This is the cementation of trust in a relationship that will extend into the Breaking Bad timeline. Ira was able to flip Bavarian Boy for more money than assumed, and Jimmy is actually impressed that he was given his fair cut. Jimmy then goes to meet Ira to get his payout from the Hummel sell (looks like my Irene theory is squashed). Bouncing a rubber ball against the wall to pass the time, Jimmy looks like a prisoner in a cell, not a lawyer biding time selling cellphones. ![]() Either to put her mind at ease or avoid having to grapple with his emotions, Jimmy calls CC Mobile back and accepts the job, which he almost immediately regrets once he gets to the dead storefront. He opens the episode turning down a job offer from CC Mobile, until Kim mentions to Jimmy that she’d like him to talk to a therapist, likely still upset over his muted, nonreaction to Chuck’s letter from last week. Just like in his group therapy session, if you want Mike to talk, you might not like what he has to say, but you’ll probably be better off hearing it.Įlsewhere, Jimmy continues to push his feelings about his brother aside by any means necessary. Gus needs Mike’s professionalism, and likewise, Mike needs the catharsis (and money) that can be found in the work opportunities that Gus provides. ![]() ![]() Gus clearly is upset that Mike did not alert him to Nacho’s plan to kill Hector, but Mike’s a man who’s already lost his son there’s nothing left to take from him, and therefore, he’s uninterested in games of threat and intimidation. Mike was given relatively short shrift during Season 3, so it’s nice to see him at the center of “Talk.” There’s seemingly a lot of emotional material left to mine from Mike’s backstory, as well as from the beginning of his partnership with Gus Fring.
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