Mijo (Better Call Saul)

[1] In the episode, Jimmy McGill (Bob Odenkirk) accidentally meets Tuco Salamanca (Raymond Cruz), who thinks Jimmy and his clients, twins Lars and Cal Lindholm (Daniel Levine and Steven Levine), have come to scam his grandmother (Míriam Colón).

Though they accidentally targeted the wrong driver, Cal and Lars follow her home and falsely claim serious injuries from the staged accident.

Jimmy McGill arrives at the front door searching for Cal and Lars and Tuco drags him inside at gunpoint.

[2][3] During the episode, there is a montage in which Jimmy's routine is revealed: Grabbing his coffee, defending clients, collecting his check, and his ongoing battle with the parking attendant, Mike.

[4] Upon moving to its regular Monday slot, the episode received 3.4 million viewers and a 1.6 rating among adults 18–49 in the United States.

[6] Erik Kain of Forbes said that despite hating the long and drawn-out restaurant scene, the overall episode was good.

Despite this he felt that he wasn't "sitting nearly as close to the edge of my seat [as in Breaking Bad]—but it's entertaining and funny and still beautifully shot, acted, and written.

"[7] David Segal of The New York Times, in a positive review, noted that his favourite part of the episode "is the elaborate, jaunty montage of Jimmy at court, which pays tribute to the elaborate, jaunty montage in Bob Fosse's All That Jazz, complete with the same Vivaldi concerto and "It's showtime!"

[8] Catherine Gee of The Daily Telegraph gave the episode 4 out of 5 stars, saying: We got to see Jimmy McGill... truly show off his negotiating skills when haggling over the twins' fate.

And it is in the deft hands of the episode’s writer and co-creator Peter Gould that we got to indulge in a light chuckle over whether McGill can talk Tuco down from a flaying to a leg-breaking while avoiding the possible detours of eye-gouging and tongue-ripping.