Real Lawyer Reacts to Better Call Saul (The Battery Episode, Chicanery)

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  • čas přidán 14. 06. 2021
  • ⚖️ Do you need a great lawyer? I can help! legaleagle.link/eagleteam ⚖️
    Jimmy hides a battery in Chuck's pocket during a disciplinary hearing. Is this legal?
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Komentáře • 6K

  • @LegalEagle
    @LegalEagle  Před 2 lety +1508

    👮‍♂️ What show should I do next?
    🚀 LIMITED: Get CuriosityStream AND Nebula for 26% OFF! legaleagle.link/curiositystream

    • @LegalEagle
      @LegalEagle  Před 2 lety +153

      This show is so good. This was really fun.

    • @OGimouse1
      @OGimouse1 Před 2 lety +14

      If you ever decide to go pilgrimage to the brother's law firm, it's the former healthcare building next to the actual State Bar building lol

    • @crayray8155
      @crayray8155 Před 2 lety +17

      Please do apple v epic games

    • @cheighes1
      @cheighes1 Před 2 lety +9

      SNL Donald Glovers defense of Jurassic Park.

    • @hamfrog9893
      @hamfrog9893 Před 2 lety +11

      More bcs!!

  • @LukePalmer
    @LukePalmer Před 2 lety +36235

    The fact that he committed battery with a battery is some arrested development level writing

  • @romilrh
    @romilrh Před rokem +15709

    The fact that Jimmy's chicanery made a real-life lawyer so torn on whether or not what he did was right, is SO PERFECTLY in-line with Jimmy's character it's insane

    • @yikes216
      @yikes216 Před rokem +948

      and thats a feeling you got throughout the entirety of better call saul, you keep trying to justify jimmy's bad actions

    • @acarroll6842
      @acarroll6842 Před rokem +274

      @@yikes216 all the way up to Howard. And then at the end of the episode he jumps forward to Saul.

    • @RECTALBURRITO
      @RECTALBURRITO Před rokem +73

      I've never watched this show, but I kind of want to now.

    • @mehrabislamarnab1675
      @mehrabislamarnab1675 Před rokem

      ​@@RECTALBURRITOwatch it. it's good

    • @kobaruto
      @kobaruto Před rokem +121

      @@RECTALBURRITO you should absolutely give it a watch, really good show

  • @xisioff7144
    @xisioff7144 Před rokem +8487

    Nice ! Can't wait to see "Real drug dealer reacts to Breaking Bad" next !

    • @legendavidgg544
      @legendavidgg544 Před rokem +45

      😂

    • @prapanthebachelorette6803
      @prapanthebachelorette6803 Před rokem +14

      Lolllll

    • @GnosticMaximus
      @GnosticMaximus Před rokem +262

      I can do one if you want

    • @BigPurp9
      @BigPurp9 Před rokem +111

      Isn’t there a channel that does that? Like I remember watching a video where a real convicted drug smuggler reacted to scenes from Narcos etc

    • @ThatDuk
      @ThatDuk Před rokem +40

      @@BigPurp9 I saw a dude on shorts that sold drugs and made a channel, so i wouldnt be suprised if he has made a video

  • @liverpudliandream2299
    @liverpudliandream2299 Před rokem +13197

    I think Chuck and Jimmy are the perfect examples of "doing the right thing for the wrong reasons" and "doing the wrong thing for the right reasons" respectively

    • @evolved9541
      @evolved9541 Před rokem +387

      ahhh the foils are perfect

    • @astra3310
      @astra3310 Před rokem +203

      Well, to an extent with Jimmy. Especially when he starts his career as Saul.

    • @powerstation0872
      @powerstation0872 Před rokem +526

      Chuck was the kid in school who reminded the teacher about the homework assignment from the previous day.

    • @RylanStorm
      @RylanStorm Před rokem +601

      The problem is that Chuck has mistreated Jimmy for years.
      You can't constantly and systematically destroy a person's esteem and wellbeing and then say "Look, I was right all along" when they screw up as a result.

    • @chaboi685
      @chaboi685 Před rokem +18

      Love this analysis of the show, fits perfectly. Great show, great story of two brothers and I haven't finished it so no spoilers.

  • @BlakeMcCringleberry
    @BlakeMcCringleberry Před 2 lety +5177

    "This is one of the best instances of TV lawyering of all time. I'm giving it an A-."
    Sounds like a law school professor to me.

    • @shefalimehta9794
      @shefalimehta9794 Před 2 lety +65

      LOL

    • @dorothygale1104
      @dorothygale1104 Před 2 lety +292

      He can’t give it an A because that would leave no grading room if a better instance of TV lawyering was produced.

    • @Dustviii
      @Dustviii Před 2 lety +4

      lmaooo

    • @ItDoesntMatterReally
      @ItDoesntMatterReally Před 2 lety +270

      @@dorothygale1104 I don't understand this mentality. When grading something you don't do it with the expectation of something better coming along. There aren't professors and teachers giving B- to papers where everything is technically right just because a more well-written paper might come around next semester on the same subject. You grade something on it's own merits and not the merits of others, unless there's some sort of curve system at play.

    • @dorothygale1104
      @dorothygale1104 Před 2 lety +30

      @@ItDoesntMatterReally I beg to differ. As one who has taught before, your assertion that a paper (the example you used) is judged on its own merit is incorrct. A paper, report, story, etc is judged against what is believed to be perfect. Technical perfection is only one aspect of grading a paper, which by itself is a subjective undertaking. Correct grammar, punctuation, spelling, etc does not mean the paper is by any means perfect. In fact, a paper can have no spelling, punctuation, grammar errors an still be a poorly written pape if the content is bad. Actually, the technical aspects of a pap are the least important aspects of a paper, far behind content, insight & composition. Saying a paper is an “A” means that no other paper on the subject could be written. It is effectively saying a paper is perfect and can never be improved upon.
      It is no different than various sports that are judged, like gymnastics or diving. A score of 10 means that the performance was perfect and could never be improved upon by anybody.
      Now an objective test for example is graded upon a completely different basis. If you answer all the questions correctly your score would be 100%, which translates to an “A” because you have achieved perfection in answering all the questions correctly. A better performance in that regard cannot be attained.

  • @1Kapuchu100
    @1Kapuchu100 Před 2 lety +11471

    There's a bit of a joke. The Witness guy was a victim of battery, because he was given a battery.

    • @almogdov
      @almogdov Před 2 lety +296

      I was waiting for him to realize that but alas XD

    • @ziggystardog
      @ziggystardog Před 2 lety +839

      If it was a lithium or alkali battery, that would "a salt" as well.

    • @vest816
      @vest816 Před 2 lety +420

      Explains why it was appealed to the circuit court.

    • @sneakmore
      @sneakmore Před 2 lety +126

      Yeah it would mean “you committed battery, with a battery”

    • @arnav4174
      @arnav4174 Před 2 lety +8

      Oh no!😂😂

  • @DavidGarcia-nc7yi
    @DavidGarcia-nc7yi Před rokem +2876

    It always hurts my heart how Chuck still tells Jimmy that he defecated through a sunroof letting know that no matter what Jimmy does now, his brother is not gonna see him as worthy of what he does

    • @bluecrypto4640
      @bluecrypto4640 Před rokem +15

      Yea because Jimmy is one bad brother and he is not worthy of an attorney

    • @lkctom2546
      @lkctom2546 Před rokem +68

      Yeah because he could not allow Jimmy to go straight

    • @margarethmichelina5146
      @margarethmichelina5146 Před 11 měsíci +172

      He's never let Jimmy success and even not telling that their mother's last word was "Jimmy" and it makes him hate him more. Even he manipulated Howard to not let Jimmy works at HHM.

    • @tatealderson9843
      @tatealderson9843 Před 10 měsíci +4

      If Chuck knew what Jimmy was doing now for drug cartel he was disowned disowned his brother

    • @BubbyNikko
      @BubbyNikko Před 10 měsíci +96

      Ironically, in the very first episode of the series, when in court Jimmy exclaims "If I were held accountable for everything I did when I was 19... oh boy" or something like that. And that's exactly what Chuck does. Very nice little detail.

  • @benboudreau1221
    @benboudreau1221 Před rokem +847

    The best thing about this is that Bob Odenkirk and Michael Mckean are two comedic actors, yet again in this series delivering some of the best dramatic performances on television

    • @yaqubebased1961
      @yaqubebased1961 Před rokem +45

      Can't wait to see what Vince does with Jim Carrey

    • @SavageJarJar
      @SavageJarJar Před rokem +21

      @@yaqubebased1961 You saw the Huell’s Rules leaks too?

    • @FakestLoogi
      @FakestLoogi Před 11 měsíci +17

      It's an interesting twist, reminds me of how Leslie Nielsen originally did dramatic acting but knocked it out of the park with his Deadpan comedy within the Naked Gun Movies

    • @warzed6220
      @warzed6220 Před 10 měsíci +50

      wasn't bryan cranston a primarily comedy actor too?

    • @gyrozeppeli7296
      @gyrozeppeli7296 Před 9 měsíci +13

      Vince believed that if you can play comedy you can play drama

  • @raceytray3963
    @raceytray3963 Před 2 lety +5270

    Objection: Kim and Jimmy weren’t technically law partners. They just shared a law office.

    • @TheMinskie
      @TheMinskie Před 2 lety +483

      Ye, Kim EXPLICITLY said they would not be law partners when moving into the same office. With the ripping of the mock business card demonstration.

    • @jeongraekim7177
      @jeongraekim7177 Před 2 lety +39

      Amazing fans I love you

    • @sergiogonzalez7598
      @sergiogonzalez7598 Před 2 lety +44

      Sustaineddd

    • @sondosoft4603
      @sondosoft4603 Před 2 lety +9

      True but the point still stands. Kind of splitting hairs.

    • @stonerbland7621
      @stonerbland7621 Před 2 lety +134

      The fact that Jimmy said he did this for Kim makes Kim representing him a conflict of interest regardless of their relationship/shared practice

  • @montecristo1845
    @montecristo1845 Před 2 lety +6580

    It was so satisfying to see the reaction of the three judges when they realized this was a personal matter rather than a professional one.

    • @switchunboxing
      @switchunboxing Před 2 lety +236

      Yeah but legally would that still disregard the fact that this dude broke in and destroyed evidence and admitted to guilt? I guess we will see when I watch the next episode

    • @inkeymilk
      @inkeymilk Před 2 lety +5

      @@switchunboxing sameee

    • @MrMichealHouse
      @MrMichealHouse Před 2 lety +863

      @@switchunboxing 1. The only proof was the tape.
      2. Jimmy's entire defense was that the tape was not valid because of his brothers mental state. "He was so imbalanced that Jimmy would have said anything to calm him down" is the argument.
      3. They spent the entire case trying to argue that Chuck's "electromagnetic hypersensitivity disorder" wasn't real, merely indicative of a much deep mental instability, which culminated in Chuck's outburst.
      4. This casted serious doubt on the validity of the tape, and also did much to excuse Jimmy's other crimes, like the BnE. "Jimmy had been caring for Chuck for a long time, and snapped when Chuck tried to use his "fake" confession against him".

    • @raymonlandry228
      @raymonlandry228 Před rokem +308

      @@MrMichealHouse 5. He avoided being disbarred, but was suspended for a year.

    • @Baronnax
      @Baronnax Před rokem +127

      @@switchunboxing he already did time for the BnE, the bar hearing was to decide if he should also lose his license over the action. Since they more or less established that the tape was created under iffy conditions due to Chuck's shaky mental state, they let him off easy.

  • @psalmyyvan
    @psalmyyvan Před rokem +1645

    About Jimmy's potential battery assault, in an earlier episode of Chuck's first hospitalization, when the Doctor turned on a device, Chuck didn't have any reaction. This means that Jimmy knows for a fact that Chuck doesn't really experience 'pain' when he isn't aware of the presence of an electromagnetic device.
    Is it still a battery then?

    • @dreuvasdevil9395
      @dreuvasdevil9395 Před rokem +16

      what? he wouldn't have planted it if he knew that it would hurt him.

    • @wilexheyndrickx8316
      @wilexheyndrickx8316 Před rokem +347

      @@dreuvasdevil9395 You are completely missing his point.
      Jimmy is trying to prove Chuck's illness isn't real to defend himself. The argument is wether Jimmy commited battery when he let Hule plant the battery in his pocket. If he tried to prove it without actually knowing his disease is real or not he would in theory have commited battery (as it might harm him). However, in an earlier episode a doctor already proved to Jimmy that Chuck's illness isn't real (which he ignored back then) meaning what he did is questionable at best but not illegal. (Since he knew chuck would'nt be harmed, and that doctor could verify that claim)

    • @dreuvasdevil9395
      @dreuvasdevil9395 Před rokem +1

      ​@@wilexheyndrickx8316 Jimmy is a lifelong criminal who hurts everyone around him. Chuck felt a responsibility to protect the world from Jimmy, or at least not abet Jimmy’s efforts. Jimmy conned innocent people out of money through a number of schemes, whether Slippin’ Jimmy or the fake Rolex scam in Cicero or stealing from his own parents. As a lawyer, he immediately did dishonest and unethical things: The billboard scam. The TV ad spot he tricked his firm into buying. Getting himself fired from Davis and Main. He also destroyed Chuck just to get Kim the Mesa Verde account - then broke into Chuck’s house to get the tape of his confession and threatened to burn the place down. Jimmy humiliated Chuck on the stand - going so far as to bring in Chuck’s ex-wife to emotionally discombobulate him and ignite a breakdown - even though it was 100% irrelevant to the case, which was supposed to be focused on Jimmy’s criminal behavior. And then Jimmy got Chuck’s malpractice insurance cancelled so Chuck couldn’t practice anymore, leading to his suicide. Jimmy was a garbage human being who needed to be stopped.
      And what dastardly sin did Chuck commit? He worked behind the scenes to keep this lifelong criminal from behind hired at Chuck’s own firm. Chuck didn’t stop Jimmy from opening his own practice. He just didn’t want him at HHM, and he didn’t want Jimmy to know it was him. That’s it. Oh, and after all that went down, he was mean to Jimmy by saying he didn’t care about him. Can you blame him?
      Chuck absolutely did the right thing: Jimmy was a monster. Chuck just failed.

    • @GPantazis
      @GPantazis Před rokem +9

      @@wilexheyndrickx8316 I do not know what the exact definition of battery is, but I feel maybe he could still argue that Jimmy paid a man to physically bump onto Chuck and plant an item in his pocket without his consent or knowledge. Again, if the definition is vague enough.

    • @adeshkantha7034
      @adeshkantha7034 Před rokem +6

      @@wilexheyndrickx8316 if the doctor admitted what she did won't she be charged with battery

  • @ElectroBOOM
    @ElectroBOOM Před 10 měsíci +1754

    But a battery not powering anything won't radiate any energy. They could have argued that planted battery won't be felt by the guy! I guess the guy didn't know his electronics well...

    • @isaiahwalking
      @isaiahwalking Před 10 měsíci +114

      Yoooo it's electroBOOM!

    • @failtv5442
      @failtv5442 Před 10 měsíci +61

      i thought the same thing

    • @RealBased
      @RealBased Před 10 měsíci +54

      But he put the battery back in the phone and turned it on

    • @fuzzatz7257
      @fuzzatz7257 Před 10 měsíci +463

      That wasn't the point of the battery, that's why the writers even went through the trouble of having Jimmy ask Chuck if he could feel the lights in the court room despite them being turned off, to which Chuck replied "If the current's not flowing, no."
      Even still, though you could argue that hypothetically he wouldn't be able to feel a battery that wasn't powering anything if the illness was real, his reaction to finding it in his pocket proves that at least he believes he should, which is all the matters (See around 16:00 for the "Egg shell skull" doctrine. This reaction was enough to call in to question Chuck's mental health, causing the Prosecutor to say "Even if he was schizophrenic-", which in turn caused Chuck to fall into his chicanery speech, making him seem mentally unwell and revealing his deep resentment of Jimmy. This would make it more believable that Chuck could have made the simple mistake of confusing 1261 and 1216 in his state of mind, and makes it more believable that he would pin it on Jimmy, not because Jimmy had anything to do with it, but rather because Chuck hated him.

    • @KeiKAndLies
      @KeiKAndLies Před 9 měsíci +49

      Objection, battery does leak energy when exposed to the atmosphere.

  • @mcsweatshop
    @mcsweatshop Před 2 lety +11239

    This shows how you can make a compelling, realistic legal scene without flashy cuts or hack writing; you just need four seasons of well-crafted, slow-burning tension and conflict between the main characters. Easy.

    • @azhari7968
      @azhari7968 Před 2 lety +158

      Not easy but, I get your point

    • @ephin3242
      @ephin3242 Před 2 lety +815

      @@azhari7968 that’s the joke.

    • @ephin3242
      @ephin3242 Před 2 lety +627

      @@azhari7968
      *say something extremely complicated and difficult* “easy”
      One of the oldest jokes in the book.

    • @profightcompilations4764
      @profightcompilations4764 Před 2 lety +134

      @@azhari7968 yes it is

    • @jyrlan2596
      @jyrlan2596 Před 2 lety +221

      @@azhari7968 yes it is, don't be salty because you didn't get it

  • @vijaykumarpuri7534
    @vijaykumarpuri7534 Před rokem +9337

    All this set-up by Kim and Jimmy, but ironically Chuck's breaking point came when the prosecutor used the words "Even if Chuck was schizophrenic..." Beautiful writing.

    • @livecarsonreaction
      @livecarsonreaction Před rokem +1555

      Yup. Personal pride is Chuck's hot button. For someone who loved to pay lip service to ethics and morality, Chuck had no problem sabotaging Jimmy's career out of petty insecurity. But the moment someone calls into question his own judgment, intellect, or personal ability, it's guns out.

    • @threenumbnuts
      @threenumbnuts Před rokem +1

      @@livecarsonreaction I mean...
      * Chuck believes (not unreasonably, but possibly falsely) that Jimmy was embezzling from their father's store
      * Jimmy scammed small business owners out of their money with his slippin' scam. Those aren't small payouts, and those guys don't have deep pockets. Chuck knew the Slippin' nickname, so he probably knew where it came from.
      * Jimmy ran a variety of other scams, not all of which have been detailed.
      * Jimmy shat on the occupants of a car out of a personal grudge.
      I don't think the secrecy was the right way to handle it, but Chuck had every right and reason to not hire Jimmy. And not hiring someone isn't the same as sabotaging their career.

    • @nicbentulan
      @nicbentulan Před rokem +118

      Bravo, Vince!

    • @RinRin72769
      @RinRin72769 Před rokem +78

      pravo Beter

    • @cyog2971
      @cyog2971 Před rokem +49

      vrabo nivce

  • @micahclawrence
    @micahclawrence Před rokem +4875

    Now that it’s all done, I think my favorite twist of BCS is that Chuck was unhinged and hated his brother, while Howard was actually a very decent man.
    What a tragedy

    • @CoolGobyFish
      @CoolGobyFish Před rokem +175

      how is this a twist. it clear from the start that Chuck was crazy and bitter.

    • @Msjj502
      @Msjj502 Před rokem +435

      @@CoolGobyFish considering that decision wasn’t made for chucks character until episode 6 that seems unlikely

    • @CoolGobyFish
      @CoolGobyFish Před rokem +63

      @@Msjj502 what? did you really think his "condition" was real? he was set up as a crazy person from the start

    • @micahclawrence
      @micahclawrence Před rokem +432

      @@CoolGobyFish the twist I’m referring to is mainly Chuck being the one who tried to sandbag Jimmy’s career, and Howard actually not being a villain. And although it was clear from the start that something was wrong with Chuck, it was not telegraphed that he despised Jimmy.

    • @CoolGobyFish
      @CoolGobyFish Před rokem +17

      @@micahclawrence oh that. yes. but I feel they dragged Chuck story line for way way too long.

  • @brandonwatts2244
    @brandonwatts2244 Před 11 měsíci +169

    They had a New Mexican Lawyer on staff of the show to fact check and guide the show. There was an episode dedicated to that lawyer as she passed.

    • @yayito1582
      @yayito1582 Před 8 měsíci +14

      This is that episode

    • @VictorRochaFerreira6
      @VictorRochaFerreira6 Před měsícem +4

      @@yayito1582it is not. the episode chicanery is dedicated to the mother of the writer

    • @KasumiRINA
      @KasumiRINA Před měsícem +2

      As opposed to an Old Mexican Lawyer? You don't want your Mexico Attorneys to get aged.

  • @davidci
    @davidci Před 2 lety +4737

    At the end of this episode, there was a dedication to Jane Marzelli Smith, Esq. She was the mother of one of the writers for BCS and she is a lawyer herself. She's been a source of looking into the accuracy and inner workings of the lawyer world in the show and it's poetic that one of the best episodes ever of a lawyer show is dedicated to her.

    • @TonyGonzales
      @TonyGonzales Před 2 lety +198

      Excellent bit of trivia here, thank you.

    • @james2082
      @james2082 Před 2 lety +38

      @@TonyGonzales excellent indeed.

    • @chrisdawson1776
      @chrisdawson1776 Před 2 lety +48

      I’m glad you caught that, Davidci. Very observant. The sacred and the propane.

    • @justinhughees
      @justinhughees Před 2 lety +60

      Gordon Smith’s mother. He has written some of the best episodes on this show and his mother and sister have helped him a lot with writing law related scenes accurately.

    • @scottslotterbeck3796
      @scottslotterbeck3796 Před 2 lety +23

      Obviously a lawyer had to be involved. 'thin-skulled plaintiff' is something you'll never hear outside of law school or the legal profession.

  • @FedorablePenguin
    @FedorablePenguin Před 2 lety +1603

    Objection: you did not criticize Howard for wearing a contrast collar.

    • @Delightfully_Bitchy
      @Delightfully_Bitchy Před 2 lety +129

      What do you have against Hamlingo blue?

    • @coltonbittner
      @coltonbittner Před 2 lety +31

      @@Delightfully_Bitchy hamlindigo? Sheesh

    • @megha9789
      @megha9789 Před 2 lety +61

      @@Delightfully_Bitchy *hamlindingo blue? more like.. hamlindingo blow me* >_

    • @sonicgalaxy9368
      @sonicgalaxy9368 Před 2 lety +5

      Who's Howard?

    • @ioanasingureanu
      @ioanasingureanu Před 2 lety +16

      @@sonicgalaxy9368 he's not that bland and forgettable.

  • @TheMartyredextras
    @TheMartyredextras Před rokem +687

    I think it's particularly fantastic because of the fact that it does push the boundaries of legality because Jimmy himself is known for that. The whole point is that what he does might not be legal, but it's gray enough that he gets away with it. And the fact that he's doing this in a disciplinary hearing, not a trial, gives them an easy excuse for bending the rules.
    The writers clearly knew what they were doing.

    • @KasumiRINA
      @KasumiRINA Před měsícem

      Until the end where they SOMEHOW make Saul responsible to all of crimes HIS CLIENTS MADE, and even accuse him of killing cops and he decides to confess to stuff he didn't do to impress an ex and cringy cellmates.

  • @yashwatal7955
    @yashwatal7955 Před rokem +186

    It took me a while to realize that CURRENT DOESNT EVEN FLOW THROUGH A DISCONNECTED BATTERY! If anything, this really does play into the idea that Chuck's illness was psychological, he thinks that the battery should hurt, so it does, even though it doesn't even follow the rules that he lays out in this episode! (he says that he only feels pain if current is flowing, but current does not flow through disconnected phone batteries, it would only do so after completing the circuit inside the phone when connected.) Bravo Vince!

    • @amasirat
      @amasirat Před 2 měsíci +1

      Which could mean that the Battery charge that Legaleagle talked about is less substantial since it could be argued that the person had no reason to think a battery that has no current flow would hurt him. Yeah, kind of perfect.

    • @greyyy.tttmmmccc
      @greyyy.tttmmmccc Před 2 měsíci

      hes literally the placebo effect lmao

    • @amasirat
      @amasirat Před 2 měsíci

      @@greyyy.tttmmmccc nocebo actually.

    • @thefourshowflip
      @thefourshowflip Před 2 měsíci +2

      That…and that current always exists in AC circuits that are connected to a source; turning off a light bulb does not change the fact that electricity is flowing in every line connected to the main at 60Hz …or that the overwhelmingly largest source of electromagnetic radiation is the sun… for all the good legal research, they clearly did not consult a physics advisor 😅

    • @amasirat
      @amasirat Před 2 měsíci +4

      ​@@thefourshowflip That's the point. It's not supposed to be a real condition. It's when he THINKS he's being exposed to electromagnetism and he's no physicist.

  • @dljennings
    @dljennings Před 2 lety +3002

    I love that Huel could have been charged with battery for dropping a charged battery. It’s poetic

    • @brilliant13675
      @brilliant13675 Před 2 lety +9

      You can't be charged for a tort

    • @dothething2892
      @dothething2892 Před rokem +9

      @@brilliant13675 battery isn’t tortious
      Nvm American laws are weird? Some criminal offences are actually torts in America

    • @fanciopantsio8645
      @fanciopantsio8645 Před rokem +15

      @@dothething2892 It can be a crime and a tort at the same time. Crime is when the state takes legal action for committing an offense against civil society. A tort is when the victim takes legal action for damages. It's a little more complex than that obviously, but that's the gist. Maybe you're from a country with civil law instead of common law. Is it different there?

    • @PierreRipplinger
      @PierreRipplinger Před rokem +5

      Charged with battery with a charged battery.

    • @brilliant13675
      @brilliant13675 Před rokem +1

      @@dothething2892 Battery is def a tort, can't speak for your jurisdiction but I can for mine. Assault is a crime, but assault is also seperatley a tort.
      The tort of assault is threatening someone (so the crime of uttering threats), and the crime of assault is the same as the tort of battery.
      Absolute mess.

  • @TeamSukiyo
    @TeamSukiyo Před 2 lety +6270

    I still can’t believe Michael McKean didn’t receive an Emmy nomination for this episode.

    • @Delightfully_Bitchy
      @Delightfully_Bitchy Před 2 lety +48

      I didn't know that. Neither can I.

    • @andmicbro1
      @andmicbro1 Před 2 lety +252

      Better Call Saul should win an the Emmies!

    • @johnjones4426
      @johnjones4426 Před 2 lety +291

      What a sick joke!

    • @Delightfully_Bitchy
      @Delightfully_Bitchy Před 2 lety +51

      @@johnjones4426 "As much as I like cruel sick jokes, I'm afraid this is serious."

    • @DeadSezSo
      @DeadSezSo Před 2 lety +75

      He was brilliant throughout the whole series

  • @alphabulblax1649
    @alphabulblax1649 Před rokem +533

    I love how eager he was to start talking after every clip. You can really tell he's wanted to talk about this episode for a LONG time.

  • @Dreadnaught1985
    @Dreadnaught1985 Před rokem +416

    The reveal was amazing. But yeah, it could set a dangerous precedent for how lawyers can treat a witness. Could you imagine a lawyer doubted a witness has a peanut allergy and so tricked them into trying something made with peanut oil?

    • @alexsoto9285
      @alexsoto9285 Před rokem

      Not really, since 1) it’s his brother & 2) it was a mental Illness so he knew the plan would work. It was risky but it did it’s purpose. Would be much more risky if those variables weren’t there

    • @heyitsmushu7393
      @heyitsmushu7393 Před rokem +147

      The difference is revealed in I believe Season 1, where a doctor flips on the switch in chucks bed while hes in the hospital, and its proven that unless he knows it is there it doesnt affect him: proving its not a real medical condition. Jimmy already knows full well.

    • @Dreadnaught1985
      @Dreadnaught1985 Před rokem +52

      @@heyitsmushu7393 I get that, but he did not establish that with the panel. So the fact that they are judging to see if Jimmy had behaved in an unethical manner. And this has the appearance of unethical behaviour when not informed of the totality of the evidence.

    • @glamglam8347
      @glamglam8347 Před rokem

      the difference is that jimmy knew and the witness still gets a physical reaction from peanut butter regardless of them knowing or not which makes it direr than chucks sitatution. like can you imagine someone saying they had a peanut allergy then you feed it to them and they don't react AT ALL and then they start freaking out hours after you tell them? it looks a lot more like a crazy person faking an allergy than anything. not saying you don't have a point but i think jimmy was trying to distract others with this "my brother is a crazy person who makes up a fake diseases" shtick and it worked

    • @arshiaaghaei
      @arshiaaghaei Před rokem

      The difference between a peanaut allergy and EHS is that EHS is a mental disorder disguised as an allergy.
      You can detect an allergy rather easier.

  • @coreyredmon5611
    @coreyredmon5611 Před 2 lety +1952

    You didn’t comment on my favorite argument that Jimmy made: if Charles can exaggerate and lie about his illness to garner Jimmy’s sympathy to induce a confession on a hidden tape, Jimmy can give a false confession just to lift Charles’ spirits.

    • @coreyredmon5611
      @coreyredmon5611 Před 2 lety +61

      I guess that part is on Nebula.

    • @Erikaaaaaaaaaaaaa
      @Erikaaaaaaaaaaaaa Před 2 lety +48

      @@coreyredmon5611 It actually isn’t!

    • @andrewhunter2520
      @andrewhunter2520 Před 2 lety +41

      damn, that's a cool argument

    • @lexx5313
      @lexx5313 Před 2 lety +20

      Exactly what I was looking for in this video! That exact interchange!

    • @davuhn2
      @davuhn2 Před 2 lety +6

      Yes that’s the whole reason I’m watching this.... now I Kinda don’t wanna finish lol

  • @christopherramsey7027
    @christopherramsey7027 Před 2 lety +3115

    22:41 A fully charged battery wouldn't actually have any current flowing through it unless it was hooked up a circuit (something that the electricity could flow through, perhaps something that uses electricity).
    But clearly, Chuck doesn't know this (and neither does Jimmy). And since the condition is entirely psychological, Chuck believes he felt something here anyway.

    • @DLites151
      @DLites151 Před 2 lety +240

      Thank you! Lawyers don't understand Physics

    • @justanoman6497
      @justanoman6497 Před 2 lety +108

      Exactly what I was about to say, but checked comments to be sure.
      The simplest circuit would be a battery, a wire and a resistor--both so that it doesn't get too hot and make it last longer.

    • @carterplasek498
      @carterplasek498 Před 2 lety +181

      I was noticing this, I am rather surprised that Chuck didn't know this, in earlier episodes he references doing a lot of research, and it seems he would know such a relatively simple fact. Especially since he referenced current specifically earlier with the exit sign.

    • @sludgerat666
      @sludgerat666 Před 2 lety +65

      @@carterplasek498 He was under duress and probably didn't realize from the reveal

    • @TennyConductor
      @TennyConductor Před 2 lety +319

      @@carterplasek498 He repeatedly shows ignorance to the subject in spite of claiming to know so much about it. For instance, he acts like his house blocks everything out, but those walls wouldn't do anything to "protect" him from the transformer he's always scared of. And that's just one example.

  • @lukaskubik4698
    @lukaskubik4698 Před rokem +167

    The fact that Huel planting a battery on Chuck could be considered a battery is perfect.

  • @cryzz0n
    @cryzz0n Před rokem +354

    Honestly, I'm still not convinced that Jimmy even really intended to get that evidence admitted. I think he just wanted to provoke a response from Chuck that would essentially prove his case.

    • @matejkufa8652
      @matejkufa8652 Před rokem +8

      Can we talk about that profile picture tho

    • @freelanceminion7396
      @freelanceminion7396 Před 4 měsíci +3

      Exactly, my reading was that he was trying to get Chuck to impeach himself.

  • @mochynddu723
    @mochynddu723 Před 2 lety +1342

    It may not have been assault but it definitely was battery.

    • @georgelionon9050
      @georgelionon9050 Před 2 lety +41

      It was indeed a battery he planted!

    • @davidheagneyjr6181
      @davidheagneyjr6181 Před 2 lety +41

      A battery battery

    • @channingdeadnight
      @channingdeadnight Před 2 lety +24

      A battery doesn't draw current anyways. It should bother him as much as a brick would whether his disease is real or not.

    • @Psianth
      @Psianth Před 2 lety +41

      It was a li-ion battery, so it was actually also 'a salt'

    • @brandonmorgan795
      @brandonmorgan795 Před 2 lety +13

      @@Psianth yay, science jokes!

  • @StarAZ
    @StarAZ Před 2 lety +2324

    Context: a doctor suspected that the hypersensitivity wasn’t real. She confirmed her suspicion by turning on a medical device without telling Chuck and Chuck had no reaction. Jimmy was there when it happened. Worst case he could get that doctor to testify that Chuck's condition was entirely in his head.
    EDIT: fixed typos

    • @andrewmckee6580
      @andrewmckee6580 Před rokem

      The doctor would not be able to testify. HIPPA would prevent that. Unless Chuck agreed to have the doctor disclose that information she wouldnt be able to.

    • @StarAZ
      @StarAZ Před rokem +66

      @@andrewmckee6580 jimmy was there. Can they ask the doctor if she flipped the switch?

    • @teamofwinter8128
      @teamofwinter8128 Před rokem +93

      Excatly but wouldn't the doctor be taking the offense instead of Jimmy?
      Also not to mention that the doctor, jimmy and wexler witnessed it

    • @captainbritain7379
      @captainbritain7379 Před rokem +51

      Nonetheless, his psychological reaction is a real, predictable harm.

    • @midn8588
      @midn8588 Před rokem +33

      @@StarAZ probably runs afoul of HIPAA, plus in a hospital with tons of patients, she might not remember him.

  • @concernedspectator
    @concernedspectator Před rokem +173

    The best part is that Jimmy characteristically breaks the rules and that's also the context for this hearing. That mix of grey, immoral and even outright illegal conduct is all part of the story, and the way this chicanery blurs the boundary just adds to this show's excellence.

  • @TV4Fun2
    @TV4Fun2 Před rokem +61

    I think Howard must've known or at least suspected that Chuck's condition was psychogenic. He tried to talk him out of testifying because he was worried Jimmy would arrange a demonstration exactly like he did. Chuck on the other hand was absolutely convinced his condition was real, that he was completely right in everything, and that there was nothing Jimmy could do to undermine his credibility in court. Obviously we saw how that went.

  • @unclecreepy4185
    @unclecreepy4185 Před 2 lety +1658

    It’s called a Chicago Sunroof. It’s a real thing. Jimmy didn’t make it up and he wasn’t the first to do it. But hey, the guy wanted some soft serve and Jimmy gave him some soft serve.

    • @illestvillain1971
      @illestvillain1971 Před 2 lety +66

      Jesus the last line made me laugh so hard when he rambles to seniors about it bahaha

    • @ericwalstrand3512
      @ericwalstrand3512 Před 2 lety +19

      At least it wasn't a Squat Cobbler...

    • @mustardtitsthemurdermaster3486
      @mustardtitsthemurdermaster3486 Před 2 lety +2

      I just wanna add that, yes, the guy deserved some soft serve, but his kids didn't. Ooofff

    • @MkeKen67
      @MkeKen67 Před 2 lety +3

      @@ericwalstrand3512 - On the other hand, there's no fecal matter involved in Squat Cobbler.

  • @Caesar512
    @Caesar512 Před 2 lety +660

    LE: "I have a confession to make"
    Me: "Wait, no, seek counsel before doing that"

    • @ziggystardog
      @ziggystardog Před 2 lety +38

      LE: Overruled. I'm acting as my own counsel
      Not Abraham Lincoln: A man who represents himself, has a fool for a client.

    • @gjeanf2005
      @gjeanf2005 Před 2 lety +8

      It’s counsel.

    • @Caesar512
      @Caesar512 Před 2 lety +3

      Sure, fixed.

    • @blofeld39
      @blofeld39 Před 2 lety +2

      @@ziggystardog Gomez Addams: As GOD is my witness, I AM THAT FOOL!!!

  • @xdanbo1859
    @xdanbo1859 Před 10 měsíci +33

    12:35 - Everybody back in Coushatta, Louisiana loves Huell. I wrote a letter to the court telling them what a great man Huell is.

  • @WoodApe100
    @WoodApe100 Před rokem +212

    It's always tricky when a witness is vulnerable to coming unglued.
    Chuck was very blind to take the stand. Howard knew that Jimmy knows Chucks buttons and can press them.
    Chuck has several blind spots and one of them is his "holier than thou" romantic love for the law. It's obsessive and self aggrandizing since Chuck places such a high value on himself that he is a highly respected lawyer.
    This is great acting and great character trait...it rings true in several scenes.
    Chucks "illness" is something he uses to control and get people to defer and consider him...always. These people are exhausting. Howard plays the game and has everyone turn everything off and going to these extremes before Chuck rolls up in a limo for a meeting. This makes Chuck feel important and powerful.
    Chuck believes his condition is real because it works so well for him! He gets attention and it gives him an out and a pass anytime he wants one. It's a bit Munchausen in a way. Yet Chuck seems to avoid medical diagnosis because it confronts his control game.

    • @RustedBuddy5192
      @RustedBuddy5192 Před 11 měsíci +26

      Chuck after reading that the Earth has its own electromagnetic field that no one can get away from:
      AGGGHHHHHGGHH!

    • @JohnDemetriou
      @JohnDemetriou Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@deanjustdean7818 Isn't Agoraphobia related to crowds and other people?

    • @blokvader8283
      @blokvader8283 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@JohnDemetriou Yeah I was gonna say, Chuck isn't afraid of crouds or other people, he clearly tells his doctor "When I'm cured I want to host a huge party at my house, people spilling out into the street, I want to be surrounded by friends"

    • @blokvader8283
      @blokvader8283 Před 8 měsíci +5

      I don't think he's using his illness as a way of power, in my eyes his "condition" is the physical manifestation of his feelings towards Jimmy.
      Whenever he feels Jimmy is getting worse and slipping back into the... "Slipping" role, he starts to feel worse.
      When he and Jimmy were working together on the Sand Piper case, Chuck walked outside to get things out of the car, not even realizing he was surrounded by electricity, it was like he forgot he had a condition.
      Alternatively, when he was suspecting Jimmy of forging documents, bribery, and other things for Mesa Verde, he straight up passed out in the middle of the printer shop.

    • @MadMax-ii8gq
      @MadMax-ii8gq Před 7 měsíci +2

      I never thought of it that way, that’s interesting.

  • @sammiller6631
    @sammiller6631 Před 2 lety +1959

    His excitement is palpable. He's like a kid in a candy store. CZcamsrs tend to project high energy, but you don't often see this level of unbridled joy.

    • @Xaintrix
      @Xaintrix Před 2 lety +104

      That’s why I’m so glad he reviewed more Saul. The genuine joy is infectious.

    • @cassandrapearsall4273
      @cassandrapearsall4273 Před 2 lety +89

      He's like a 7 year old talking about dinosaurs, it's just an adorable level of excitement.

    • @FunBoysGaming
      @FunBoysGaming Před 2 lety +11

      He‘s an attorney. He is a master of deception

    • @Whippee
      @Whippee Před 2 lety +4

      id rather see a genuine reaction than an ingenuine reaction lol

    • @Whippee
      @Whippee Před 2 lety

      @@FunBoysGaming ye

  • @clashsupreme9394
    @clashsupreme9394 Před 2 lety +3110

    finally more better call saul gets lawyered!

    • @cormalan9894
      @cormalan9894 Před 2 lety +15

      Yeah I was waiting for this

    • @conniethesconnie
      @conniethesconnie Před 2 lety +62

      He should have done the entire series. Every episode had moments to dissect. Add in Vince Gilligan's character creation skills, plot development, and attention to detail and there is no shortage of well crafted drama and easter eggs to comment on.

    • @f72638
      @f72638 Před 2 lety +7

      fr been waiting for too long

    • @crsmith6226
      @crsmith6226 Před 2 lety +6

      Only took how many years? XD

    • @ketanhein
      @ketanhein Před 2 lety +4

      I was just about to say that.

  • @ZigbertD
    @ZigbertD Před rokem +38

    The point of the battery via battery wasn't so much to prove Chuck's ailment wasn't real as to goad him into revealing how much hostility and animosity he harbored towards Jimmy, puncturing his whole "I love my brother, but my duty to the law compels me to act" line. I guess the purpose was not to prevent Jimmy from being punished but to show that there were mitigating circumstances (Chuck is a mean and vindictive SOB) to hopefully lessen his punishment. Which worked, since he was only suspended instead of disbarred.

  • @Tekdruid
    @Tekdruid Před rokem +186

    What I would have built Jimmy's defence around is the fact that the things said on that tape were solely for the benefit of calming down Chuck, who was clearly acting in a very agitated and irrational manner at the time, and not necessarily true. If Chuck had accused Jimmy of assassinating Abraham Lincoln under those circumstances, he would probably have admitted to that too just to humour his brother and stop him from acting against his own best interests.

    • @sitrinist2842
      @sitrinist2842 Před rokem +4

      why did he break in and destroy the tape then

    • @Tekdruid
      @Tekdruid Před rokem +62

      @@sitrinist2842 He knew it could be interpret as a legitimate confession if presented out of context.

    • @replayarchive8758
      @replayarchive8758 Před rokem +39

      almost like that’s what they did in the show

    • @amineessouli965
      @amineessouli965 Před rokem +6

      @Sitrinist "he has been caring for his brother for so long. And for him to find out he is using the "fake" recording against him made him snap"

  • @majorramsey3k
    @majorramsey3k Před 2 lety +8375

    From an electrical perspective: Chuck should have argued that he didn't feel the battery since the current wouldn't flow unless connected to a load.

    • @wonderguardstalker
      @wonderguardstalker Před 2 lety +57

      That’s how you know he’s truly mentally ill. He couldn’t even pretend to be okay with something that by his own definition of his illness earlier in the scene shouldn’t bother him.

    • @NoirTheSable
      @NoirTheSable Před 2 lety +3007

      Actually (and Mr. Stone/LegalEagle partially brings this up in the vid, calling it "laying the foundation"), Jimmy would counter that by going back to the question he asked moments earlier.
      JIMMY: "Got it, got it. So if I had a small battery, say, from a watch or something, and I got it close to you -- close to your skin, you'd know?"
      CHUCK: "I would feel it, yes."

    • @matthewfiedler2357
      @matthewfiedler2357 Před 2 lety +907

      @@NoirTheSable As a registered electrical engineer I was just thinking this, he should have had the battery left in with the phone itself. If Chuck was smart enough to know the inverse square law, he should have been smart enough to know this. Either way, this scene is still brilliant!

    • @_Davepocalypse
      @_Davepocalypse Před 2 lety +355

      Internal resistance though, no? Batteries do by themselves discharge over time.

    • @matthewfiedler2357
      @matthewfiedler2357 Před 2 lety +191

      @@_Davepocalypse Since I work primarily with A/C current I am not as familiar with DC current in a battery, but to my knowledge, you still need current flow to produce a significant amount of internal resistance. Otherwise the internal resistance we are talking about would be quite minimal.

  • @mrodriguez16ks
    @mrodriguez16ks Před 2 lety +2003

    Saul's plan wasn't to prove himself innocent it was to entirely discredit his brother who was well respected lawyer in New Mexico (which is why so many special precautions and certain amount of leeway was granted.)

    • @grimmoire5952
      @grimmoire5952 Před 2 lety +210

      That's the right analysis.
      He kept pushing evidence and ridiculing him and his sickness infront of court until Chuck snapped and started screaming and ranting nonsense.
      That was the point where all credibility of Chuck and his prestigious position as the best lawyer went down the drain.
      Chuck's evidence and testimony was therefore considered unreasonable since Jimmy proved that Chuck is an unreliable witness with mental health problems.

    • @yourinnerlawyer4035
      @yourinnerlawyer4035 Před 2 lety +2

      Yup. ???

    • @melissas4874
      @melissas4874 Před 2 lety +71

      If I were at this hearing, Chuck would be already be sus from his claim of being allergic to electricity.

    • @Oll1000
      @Oll1000 Před 2 lety

      @@melissas4874 Why would he be suspended? It's not like he would endanger anyone present or anything.

    • @jameswashere187
      @jameswashere187 Před 2 lety +59

      @@Oll1000 I think they meant suspicious

  • @Duffman19370
    @Duffman19370 Před 5 měsíci +18

    BB and BCS were written so well. It always felt like i was watching more of a show based on real events.

  • @Papa_Waffles
    @Papa_Waffles Před rokem +43

    The grayness of how James did all this was beautiful, it makes it so that when the ambiguous happens he can steer the morality of it to his favor use to the results against his brother.

  • @andreasberger4
    @andreasberger4 Před 2 lety +2855

    The fact that Jimmy made a whole charade with planting evidence during a trial makes the whole document thing look more plausable

    • @BhlackBishop
      @BhlackBishop Před rokem +193

      lol stuff you only realize when you get home. Wait a minute 😂

    • @zaphodbreeblebrox9542
      @zaphodbreeblebrox9542 Před rokem +72

      Would he have to say in court how the battery got there? It was there. Wouldn't it be better to Not say anything? Let them speculate, but don't confess.

    • @awesome7732
      @awesome7732 Před rokem +133

      @@zaphodbreeblebrox9542 how would he have known the battery was there if he didn't put it there? Does Jimmy have x-ray vision? Would that x-ray vision cause Chuck's disease to flare up?

    • @leomunroe9348
      @leomunroe9348 Před rokem +41

      Hitchcock called those "cold chicken" moments: when you're pawing about in the fridge after a show and...waitaminute!

    • @betanixd5083
      @betanixd5083 Před rokem +13

      yea but kim said that they aren't denying jimmys wrongdoing

  • @drpollo6001
    @drpollo6001 Před 2 lety +2451

    I don't care if the episode is accurate or not, it's still one of the most brilliantly written episodes in TV history.

  • @McBeefenstein
    @McBeefenstein Před rokem +94

    I started rewatching the show to kill the time while waiting for the rest of the final season to came out, and something occurred to me regarding the establishment of this hearing in the show. Ernesto got fired for telling Kim about the tape, who then forwarded it to Jimmy. Chuck told Ernie that the tape was related to a case that was in the works, but at that moment there wasn't any case. Could Ernie have sued HHM for some form of entrapment or whatever? Chuck set the recorder to play the tape once there were new batteries in it and explicitly requested that Ernesto put the new batteries into the recorder so that the chain of events would go the way that they ended up going.
    I just feel that Ernie got a bad deal from all of this, and we really never get a follow up to his side of the story which I find to be a bit sad as he's one of the first people to well and truly get burnt for his loyalty to Jimmy.

    • @humblesparrow
      @humblesparrow Před 6 měsíci +3

      I agree. Kim and Jimmy should have hired him. Not that the job would have lasted long, but still.

    • @luichinplaystation610
      @luichinplaystation610 Před 3 měsíci

      Ernie became Gus Fring

  • @theinternetlawyer7126
    @theinternetlawyer7126 Před 9 měsíci +21

    Jimmy being charged with battery for hiring someone to plant a charged battery in chuck’s pocket is insane

  • @bdautch20
    @bdautch20 Před 2 lety +645

    Having Rebecca there so Chuck would lose his job AND his chance with his ex was a masterstroke. Chuck was as good as dead when this unfolded in Rebecca's presence.

    • @ekathe85
      @ekathe85 Před 2 lety +191

      Crazy thing is he lost his chance with Rebecca not directly because of his illness, but more because he was too stubborn to admit the possibility that it could be psychological. Remember when he slaps the cellphone off her hand? Then after this episode, she turned out to be quite supportive about him having a loose screw, even went to see him. He wouldn't open the door.

    • @georgelionon9050
      @georgelionon9050 Před 2 lety +66

      @@ekathe85 Indeed, but that was what the character Jimmy was like. He was very proud of his mental abilities. Man it made him partner of his own big law company.. He was just way too proud to admit even to himself he might have a screw lose. Rebecca wouldn't have mined. Opening up to her could have even saved their marriage.
      Also one thing, he likely didn't get his mental condition due to the breakup as suggested by Jimmy here. It may have gotten for him treating his brother badly (and as shown they were once much closer to each other than normally brothers are). He didn't want to employ him as a lawyer in his company, but didn't have the balls to tell him to the face and sent Victor as bad front face to take the blame for his decisions.
      Overall this is all just great writing. The character of Chuck makes so much sense and also the dilemma he was forced in, also beside that Chuck being actually a mean person, he was in fact right about Jimmy. Everything he claims is actually true.

    • @shingouki1988
      @shingouki1988 Před 2 lety +87

      @@georgelionon9050 I think what's even more interesting is the fact that while Chuck turned out to be right about Jimmy, it was kind of a self-fulfilling prophecy with the way Chuck treated him. Now I'm not saying that there is no blame to put on Jimmy; he is an adult after all, who can make his own decisions. But having an older brother who constantly put you down, even after trying to change for the better, definitely helped push him to be what his brother wanted him to be.
      This show is so fantastic, and I was skeptical about it when it was first announced after the amazing Breaking Bad, as I thought there was no way they would be able to match that quality. But they somehow managed it.

    • @georgelionon9050
      @georgelionon9050 Před 2 lety +11

      @@shingouki1988 I'm not sure I follow, take the billboard thing for example, this was Jimmy just being Slippy Jimmy again, not in any way created by Chuck. (It was in fact an important issue, as Jimmy wanted to hide it from him, and he went out to get the newspaper just to get his suspicion confirmed that Jimmy got back to his old ways).
      I don't think Chuck = bad, Jimmy = good, is as easy here. Chuck may have had very good reasons not to trust Jimmy, he should have told him into the face tough.

    • @ariapaydari6331
      @ariapaydari6331 Před 2 lety +62

      @@georgelionon9050 Chuck explicitly prevented Jimmy from getting a job at HHM and he forced Howard to take the blame for that instead. If he hadn't done that Jimmy would have become a legit lawyer, instead he was forced to rely on his schemes to succeed. Chuck hated Jimmy cause he was more likeable (see the flashbacks where their mom dies, or where Jimmy gets Rebecca to laugh at his jokes). That doesn't excuse Jimmy's actions, but Chuck was the one who finally pushed him into becoming Saul.

  • @hoodiegal
    @hoodiegal Před 2 lety +583

    So if I understand this correctly, Huell managed to *literally* commit battery.

    • @seanA416
      @seanA416 Před 2 lety +11

      And I can't imagine secretly planting property on someone is legal.

    • @Justin-tp1mx
      @Justin-tp1mx Před 2 lety +14

      @@seanA416 you can give someone whatever you want, also a battery doesn't have electricity, it only has the ability to create electricity when plugged in. so it would never have hurt the guy anyway

    • @seanA416
      @seanA416 Před 2 lety +7

      @@Justin-tp1mx right but it was "offensive" in the sense he knew his brother had or believed he had this rare condition

    • @johnp1277
      @johnp1277 Před 2 lety +3

      commited to plant a battery , yes....

    • @justinroberts3612
      @justinroberts3612 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Justin-tp1mx I wonder, can you give someone something if they do not consent to receiving it?

  • @angeloskoulas3988
    @angeloskoulas3988 Před rokem +16

    11:55 At the time, Jimmy and Kim aren't law partners, they are two separate solo practitioners sharing expenses by renting the same office, employing the same receptionist etc.

  • @Questionable_Content
    @Questionable_Content Před rokem +23

    The realization that Huell committed battery with a battery is one of the best things ever

  • @MurderMostFowl
    @MurderMostFowl Před 2 lety +1928

    Better Call Saul is one of the most slow burning, wonderful show I've ever seen. It took me awhile to get into it, but it's just genius. I actually enjoy it more than Breaking Bad. ( and I loved that show! )

    • @romeolivingston84
      @romeolivingston84 Před 2 lety +65

      Probably my favorite show, season 6 gonna go crazy 😳

    • @michellemerriman7940
      @michellemerriman7940 Před 2 lety +117

      I love BrBa but BCS is on another level. I personally think it's kind of a happy side effect of doing a prequel to a HIGHLY successful program - they cut their teeth and honed this particular "BrBa Style" over 6ish years on the original and then just got to then expand on an already tight, perfectly written story. It's like they took all the amazing lessons they learned over five seasons on BrBa and then just turned it up to eleven for BCS. The photography, the composition (the directors for this show have some of the most stunning single shots in some of the most mundane places, it's crazy), the writing and GOD. The acting! *chef's kiss* How has Rhea Seehorn not won an emmy? Seriously. Season 5 made me want to rip my hair out and I am absolutely dying for season 6.

    • @kevingreene6624
      @kevingreene6624 Před 2 lety +57

      @@michellemerriman7940 Rhea Seehorn hasn't even been nominated. As Chuck would say, "what a sick joke."

    • @toooydoeur
      @toooydoeur Před 2 lety +3

      Great show you breaking bad is still better

    • @toooydoeur
      @toooydoeur Před 2 lety

      @@kevingreene6624 doesn't really change what I said

  • @leeskinner9627
    @leeskinner9627 Před 2 lety +1451

    Never realized that "battery" was a double entendre until now. Damn, this show is smart.

    • @MrBlodhund
      @MrBlodhund Před 2 lety +1

      Can you explain?

    • @leeskinner9627
      @leeskinner9627 Před 2 lety +20

      @@MrBlodhund look up the definition of battery.

    • @wanderingwonder111
      @wanderingwonder111 Před 2 lety +32

      @@MrBlodhund battery the criminal act/tort, and the litteral cellphone battery

    • @ClarkHathaway3238
      @ClarkHathaway3238 Před 2 lety +4

      @@MrBlodhund You should watch the video

    • @bluestormcloud791
      @bluestormcloud791 Před 2 lety +3

      If only a salt shaker had somehow been written into the script.

  • @mohitberi8355
    @mohitberi8355 Před rokem +25

    Jimmy made chuck get in the witness box when he scared him with the lines "you will get sick and no one will be there to help you" Chuck really wanted to keep the relationship with Jimmy solid as he feared that Jimmy might be telling the truth

  • @CinnamonFudge2229
    @CinnamonFudge2229 Před rokem +34

    the attention to detail and accuracy in Better Call Saul is incredible, and it still doesn't make the watching experience boring, hell, it makes watching the series that much better

  • @eandvwiglegames1030
    @eandvwiglegames1030 Před 2 lety +877

    “He was deceived by a lie, we all were.”
    -Anyone who watched the apology video

  • @TheAlps36
    @TheAlps36 Před 2 lety +655

    Is it just me or is LegalEagle almost jumping out of his chair while reviewing this episode?

    • @annaeverette8960
      @annaeverette8960 Před 2 lety +67

      Which is why he should do more Better Call Saul 🙌

    • @realleon2328
      @realleon2328 Před 2 lety +14

      Who wouldn't with this episode of BCS though?

    • @Rubiecat
      @Rubiecat Před 2 lety +12

      this episode just does that to people tbh

    • @andredulac4456
      @andredulac4456 Před 2 lety +1

      I think he wants to try that trick during his next trial :p

    • @ourcorrectopinions6824
      @ourcorrectopinions6824 Před 2 lety +7

      Not “almost”. He’s a giddy schoolgirl over this one and I love it.

  • @HarryBalzak
    @HarryBalzak Před rokem +11

    Notice Huell looks back at Chuck after planting the battery. I always imagine Jimmy asked him to watch to see if Chuck showed any sign of feeling the electricity he is supposedly so allergic to.

  • @akariakamine4095
    @akariakamine4095 Před 5 měsíci +8

    Fun fact: I was in a Mock Trial class in my freshman year of high school and we competed in the official courthouses in downtown abq, so there's a high chance I- or one of my classmates- competed in a courtroom near the one they filmed in for this episode :)

  • @midnightwolfwarrior
    @midnightwolfwarrior Před 2 lety +323

    I love watching our lawyer get all giddy and flappy hands about something. It's great to see him excited

    • @tealmer3528
      @tealmer3528 Před 2 lety +9

      He's not "our lawyer." He's an entertainer here who also is a lawyer, outside of this. Note the disclaimer, this is not legal advice and does not constitute an attorney-client relationship.

    • @Hamletonium
      @Hamletonium Před 2 lety +31

      @@tealmer3528 I think they get that, fam

    • @Kefka.
      @Kefka. Před 2 lety +2

      I get flappy hands about stuff but never heard/read it described before.

    • @midnightwolfwarrior
      @midnightwolfwarrior Před 2 lety +6

      @@tealmer3528 mate, it was late and I couldn't place his name. Ease off, yeah?

  • @thejungwookim
    @thejungwookim Před 2 lety +472

    Planting a battery to someone with Electosensitivity is considered Battery...
    Well played DJ 🔋🔋

    • @angc214
      @angc214 Před 2 lety +1

      I heard a joke on Steve Lehto's channel. "Energizer bunny arrested. Charged with battery."

    • @tardvandecluntproductions1278
      @tardvandecluntproductions1278 Před 2 lety +5

      Does a unconnected battery do anything to anyone like that though? (ignoring the question if the condition even exists)
      It doesn't have a magnetic field without the electricity flowing around

    • @thefourshowflip
      @thefourshowflip Před 2 lety +4

      @@tardvandecluntproductions1278
      No, an isolated battery is nothing but a voltage source; no current is flowing anywhere because the circuit is not closed, therefore no pathway for the current to travel along. The exception would be in the case where the voltage source is robust enough (can generate sufficient voltage) to essentially short the terminals of the battery. For our atmosphere, breakdown voltage of air is on the order of several kilovolts per centimeter, and we just don’t have batteries that are small enough to fit in a coat pocket without being noticed and also capable of supplying tens of kilovolts of potential.
      I’m not sure what the mechanism behind the alleged condition is (does he have an effect by being in the presence of magnetic fields due to a current? Is he likewise affected by permanent magnets? Is it the electric field? If so, then the batter would still generate an electric field since there exists a charge separation within batteries, and therefore an electric field likewise exists).

    • @thejungwookim
      @thejungwookim Před 2 lety +5

      @@thefourshowflip and thus, the debate over whether the battery should have done anything was started (when the episode came out)
      Though again, the disease is psychological so it doesn't matter

    • @geraldgrenier8132
      @geraldgrenier8132 Před 2 lety +5

      @@thejungwookim And the whitness testified their understanding is the battery is detectable

  • @Ahiru77
    @Ahiru77 Před rokem +46

    When the writers need to write for Kim: "That's inaccurate for this trial", "actually she shouldn't have been representing Jimmy at all", "She doesn't properly object Chuck's testimony, what a pity".....
    When the writers write against Kim: "OMG that's dead on accurate, actually this has never been done this right on T.V. ever!! Great job!!"
    Do the writers just hate Kim Wexler? 😅

    • @ronniejdio9411
      @ronniejdio9411 Před rokem +10

      Kim can't win the exchange. Jimmy has too. The show isn't better call Kim

  • @hansuketakahashi0009
    @hansuketakahashi0009 Před rokem +20

    Alternative title: "Lawyer watching a lawyer defending a lawyer who was sued by a lawyer while watching a testimony of a lawyer."

  • @RDMacQ
    @RDMacQ Před 2 lety +689

    The interesting thing- and part of the point of Jimmy's character- is that he *isn't* supposed to be doing stuff like this in court. He's basically bringing Perry Mason like tactics into a court of law to get the result that he wants. And a good chunk of the series is revealing how that clashes with actual, real lawyers who follow the rules.

    • @joshevans3421
      @joshevans3421 Před 2 lety +57

      Because let's be honest how interesting could a show really be where real normal lawyers do real normal lawyer stuff in a real normal court

    • @michellemerriman7940
      @michellemerriman7940 Před 2 lety +23

      What makes you say Jimmy isn't a real lawyer? His degree and his bar acceptance are legit - he's a lawyer. Your last sentence sounds like something that would've been written for Chuck, hah.

    • @xavmarz755
      @xavmarz755 Před 2 lety +39

      @@michellemerriman7940 that's just sementics, of course he's a real lawyer but in the context of his comment you can understand that he's using ''real lawyer'' as in an average lawyer or the image we have of a lawyer.

    • @esthersmith3056
      @esthersmith3056 Před 2 lety +23

      @@xavmarz755 It's not "just semantics" though, the point is about the disconnect between "the image we have of a lawyer" and "the infinite set of people who can literally be a lawyer". Jimmy is constantly frustrated by people who look down on him -- who attribute a high social status to "real lawyers" but do not give him that same respect -- because he doesn't fit the average person's idea of what a lawyer ought be. He doesn't clash with "actual, real lawyers", he clashes with snobs who refuse to acknowledge him as an equal.

    • @adamvialpando106
      @adamvialpando106 Před 2 lety +15

      @@esthersmith3056 Most of those he clashes with are actually quite reasonable besides Chuck.
      He is not inherently a bad guy but he toes the line into dangerous legal waters all the time in order for him to come out on top.

  • @michellemerriman7940
    @michellemerriman7940 Před 2 lety +1192

    Just listened to the BCS Insider Podcast yesterday where they talked about how much research went into all of the "legal" details of the show. They have a whole team that examines the script for each episode, determines which legal documents might possibly be shown, even if just for a fraction of a second, and then does all of the necessary due diligence to craft an accurate fake, sometimes going several pages deep on the off chance that the actor makes a choice in a take to flip through it, making multiple pages visible to the camera. The lengths that Gilligan, Gould, et al., go to just to make this show immersive and realistic are so underrated.

    • @donnykyoto1519
      @donnykyoto1519 Před 2 lety +43

      One of the writers was also a former lawyer, it makes so much sense how accurate they can get

    • @michaelhoste_
      @michaelhoste_ Před 2 lety +8

      Somehow it has the understated ring of authenticity. Well, perhaps ‘understated’ is not the right word, but you know what I mean!

    • @_M41KU_
      @_M41KU_ Před 2 lety +5

      Actually just Peter Gloud. If I’m remembering right Gilligan had little to do with bcs s1-5. He only did minor work here and there but it’s mainly all Gloud.

    • @michellemerriman7940
      @michellemerriman7940 Před 2 lety +3

      @@_M41KU_ you gotta listen to the podcast. Both Gould and Gilligan are on the podcast and while Vince might not be as hands-on as he was in BrBa, he is still highly involved.

    • @rashoietolan3047
      @rashoietolan3047 Před 2 lety +1

      A most educational (and free!!) lesson on why sweating the details matters

  • @ianj4389
    @ianj4389 Před rokem +7

    I love this show and it's so cool to see you geeking out on it from the perspective of a lawyer.

  • @mehlover
    @mehlover Před rokem +17

    It's adorable to see LegalEagle get so hyped up and having fun with this episode

  • @gabe9120
    @gabe9120 Před rokem +1052

    All I can say is protect Huell, we didn't deserve a character like him

  • @leonardmcdonald3928
    @leonardmcdonald3928 Před 2 lety +527

    I would follow this up with the episode where Jimmy is trying to get his license back

    • @geraldgrenier8132
      @geraldgrenier8132 Před 2 lety +3

      So he lost it this hearing?

    • @yourinnerlawyer4035
      @yourinnerlawyer4035 Před 2 lety +10

      @@geraldgrenier8132 yes.

    • @theomegajuice8660
      @theomegajuice8660 Před 2 lety +42

      @@geraldgrenier8132 He has it suspended for a year with a possibility (but not guarantee) of getting it back after a review when the year is up

    • @mustafaabdeltawwab9280
      @mustafaabdeltawwab9280 Před 2 lety +17

      @@theomegajuice8660 I mean, as long as he can get it back then it's all good man.

    • @sandoval9276
      @sandoval9276 Před 2 lety +23

      Arguably he won, Chuck wanted to get him disbarred forever, and he only got a year of suspension with the ability to apeal after that... only a slap on the wrist for someone like him

  • @andreweffertz1664
    @andreweffertz1664 Před rokem +22

    This show is brilliant... I wouldn't put it past the writers to be making a joke with the whole "committing battery" thing by literally placing a battery on Chuck 😝

  • @jqths1974
    @jqths1974 Před rokem +5

    I love your excitement discussing this episode!! Terrific content 👍👍👍

  • @blasvillanueva7195
    @blasvillanueva7195 Před 2 lety +952

    The standard for battery in New Mexico isn’t “harmful or offensive” but “rude, angry, or insolent manner.”

    • @JohnyScissors
      @JohnyScissors Před 2 lety +30

      So intent is what matters. So bumping into someone intentionally to put something in their pocket would still fit that right?

    • @Jechti307
      @Jechti307 Před 2 lety +76

      @@JohnyScissors I Don't see how that is to be "Rude, Angry, Or insolent"

    • @mr.d00m37
      @mr.d00m37 Před 2 lety +62

      @@Jechti307 Yeah, IMO that doesn't count as battery under NM law

    • @PaddyCollector
      @PaddyCollector Před 2 lety +6

      what was the standard when the show takes place since the show takes place in 2002? Has it changed in the last 20 years?

    • @MrMakoto2
      @MrMakoto2 Před 2 lety +23

      @@Jechti307 bumping into someone on purpose is definitely considered "Rude"

  • @LillyMarchant
    @LillyMarchant Před rokem +829

    11:50 They weren't actually law partners. They each had independent practices and shared an office space. I don't know if their relationship is still too close for her representation to be proper, but Kim refused to go into practice with Jimmy because of his propensity to bend, break, and re-write rules.

    • @VDA19
      @VDA19 Před rokem +87

      "Kim refused to go into practice with Jimmy because of his propensity to bend, break, and re-write rules."
      This didn't age well

    • @MrMichealHouse
      @MrMichealHouse Před rokem +99

      @@VDA19 I mean it was true at the time. Kim changed.

    • @VDA19
      @VDA19 Před rokem

      @@MrMichealHouse Kim was always dirty. She was breaking the law ever since she was a kid.

    • @walter9240
      @walter9240 Před rokem

      @@VDA19bro, what? Everyone has broken the law.

    • @aakarshverma5793
      @aakarshverma5793 Před rokem +12

      @@walter9240 she broke bad

  • @ghosttoast8326
    @ghosttoast8326 Před rokem +5

    Was going to watch in parts while playing games, ended up watching the whole thing and gaining an interest in legal stuff, thanks haha. Great video

  • @Rafutah
    @Rafutah Před rokem +5

    Great video with all the background info on legal activities. Made it very educational as well as fun to watch.

  • @jeongjeongmusic
    @jeongjeongmusic Před 2 lety +2341

    the way chuck says "he defecated thru a sunroof!!!" always makes me laugh, the pure desperation in his voice 26:06

    • @thisismagacountry1318
      @thisismagacountry1318 Před 2 lety +127

      Ahhhhhh yes, the Chicago Sunroof, a classic.

    • @zumabbar
      @zumabbar Před rokem +167

      i love how in nearly all copypastas of the rant you will ever see, this sentence is left untouched regardless of what it is parodying or is it's topic about

    • @sydssolanumsamsys
      @sydssolanumsamsys Před rokem +1

      @@zumabbar You can see why. after all, he did, in fact, defecate through a sunroof

    • @viderevero1338
      @viderevero1338 Před rokem +1

      @@zumabbar it’s just so perfect on its own.

  • @KingBobXVI
    @KingBobXVI Před 2 lety +893

    "The idea that no matter who you are, your actions have consequences" - "preach baby, preach!"
    Yeahh... if only it were _actually_ true...

    • @esthersmith3056
      @esthersmith3056 Před 2 lety +101

      ikr, i like a lot of legaleagle videos, but the fact that he's a lawyer and therefore kinda, "believes in" the law definitely puts a damper on things for me. that said, definitely pretty daft of me to watch a legal enthusiast's youtube channel and get upset that he's, yeah, a legal enthusiast.

    • @ghxstleader485
      @ghxstleader485 Před 2 lety

      LOL exactly

    • @angrynoodletwentyfive6463
      @angrynoodletwentyfive6463 Před 2 lety +57

      @@esthersmith3056 Well LE is an enthusiast of the law as it is supposed to be enforced... and gets upset when people are not treated fairly... He is aware of the inequities of law... he has spoken on them before.

    • @esthersmith3056
      @esthersmith3056 Před 2 lety +44

      @@angrynoodletwentyfive6463 Nah, my criticism of law goes beyond its flawed enforcement, and even beyond the fact that the law can only ever exist in its unequal form -- can only ever serve as a tool of power for unaccountable lawmaker, who remain unaccountable entirely because they are lawmakers.
      Specifically regarding Chuck's mini-speech in the episode that LegalEagle singled out, when he says "He has a way of doing the worst things for reasons that seem almost noble" -- he's rejecting the idea that Jimmy's lawbreaking can be noble, he's presenting a legalistic view of morality; to Chuck, breaking the law is de facto ignoble. Obviously, he's not presenting a rigorous argument here, we kinda have to guess at his reasons for statements, read between the lines a little; when he says "no matter who you are, your actions have consequences", I assume that those "consequences" are "consequences for actions which society ought want punished" -- that he is again, essentially talking about the law as a conduit for morality. I don't really believe in this sort of legalistic morality, I don't think a rigid code that attempts to declare when things are "okay" or "not okay" can ever work. Any rule you can come up with will sometimes unjustly convict people. So yeah, to me, even if the law could somehow exist in an idealized, just, equal form (and again, it cannot, because lawmakers will inevitably abuse their power), it still wouldn't actually work.

    • @Mwstmrlnd
      @Mwstmrlnd Před 2 lety +19

      @@esthersmith3056 People are making wayyy too much of his reaction to that statement. All you have to do is watch any of his protest and Trump-related videos to see that he very much understands the real-world law vs. the ideal of the law, but you do HAVE to believe in the ideal to be a good lawyer, in my opinion. Utopian ideals are something good and valid to strive for, even if they aren't reachable and you know they aren't reachable.

  • @johnxpaulson
    @johnxpaulson Před rokem +7

    25:05 So, you're telling me Jimmy committed battery by planting the battery? Nice

  • @MathGeekQ
    @MathGeekQ Před rokem

    Thank you for this! Came late to the BCS party, but i'm finally caught up and ready to watch this video. That episode was indeed amazing and thanks for analyzing it!

  • @deadbeef33
    @deadbeef33 Před 2 lety +154

    He says "he had to cut the video almost in half!" but the extended version on nebula only has 2 extra minutes.......objection!

    • @StorymasterQ
      @StorymasterQ Před 2 lety +16

      Better call a lawyer!

    • @holysecret2
      @holysecret2 Před 2 lety +1

      I suppose "almost" is a subjectively interpretable term xD

  • @albertmendez2262
    @albertmendez2262 Před 2 lety +347

    “He defecated through a sunroof!”
    This quote will never not make me laugh when I hear it from Chuck. 😂🤣😂

    • @abcd-sj5cd
      @abcd-sj5cd Před 2 lety

      What does that quote mean?

    • @laughingatnothing4642
      @laughingatnothing4642 Před 2 lety +16

      @@abcd-sj5cd jimmy actually defecated through a sunroof when they were younger. And chuck bailed him out.

    • @nont18411
      @nont18411 Před 2 lety

      After season 5 ended
      “SHE defecated through a sunroof!”

    • @jimmymurphy898
      @jimmymurphy898 Před 2 lety

      @@abcd-sj5cd um defecated means shit. So Jimmy took a shit through a sunroof lol

  • @kf160k160
    @kf160k160 Před 3 měsíci +3

    If you think about it. Chuck says he "can" only detect it when there is a current flowing through a wire. Jimmy put his cellphone in his pocket without battery and his battery planted in Chuck's pocket. There is no current flowing in either things and thus Chuck "cannot" detect it.

  • @xijinpooh4529
    @xijinpooh4529 Před rokem +12

    Im not saying this is the best episode of Lawyer React, I'm sure you will make ones in the future that will blow this one out the water in terms of analysis and education. However, what I am saying is that Laywer React feels like it was made for this episode and vice versa. The amount of information I learned from you because of this episode is staggering. I'm currently not taking law as a college course (different paths in life and all that,) but because of you, I get really interested in these subjects. Thank you, sir.

  • @alexisl5189
    @alexisl5189 Před 2 lety +181

    Battery with a battery seems almost too perfect.

    • @timzoikie8262
      @timzoikie8262 Před 2 lety +20

      Even better it was rechargeable type of battery. Most rechargable batteries from the time era that the show was in could contain lithium hexafluorophosphate, which if you aren't chemistry inclined is ... A Salt. Brilliant show, brilliant episode.

    • @glenecollins
      @glenecollins Před 2 lety +3

      Unfortunately a battery doesn’t produce electromagnetic radiation and he wasn’t claiming to be susceptible to electric fields or potential differences (if he was static would be way more of a problem than a battery)
      Is it stills battery if it is just something you think will discomfort them?

    • @holysecret2
      @holysecret2 Před 2 lety

      @@glenecollins Yeah I believe that was LegalEagle's point here. Think of the butterfly example. You may be convinced that placing a butterfly on someone isn't 'actually' hurting them in any real way, but you can still be guilty of battery for knowingly causing deep psychological distress if you did it with the knowledge that your 'victim' is deathly afraid of butterflies. So what matters is your knowledge, as well as the victim's subjective belief in his condition, regardless of how medically accurate it is. Like is the case with Chuck here. No magnetic field was present, yet he felt the discomfort as soon as he learned of the fact that there was a battery in his close vicinity - purely psychological, yet authentic, from Chuck's point of view. At least that's my understanding

    • @glenecollins
      @glenecollins Před 2 lety

      @@holysecret2 I was thinking more along the lines of IRL most electrosensitives wouldn’t be worried by a battery because they actually do research into what makes electromagnetic fields (they do find a heap of things that don’t really but I haven’t seen batteries in there).
      A battery only has a very weak electric field around the anode and only produces an electromagnetic field if it is in a circuit. So the EMsensitives would likely know that and be unconcerned by a battery where as a lawyer may think it would bother them because it contains “electricity”.
      Would that be attempted battery with a battery if the person was unconcerned by the battery because they know it doesn’t produce a field (wether or not they can detect one) but the laser thought it would discomfort them.
      Why is there no cross eyes emoji? I am starting to confuse myself 🤪

  • @NMiller_
    @NMiller_ Před 2 lety +114

    So, he committed battery... with a battery. How poetic.

    • @leithcrowther6086
      @leithcrowther6086 Před 2 lety +5

      “You wouldn’t hit a guy with glasses!”
      [takes off the glasses and smacks King Candy with them]
      “You hit a guy WITH glasses.”

  • @chy42079
    @chy42079 Před rokem +69

    BCS and it’s predecessor BB are personally near and dear to my heart. I study both of them constantly and repetitively! These videos are EXACTLY what I was thinking about when I was watching it😳😳

  • @Pouilleux
    @Pouilleux Před rokem

    This video is how I discovered you. I've been watching your content ever since, yet it still pops up in my recommended every now and then. Funny how things work out

  • @lukekelchner5471
    @lukekelchner5471 Před 2 lety +684

    The bias and special treatment chuck got from the panel made me gag. The panel members went into that hearing with a preconceived opinion of chuck, and probably an extremely high held opinion. Chuck claimed the law was too important to be tampered with but he didn’t seem to have any problem with the law being stretched in his favor.

    • @widehalk
      @widehalk Před rokem +2

      Agreed, and the idea that the law applies to everyone equally is delusional. Banks, billionaires, politicians, people like Chuck lol etc will always be above the law.

    • @threenumbnuts
      @threenumbnuts Před rokem +41

      Except the courts have already established Chuck as the victim and Jimmy as the culprit by the time this happens. Of course they're going to defer to him.

    • @heyitsmushu7393
      @heyitsmushu7393 Před rokem +60

      @@threenumbnuts yeah thats a problem. Most courts and jury perceive the defendant as guilty before hearing anything

    • @threenumbnuts
      @threenumbnuts Před rokem +43

      @@heyitsmushu7393 no, that’s not what I’m talking about. This is a disciplinary hearing, and Jimmy already plead guilty to the felony charges. They’re completely justified in treating him as guilty, because he himself agreed to the label in the court system.

    • @heyitsmushu7393
      @heyitsmushu7393 Před rokem +13

      @@threenumbnuts that doesnt matter. I dont know if you have ever been the defendant, but I have. They are not ALLOWED to show deference until just evidence is given and the verdict is absolute.

  • @finsfan86
    @finsfan86 Před 2 lety +143

    Apparently no one else here has the balls to demand what's needed. We NEED "A real lawyer reviews Judge Dredd." I have so many questions.

    • @TubaJay448
      @TubaJay448 Před 2 lety +18

      Judge Dredd is an entirely different legal system. It would be more speculation on his part than anything.

    • @moreisallyouneed4175
      @moreisallyouneed4175 Před 2 lety +11

      It could be interesting to see the similarities and maybe explore the laws that could lead to such a justice systems.

    • @finsfan86
      @finsfan86 Před 2 lety +8

      @@TubaJay448 OBJECTION! MOVE TO STRIKE!

  • @Misteribel
    @Misteribel Před rokem +4

    Hands down the best episode of the series! Great analysis ❤

  • @taytortwat
    @taytortwat Před 7 měsíci

    I love how excited you get for this episode

  • @AdamAfandi
    @AdamAfandi Před 2 lety +2365

    _"Serving pork to someone who doesn't eat pork for religious reason, might be highly offensive to them"_
    *Husseinberg* : _"You're goddamn right!"_

    • @saintroddy
      @saintroddy Před 2 lety +356

      JESSE WE NEED TO FAST

    • @gregg7233
      @gregg7233 Před 2 lety +5

      😂

    • @kaihG
      @kaihG Před 2 lety +12

      @@saintroddy oh my god

    • @current3109
      @current3109 Před 2 lety +170

      JESSE WE NEED TO PREPARE FOR RAMADAN

    • @baselover84
      @baselover84 Před 2 lety +11

      Sometimes you read a comment and actually laugh out loud 😁

  • @kevinolson9940
    @kevinolson9940 Před 2 lety +142

    I love how rule 403 is essentially: access to evidence forbidden

    • @himothaniel
      @himothaniel Před 2 lety +8

      I appreciate your joke, even if nobody else does.

    • @TheBlarggle
      @TheBlarggle Před 2 lety +21

      Rule 404: File Not Found

    • @MarlonBitoy
      @MarlonBitoy Před 2 lety +12

      @@TheBlarggle it’s error 403: access denied, 404 is something else

    • @nathanb011
      @nathanb011 Před 2 lety +6

      @@MarlonBitoy 404 is file not found.

    • @MarlonBitoy
      @MarlonBitoy Před 2 lety

      @@nathanb011 yes

  • @James_Wisniewski
    @James_Wisniewski Před rokem +6

    I would love to see your reaction to the series finale since there's so much trial stuff involved in it, especially now that it's been a bit since it aired.

  • @cliffordjayrequillo603
    @cliffordjayrequillo603 Před rokem +11

    Better Call Saul is truly a masterpiece. Impressive writings and great character choices

  • @buckrogers7115
    @buckrogers7115 Před 2 lety +470

    The professionalism of the legal environment makes this common rivalry between brothers feel so smothered and focused. It’s such a great way to portray familial drama.

  • @kleinerprinz99
    @kleinerprinz99 Před 2 lety +177

    I think whats more important is what happends when Jimmy inserts the battery into his cellphone. Because as stated earlier. Current needs to flow for the electromagnetic field and said "allergy" to work. However a charged battery is inert. Only when you insert it into and turn the cellphone on current will flow. So as soon as Jimmy turns on his cellphone , Chuck should show signs of a reaction. Yeah so the implication is that Chuck is crazy and only suffers his disease in reaction to his brother and their relation.

    • @himothaniel
      @himothaniel Před 2 lety +73

      Yes, but the flowing current isn't a piece of Jimmy's argument, it's just the leadup.
      He has Chuck state two things which he immediately disproves. That he thinks the nearest flowing current is in Jimmy's pocket and that he would feel a battery if it were anywhere near him.
      He obviously can't feel the current in Jimmy's pocket because it doesn't have a battery in it and he doesn't realize a battery has been in his pocket for the entire time he was testifying. The current not flowing is immaterial to the argument Jimmy makes.

    • @laboon344
      @laboon344 Před 2 lety

      Happens*

    • @trevorlambert4226
      @trevorlambert4226 Před 2 lety +15

      @@himothaniel You say it's immaterial, but that's only because Chuck failed to recognise that the bare battery would emit no electric field. What if when Jimmy asked him if he'd notice a fully charged battery in his pocket, he replied "no, because no current would be flowing". It would have sunk his whole spiel. So either he got lucky, or more likely, the writers don't understand electricity all that well.

    • @marian-gabriel9518
      @marian-gabriel9518 Před 2 lety +23

      @@trevorlambert4226 You are reading too much into the real aspects of "what it would be like if it were possible to have the condition" thus the current needing to flow to generate a magnetic field to have said influence. The writers did understand electricity....but wrote this character with this fictitious disease and this is the way they show it is fictitious or at best psychological and definitely not physiological...that is the distinction and the intent and also the whole basis of the argument in the court.

    • @himothaniel
      @himothaniel Před 2 lety +6

      @@trevorlambert4226 You're stating arguments that the "prosecution" (or whatever the people trying to get him disbarred are called) should hopefully bring up, but they don't actually change the effect that the testimony has on the case. Being able to catch Chuck in a misstep or having to backtrack his statements has a negative effect on his testimony. Not only that, but we're completely ignoring that the testimony continues to be degraded as he becomes more unhinged and spouts more (seeming) absurdities.

  • @learneraccount5244
    @learneraccount5244 Před rokem +1

    Such a fascinating review and analysis of legal and procedural issues. The analysis is, from my lay perspective, spot on.