Were Lalo to learn about this operation, Gus would either be murdered for his perfidy or forced to share the bounty. It is the money-making machine of Gus’s dreams. Fring has no plans to share profits from the lab with the cartel, and we know from Jesse in “Breaking Bad” that it will eventually produce $96 million worth of the stuff every three months. Lalo wants information on Fring’s construction project, which he will eventually discover is a super lab that will produce vast amounts of high-quality meth. It’s worth remembering what the stakes are here. This advantage lasts a matter of seconds because Lalo has a razor blade behind the Volker’s sticker (or business card?) that he’s brought along, and almost immediately he is in control and ready to begin an inquisition. The last thing a sane person would do is enter that barn with a drawn gun, but Lalo can be impetuous, and it isn’t a huge surprise when Casper blindsides him with the axe. When Lalo approaches, Casper flees into a darkened barn. Specifically, he got the name and address of Casper (Stefan Kapicic) who appears to live in the country and chop a lot of wood. The piece was manufactured by a company called Voelker’s, the sticker said, and somehow Lalo finagled the identity of at least one of the boys from the company. Lalo has determined the identity of at least one of Werner Ziegler’s “boys” by reading the underside of the Lucite-encased slide rule that was a gift from the lads, and which Lalo handled during his brief visit to Frau Ziegler’s home. The episode heaves to life when the drugs-and-money part of the show finally gets some oxygen. Can anyone explain the dramatic reason for the encounter between Kim and Francesca in Jimmy/Saul’s office? If it had been deleted, what exactly would be missing? Now that the cartel plot is on a boil, the legal plot seems slapstick-y at moments, dull at others and padded at times. (Think of when Kim meets Mike in Episode 5, or Jimmy’s work for Tuco and Lalo.) Otherwise, they spin on their own, with atmospheres that are dramatically different. “Better Call Saul” has always been two very different planets - the drug world and the lawyering world - with orbits that only occasionally line up. It’s hard to care, at least not in a deep, emotional way. Will Kim save “D-Day,” as she and Jimmy call this moment?
THE GIRL WHO SEES SCENTS LAST EPISODE RECAP SERIES
Series Finale : If the ending of “Better Call Saul” surprised you, take comfort in this fact: It surprised Saul Goodman, too.The End of ‘Better Call Saul’ The “Breaking Bad” spinoff has concluded its run after six seasons. It was far from inevitable that Howard would think, “I need to hire a private detective and photograph Jimmy,” once he realized he was the target of a reputation-soiling scheme. Seems like a lot of effort, and risky, too. Like: Were all of Kim and Jimmy’s slanderous antics really necessary? If you want to cajole your enemy into hiring a P.I., is the surest approach to plant a bag of drugs in his country club locker room, then steal his car for a joyride with a prostitute, whom you kick out of the vehicle in view of an esteemed colleague?
![the girl who sees scents last episode recap the girl who sees scents last episode recap](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/4d/11/5c/4d115c73830f58af34eb84744dace31c.gif)
The particulars of the coming end game are unclear, but we know enough to ask a few skeptical questions. The point was to induce Howard to hire a private investigator who would photograph Jimmy conferring with a guy who looks like the mediator of the class-action suit against Sandpiper Crossing. At the end of last season, Kim and Jimmy talked about a plot to discredit and shame Howard, and for the last five episodes we’ve been led to believe that framing Howard as a hooker-exploiting drug addict was the point of the plan.