One of Those Moments
Charles Anthony Lyrics


We have lyrics for these tracks by Charles Anthony:


Journey of Love Journey of love Journey of love And it feels so good Journey…


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Most interesting comments from YouTube:

Shourya Mukherjee

​@Executive Sonda It is already established that Howard was Chuck's puppet for a long time. Chuck goes out of his way to make sure that Jimmy doesn't get hired, so clearly Chuck has influence over employee management. When Kim Wexler, who Chuck has admitted is an excellent lawyer, is stuck in doc review, Chuck does nothing. Chuck doesn't directly punish Kim, but he doesn't stop Howard from punishing Kim.

Now tell me which of these two reasons for Chuck letting Kim suffer is more likely:

Chuck decides to let Kim suffer in doc review because he has had a change of heart and has decided not to overstep his bounds (even though he had no problem overstepping his bounds when Jimmy was in question).

or

Chuck decides to let Kim suffer in doc review in order to hit Jimmy where it really hurts (he literally goes up to Kim during her coffee break and tells her all the shitty things Jimmy has done)

As for Jimmy joining other law firms, you just said it yourself, "I highly doubt any reputable lawfirm wants to hire a former conman from the university of american samoa." Chuck didn't stop Jimmy from joining other companies, but why would other companies want to hire Jimmy given his criminal history? HHM was Jimmy's best shot at becoming a lawyer (Jimmy and Howard were on pretty good terms back then), and Chuck shot him down. Why do you think Jimmy was working public defense cases with a horrible salary and a shitty car for years? He had nowhere else to go, because no other law firm would accept him.



Analog Signal

@Circolo dell'Inconcludenza I want to agree with this so much, but I don't believe that the answer is that simple.


Chuck's character is actually manipulative on a few levels. He is a lot like Daniel in There will be Blood, except without the murder. Both hard working, ambitious titans that play the field. But these types equate power with competence and call it human, theirs is a contemptuous sullen experience.


I guess what I'm saying is that it shouldn't be everyone else's problem that this personality type is so difficult to please. You can be the man and still be powerful when you make it a point to accept people for who they are. People have enough problems without being type-casted by the most stellar members of the human family.


Now I can appreciate that Chuck doesn't want to babysit his brother and would rather stir up the nest. Even with Jimmy bringing him ice, I get that dynamic. However, when you are born an elder, there isn't a place you can be on this earth where your influence won't impact your siblings in some way. (I'm African so we see things a little different from whatever tribe McGill descends from)


You can have a dynamic where you are the multi millionaire and have a band of deadbeats for family and still have them proud to both honor you and to be themselves. I'm sure it takes plenty boundaries, but love has to be the proactive measure.


This situation is a lot of rehearsed "I've had this conversation too many times". Jimmy isn't a dog where he needs to be actively reinforced not to leak on the rug. Chuck is content to explain away unpleasantness, effectively weakening any chance he might have at a rich meaningful relationship with his brother. His desire to be the other prodigal son leads him down the path of jealously and resentment.


Like it's not enough for him to be worth millions, he has to reassert that "Suddenly that makes you my peer?" It's like getting to heaven and finding out that Jesus expected you to retrace his steps exactly starting with the virgin birth. We all know that Chuck would make Jimmy his pet under litigation proceedings at high levels; he is his pet now and wants to rub his nose in it


Jimmy sings with him at the bar, helps him appreciate the feel of grass, even tries to make him see reason when he pulls a switch on his own wife. I see this as a situation where Jimmy understands his role as a brother and Chuck is oblivious to his own potential in that area. Willfully blind, which makes it somewhat petty.



RDMacQ

@RobertoRPG Jimmy wasn't always on this path. He did bad in the past, but he was trying to do some good. To really turn his life around.



That's what makes this a tragedy. Jimmy was trying to change to honor his brother, never realizing how much his brother despised him. And Chuck was convinced Jimmy could never change, never knowing how much Jimmy tried to walk on the straight and narrow.



Jimmy's not blameless. But neither is Chuck.



hanzo _

1:55 I want to point out how disgusting it is that Chuck uses the usually-beneficial affirmation of Jimmy's feelings in a twisted manner. By saying this while putting Jimmy down, Chuck effectively makes Jimmy perceive his own feelings as being a part of a cycle: that no matter how much he puts into reflecting and emotionally healing from his own mistakes, he will always slip back. This really is the general message he's sending, but I think this part is something so subtle but incredibly destructive... because by saying "his feelings are real", it won't matter, and thus, it should NEVER MATTER how Jimmy feels.

It's why Saul is so unfeeling and less empathetic in the long run, why he thinks a trip to Belize is a great idea most of the time, and why he feels extremely comfortable with working for a drug kingpin that would go on to destroy countless of lives with his product.

Saul will feel his Jimmy side from time to time, but he knows in the grander scheme of things, it won't matter. It's insane to me because Chuck is a big believer in "ends don't justify the means." By saying Jimmy's attempts at self-reflection don't matter, he's basically TEACHING Jimmy a horrible lesson that any and all means will reach the same end, which contradicts everything Chuck supposedly stands for and what he should've been teaching Jimmy.

I don't think Chuck's message would have had the same effect had that line not been in the script. It explicitly attempts to destroy Jimmy's empathy, and even if the entire message does that already, this line seriously adds subtext to the fact that Saul is so cold and sleazy.

EDIT: Just realized while thinking about this scene again... this makes "Bad Choice Road", the episode where Mike gives Jimmy the titular advice, a great example of how much this talking down affected Jimmy. When he relays the same lesson to Kim for quitting Schweikart & Cokely as well as giving up Mesa Verde, he distorts that lesson into being about MONEY than it is about personal belief, morals, or KIM'S FEELINGS about her job. Every attempt at self-reflection or self-improvement is overshadowed by the delusion that his feelings will always downplay what is rational and logical, specifically on a utilitarian and hedonistic sense rather than an altruistic and unselfish manner. Chuck destroying some of Jimmy's capacity to feel that he can do good things, that he can change, and that a big source of possible change can come from his own emotions and feelings... was crucial in Jimmy's death and Saul's birth.

EDIT 2: GOD, this scene makes me keep coming back... I LOVE how it's shot to keep half of their faces in the dark, but I love how well-done the shots on Jimmy do well to show how Chuck essentially makes him "bury" his good-half. When Jimmy tries to weakly retort "it's not a show" his full face almost becomes fully lit, representing that this is Jimmy at his most vulnerable and sincere... and the whole exchange ends with half of Jimmy's face fully darkened, before him finally leaving back turned for GOOD, leaving behind a chunk of his former self.

This scene... FUCKING HELL, this scene gets to me too much.



Chicken Draws Dogs

Better Call Saul has mastered what I'd like to call the "dialogue bomb drop", where simple lines have such devastating emotional impact. Examples:

"You're not a real lawyer." - Chuck
"You never mattered all that much to me." - Chuck again
"I broke my boy." - Mike
"There are so many stars out here in Albuquerque. I will walk out there, to have a better look." - Werner
"S'all good, man." - Saul
"Pew, pew." - Kim
"So you've always been like this?" - Walt



All comments from YouTube:

Clovis Pictures

That is honestly the most hurtful thing Chuck could've said to him.
Jimmy took care of Chuck for so long, and always looked up to him. That's just a direct stab in the heart.

Executive Sonda

Boo hoo poor Jimmy. Not like Jimmy sabotaged Chuck and ruined his career.

Executive Sonda

@Shourya Mukherjee It was Howard who punished Kim, not Chuck, because Kim had talked Howard into vouching for Jimmy only to have Jimmy embarrass Howard by releasing a commercial in his employers name without authorization. Besides, I highly doubt any reputable lawfirm wants to hire a former conman with an education from "university of american samoa". Chuck didn't want Jimmy to work in his firm, his sin was not telling Jimmy why from the start. Note that he didn't stop Jimmy from joining other companies.

Shourya Mukherjee

​@Executive Sonda It is already established that Howard was Chuck's puppet for a long time. Chuck goes out of his way to make sure that Jimmy doesn't get hired, so clearly Chuck has influence over employee management. When Kim Wexler, who Chuck has admitted is an excellent lawyer, is stuck in doc review, Chuck does nothing. Chuck doesn't directly punish Kim, but he doesn't stop Howard from punishing Kim.

Now tell me which of these two reasons for Chuck letting Kim suffer is more likely:

Chuck decides to let Kim suffer in doc review because he has had a change of heart and has decided not to overstep his bounds (even though he had no problem overstepping his bounds when Jimmy was in question).

or

Chuck decides to let Kim suffer in doc review in order to hit Jimmy where it really hurts (he literally goes up to Kim during her coffee break and tells her all the shitty things Jimmy has done)

As for Jimmy joining other law firms, you just said it yourself, "I highly doubt any reputable lawfirm wants to hire a former conman from the university of american samoa." Chuck didn't stop Jimmy from joining other companies, but why would other companies want to hire Jimmy given his criminal history? HHM was Jimmy's best shot at becoming a lawyer (Jimmy and Howard were on pretty good terms back then), and Chuck shot him down. Why do you think Jimmy was working public defense cases with a horrible salary and a shitty car for years? He had nowhere else to go, because no other law firm would accept him.

LB7 '98

@Executive Sonda I bet you can't back that up huh? I thought so 😂

73 More Replies...

Anon Ymous

Chuck's statement is easily refuted. If Jimmy never meant that much to him, why did he spend so much time and energy on destroy Jimmy's career and life.

Guilherme Fernandes da Silva

That's why he killed himself

Dariuscious

For respect for his career, Chuck sees the law as something sacred that must be respected and Jimmy sees it as a tool or game.

Yellow Ranger

@Dariuscious would be understandable if he ever gave him a chance.

Mridul Shrivastava

@Dariuscious naah man, it had nothing to do with law.
It was pure jealousy and hatred.

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