows are on right now that you think are at this level?
I'm not TCTTS but and don't know much that could be on BCS level but I have really high hopes for The Last of Us whenever it comes out on HBO. Best game ever made and a 10 million dollar budget per episode. It better be good.
Has there been a good show based on a game? I cannot think of any offhand. I doubt anybody has spent that much money per episode, though.

I don't know anything about the game. I wonder if a person like me would enjoy it going into it blind.
johnnyblaze36
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
There hasn't been any that I can think of off the top of my head. But I'd say anything with Pedro Pascal in it has great potential. And even if you haven't played the games just trust me-the storyline is phenomenal.

After reading this thread I already want to re-watch last night's episodes. It was so damn good.
aTmAg
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
I may be at an advantage, since I know nothing about the game. I'll give it a shot.
oragator
How long do you want to ignore this user?
The ID said Manitoba.0
Teddy Perkins
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Know Your Enemy said:

Infection_Ag11 said:

Teddy Perkins said:

Speinwall's write up on the episode. https://www.rollingstone.com/tv/tv-recaps/better-call-saul-season-6-premiere-recap-1333400/

And his take on Nacho, the hotel, and bank statement from the safe. I missed the Peruvian transaction on the statement to throw the Salamancas off Fring's scent.

Quote:

At the same time, it's difficult to keep up with all the moves and countermoves at times, in part because Mike's agenda is not in lockstep with Gus'. Mike likes Nacho, and feels bad that Gus has placed the kid in such a difficult position, while Gus has nothing but contempt for Ignacio Varga. Both men, though, do not want Nacho to become a live prisoner of the Salamancas, knowing that he would reveal their role in the botched assassination attempt. Mike replaces Nacho's safe with an identical one, and plants falsified evidence of a Peruvian wire transfer to draw attention away from Gus, along with details about the motel. (Mike also removes all traces of Nacho's dad, understanding that Mr. Varga is a complete innocent in all of this.) His hope is that Nacho will simply get away, perhaps with his help, while understanding that death seems more likely. And Gus just wants Nacho dead as quickly as possible, and thus has arranged for Nacho to be placed in a second-floor room with no exit, and to have Tyrus monitoring the situation from afar until the Cousins arrive. The whole thing is deliberately messy we even see the meticulous Gustavo Fring knock over a glass in one scene but it's a lot to keep track of, especially now that Hector is feeling mentally strong enough to assist his nephews in all of this.



But again, this all glosses over the fact that IF you send the cartel after Nacho there's a chance he ends up in their custody alive before they kill him. And if that happens a fake bank statement won't save him.

It just doesn't seem like something someone as calculating as Fring would do. It's leaving his fate up to chance.
Precisely why Tyrus told Nacho to shoot anyone that came to the door. They expected to cousins to show up at the motel and Nacho to fire at them causing them to return fire and kill him.
This is correct and confirmed by Peter Gould - https://ew.com/tv/better-call-saul-creator-on-jimmy-kim-scheme-lalo-season-6-premiere/

Quote:

Nacho realizes he's being watched and set up, but instead of revealing what's happening, he only tells Tyrus that he has a bad feeling about this…

Nacho's no idiot. And he knows very well that Gus Fring doesn't have his best interest at heart. And the Gus Fring organization is the one that shot him in the side in order to make a setup look a little bit better. So the fact that he's got this sort of safe haven in Mexico at first Nacho's kind of happy not to be on the run. The wheels are turning and somehow he's being set up, and in episode 2, you see exactly how he's being set up. They want him waiting in motel where the Cousins are going to show up, and Nacho catches on just moments before. If he had caught on just 45 minutes later, the Cousins would've grabbed him and he'd be tortured and dead. That's why they give Nacho the gun, because the real setup is hoping that he's going to be trapped in a firefight with the Cousins, and one way or another Nacho will be killed in the action.
Teddy Perkins
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Other nuggets from the Gould interview.

Quote:

  • There's no ambiguity about what happens to Kim, I'll tell you that.
  • That intriguing little black book could turn out to have a significance. That whole teaser is chock-full of references to where we've been, but also references to where we're going.
  • You know, we have this corkboard in the writers' room with the names of all the characters we'd like to bring back. And, boy, we really would've not felt good about finishing the show if we hadn't seen the Kettlemans again. You'll see as the season goes on it's not like there's any deep hidden meaning in the show there are these couples who all made different choices about how to live, and you're going to see at least a trilogy of these couples who make an appearance, and the Kettlemans are some of our favorites.
  • What's the word that you'd use to best describe what awaits viewers in episode 3? Shattering.

TCTTS
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Teddy Perkins said:

Know Your Enemy said:

Infection_Ag11 said:

Teddy Perkins said:

Speinwall's write up on the episode. https://www.rollingstone.com/tv/tv-recaps/better-call-saul-season-6-premiere-recap-1333400/

And his take on Nacho, the hotel, and bank statement from the safe. I missed the Peruvian transaction on the statement to throw the Salamancas off Fring's scent.

Quote:

At the same time, it's difficult to keep up with all the moves and countermoves at times, in part because Mike's agenda is not in lockstep with Gus'. Mike likes Nacho, and feels bad that Gus has placed the kid in such a difficult position, while Gus has nothing but contempt for Ignacio Varga. Both men, though, do not want Nacho to become a live prisoner of the Salamancas, knowing that he would reveal their role in the botched assassination attempt. Mike replaces Nacho's safe with an identical one, and plants falsified evidence of a Peruvian wire transfer to draw attention away from Gus, along with details about the motel. (Mike also removes all traces of Nacho's dad, understanding that Mr. Varga is a complete innocent in all of this.) His hope is that Nacho will simply get away, perhaps with his help, while understanding that death seems more likely. And Gus just wants Nacho dead as quickly as possible, and thus has arranged for Nacho to be placed in a second-floor room with no exit, and to have Tyrus monitoring the situation from afar until the Cousins arrive. The whole thing is deliberately messy we even see the meticulous Gustavo Fring knock over a glass in one scene but it's a lot to keep track of, especially now that Hector is feeling mentally strong enough to assist his nephews in all of this.



But again, this all glosses over the fact that IF you send the cartel after Nacho there's a chance he ends up in their custody alive before they kill him. And if that happens a fake bank statement won't save him.

It just doesn't seem like something someone as calculating as Fring would do. It's leaving his fate up to chance.
Precisely why Tyrus told Nacho to shoot anyone that came to the door. They expected to cousins to show up at the motel and Nacho to fire at them causing them to return fire and kill him.
This is correct and confirmed by Peter Gould - https://ew.com/tv/better-call-saul-creator-on-jimmy-kim-scheme-lalo-season-6-premiere/

Quote:

Nacho realizes he's being watched and set up, but instead of revealing what's happening, he only tells Tyrus that he has a bad feeling about this…

Nacho's no idiot. And he knows very well that Gus Fring doesn't have his best interest at heart. And the Gus Fring organization is the one that shot him in the side in order to make a setup look a little bit better. So the fact that he's got this sort of safe haven in Mexico at first Nacho's kind of happy not to be on the run. The wheels are turning and somehow he's being set up, and in episode 2, you see exactly how he's being set up. They want him waiting in motel where the Cousins are going to show up, and Nacho catches on just moments before. If he had caught on just 45 minutes later, the Cousins would've grabbed him and he'd be tortured and dead. That's why they give Nacho the gun, because the real setup is hoping that he's going to be trapped in a firefight with the Cousins, and one way or another Nacho will be killed in the action.


Awesome, thanks. All makes sense now. Basically, because of the timing, I assumed Tyrus had informed Salamanca's crew via phone call, in that moment, which threw all the motivations off and confused the hell out of me. Turns out, Salamanca's crew just happened to show up then (based on the document Mike planted earlier). A little too convenient for my taste, but made for excellent TV, so it's fine.
TCTTS
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
aTmAg said:

TCTTS said:

TV is maybe best it's ever been, with so many insanely great shows over the past couple years (this month in particular). But man, there is absolutely nothing like the tone, tension, and fastidious, clockwork precision of this show. It's just on a completely different level. Seriously, what a fantastic opening two hours.
Interesting.. I considered the golden era over and that BCS was the final show of that era. It's the only show I bother to watch live anymore.

What other shows are on right now that you think are at this level?

First of all, I said "maybe," so don't take it so literally. My main point was how good Better Call Saul is, not the thing about TV quality as a whole.

That said, yes, I agree that the Breaking Bad / Mad Men / Game of Thrones / etc era was definitely "the golden era," no question. But that was still only a handful of shows compared to what we have now. I'm not at all saying any of these are better, or that they're all on equal footing, but we absolutely have a higher volume of quality and choice than ever before, over the past few years. Just to name a few...

- Atlanta
- Big Little Lies
- The Crown
- Dark
- Dave
- Euphoria
- The Great
- Mare of Easttown
- The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
- Master of None
- Normal People
- Ozark
- Peacemaker
- The Queen's Gambit
- Severance
- Station Eleven
- Stranger Things
- Succession
- True Detective
- The Underground Railroad
- Westworld
- The White Lotus

... etc. And then just this month...

- The Dropout
- Outer Range
- Slow Horses
- Tokyo Vice
- Winning Time

... along with all the Marvel and Star Wars fare, a ton of great comedies, etc.

But again, I'm simply saying that as good or as popular as many of these are, Better Call Saul showed up with unmatched swagger last night to essentially say THIS is how it's done. That doesn't even mean I think BCS is necessarily better than, say, Succession, either. I'm just saying it *feels* like it's the most well-crafted and precise, like you're in the hands of workman-like professionals at the absolute top of their game.
Bunk Moreland
How long do you want to ignore this user?
The Offer also comes out this month
TCTTS
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
That's right. I'm literally having to schedule my TV watching on a calendar this month, just to keep up with everything. It's insane.
johnnyblaze36
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
I read that the final season of Peaky Blinders is coming in June as well.
YNWA_AG
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
johnnyblaze36 said:

I read that the final season of Peaky Blinders is coming in June as well.


You can already watch it if you connect to a UK vpn for bbc one access. Not saying I already did it, but I might have
First Page Last Page
Page 7 of 124
 
×
subscribe Verify your student status
See Subscription Benefits
Trial only available to users who have never subscribed or participated in a previous trial.