The Good Fight
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Can she and the firm really claim to be living up to their ideals?

In The End of the Yips, its Lizs turn under the microscope.
Her father was a legendary defense attorney who fought for civil rights.
Is she worthy of his legacy?
Its not that simple.
She seems to conclude, on balance, that she did the right thing at the time.
But its not an open-and-shut case.
Neither is the case that Marissa yipped her way out of last week.
(No, Eli.
And welcome to Paramount+, where you could be your true foul self.)
But Eli being Eli, theres more to it than that.
Lila is suitably troubled.
Where does she draw the line?
It turns out the line is already drawn for her whether she likes it or not.
Lila and Liz are facing circumstances that are not dissimilar.
But theyre both put in situations in which a perfect decision isnt possible.
They have to snag the least odious of two options.
The only way to play a clean game is not to play at all.
Hearsay
Could be antifa, could be Proud Boys.
Either way, Eli is characteristically unfazed by the grenade tossed into his elevator.
This episode does a fine job underlining Marissas privilege and her lack of self-awareness about it.
Carmens blithe willingness to work basically as a mob lawyer out of a legitimate firm continues to fascinate.
She doesnt want anyone to poke into her doings.
Diane is starting the season as a supporting player mostly on the fringes of the action.
I have no idea whats in that blue drink she takes from RiChard, but it looks unsafe.
(Also whats with the elf erection?
Probably just some weird hallucination, right?)
Dont tease us, Baranski!
Lets hear the full-throated rendition of Somethings Coming.