Aug. 2nd, 2025

canyonwalker: Better Call Saul starring Bob Odenkirk (better call saul)
First of all, no, I haven't resumed watching Better Call Saul. I paused the series 2 episodes from the end in May and haven't picked it back up since then. This blog is just me catching up on the last 2 episodes I did watch. The fact that I'm just getting to writing about those 10 weeks later is both a measure of how backlogged I've been and how badly this series lost my attention right at the end.

What happened? What happened is that the series shifted gears for its last 4 episodes. Across the first 5½ seasons we'd seen occasionally flash-forwards to Jimmy McGill's life post Saul Goodman. These were a narrative device similar to flashbacks but instead of filling in details or color about the past they were teasing us with the future. In this case, the future some 6 years later, after the Breaking Series, to which Better Call Saul is a prequel. So it's like the prequel changed to the post-postquel.

In the life-after-Breaking-Bad timeline, Jimmy/Saul is on the lam. He's living under a new identity as Gene Takavic, who manages a Cinnabon store in Omaha. This situation is a nod to a seemingly throwaway line Jimmy/Saul makes in his last scene in Breaking Bad, where he tells Walter White, "With any luck by this time next year I'll be managing a Cinnabon in Omaha."

The brief flash-forwards sprinkled across the series show Jimmy living unhappily as Gene, the Cinnabon store manager. His job is a big letdown from his previously high flying career as a dirty lawyer, and he's constantly looking over his shoulder in fear that both people from his criminal past and law enforcement might figure out his true identity. He lives a quiet life going between home and work, doesn't socialize more than perfunctory greetings, and often drinks himself to sleep at night.

In episode 6.10 the show jumps full-time from Jimmy in 2004, right after Kim has left him, to Jimmy as Gene in 2010. Jimmy is panicking that someone from the past has recognized him. Jeff, a cab driver in Omaha who used to live in Albuquerque years earlier, recognizes him through his disguise. Jimmy then perpetrates a series of cons to ingratiate himself with Jeff and his family, starting with Jef's sweet but naive mom, Marion— played in a cameo by Carol Burnett that seems like an utter waste of the legendary comedienne's talent. Jimmy cons Jeff into committing a robbery he plans. The purpose isn't to profit from the loot but to get enough "dirt" on Jeff that he could go to jail for possibly decades if he rats out Jimmy. It's mutually assured destruction.

The thing is, Jimmy is not at all sympathetic in these cons. Younger Jimmy, "Slippin' Jimmy", was somewhat sympathetic when he was conning people because he was typically conning people who were jerks. He played on their greed and turned it against them. Here he's conning Jeff— and his innocent mother— just to protect himself.

Then the cons get worse.

Jimmy goes back to Jeff— after revealing that he conned him just to get "dirt" on him— with another crime proposal. They're going to drug wealthy men, copy their IDs and financial information, and sell it to an identity thief. Why is Jimmy doing this, though? It's not because he needs the money. The flash-forwards already established that Jimmy has a considerable stash of wealth in the form of diamonds. The only conclusion left is that Jimmy's doing it because he's evil.

The worst comes when Jimmy and his accomplices target a man whom they discover is a terminal cancer patient. The sedatives they use, in addition to the medications the man's already on, could be lethal. Jimmy's two accomplices tap out. But Jimmy is determined to see this particular con through, even if it directly kills someone. Evil.

And that's where I stopped watching, with only 2 episodes left in the series. Because why do I care about these characters anymore?

Yeah, I'll finish watching... at some point. But I'm just not that interested anymore.

canyonwalker: Hangin' in a hammock (life's a beach)
North Coast Roadtrip travelog #6
Shelter Cove · Sat, 26 Jul 2025, 9pm

Tonight we're bedding down on the Lost Coast. "Wait, isn't that a brewery?" you might ask. Well, yes, we did visit the Lost Coast Brewery this afternoon, but this is different. The brewery is in Eureka and is named for a place, a really remote place, a bit south. Now we're actually in that place. The Lost Coast.

We've had a good day of adventure so far. We started in Garberville, a tiny town just off the highway that's basically a dot on the map (pop. fewer than 1,000) then drove north toward Eureka, driving the scenic byway of the Avenue of the Giants. We passed through Eureka en route to Sue-meg State Park, where we went rock-hounding on Agate Beach. Passing back through Eureka we stopped for lunch and the aforementioned brewery. Then, it was like, "You've tried the beer, now try the place!" Lost Coast. 🤣

Okay, but seriously, why's it called the Lost Coast? For one, it's seriously remote. There's a mountain range hard against the coast here, the Kings Range mountains. Yeah, there are mountains along most of the California coast, and these aren't even the highest— King's Peak is just over 2,000' elevation, which is lower than the highest peaks in the Santa Cruz Mountains near my home— but they are steep and rugged. The drive down from the peak to our hotel in Shelter Cove felt a bit like going down a roller coaster. The gal who checked us in at the hotel even asked, with a smirk, if we had trouble driving or with the brakes on our car as we came down the mountain. Hawk told me a few minutes later she was offended by the hotelier's almost snide humor about people having car trouble. Whereas I was like, Girl, we have a sports car, and we know how to drive it!

Anyway, long story short, it's seriously remote out here. The name Lost Coast apparently stems from when European settlers gave up trying to live out here around 100 years ago. The mountains isolate it too much from the rest of the state.

So, why are we staying out here? Well, one, because it's the Lost Coast. Just the name sounds awesome. And two, because we want to explore the area & stay at a hotel perched on cliffs overlooking the ocean.

Our room at the Lost Coast Inn (Jul 2025)

And three, we didn't really want to stay another night in Garberville. Our motel room there was strictly basic accommodations; an 8-hours-and-a-shower kind of place. Here we've got a larger room with a nice little table to sit at, a sofa, and kitchenette, and a balcony. Yeah, it also costs like 3x more, but did I also mention there's an ocean view? Our room in Garberville had a literal parking lot view.

The Lost Coast Inn (Jul 2025)

This inn also has a hot tub on its deck overlooking the ocean. That was one of the selling points for us, too; though it turns out it's broken. ☹️ Oh well, we'll just have to enjoy the hell out of our balcony.

View from our balcony at the Lost Coast Inn (Jul 2025)

And yeah, that's what we've done this evening: enjoyed the hell out of our balcony. We bought dinner at the pizza cafe attached to the hotel (I got a pizza; Hawk got a dish of lasagna) and took it back to our room to eat while watching the sunset. After the sun set Hawk grabbed a spare blanked and curled up with it on the balcony while I stayed inside, stretching out on the bed with the sliding glass door open and the heater running. It turns out the heater blows most of its heat onto the balcony. That seems like a design or maintenance problem, but for this evening it's been perfect. It's kept Hawk from shivering out on the balcony!

Profile

canyonwalker: wiseguy (Default)
canyonwalker

March 2026

S M T W T F S
1 2 3 45 67
89 10 11 121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031    

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Mar. 14th, 2026 11:24 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios