Rarely does a second season contend with the first, especially considering its Fargo and season one was a masterclass of acting. But this season is impeccable.
@@bobf4819 Because if you search for it, in late 70's there was a relatively famous incident with a state trooper in Minnesota claiming he saw a UFO. Fargo is presented as a "True Story", and even though we know that is not what it is, the UFO plays into reinforcing that as a story-telling device. Fargo needs those random, odd, truth-is-stranger-than-fiction elements. Otherwise, it's not Fargo.
@@ActionableFreedom I thought polite unfriendliness was the definition of passive aggressiveness? As in its passive, not active in a physical manner,but still unpleasant,attacking the co-interlocutor in a verbal or simply facial expressive way?
Criminally under employed actor. Hes exceptional when given the right roles. He's had a load of forgettable bit parts over the years. Hopefully this a new chapter for him in progress
Wasn’t he in “The Big Hit” as the merc that learned he could have a good time jacking it? 😂 They even had him with a finger exercising machine, and demanding for lotion with lanoline.
An educated villain who doesn’t have to threaten, use violence, or be physical to be menacing is always a pleasure to watch. Wynn Duffy from Justified comes to mind as well.
“I’m gonna go ahead and guess the boys are an 11 not a 2… which would make them toddlers” 😭 the way Mike Milligan delivered his lines makes him one of the greatest characters in the Fargo universe
Mike is incredible. He even gives it back to Hank with the waffle talk. He's basically saying "you know who we are, where we're from & what we're doing here. And you can't do anything about it."
@@raymondflores6410 idk, I think if things went south, mike would be the first to die in this situation. And he knew it. Hank was gonna shoot him first no matter what.
Mike was also surprised by Hank. I don’t think he was expecting a cop who clearly wasn’t afraid of any of them. When your used to getting your way and intimidating every one around you, it can be frightening to meet someone who doesn’t flinch.
@@Shearn31787 I agree, I also think it's partly that he wasn't afraid but not in the way that the police from Dakota weren't scared (being all bravado and obnoxious), Hank clearly saw and acknowledged that they were dangerous, but he was still polite and set on doing his job. For a man used to being either feared or disrespect, that was probably a welcome change.
Mike says later that he liked Hank when he met him. I think the interesting thing here is Hank's little breath when he turns around. He's not stupid, he knows the men are dangerous, but he sticks to his guns and doesn't take smack from them. He *knows* he's in deadly danger, but he's still a sheriff and he acts like one.
I think they must've meant Ted was the obscure one. BW is a legend character actor. Danson was surprisingly good in this, probably the best acting i seen from him ever (cheers isn't good acting, good show but i prefer frasier)
Bookeem Woodbine's character is such an interesting one . Mike Milligan has the distinction of being naturally polite and intimidating at the same time. This show convinced me Bokeem Woodbine is actually a good actor.
Mike is one hell of a rethorician and manipulator. He knows exactly what to say, when and how, to deliver some sort of message and to get certain type of reaction.
He asked them if they were armed but Mike just blew off the comment. Then Mike said he would have them home by supper and that if he was anything, he was a "man of his word." He was telling Hank he was a dead man if he tried to detain them. Superably written and acted.
@Boco Corwin no, it was a reference to Fargo season 1, when Malvo uses that line. Colin Hanks’ character knew he had met a “dragon” in that instance when he let him go.
@Boco Corwin it’s pretty obvious I already knew that, so I have no idea why you interjected into the conversation. Colin Hanks character knew Malvo was a “dragon”, but that’s not the case here. Ted Danson couldn’t legally hold these guys any longer. He HAD to let them go, where as Hanks didn’t.
@Boco Corwin I was replying to the OP, and then you made a pointless and irrelevant comment presuming I didn’t get the reference. So yeah, I think I summed up your actions pretty well.
This scene kind of reminds me of the diner face off between Pacino & De Niro in “Heat”. A seasoned lawman having a polite but frank conversation with an obvious mob enforcer and his equally obvious professional hitters…on a lonely highway, while the rest of the world goes by oblivious. Of course he let them go - he had nothing to hold them but suspicion. He knew he could try probable cause to search the car and would certainly find weapons…but if he does that he’s alone against 3 professionals with backup minutes away. Likewise, Milligan knew he had the advantage & could have taken the sherif at any time, but they didn’t do it and there was nothing to link them to the crime. And they’re smart enough to know killing the cop gets in the way of business and would put every cop from Minnesota to Missouri on their trail. And so…a civil, polite but unfriendly conversation where the players all recognize each other but they just let the game play. Amazing.
Mike is one hell of a rethorician and manipulator. He knows exactly what to say, when and how, to deliver some sort of message and to get certain type of reaction.
He'd have to be an idiot not to feel fear when facing 3 people that seemed like obviously seasoned killers on his own, not to mention just releasing the tension from the high pressure situation.
@Sam Spade Check out hos role in Season 1 of "Damages" with Glenn Close and Rose Byrne sometime. By far the best dramatic, dark, intense acting Ted Danson has ever done.
My friend up front doesn't like talking to strangers. Translation? My buddy up top is about a hair trigger away from chopping you down and taking your badge as a souvenir. Gotta love how Mike M dodges questions.
The subdued exhale of relief at end of scene reminds of how many high stakes poker hands end after a long wait for "will they call me , do i have them or do they have me " . Great wrap to a great scene .
WE rebuilt a 1870 big block and that looks like an 73 or 74. you should see ours in blue with a dark blue landau top, as new. Our uphostelry shop in LA had a new roll of blue brochade GM and we found a full package of chrome at a Canadian dealer!! Even the whilewalls and trans. are made in Canada. Most of these without the 454 big block got squished long ago.
I love the minor parallels each season has to each other. This scene paralleled the scene when Malvo was pulled over by the cop in season one and was intimidated. Both cops had a look of fear and relief after each encounter because they knew it could’ve easily went the other way.
Just got done with the season. It’s ironic how this motif of strained lines of communication even goes back towards Hank and the language he was creating.
These things do cost you. Your memory, your emotions, your focus, your time and your attention. Do not live your life pretending these things come for free and are not limited.
This scene contains some superb acting, lighting and camera work. Also the score fits to a T. Both the movie Fargo as well as the series up intill now are classics which cannot be unwatched.
@@ontariobuds how, are they in an Arena? Is it Just silent twins vs silent twins, build up though some Episodes? Or did you Just Order "bang! vam!" Those two in their respective attire vs each other! "Blang! Cool edgy Kills, boom!"
This season was the best television I have ever seen. The 3rd season was also incredible and blew my mind, but this second season is literally the best. I loved the first season too. Didn’t care much for the 4th unfortunately.
@@mrdeathamore it gets better as the season continues after the first few episodes, but it’s not as good as any of the first 3 seasons. It is however, still entertaining. Just not great by Fargo standards
Anyone come back to this after reading the fan theory that mike Milligan is cannons son? It’s probs a coincidence but the kid in season 4 kinda stand the same way mike does
Often he really gets on my nerves- like Patrick Wilson- but both are fantastic in this season: I think given the right direction and script, they're actually fine actors. Everyone is top of their game here.
“So you can imagine our surprise when we find the place closed and the scene of a crime” *have a wonderful day sir I hope you’ve enjoyed our great state*
Did anybody catch when he said he is a man of his word… the sheriff kept fishing and it was irritating Mike.. he told him earlier that he had nothing to fear from them but the cop was pushing his luck
Continuity error at the end when Mike tells the sheriff have a nice day. The red jacket Kitchen brother gets in the driver side and starts the car audibly, but the door never opens and the front glass stays in frame.
This scene has feelings of race undertones that’s crazy. 1st off, Milligan tells the cop “I’m going to reach for my wallet” letting him know not to overreact. 2nd, the conversation about two people being able to calmly converse with each other while the world around them is going crazy is about racism ( mind you also this is late 79’s in the Midwest). Great writing ✍🏾
Or you're just racist, or atleast extremely racially motivated to the point of just highly questionable reasoning.... Anyone can and is shot by police. Theres nothing race related to telling a cop you're getting your ID. Only if you're a negative stereotype, who thinks only blk men are asked for ID. Nearly everyone is IDd. And the 2nd example, was just literally nothing. Talking in general is apparently secretly about race. Or maybe, just maybe, youre obsessed with race so you see it in everything. No matter how nonsensical that may be.
@@eighterthabest9024 There’s nothing wrong with a cop asking for ID. That’s not the point. It’s the point that Milligan knows better than to just quickly reach for something even when asked to Do so by a cop. Something that us black people are taught. This scene is not calling the cop racist in any way and nor am I. But Milligan is fully aware as a black man how he should safely operate around police thus his last dialogue speaking to their civility in that moment which isn’t common in rural Midwest 70’s time between black and white people. Think before you call a black person racist 😂
@@p.jjohnson313 Still just you being racist. Extra points on that one for somehow thinking blk people are less capable of anything, especially racism.... Would it blow your racist mind if i honestly told you I was taught the same exact thing? 🤯🤯🤯 Thats not a "blk only person experience". Thats more just what parents who dont trust their kids not to be dumb in front of cops do. Don't reach too quickly. Don't stick your hands in your pockets or even put them out of line of sight. Announce when you're doing something and what. Yeah, got all of that and more, multiple times. Its not a cultural experience, ya dork. It means you grew up somewhere where crime was common and your parents cared enough to teach not to be stupid, while also had the low opinion of you that you absolutely could do something stupid. Wanna start a club? It wont be racially segregated like youd undoubtedly like.. I'm joking with you and insulting you and all, but come on, you don't seem this dumb for the majority of your comment, despite spouting such nonsensical ideas. What happened was you saw a blk man on screen, and then you filled in the context based on your own...yes racist ideals and ego...
Rarely does a second season contend with the first, especially considering its Fargo and season one was a masterclass of acting. But this season is impeccable.
The ending was a clusterfuck though, aliens? Yeah ok.
But for what purpose? The plot has nothing to say.
@@bobf4819 entertainment
@@mikepetersen9887 I would rather be entertained with a meaningful script. This script was a veritable circus.
@@bobf4819 Because if you search for it, in late 70's there was a relatively famous incident with a state trooper in Minnesota claiming he saw a UFO. Fargo is presented as a "True Story", and even though we know that is not what it is, the UFO plays into reinforcing that as a story-telling device. Fargo needs those random, odd, truth-is-stranger-than-fiction elements. Otherwise, it's not Fargo.
That polite unfriendliness again... such a thing
His pops said that....comes to full circle
Like those mormons
It's called passive aggression
@@goodnightvienna8511 This is not passive aggressiveness.
@@ActionableFreedom I thought polite unfriendliness was the definition of passive aggressiveness? As in its passive, not active in a physical manner,but still unpleasant,attacking the co-interlocutor in a verbal or simply facial expressive way?
“Now that is a truly odd question”
an
@@visgraatje859It’s “a” dumbo
Bokeem Woodbine KILLED every scene he was in!
Steven Dunn he is an awesome actor
Criminally under employed actor. Hes exceptional when given the right roles. He's had a load of forgettable bit parts over the years. Hopefully this a new chapter for him in progress
Wasn’t he in “The Big Hit” as the merc that learned he could have a good time jacking it? 😂 They even had him with a finger exercising machine, and demanding for lotion with lanoline.
He came a long way and perfected his acting craft.
Steven Dunn
Yeah he did! I’ve always loved him, I just wish he was in a whole lot more. Great actor!
Mike is threatening in the most subtle way I have seen
Similar to Malvo. Between the two, I think I'd have rather faced Mike.
An educated villain who doesn’t have to threaten, use violence, or be physical to be menacing is always a pleasure to watch. Wynn Duffy from Justified comes to mind as well.
@@KutWrite sure thing. Malvo is an irrational murderer.
I like Hank's exhale of relief at the end. Dodged a very literal bullet.
If like that then watch the sh lad interview of sugafree
“I’m gonna go ahead and guess the boys are an 11 not a 2… which would make them toddlers” 😭 the way Mike Milligan delivered his lines makes him one of the greatest characters in the Fargo universe
Mike is incredible. He even gives it back to Hank with the waffle talk. He's basically saying "you know who we are, where we're from & what we're doing here. And you can't do anything about it."
He definitely likes Hank. But, he's hinting that the waffle joint is all about the gehrharts, like he set the stop up.
Mike let him off with a warning.
@@raymondflores6410 idk, I think if things went south, mike would be the first to die in this situation. And he knew it. Hank was gonna shoot him first no matter what.
Mike was also surprised by Hank. I don’t think he was expecting a cop who clearly wasn’t afraid of any of them. When your used to getting your way and intimidating every one around you, it can be frightening to meet someone who doesn’t flinch.
@@Shearn31787 I agree, I also think it's partly that he wasn't afraid but not in the way that the police from Dakota weren't scared (being all bravado and obnoxious), Hank clearly saw and acknowledged that they were dangerous, but he was still polite and set on doing his job. For a man used to being either feared or disrespect, that was probably a welcome change.
Mike says later that he liked Hank when he met him. I think the interesting thing here is Hank's little breath when he turns around. He's not stupid, he knows the men are dangerous, but he sticks to his guns and doesn't take smack from them. He *knows* he's in deadly danger, but he's still a sheriff and he acts like one.
I love how Fargo meshes obscure actors with A listers and let the magic happen
I jumped when I realized Hank was Ted Danson. Best unexpected casting in the show.
uhh Mike is played by Bokeem Woodbine a legendary actor, a few of his films were "Strapped","Caught UP" and "Total Recall".............
I think they must've meant Ted was the obscure one. BW is a legend character actor.
Danson was surprisingly good in this, probably the best acting i seen from him ever (cheers isn't good acting, good show but i prefer frasier)
@@wildvet1 Total Recall was the one with Arnold, right? No clue about those other two.
@@nothanks492 strapped was an hbo movie when he was really young caught up was another obscure black movie too all really good
Bokeem should've won an award for this role
Bookeem Woodbine's character is such an interesting one . Mike Milligan has the distinction of being naturally polite and intimidating at the same time. This show convinced me Bokeem Woodbine is actually a good actor.
Milligan was also a great philosophical gem
He was EXcellent. 😉
Mike is one hell of a rethorician and manipulator. He knows exactly what to say, when and how, to deliver some sort of message and to get certain type of reaction.
This is what convinced you?? He’s always been an incredible actor.
@STOFFEL almost as stupid as cosplaying as a honey Badger
He asked them if they were armed but Mike just blew off the comment. Then Mike said he would have them home by supper and that if he was anything, he was a "man of his word." He was telling Hank he was a dead man if he tried to detain them. Superably written and acted.
Indeed
Having a revolver against three people isn't wise either. He should have approached with a shot gun or automatic weapon lol.
Mike Milligan is a very rational person, and doesn't let any annoyance take over the situation. Calm and Rational.
Season 2 is my favorite. All the actors are superb. Bokeem Woodbine is a revelation!
This season was one of the best seasons of any show ever.
Indeed, classic
Hear hear!
What show is this?
@@kenwooddrive3116 Fargo season 2
A 10 hour movie that kicked was from start to finish.
And that's when the cop realised he just met a dragon on the road
Well, not really. He couldn’t legally hold them there any longer or have probable cause to search their vehicle.
@Boco Corwin no, it was a reference to Fargo season 1, when Malvo uses that line. Colin Hanks’ character knew he had met a “dragon” in that instance when he let him go.
@Boco Corwin not sure what your point is. The OP was referencing Malvo’s quote from season 1, which has nothing to do with what happened first.
@Boco Corwin it’s pretty obvious I already knew that, so I have no idea why you interjected into the conversation. Colin Hanks character knew Malvo was a “dragon”, but that’s not the case here. Ted Danson couldn’t legally hold these guys any longer. He HAD to let them go, where as Hanks didn’t.
@Boco Corwin I was replying to the OP, and then you made a pointless and irrelevant comment presuming I didn’t get the reference. So yeah, I think I summed up your actions pretty well.
This scene kind of reminds me of the diner face off between Pacino & De Niro in “Heat”. A seasoned lawman having a polite but frank conversation with an obvious mob enforcer and his equally obvious professional hitters…on a lonely highway, while the rest of the world goes by oblivious. Of course he let them go - he had nothing to hold them but suspicion. He knew he could try probable cause to search the car and would certainly find weapons…but if he does that he’s alone against 3 professionals with backup minutes away. Likewise, Milligan knew he had the advantage & could have taken the sherif at any time, but they didn’t do it and there was nothing to link them to the crime. And they’re smart enough to know killing the cop gets in the way of business and would put every cop from Minnesota to Missouri on their trail. And so…a civil, polite but unfriendly conversation where the players all recognize each other but they just let the game play. Amazing.
yeah. well said. it was just that. great parlance to hide what everybody there knows is really being said, without it actually needing to be said.
great analysis!!!!
Great. Now I have to watch that scene all over again, just because you brought it up.
This is some of the best writing in any series ever written.
Loved this show. Props do Bokeem Woodbine. I've seen him in gangster, sci-fi, comedy, police, etc.. Movies. Always an amazing performance..
He was also a mercenary in The Rock.
Also the first role where I’ve seen him survive.
"Misunderstanding". Interesting word from Mike. Hank thinks that all conflict comes from misunderstandings.
Thomas Long I‘mma suggest looking into Eric Gans‘ concept of the ostensive sign I think it really helps understanding from where Hank is coming
Hank was the Zodiac
Out of all four seasons Mike Milligan is the best character, and almost every character is fantastic.
No malvo is
@@horatiotodd8723 they’re both great
@@sydr570 You really wanna have this argument? Yes or no?
Mike looks like Dave Chapelle
@@raymondreddington5847 I mean there’s not really an argument to be made. All antagonists throughout the season are great unanimously
Mike is one hell of a rethorician and manipulator. He knows exactly what to say, when and how, to deliver some sort of message and to get certain type of reaction.
Hank silently let his sigh out after the talk the moment he was walking away. He was scared of them.
Thanks
He'd have to be an idiot not to feel fear when facing 3 people that seemed like obviously seasoned killers on his own, not to mention just releasing the tension from the high pressure situation.
@@Warcodered01 The ONE time I didn't have back up is the one time things are going to go very, very wrong.
Ted Danson is very good in this scene.
What's not to love about Ted Danson, right?
Education one is he ready color?
His hairdo hides that forehead that keeps his wife Mary Steenburgen out of the rain with.
@Sam Spade Check out hos role in Season 1 of "Damages" with Glenn Close and Rose Byrne sometime. By far the best dramatic, dark, intense acting Ted Danson has ever done.
@Sam Spade based on a true story iirc
Bokeem Woodbine, never less than great.
Damn Cheers has gotten really dark this season.
"Sometimes, you wanna go..."
Idk what it is about Ted with that beard but it's very intimidating
It peppers in the acting experience
Kitchen Brothers reminded me of a roided up evil versions of the Bee Gees
Kitchen brothers reminded me of the twins from Breaking Bad, ruthless and no emotions
Bee Gees and Doobles
They actually look like linemen of the 1970s NFL teams..
Somewhere in the season Mike makes that band name joke about 'Mike Milligan & the Kitchen Brothers.' 😁
You've never seen the bee gees then
My friend up front doesn't like talking to strangers. Translation? My buddy up top is about a hair trigger away from chopping you down and taking your badge as a souvenir. Gotta love how Mike M dodges questions.
Or he just said let me do the talking. Have to be careful what you say to a cop.
That "I'm a man of my word " by Milligan says it all.
That was one intense scene. Loved every second of it, season 2 was fantastic.
People don’t say this enough… but dammit I love Bokeem Woodbine and he can act!
The suspense in this scene is so intense
The subdued exhale of relief at end of scene reminds of how many high stakes poker hands end after a long wait for "will they call me , do i have them or do they have me " . Great wrap to a great scene .
This was my introduction to Bokeem Woodbine. Phenomenal actor
Please go back and work Jason’s lyric.
Bokeem Woodbine been doing this forever but never gets a lot of credit but definitely a superb actor
Mike was such a great character I actually like him more than malvo its because he's a perfect mix of Intense and Witty humour
I didn't buy Malvo. Just too obviously evil. I much preferred season 2.
you never really know what you are and what stuff you made of, till you're confronted by someone who is threatening to take your life
1:50 wow damn, this man can put on his glasses pretty fast! With one hand.
Slight of hand, the same way the Kitchen brothers could tug away their guns
@@S.E.J Oh, the mysterious reason. What might it be? Some evil plot? Or maybe I just wanted to correct the typo? I guess you will never know...
Underrated comment
3:12 is Mike telling Hank he's not somebody to fuck with. Brilliant writing.
That brown Oldsmobile with the padded roof is so quintessentially SOMETHING.
WE rebuilt a 1870 big block and that looks like an 73 or 74. you should see ours in blue with a dark blue landau top, as new. Our uphostelry shop in LA had a new roll of blue brochade GM and we found a full package of chrome at a Canadian dealer!! Even the whilewalls and trans. are made in Canada. Most of these without the 454 big block got squished long ago.
Didn't realise Oldsmobile was the actual make of the car lol. Thought you were calling it that because its an old car, until googling it
Dude sounds , looks and acts like Dave Chapelle
That is Dave Chapelle
@@gvhnl497 Bokeem Woodbine ;)
Some Other Guy no that’s Samuel l Jackson. Not all black people look alike.
@@pretzelstick320 you racists make me sick!
Who wants to bet that the characters in the upcoming season will somehow be linked to Mike M. ?
I hope you bet a lot of money!
@@Rambleon31 lol, he must've had inside info on the show😆
3:57 - 4:38
How to scare the living hell out of someone (a cop no less) with veiled threats without ever sounding threatening.
3:19 - Is the noise of a chainsaw in the background intentional or just a random dude srewing up a scene recording?
😂😂
2:59 this part cracks me up everytime 🤣🤣
I love the minor parallels each season has to each other. This scene paralleled the scene when Malvo was pulled over by the cop in season one and was intimidated. Both cops had a look of fear and relief after each encounter because they knew it could’ve easily went the other way.
1000000% correct btw, 2 very important scenes in each season "these men, these types of men, they don't fear "police""
Just got done with the season. It’s ironic how this motif of strained lines of communication even goes back towards Hank and the language he was creating.
On ThE FlInTsToNeS
What kills me about this scene is how fast he puts on those glasses at 1:48... He don't trust these boys at all lol
See now this is what happened when satchel cannon ran off with rabbi Milligan and grew up to be Mike
U just finished season 4 I’m assuming
So did I. They're all outstanding seasons, but season 2 is the best in my opinion
Never been a fan of Ted Danson but this role was dead nuts. Every character written and actor chosen this season was spot on.
Five things that don't cost you anything: remembering someone name, being punctual, being polite, taking an interest in others, being sincere.
These things do cost you. Your memory, your emotions, your focus, your time and your attention.
Do not live your life pretending these things come for free and are not limited.
"Bathroom brothers"
4:20 he drops his accent, like when he met Lou in the typewriter shop
This scene contains some superb acting, lighting and camera work. Also the score fits to a T. Both the movie Fargo as well as the series up intill now are classics which cannot be unwatched.
The general theme of Fargo is how can survive in winter. The darkness, the rage, the loneliness. That is the central theme.
The Chris Rock season. It wasn't about the world of winter.
I want to see a battle of the brothers with The Kitchen Brothers vs The Salamanca Cousins.
Why?
Ben Dover Because both of them were ruthless and they were great villains. It’s like Superman versus Batman or something along those lines.
@@ontariobuds how, are they in an Arena?
Is it Just silent twins vs silent twins, build up though some Episodes?
Or did you Just Order "bang! vam!" Those two in their respective attire vs each other! "Blang! Cool edgy Kills, boom!"
@@bendover2684 Yes.
The bathroom brothers come out on top
Mann bros are the best actors!
Love Mike! One of my all time favorite characters!
"Sir, please roll up your window."
Hahaha I laughed so much at that. Ted Danson was class in season 2.
A scene that puts many Oscar winners to shame.
Satchel is all grown up !
Size 11 and not 2 love it
This combined with The Good Place gave me a whole new respect for Ted Danson! And the tension!
This season was the best television I have ever seen. The 3rd season was also incredible and blew my mind, but this second season is literally the best. I loved the first season too. Didn’t care much for the 4th unfortunately.
Is 4th even worth the time if I'm a fan of 1st and 2nd, and not much of a 3rd?
@@mrdeathamore it gets better as the season continues after the first few episodes, but it’s not as good as any of the first 3 seasons. It is however, still entertaining. Just not great by Fargo standards
@@mrdeathamore popular opinion is season is the weakest. Have seen all of them I'd say watch and form your own opinion. I liked season 4
@@mrdeathamore Yes, it is absolutely worth watching.
Anyone come back to this after reading the fan theory that mike Milligan is cannons son?
It’s probs a coincidence but the kid in season 4 kinda stand the same way mike does
yeah thats an ongoing debate with all season 4 watchers, its either Satchel or going to be future Etherilda's son
He's satchel Chris rock repeats the line he told this cop to the Marshall
@@AdolfHitler-zp8uu you got that right
@@AdolfHitler-zp8uu He can't be Satchel, Milligan was born in 1949, the same year Satchel was swapped.
@@Totallyfizzle This aged badly 😂🌝
I find it very interesting that the Kitchen Brothers pulled their licenses straight from their pockets, all loose like.
Bokeem Wobine was phenomenal in this. Like blew my socks off.
Woodbine was AWESOME in this show.
"...that two men could stand on a lonely road in winter and talk..." One of the best implied threats ever.
Some of the best acting I’ve seen since breaking bad
both 10/10 shows
I am with anyone who agrees that woodbine has this cadence that sounds like Dave chappelle !
No lie !
defo, im black and a lot of us just have recognisably deeper cadence than other backgrounds, male and female alike
Beautiful scene. As cold as the weather with a hint of Spring .
Such a great season here. Masterful acting.
absolutely riveting !!! greatest series of all time !!!!
This series had some great characters. Very well done.
Bookeem is a good actor and fine too
He's like a very dark Chapelle. The humor is still in there, but violent added.
Often he really gets on my nerves- like Patrick Wilson- but both are fantastic in this season: I think given the right direction and script, they're actually fine actors. Everyone is top of their game here.
What a great season that was. Plot was amazing and portrayals were stellar.
Satchel cannon was absolutely amazing in this.
He knew he was staring death in the face.
Jesus! Ted Danson and Bokeem Woodbine get more handsome with age!
Bokeem Woodvine deserves more respect on his name.
I love when Mike's accent changes up.
Me too 😏 showing his true voice.
The intermittent chain saw working in the background is most excellent.
“So you can imagine our surprise when we find the place closed and the scene of a crime”
*have a wonderful day sir I hope you’ve enjoyed our great state*
Fantastic scene.
Danson really shines bright here, I think.
Mike Milligan and Lorne Malvo, two greatest characters in TV history?
They're definitely up there.
0:38 window all the way down. 0:42 window sticking out just a bit.
Sounds like my car
4:43 you hear audio for both front doors opening but you can clearly see based on the seam, the front door does not move.
Anyone see mikes ring?? From season 4?
Mike Milligan ant the Kitchen Brothers, Number 1 Billboard 200 in 70's
Man he talks just like Dave Chappelle 😅
The Kitchen brothers versus Tuco's cousins would be a good match.
Did anybody catch when he said he is a man of his word… the sheriff kept fishing and it was irritating Mike.. he told him earlier that he had nothing to fear from them but the cop was pushing his luck
I’ve always loved Bokeem’s acting even as far back as in Strapped
Continuity error at the end when Mike tells the sheriff have a nice day. The red jacket Kitchen brother gets in the driver side and starts the car audibly, but the door never opens and the front glass stays in frame.
Bokeem Woodbine should have played Brother Mouzone in the Wire.
This scene has feelings of race undertones that’s crazy. 1st off, Milligan tells the cop “I’m going to reach for my wallet” letting him know not to overreact. 2nd, the conversation about two people being able to calmly converse with each other while the world around them is going crazy is about racism ( mind you also this is late 79’s in the Midwest). Great writing ✍🏾
Or you're just racist, or atleast extremely racially motivated to the point of just highly questionable reasoning....
Anyone can and is shot by police. Theres nothing race related to telling a cop you're getting your ID. Only if you're a negative stereotype, who thinks only blk men are asked for ID. Nearly everyone is IDd. And the 2nd example, was just literally nothing. Talking in general is apparently secretly about race. Or maybe, just maybe, youre obsessed with race so you see it in everything. No matter how nonsensical that may be.
@@eighterthabest9024 There’s nothing wrong with a cop asking for ID. That’s not the point. It’s the point that Milligan knows better than to just quickly reach for something even when asked to Do so by a cop. Something that us black people are taught. This scene is not calling the cop racist in any way and nor am I. But Milligan is fully aware as a black man how he should safely operate around police thus his last dialogue speaking to their civility in that moment which isn’t common in rural Midwest 70’s time between black and white people.
Think before you call a black person racist 😂
@@p.jjohnson313 Still just you being racist. Extra points on that one for somehow thinking blk people are less capable of anything, especially racism....
Would it blow your racist mind if i honestly told you I was taught the same exact thing? 🤯🤯🤯
Thats not a "blk only person experience". Thats more just what parents who dont trust their kids not to be dumb in front of cops do. Don't reach too quickly. Don't stick your hands in your pockets or even put them out of line of sight. Announce when you're doing something and what. Yeah, got all of that and more, multiple times. Its not a cultural experience, ya dork. It means you grew up somewhere where crime was common and your parents cared enough to teach not to be stupid, while also had the low opinion of you that you absolutely could do something stupid. Wanna start a club? It wont be racially segregated like youd undoubtedly like..
I'm joking with you and insulting you and all, but come on, you don't seem this dumb for the majority of your comment, despite spouting such nonsensical ideas. What happened was you saw a blk man on screen, and then you filled in the context based on your own...yes racist ideals and ego...
Bearded Ted Danson > than clean shaven Ted Danson
A work of art!
I love Fargo, but the kitchen brothers were the dumbest thing ever
Bokeem is so charismatic