I've got a friend who's watching through and currently in season 2 and it's so hard to discuss it with him and remember what I can and can't say at any given point.
as was lalo..Mentioned (implied), not appeared in BB. Not sure how common Ignacio is...not to mention Nacho being used as a nickname.
Personally think Mikes death was sadder than Jane's, especially after him being more of a main character in Better Call Saul. It almost had a Tasha Yar feel to it, clearly Walt felt it when he realised he didnt need to do it. For his grandaughter never to see him again and have no resolution on the reason seems incredibly sad.
Early in my career (back in the early-mid 90’s), I had a manager exactly like that. They even look alike, which kind of freaked me out. Perfectly quaffed hair, perfect smile, polite (almost condescending) little laugh, pressed monogrammed shirts with the white collar, cuffs and a different pair of cuff links for each day of the week, insufferably arrogant and downright mean when the clients weren’t around.Agree, Howard was almost like a caricature , the way he puffed his chest out, slapped on a smile
Andrea was certainly very sad.The saddest might be Andrea.
Objectively some of the saddest are the side casualties we know nothing about. Drew Sharp, Matt Earmantraut, Mike’s Good Samaritan, travel agency guy, random civilian shot by twins in Hank hit.
Objectively with real world logic Jane’s is sadder, but narratively Mike’s is. As a viewer of a TV show, you don’t get as invested in Jane because of the blackmail and ensuing attitude. I feel worse for John Delancie’s character than Jane.,
I’m torn on whether Todd was just a psychopath or whether he just had a broken moral compass due to being raised by Nazis. Todd seemed capable of empathy more than some of the other villains, he was just taught a criminal way of life where life is expendable.
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