You said maybe we're
different people now, but...
I'm not,
and I can't keep lying
to myself that I am.
It stops now.
We have a bum juror in the box.
I need everybody to stay focused.
And what I don't need is
somebody going behind my back.
I've been in front of you
the whole time.
HOPKINS: There's been a development
in the Smokestack class action.
One of the jurors said
that he'd been bribed.
AGENT: Dr. Jason Bull,
you're under arrest
for the crime of jury tampering.
[HORNS HONKING]
[OPERA MUSIC PLAYING OVER CAR STEREO]
[OPERA MUSIC CONTINUES]
♪
[LAUGHING]
MAN: Take a video!
I got this.
[LAUGHING]
[LAUGHS]
[LAUGHS]
REPORTER: Minute Oil
& Lube CEO Lee Donaldson
was seen skinny-dipping...
GEMMA: Have you seen enough?
Maybe I should keep it running.
We can all watch together
when my father gets arrested.
His erratic behavior
is bringing us bad publicity
and negatively impacting our revenue.
Tell them, Ruby.
Our dad's also made
unorthodox business decisions,
like converting all our available assets
into cryptocurrency and giving
half-off oil changes
on our busiest days.
Minute Oil & Lube
used to be worth million.
Now we're down to
and trending south.
I, for one, will not wait
for the bottom to fall out completely.
Gemma, as your husband
and concerned member of the board,
I second your concerns.
Thank you, Don.
My father is not of sound mind.
And his contract requires he be
in order to remain in his position.
Let's vote.
Should we wait for Kira?
Kira knew about the meeting.
She must have something
more important to do
than saving the family business.
Show of hands
if you support utilizing
the termination clause
to remove our father as CEO.
♪
Okay.
Thank you very much.
Ah, the joys of slow-moving bureaucracy.
Got me a night with a cellmate
who clearly thinks
that cleanliness is not
next to godliness.
No offense, but listening to you gripe
is not part of my bucket list.
[CHUCKLES] Fair enough.
I'm Dr. Jason Bull.
You say your name like
it gets you free drinks.
[LAUGHS] Well, probably
not as many as yours.
Because, if I'm not mistaken,
you are the oil change guy,
Lee Donaldson, right?
That's me.
Well, if you don't mind my asking, Lee,
what are you doing in federal court?
I danced naked in that
fountain in City Hall Park.
I did not see that coming, Lee.
Whenever I'm having a bad day,
I get myself to that fountain.
Turns my mood right around.
Why that fountain?
I used to take my daughters there
to pitch pennies, make wishes.
Taught them the wrong lesson, though,
throwing away money like that.
[LAUGHING]
I didn't realize skinny-dipping
was a federal crime.
No, see, afterwards, I...
I took a joyride in a postal truck.
Ah. [LAUGHS]
Making some deliveries.
You know, sometimes in life,
you start to question your priorities.
So it's time for a course correction.
Yeah, I used to be an oil change guy.
Now I'm a life change guy.
- Hmm.
- KIRA: Chunk Palmer.
- Kira Donaldson, what...
- [LAUGHING]
[LAUGHS]: Hi.
We all miss you down at Legal Aid.
Oh, I promise I'll be back soon.
I passed the bar.
I'm a full-fledged lawyer now.
Well, well done.
You, uh... you here
to bail out a client?
Yeah. My dad.
He got in a little bit
of trouble last night.
What about you?
Um, my boss... same.
Uh, wait a second.
Your dad's the
"we'll keep you fluid" guy?
[CHUCKLES] Yep.
That tagline has haunted me
my whole life.
[LAUGHING]: Wow.
Well, it paid my way through
law school, though, so...
- What'd he do?
- It's kind of a short story
that's more like a novel.
Maybe you'd let me
run that by you later today?
Today? That sounds serious.
Well, I can handle my dad's
petty misdemeanors,
but there are bigger battles to fight.
Tell you what... come by TAC.
- Yeah.
- See if I can help you out.
In the meantime, I have to try
to keep my boss out of prison.
[HORNS HONKING]
I took the liberty
of talking to the AUSA.
The government says that they have proof
that the juror that claims
that you bribed him
received $ ,
from an offshore account.
Uh, the government believes that
they can trace that back to you.
I've already got Taylor working on it
to prove that that didn't happen.
Should be easy, 'cause it didn't.
And also, th-they...
they say that you were seen
outside of the juror's home.
Now, now, we know
that that's a bunch of crap.
I was outside his house.
What?
You remember that night.
Things weren't looking so good.
So I went by Randall Hughes' house
to see if there was
anything I could find
that might turn him around.
I even thought about
going through his garbage.
Oh, okay. You know what?
We'll deal with that later.
For now, why don't we just get you home.
No, I got to get back to TAC.
[GROANS] I got some work to do.
Bull, you just spent
the night in lockup.
You should find a shower.
[SNIFFS]
It's that bad?
It's bad enough.
The prisoner has been released.
[SIGHS]
I couldn't find anyone to take Astrid,
or else I would've gone with Chunk.
Oh, yes, well, I know
it's not every wife's dream
to pick up their husband from jail.
[BOTH SIGH]
Do I need to worry?
I didn't do it.
That's not what I asked.
I know I've had my share
of bad luck lately,
but the good news is
this is the kind of bad news
I'm in the business of dealing with.
I know, I know, but...
And I'm very good at my business.
To answer your question,
no, you have nothing to worry about.
♪
MARISSA: I really wish
you would reconsider.
I just think this is all
a big misunderstanding.
Okay.
Just let me know
if you change your mind.
I just talked to Danny.
She feels terrible
she can't be here for Bull,
but things are still
touch and go with her mom.
Oh, God, the good news keeps on coming.
I just hung up with
the fifth client today
who was concerned about
TAC's reputation.
News is traveling fast
about Bull's arrest, huh?
Yeah. We just have to weather the storm
until he's proven innocent.
What if he isn't innocent?
Taylor, that's ridiculous.
You're telling me
it hasn't occurred to you
that he might have done it?
No.
How could you even think that?
You of all people know
the crushing financial pressure
he was under
to bring home a victory in that case.
Sometimes good people make bad choices
when they're in a tight spot.
Yeah, he was under a lot of pressure,
but he would never bribe a juror.
That is not who he is.
I'm not saying that's who he is.
I'm saying that's who we all could be.
Not Bull. Never.
Sorry, I forgot. Bull's perfect.
Hey, I don't think he is perfect.
Uh, he and I just went
toe-to-toe in a big way.
I am painfully aware of his flaws.
I just don't think that
bribing a juror is one of them.
I hope you're right.
I do.
My older half sisters, Gemma and Ruby,
have been trying for months to
oust my dad from his business,
and this morning, they succeeded.
By declaring him non compos mentis.
He's not mentally unfit, Chunk.
Last night's events notwithstanding?
I don't know what that was,
but from a business perspective,
he's still as sharp as ever.
Well, unfortunately, your sisters
don't share that assessment.
My dad was a different
man when he was younger.
Gemma and Ruby resent him
for their childhood.
Resent me, too.
I got a softer, kinder father.
And your sisters are
expressing that resentment
by taking his company?
I'm sure my dad was never anticipating
something like this happening,
but his contract does require
he can only be terminated for cause.
And if he's found to be incompetent,
then they get their cause
and his company.
It'll k*ll him.
Minute Lube is everything to him.
Kira, if we take this to court,
it could get ugly.
Have you guys thought about mediation?
They won't even consider it.
Oh.
So...
will you help him win
his wrongful termination suit?
Oh, there's one more thing.
Look, I understand that
everybody has a lot of questions...
Heck, I have a lot of questions...
But the bottom line is I did not do it.
We'll have plenty of time
to talk about this later.
Right now, we should focus
on the clients we do have, starting with
the client you brought in, Chunk.
What do we know?
Actually, Bull...
...she would prefer
that you sit this out.
Sit this one out?
She's concerned that your legal troubles
could create some liability
in her dad's case,
and frankly, I agree.
- But this is my company.
- MARISSA: And if you don't
want it to go under,
you should consider taking a sabbatical.
Look, just until your name is cleared.
Taylor, you agree?
I agree.
Mm.
Look, Bull, we got this.
We'll catch you on the next one.
[SIGHS]
Fine.
Well, it'll give me time
to concentrate on my defense.
Hey. The AUSA is supposed
to be sending over
the first round of discovery for
your case later this afternoon.
You want to... want to
come back, we'll go over it?
Won't be necessary.
I'll go over it with my attorney.
Your attorney?
As soon as I find one.
Is this because I asked you
to step aside for the Donaldson case?
Was that you?
I thought it was the client.
Yeah. No, no, she did, but...
Well, it doesn't matter.
Chunk, you were the attorney
on the class-action case
where the bribe
that didn't happen happened.
Yeah, I thought about that, but
I think we can easily sidestep
any legal conflicts.
I'm going with someone else.
Synced & corrected by -robtor-
www.addic ed.com
I guess Bull doesn't think
I'm a good enough attorney
- to represent him.
- That's not what he's saying.
No, his words:
"I'm going with someone else."
Translation: someone better.
Chunk, I do not pretend
to know Bull's mind.
Look, and for what it's worth,
I don't think he made
the right call here.
Yeah, well, I appreciate that.
But all you can do now
is work your case.
And win.
Success is the best revenge, right?
Well, I like my chances with you
riding shotgun in the courtroom.
You got it.
What's our strategy?
We have to explain away
Lee's unpredictable behavior.
Okay, what if we frame it like this?
Lee is not incompetent.
He is an iconoclast.
His unpredictable behavior
is due to his genius.
- [CHUCKLES] That's generous.
- What about Thomas Edison?
Edison believed there were
little people as tiny as atoms
living inside your brain
recording your memories.
- Really?
- Really.
We have to get the jury to ask,
what is the line between being
crazy and being a visionary?
I can work with that.
CHUNK: So, Lee, the first thing
that we're gonna
need you to do is to take
an independent medical evaluation.
What's that?
It's a psych evaluation, Dad.
I scheduled it for later this afternoon.
I'm not doing brain calisthenics
to prove that I'm right in the head.
Well, the other side
is claiming that you're
not right in the head,
and to knock that down,
we're going to need to bring in
the psychiatrist as a witness.
So we really need that IME.
Look, I can fix a carburetor
blindfolded, for Pete's sake.
That's all the IME you should need.
- Daddy...
- Hand me the float bowl screws.
Huh?
All my girls, they know
their way around cars.
Gemma and Ruby, they used to come here
every day after school when all I had
was this little shop.
Soon, I had ten.
Then a hundred.
Building a business is
like building an engine.
You got to roll up your sleeves
and get in with both hands.
And all the unorthodox business
decisions you've made recently?
- [SCOFFS]
- The other side is claiming
that those are decisions made by
a man whose mind is slipping.
Now, how do you defend that, sir?
I would say this.
Success is about risk,
and I'm a man who risks.
Finish that.
IZZY: Is this your new w*r room?
Well, apparently, I am not welcome
in my office, so for now, yep.
Hmm.
So, what are you doing, exactly?
I need to find a great lawyer.
And your definition of "great" is?
A winner.
And this is a list of people
I've worked with before,
people I've won cases with before.
You mean people you've helped win cases?
Yeah. And?
Well, it just makes me wonder,
were they great, or were you great?
- [SIGHS]
- If I were you,
I would look for someone who b*at me.
I see your point.
It's a good one.
But this is kind of
my wheelhouse, so excuse me.
♪
BULL: Well, Porter,
it's great to see you.
I hear you've been notching up
victories like belt holes.
I give everything for
my clients, just like you.
If it's all right with you, Donna,
I'd like to get right down to it.
You know I don't like to
waste time with small talk.
[CELL PHONE RINGING]
Oh.
I remember we won that bicycle case.
Ah. Seven-minute
deliberation's still a record for me.
Oh, yeah. Me, too.
Do you need to get that?
No, no, it's just...
Actually, it is so good you called me.
I have a client...
He's a former NHL guy.
- Oh, Donna.
- He's got this on-the-ice persona
of being a real tough guy,
but it's just the hockey.
We need people to not be swayed
- by this rough and tough...
- Donna.
Well?
Tell me what you're thinking.
I'd...
like to hear your thoughts
on possible strategies.
Where I like to begin is to get a sense
of what you imagine
to be the best strategy.
[LAUGHING]
What I...?
Answer me this one question,
and then we'll get back to you.
I scratch your back, you scratch mine.
It isn't an itch. It's my life.
And right now, it's
a full-blown case of shingles.
Bull, you're not just any client,
and yes, I find clients are good guides.
I remember the bicycle case.
- You think there's a correlation?
- I do.
I remember how that case was won.
Thanks for coming.
- Wait, that's it?
- Yeah.
Okay, thank you, Porter.
No.
Wait, wh-what's happening here?
You're remembering how we won a case,
and now you're letting me go.
Well, more specifically, I'm remembering
how I-I won that case.
And I'm, uh, grateful that you came by.
Good to see you.
Give my best to Victoria.
Veronica.
[ELEVATOR BELL DINGS]
In voir dire, first impressions matter.
How they see you now will affect
how they see you for
the rest of the trial.
So you're saying I should
keep my clothes on?
[CHUCKLING]: Yes,
that would be a good idea.
LEE: Oh, look at you two.
How beautiful you are.
[LEE CHUCKLES]
How about a hug for the old man, huh?
Hmm?
I'm sorry it's come to this, Dad.
LEE: Oh, it's okay.
I'm going to win.
[CHUCKLES]
We'll get past this.
I know this lawsuit was your idea.
Because you stole his company.
You could've let him go gracefully.
This isn't gonna be pretty, Kira.
We have five solid jurors,
but we need a leader in the
jury room, a free thinker.
Someone that will admire Lee's
individuality and champion it.
Hey, Taylor, do any of the
last three fit the bill?
A sanitation worker, a nurse
and a schoolteacher walk into a bar,
but none of them have
management experience.
Sorry, Marissa, no obvious matches.
[PEN WRITING]
Try this.
CHUNK: You, sir,
says here that you work
for the New York City Sanitation
Department. Is that correct?
Proud to wear the greens
and ride the truck.
Well, as a New Yorker, please
accept my extreme gratitude.
Here's the question.
What's the most out-of-the-box thing
- you've ever done at work?
- [CHUCKLES] That's easy.
I once crushed an entire living
room set in the compactor.
Sofa, love seat, even an ottoman.
Boom.
He's a hero to
five-year-old boys everywhere
but not a leader in the jury room.
There are medical protocols
for a reason.
As a nurse, if I think
outside of the box, people die.
One time, I stacked up
all my classroom desks
on the football field
like a street barricade
in order to teach my students
the French Revolution.
Sounds like a scene
straight out of Les Mis.
Exactly.
This juror is acceptable, Your Honor.
We have a strong jury, Mr. Donaldson.
- KIRA: Thank you.
- Well done.
Right back at you.
Feels good to sit shotgun.
I hate to ruin the moment,
but that was Dr. Mosgrove.
Dad, is it true you called him a quack?
- Oh, no.
- Said that he should have
his medical license burnt to ashes
and scattered in a cow pasture?
Why would you do that, Mr. Donaldson?
He asked if I thought
I was a good father.
Now, who asks a question like that?
A psychiatrist doing an IME.
Hey, you can take the kid
out of the Bronx,
but you cannot take the Bronx
out of the kid.
Well, if you want to win this case,
perhaps you would consider
keeping the kid in Manhattan.
[SCOFFS]
Whatever you say.
How mad is Dr. Mosgrove?
Mad enough he's deeming Dad unstable.
That IME gets sent to the defense.
They will use our witness against us.
We've lost before we've even begun.
No, no, no, no!
I am not losing this case!
No, not on my watch.
Okay.
The key to winning a wrongful
termination suit is proving
that the company's
reason for termination
was a pretext for something else.
They are saying that they're doing this
for the good of Minute Oil & Lube,
but maybe they're doing this
for the good of themselves.
CHUNK: Exactly. We need to get into
the other side's motives and
find a way to impugn them.
Investigate my sisters?
I'll get Taylor on it.
Oh, and maybe we leave
your dad out of this.
I don't think he would react
well to this fishing expedition.
Yeah.
BEN: We go on the offensive.
This is the kind of game
where you don't wait
for them to show their hand.
And we hit them
with character witnesses,
even the ones who don't like you.
Are you saying there
are people out there
- who don't like me, Ben?
- [LAUGHS]
We aren't gonna earn sympathy
for what a great guy you are.
We're going to earn respect
for what a great job you do.
Integrity. That's our word.
We're going to buzz it
in the jury's ears
until they think
it's a synonym for Bull.
I like the way you're thinking.
I hear that the AUSA
has footage of you outside
of the juror's house.
Yes, he does.
Do you know if they have audio
of you offering the juror a bribe?
I didn't offer the juror a bribe, Ben.
It doesn't matter.
It's immaterial
to how I'll pursue my strategy.
Well, it's material to me.
If you think I have to bribe
a juror in order to win a case,
you are not the man for this job.
Fine.
Have fun falling on your sword.
It's a beautiful sword
with the word "integrity"
engraved on the side of it.
Can I get you anything else?
You know any good lawyers?
Hey, have you found anything we can use
- against Ruby or Gemma?
- There's very little on Ruby.
Her life's blander than this salad.
No sign of financial instability?
Nope. She works and goes home
to her cats... meow, snooze.
And Gemma?
There might be something there.
Gemma's iCalendar would have us believe
that she goes to the gym
every day at lunch,
but her membership lapsed
six months ago.
That could be a sign
of financial trouble.
Where does she go?
According to her
cell phone location data,
she spends her lunch hours
at The Triple Ivy Club.
Oh. A Triple Ivy Club membership is
way more expensive than any gym.
That's the thing, though.
Neither she nor her husband is a member.
So, what do you think she's been
- doing there every day?
- No idea.
Yeah, but you're gonna go
and get an idea, right?
That club is harder to get into
than skinny jeans in a heat wave.
Well, hack into the system.
Make yourself a member for a day.
[SCOFFS] I try not to sign my name
when I hack someone's system.
There is... [SIGHS]
One person I could call to get me in.
I just really don't want to.
Here you go.
Thanks again for getting me in here.
No problem.
How come you never took me here
when we were married?
Because you thought private clubs
were elitist and disgusting.
I still do, but, Erik,
look at this view.
Yeah.
It's something.
TAYLOR: Yes! There she is.
Don't look. You'll blow my cover.
Your cover?
I told you, I'm on a stakeout for work.
I thought you were kidding.
Aren't stakeouts Danny's thing?
Her mom is sick. I'm doing double duty.
[GASPS] Hello.
Someone's getting cozy with
someone who's not her husband.
Here, scooch in. Let's take a selfie.
[CAMERA BEEPS, CLICKS]
[CAMERA BEEPS, CLICKS]
Oh, my gosh, this is great.
[CAMERA BEEPS, CLICKS]
- I have to go.
- What?
Uh, you can order whatever you want.
Just tell them to charge it to my tab.
Erik, what did I do?
Nothing. It's my mistake.
I just thought this whole stakeout thing
was an excuse to see me.
I thought you might regret
calling things off.
Oh, Erik, I'm really sorry. I...
Like I said, my mistake.
But can you do me a favor?
Yes, anything.
Unless you want to talk about our son,
don't call me.
Don't ask to see me.
I'm not your friend, okay?
BULL: Come on, baby, move your feet,
or you're gonna be kissing canvas.
I assume this lazy-day thing
you've got going
means you found a lawyer?
Uh, what is it Shakespeare said?
"First thing we do,
k*ll all the lawyers"?
[CHUCKLES]
No. Hmm-mm. I'm not doing this.
If you were the only one affected,
I'd let you wallow
to your heart's content,
but it's not just you.
It's me. It's Astrid.
It's us.
It turns out it's
a lot harder to find
a good lawyer than you'd think.
Jason, it's time for you to go out there
and find someone
who kicked your ass in court
and ask them to help you,
because if you don't, the only fights
you're gonna be watching
are gonna be on the prison yard.
That's a good speech.
You know, don't make me give it again,
because next time, it might be too late.
Okay?
Okay.
[SIGHS]
CHUNK: So, Mr. Corso,
can you tell us how long
you've known Mr. Donaldson?
Over years.
I'm employee number two.
And how would you describe
Mr. Donaldson's business acumen?
Lee's a genius, plain and simple.
Especially when it comes to marketing.
CHUNK: Can you give us an example?
Well, he came up with that
♪ We'll keep you fluid ♪
tagline himself.
[CORSO LAUGHS]
- It's catchy, huh?
- It sure is.
Mr. Corso, have you noticed any decline
in Mr. Donaldson's abilities recently?
Absolutely not.
In fact, he's only getting sharper.
And say what you will
about his jaunt in the fountain,
but it's already become a meme
seen by over a million people.
If that's not marketing
brilliance, what is?
Indeed.
No further questions, Your Honor.
How does it look?
He spun one of our worst facts
into gold, so I'm thinking
there's a "greener
than a leprechaun" joke
to be made here,
but I'll leave those to you.
I have only one question, Mr. Corso.
Can you explain the $ million
line item on the budget
for research and development?
It's...
for research and, um, development.
Could you be more specific?
What's he getting at?
JEFF: Mr. Corso?
JUDGE STERN: I will direct the witness
to answer the defense's question.
It's for a shaman.
- [JURORS MURMURING]
- JEFF: Sh-Shaman?
As in guru, as in healer?
Lee hired him to consult on
our overall corporate strategy.
And did Mr. Donaldson
instruct you to camouflage
the $ million payment to the shaman
as research and development?
No. I did that on my own.
Because you thought it looked crazy.
Isn't that right?
Should I even ask?
Best if you didn't.
Didn't he say he was staying away?
I'll take care of it.
Are you checking up on us?
You could at least pretend
to be happy to see me.
Yeah, not really focused
on happiness right now, Bull.
We are at a courthouse handling a case
you are not supposed to touch.
Well, I'm not touching anything,
and I got to be somewhere else.
See you later.
OLIVIA: Detective,
I'm gonna stop asking you questions
because I find
your stammering obfuscation
dishonest and insulting
to these proceedings.
Objection. Argumentative.
OLIVIA: The truth is you didn't have
a reason to investigate my client
except for a political vendetta.
- Isn't that right?
- Objection.
You should object, counselor,
because it is objectionable.
I withdraw, Your Honor.
BULL: Very impressive, Olivia.
You dismantled that witness.
The answer is no.
What was the question?
There is no way in hell
I'd defend someone like you.
- Someone like me?
- Someone like you.
Someone who makes a mockery
of the justice system.
You think I forgot?
You hired a marching band
to play outside the courthouse
while I gave my closing argument.
[LAUGHING]:
Oh, yeah. They were pretty good.
Two of those guys were from New Orleans.
Come one, that was years ago.
The world had a sense of humor.
I loathe parlor tricks.
You didn't play by the rules back then,
and you're in hot water
for doing the same thing now.
I didn't bribe that juror.
- Goodbye, Jason.
- Wait.
Come on.
You still won that case.
What are you so angry about?
I'm not angry, Jason. I'm tired.
People like you, who rig the game,
put their thumb on the scales,
you make me tired.
You're not on the level,
and that exhausts me.
I didn't rig anything.
Well, then you and whatever lawyer
you can con into representing you
should have nothing to worry about.
Your father spent
$ million on a shaman?
Kitt buries bodies for my dad.
Gemma and Ruby must've dug them up.
That shaman just made our
iconoclast look like a nutjob.
Maybe I just love him too much
to admit that he's declining.
I've always put my dad on a pedestal.
I guess I just put him up too high.
We still have one more play to make.
Taylor.
Gemma's been having daily lunches
with a man named Rocco Bird.
The CEO of Rocco's Auto Center?
You know him?
My dad told us Rocco made
a buyout offer six months ago,
but he turned him down flat.
By the looks of it, Rocco's trying to go
through door number two.
If I were a gambler, I would wager
that Gemma is mixing
business with pleasure
and has a handshake deal to
sell Minute Oil & Lube
to Rocco once the case is over.
Or is that too big of a leap?
No. We can make that leap in court
and hope that we stick the landing.
So you're calling Gemma to the stand?
No.
I have something else in mind.
CHUNK: Thank you for joining us
here today, Ms. Donaldson.
You were the one
that orchestrated the plot
to oust your father from
the company that he started.
Isn't that right?
RUBY: Um, I wouldn't characterize it
as orchestrating anything,
but I voted with the board.
Do you know the succession plan
for Minute Oil & Lube
should you prevail here?
Yes. My sister Gemma and I
will run the company together.
So you'll share responsibilities - ?
Yes.
Because... and-and I-I mean
no disrespect...
But wouldn't you agree that Gemma
is a much more take-charge
kind of person than you are?
More like your father in that way?
I guess so. Yes.
But Gemma and I consult with each other
before every major decision.
Well, did she consult with you
before having an affair with Rocco Bird,
the CEO of Rocco's Auto Center?
- What?
- JEFF: Objection.
Lacks foundation.
Sustained. Move on, Mr. Palmer.
Do you think that you'll still
share - control
when she sells Minute Oil & Lube
to Rocco's Auto Center
right out from under you?
Objection, Your Honor.
Are you having an affair?
Were you planning to sell the company?
No. Of course not.
Oh, my God, you're lying.
You always play with your hair
when you're lying!
- Order in the court.
- Stop!
This isn't what I wanted,
my daughters turning against each other.
Mr. Donaldson, Mr. Donaldson,
where are you going?
I'm done.
Mr. Donaldson, you can't just walk out
in the middle of testimony.
Oh, really?
Watch me.
[DOOR OPENS]
[DOOR CLOSES]
TAYLOR [OVER PHONE]:
I'm guessing that you're
- checking in on the case.
- I am.
Even though you said you wouldn't.
Taylor.
Well, your timing is uncanny.
Lee had an outburst
and stormed out of court.
Ah. Something tells me
that didn't play well
- with Judge Stern.
- TAYLOR: Chunk was barely able
to convince her to grant a continuance,
and if we can't get Lee
back in court by end of day...
She'll throw out the case,
and Lee will lose everything.
- Any idea where he went?
- TAYLOR: No one knows.
I'm guessing he had
a worse day than you.
Taylor, I got to go.
♪
[SIGHS]
Join me?
[SIGHS HEAVILY]
Dr. Jason Bull.
Mr. Lee Donaldson.
Thought I'd find you down here.
Bad day, huh?
Hasn't been the best.
Yeah.
Lee, I believe... whoo!
You and I are very much alike.
- And how's that?
- Well...
We've both been thrown out
of the businesses we started.
- Our families doubt our sanity.
- Mm-hmm.
We're wading in water,
talking to the wind
like a couple of King Lears.
We're men who've lost our crowns.
I thought I was strange,
but you might be even stranger.
I'm just trying
to keep my life together.
What's your excuse, Lee?
I have my reasons.
I'm sure you do.
You know, s-sometimes I lose my temper,
like with that damn psychiatrist
or today in court... see?
But that doesn't mean
that I don't know
what's best for my family.
Don't you mean your business?
Isn't that what this is all about?
They're one and the same.
Put out your hand.
- [COINS JINGLING]
- Here.
What do you wish for?
[CHUCKLES]
Uh...
to go back to the beginning.
To start clean.
Just me and my girls
and my little garage,
changing filters...
...wiping grease from their foreheads.
I may not know how
to solve my problems, Lee,
but I believe I know how to solve yours.
Is this you still not checking up on us?
Oh, I'm... I'm not here.
I'm staying away
from the case, as promised.
But if I were here,
I would put Lee on the stand,
and I would only ask him one question.
Even if I thought it was a good idea
to put Lee on the stand...
Which I don't...
I couldn't, because Lee's not here.
Actually, Lee is here.
I'm sorry I went Bronx
on you again, Mr. Palmer.
Please stick with me.
I promise you I'll...
I'll stay in Manhattan
for the rest of the deal.
[SIGHS]
I-I'd take the risk,
but again, I'm not here.
- CHUNK: Mr. Donaldson.
- LEE: Hmm?
I'm going to read to you five words,
and if you would,
I'd like for you to recite them
in the order
in which I read them to you.
Plant. Book.
Dog. Flute.
Shoe.
Plant. Book.
Dog. Flute.
Shoe. How'd I do?
Perfect. [CHUCKLES]
Do you remember the color suit
you wore to your wedding?
Which wedding?
[LAUGHTER]
When I married Gemma
and Ruby's dear mother...
May she rest in peace...
I didn't have a pot to...
I was broke,
so I wore hand-me-down gray slacks
and a white button-down
my Uncle Mike gave me.
And when I married Kira's mother...
May she also rest in peace...
I wore a black tuxedo.
[CHUCKLES] With tails.
I have one last question
for you, Mr. Donaldson.
Which one of your daughters
do you love the most?
[MURMURING]
I love my daughters all the same.
When you get older, you realize
the mistakes that you made.
I gave my daughters too much
of the wrong things
and not enough of the right things.
I gave them money, privilege.
I gave them everything that
I never had when I was a kid.
But I didn't teach them
how to love each other.
I'm sorry.
Mr. Donaldson, why did you jump naked
into that fountain,
invest so heavily in cryptocurrency?
Why would you give half-off
oil changes on your busiest day?
I've been trying to devalue my company.
- CHUNK: Devalue?
-
- How?
- Six months back,
I got an offer to sell my
company to Rocco's Auto Center.
And when I told my daughters about it,
I could see that they were getting ready
to fight over all that money.
I knew I had to do something drastic.
Are you telling us that you have
intentionally attempted to...
to bankrupt Minute Oil & Lube?
If I devalued the company to nothing...
...we'd all have to go back
to the beginning together,
where all we had was pennies...
and wishes.
I love my daughters
with every fiber of my being.
And I just want them
to love each other as much.
Am I supposed to pretend
you're not here again?
No. This is me.
How's it going in there?
Chunk is trying a little
family mediation after all.
Mm.
You and I could use a little
family mediation, don't you think?
Bull.
I owe you an apology. I know that.
And, in fact, I was
in the middle of one
when I got arrested.
There will be time for
you and me to hash this out,
but right now, the one
you need to talk to is Chunk.
Well, I am glad that we could
come to an agreement.
Look, I really appreciate
you sticking with me.
I'm sorry about all
that I put you through.
Free oil filters for life?
Mr. Donaldson, if only I had a car.
[CHUCKLES] Okay.
[QUIET CHATTER]
Well, Mr. Palmer, I see smiles.
That's good.
We worked out a deal.
Lee's gonna turn over control
of the company
to all three of his daughters,
with one condition:
that they all three run it together
for the next ten years
before they sell it.
That's clever.
You were right putting Lee on the stand.
And that question...
I think you would've
come up with something.
No matter what,
you were gonna win this thing.
You don't have to do that, Bull.
If our pal Lee has taught us one thing,
it's to speak your truth
before everything falls apart.
So I'll speak mine.
You're a great lawyer
and a great friend.
And friends have blind spots.
They protect each other unknowingly.
I can't risk that right now.
I need someone
who doesn't care about me,
who only cares about the law.
Think you found that person?
I think I have.
If she'll have me.
- I don't mock the system.
- [SIGHS]
- It's been a long day.
- I test the system.
And I didn't cross a line when we met,
and I didn't cross one now.
Look, that juror got paid, Jason.
Not by me.
And yes, someone got to that juror.
Somebody rigged the game,
somebody put their thumb
on the scales, but it wasn't me.
I care about the system,
I revere the system,
and if you cared about it
as much as you say,
you would do something about it.
Because I intend to.
You finished?
[SIGHS] Yes.
Thank you for hearing me out.
I'll see you around.
No.
[SIGHS]
Actually, I'll see you tomorrow.
What?
: a.m., sharp.
We got a big fight ahead of us.