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James McGill

From The Codex
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Shared Smoke
Billboard Stunt
Jimmy's Choice


Jimmy: Let me tell you about a young guy--actually, he's about your age. He lived a long way from here, in a town called Cicero, Illinois. And in Cicero, he was the man. I mean, when he strolled down the street, all the corner boys would give him the high five. All the finest babes would smile at him, and hope that he would smile back. They called him Slippin' Jimmy, and everybody wanted to be his friend.


Lars: Slippin' Jimmy? What the hell kinda name is that?

Jimmy: Well, I'll tell you now. Winters in Cicero are murder. You guys growing up here in the Golden West, you don't know. Okay? I'm talking cold that'll freeze the snot right in your nose. I'm talking wind that'll cut through your jacket and carve you up like a Ginsu knife. In fact, most folks in Cicero were scared of winter, but not Jimmy. Jimmy'd wait around all summer, and when September finally rolled around and he'd feel that first cold wind come sweeping off lake Michigan, he knew it was coming. Was it Christmas? Was it Kwanzaa? Better! It was slip-and-fall season. Soon as it was cold enough, he'd find a nice, smooth patch of ice. Saint Street was good, Michigan Avenue was better. He'd pick a spot, wait for it to get busy, then walk out on the ice and--BOOM! He would biff it so hard people would come running from five blocs away!

Cal: Yeah, but did he collect?

Jimmy: Did he collect... Slippin' Jimmy had it dialed in, alright? One good fall, he'd clear six--eight grand. That'd keep him in Old Milwaukee and Maui Wowie right through Labor Day.

Lars: Eight grand?

Jimmy: Eight grand.

~ Jimmy talking about his Slippin' Jimmy days


Actually, it's getting arrested that makes people look guilty, even the innocent ones, and innocent people get arrested every day. And they find themselves in a little room with a detective who acts like he's their best friend. 'Talk to me,' he says. Uh, 'help me clear this thing up. You don't need a lawyer, only guilty people need lawyers.' And boom! Hey, that's when it all goes south. That's when you want someone in your corner, someone who will fight tooth and nail. Lawyers, you know, we're like health insurance. You hope you never need it. But, man, oh, man, not having it, no
~ Jimmy talking to the Kettlemans


I'm gonna make an educated guess what happened here. My two clients, Frick and Frack, the mopheads, were in a simple traffic accident. A minor fender-bender, but maybe they were on the wrong side of the street or they didn't look both ways. It could happen to anyone. My clients, exhibiting extremely poor judgement, followed your grandmother to this delightful, well-tended home. Now, at this juncture, I am deducing that they said or did something that... crossed a line, and you–with some justification–you put them in their place. Based on the "salsa" stain there, could've gone a couple ways. The bottom line, not to be morbid, but if they're dead, uh, I'm guessing that I'm... I'm gonna–Yeah, I'm gonna go with glass half-full here and say they're not. My point is, if they're alive, why kill us? Why, because of a misunderstanding? Our own stupidity? Why mess up your lovely abuelita's place? Why jump to the nuclear option? See, I'm saying "keep it simple." I will collect my moronic clients, and poof, we are gone. Neither you nor your lovely abuelita will ever lay eyes on us ever again, guaranteed! Signed, sealed and delivered... assuming, you know, that they're still breathing.
~ Jimmy talking to Tuco


Hey, I just talked you down from a death sentence to six months probation. I'm the best lawyer ever


So that's it then, right? Keep old Jimmy down in the mailroom, 'cause he's not good enough to be a lawyer.
~ Jimmy to Chuck


I...I got ya a 20-pound bag of ice, and some bacon and some eggs and a couple of those steaks that you like. Some fuel canisters, it's enough for three or four days. After that... you're on your own. I am done.
~ Jimmy leaving Chuck after Chuck reveals how he feels about Jimmy


Detective 1: What the hell is a squat cobbler?!


Jimmy: It's when a man sits in pie! He sits in a pie! And he... he wiggles around. Maybe it's like Hellman's Mayonnaise. It has a different name west of the Rockies. I don't know. But, uh, technically, he does a crybaby squat, so there's tears, which makes it more specialized. Not all pie sitters cry. But I'm gonna tell you something: This guy? He's a regular Julianne Moore once he gets ‭the waterworks cranked up.

Detective 2: Pies? What? Like apple?

Jimmy: Guys, I'm not the filmmaker here, all right? Banana cream. I... uh, peach. Oh, and there... And there is a costume involved.

Detective 1: [snorts] You've got to be shittin' us.

~ Jimmy defending his client by lying and saying that his client makes fetish videos


I rat fucked you. It was me. I would have made Nixon proud. I changed 1261 to 1216. It was me. It all went down exactly like you said. I mean, exactly. I doctored the copies, I paid the kid at the shop to lie for me. It is insane how you got every detail exactly right. So you can relax, okay? 'Cause that brain of yours is chugging along at a thousand percent efficiency.
~ Jimmy admitting to Chuck that he changed the address of Mesa Verde


Chuck: God, Jimmy! Don't you know by now this is real? I feel this: it's a physical response to stimuli, it's not a quirk. What do I have to do to prove it to you?


Jimmy: I don't know, Chuck. Could you reach into your breast pocket and tell me what's there?

Chuck: What now?

Jimmy: Can you tell the court what that was?

Chuck: A battery.

~ Jimmy proving that Chuck's electromagnetic hypersensitivity is a mental condition


What's that I see? Albuquerque's next TV star? It's you, small business owner! Struggling to make it in today's fast-paced economy? Thought television advertising was too expensive for you? Well you better think again! You can't afford not to be on TV! Look at you, you're a triple threat: great services, great products, and most of all, that face! You're a star! Wrap it all up in your natural charisma, and bam — you belong on TV! Better watch out for autograph hounds and paparazzi! And it gets better! I can have you on the air tomorrow! Yeah, you heard me right — tomorrow! Better get ready to be famous, Albuquerque! I can make you a TV star for a price you can afford! Call me, Saul Goodman! The world needs to know about you and your business! Call me now!
~ Jimmy using the name Saul Goodman for the first time


Look, you were just doing what you thought you had to do. Because of me.
~ Jimmy after Kim got into a car accident from overworking herself
Alpine Shepherd Boy


Are you out of your mind? You don't know me. I just came in off the street. You guys are like a couple of cats. I come in, wave a shiny object around, you're like "I want that." No due diligence, no background check. No, just "hire the guy that says them fancy words". I could be a serial killer! I could be a guy who pees in your coffee pot! I could be both!
~ Jimmy refusing the hiring proposal from Neff copiers


I have one question for you: do you shit gold? It's a simple "yes" or "no." Do - you - shit - gold? No? All right, then. Because unless you currently have a large gold nugget traversing your colon, this is the easiest money you'll ever gonna make.
~ Jimmy motivating Ira to accept the job


This little baby. It's the most compact model on the market, it can be hidden in any number of places. And if you buy it from me, with cash, it's completely untraceable.
~ Jimmy illegally selling prepaid phones to bikers


Fine, your pain is very special. Woe is you. Just stop wallowing. Okay? This place is all you've got. That and your hair, which, let's face it, clock's ticking there too, so... You wanna save your busisness? You wanna save your dignity? You're gonna have to fight. Hey. You're a shitty lawyer, Howard. But you're a great salesman. So get out there and sell.
~ Jimmy to Howard


A lawyer. Dude, I don't need to be a lawyer, all right? I'm a magic man. Will you have a little faith in me?
~ Jimmy to Huell


Listen Kim. I... I know what's on your mind. The things that we did, I mean, it was nuts. And I dumped it in you lap. Ex parte communication, contempt of court. I mean, what, talking about a couple hundred counts of mail fraud? I could've wrecked you at Schweikart. I could've boned me too. I'm this close to being reinstated. I mean, come on.
~ Jimmy apologizing to Kim


So I'm supposed to make a hairy deal about my dead brother at my reinstatement hearing? How is that sincere? I don't think about Chuck, okay? I don't miss Chuck. Chuck was alive, and now he's dead, and that's that. Vanito. Life goes on, so sue me. See, there it is again! That's why we don't have an office!
~ Jimmy arguing with Kim and telling her that he doesn't miss Chuck


Hi. You didn't get it. You were never gonna get it. They... They dangle these things in front of you, they tell you you got a chance but, I'm sorry, it's a lie. Because they had already made up their mind and they knew what they were gonna do before you walked in the door. You made a mistake, and they are never forgetting it. As far as they're concerned, your mistake is just... It's who you are. And it's all you are. And I'm not just talking about the scholarship, I'm talking about everything. I mean, they'll smile at you, they'll pat you on the head but they are never ever letting you in. But listen, listen. It doesn't matter, it doesn't. Because you don't need them. I mean, they're not gonna give it to you, so what? You're gonna take it. You're gonna do whatever it takes, do you hear me? You're not gona play by the rules. You're gonna go your own way, you're gonna do what they won't do. You're gonna be smart, you are gonna cut corners and you are gonna win. They're on the 35th floor? You're gonna be on the 50th floor. You're gonna be looking down on them. And the higher you rise, the more they're gonna hate you. Good! Good! You rub their noses in it! You make them suffer! Because you don't matter all that much to them, so what? So what? Screw them! Remember, the winner takes it all.
~ Jimmy explaining to Kristy Esposito what she will have to face if she wants to become a lawyer


I was just gonna–I was gonna try to move you all with my brother's eloquent words. You know, pull on your heartstrings. But it's not right. This letter is between me and him, and it should stay that way. Listen, my brother Chuck...you–you knew him. He loved me in his own way. He loved me as a brother. He did not love me as a lawyer. Big reason I became a lawyer was Chuck. He was the most brilliant man I ever knew, and an incredible lawyer, you know? And he knew exactly who he was. Exactly. And all my life, I wanted to make him proud, and he was not an easy man to make proud. You know, like climbing Everest without supplies: if you were one of the lucky few who reached that peak, even for a moment, if you made him proud – wow, what a feeling. And he let you know it, too. But if you weren't one of those people... He–he was polite enough, but he did not suffer fools, you know? And he could be judgmental and difficult, and he knew how to get under your skin. Hmm... could be a real son of a bitch. Chuck was the one who was always right, always. And usually he was, you know? So for a guy like me – I did lousy in school, I lacked ambition, I always cut corners – I mean, for me to live up to the standards of Charles McGill... I mean, look at me. I'll never be as moral as him, I'll never be as smart, I'll never be as respected. I'll never be as good as Chuck. But I can try. I can try. If you decide I get to be a lawyer, I'll do everything in my power to be worthy of the name McGill. And if you decide I'm not a lawyer...doesn't matter. I'll still try to be the best man that I can be. I'm lucky I got this letter. I never had a chance to write him a letter, and to tell him all the things that I should have. But I gotta believe that somehow... somehow he knows. Well, that's... that'll have to do it for me. Sorry... thank you.
~ Jimmy talking about his brother Chuck in court


S'all good, man!
~ Jimmy becoming Saul
Too Hot for Snakes
Devil's Dandruff


I'm already calling myself Saul Goodman! We've talked about this, that scammers would buy my phones. Sure as shooting, sooner or later, every last one of them is gonna find themselves in the back of a squad car. How do I get them to call Jimmy McGill? I don't! I stay Saul Goodman, they call the guy they already know. I thought I was wasting a year of my life! It wasn't a waste, it was for this! This is it!
~ Saul Goodman to Kim


Oh, one more thing. You're gonna have to find a different attorney for future endeavors, 'cause my schedule is just very, very tight.
~ Saul Goodman to Lalo


Acker: I don't need a lawyer! I don't want a lawyer, and nothing you can say is gonna change my mind! Now move your damn foot!


Jimmy: Sir, if you would just... Please, just take a look at my proposal! Okay? Because I think you'll find it pretty persuasive!

Acker: I don't want it.

Jimmy: Just look at it, sir! Just look at it. Look, what do you see?

Acker: A man... fucking a horse.

Jimmy: Sir, I hate Mesa Verde. I hate them! Looking down at us from their glass tower, they think they can shit on whoever they want! And we just have to smile and say, "Thank you?!" Picture me as the man, and Mesa Verde as the horse. I'm the guy who'll do whatever it takes to stick it to them!

~ Saul convincing Mr. Acker to represent him against Mesa Verde


Ohh, don't you fսcking Oh, Jimmy me. You look down on me?! You pity me?! Walk away. That's right, Howard. You know why I didn't take the job? 'Cause it's too small! I don't care about it! It's nothing to me! It's a bacterium! I travel in worlds you can't even imagine! You can't conceive of what I'm capable of! I'm so far beyond you! I'm like a God in human clothing! Lightning bolts shoot from my fingertips!
~ Jimmy to Howard


But what about you? Like... what happened out there doesn't bother you?
~ Saul to Mike after the shootout that happened in the desert


I can't believe... I can't believe there's like over a billion people on this planet, and the only person I have to talk about this to is you.
~ Saul to Mike after what happened in Bagman


Let justice be done, though the heavens fall.
~ Saul to Francesca

The Crystal Ship Returns


Hi. I'm Saul Goodman. Did you know that you have rights? The Constitution says you do, and so do I. I believe that, until proven guilty, every man, woman, and child in this country is innocent. And that's why I fight for you, Albuquerque!
~ Jimmy's famous television commercial as Saul Goodman.


Brandon Mayhew. All right. Brandon Mayhew. Here we go. Public masturbation. I don't get it. What's the kick? Why don't you do it at home with a big flat-screen TV, In a Starbucks. That's nice.
~ Saul Goodman to Badger


Son, I promise you this. I will give you the best criminal defense that money can buy.
~ Saul Goodman to Badger


Saul Goodman: I sense you're discussing my client. Anything you care to share with me?


Hank: Sure. Your commercials? They suck ass. I've seen better acting in an epileptic whorehouse.

Saul Goodman: Is that like the one your mom works at? Is she still offering the two-for-one discount? DEA, huh? For a street bust.

~ Saul Goodman to Hank


No shit! Right now, you’re Fredo. But with some sound advice and the proper introductions, who knows? I’ll tell you one thing, you’ve got the right product. Anything that gets the DEA’s panties in this big a bunch you’re on to something special. And I would like to be a small and silent part of it. Food for thought, yeah? So if you want to make more money and keep the money that you make — “Better call Saul!!"
~ Saul Goodman proposing his special services to Walter


It's the way of the world, kid. Go with the winner.
~ Saul to Jesse


Mike: Now when I say I'm looking for Pinkman, we both know why, don't we? And you pretending otherwise only wastes my time and serves to annoy me.


Saul: Look, Mike, there are rules to this lawyer thing.

Mike: Is that right?

Saul: Yeah! Attorney-client privilege. I mean, that's a big one. That's something I provide for you. I give up Pinkman, well, then you're gonna be asking, "Ol' Saul gives 'em up pretty easy. What's to keep him from giving me up?" Y'see, so, then where's the trust?" Mike: "I trust the hole in the desert I'd leave you in.

Saul: Yeah, that's...an argument.

Mike: Saul, don't make me beat you until your legs don't work. Now tell me where to find him. You know it's the right thing.

Saul: I can’t tell you, Mike. Alright? If I was to tell you, well I just... I couldn’t live with myself. I’m sorry. But who’s to say I didn’t write the address down in my day-planner? Or on a scratch piece of paper... somewhere. Who’s to say I didn’t write down a location? Strictly for my own professional use. Do NOT touch anything on my desk. I’m gonna leave the room... uh, make myself a Nescafe.

~ Saul giving Mike a fake address to protect Jesse


Hey, nobody appreciates a passionate woman more than I do, but in this business – and Walt can back me up on this – the number one rule is, "Don't take things personal."
~ Saul Goodman to Skyler White


He's okay? He said he was gonna break my legs. And don't tell me he didn't mean it, okay? Because he gave me the dead mackerel eyes. He meant it.
~ Saul talking about Mike


I'm sorry. Yes. Okay. I had Huell lift your cigarette, but Walt made me! He told me he was helping you, he was saving you. I never would've agreed to it if I'd known what he was gonna do. Jesse, you gotta believe me. I didn't want any of this!
~ Saul confessing that he accidently helped Walter poison Brock


Hey, it's me. We got a big problem.
~ Saul to Walter


Okay, but say, you know, just for the sake of argument, the kid's not in the mood for a nuanced discussion of the virtues of child poisoning. You know, his plans are running more towards stabbing you to death with a pointed stick. In that scenario, then what? You have a suggestion? We were wondering if maybe this isn't an "Old Yeller" type situation.
~ Saul suggesting killing Jesse to Walter


Hey, I'm a civilian. I'm not your lawyer anymore. I'm nobody's lawyer. The fun's over. From here on out, I'm Mr. Low Profile. Just another douche bag with a job and three pairs of Dockers. If I'm lucky, month from now, best-case scenario, I'm managing a cinnabon in Omaha.
~ Saul telling Walter he is out of the business


It's over


How could you never tell me about this? We could've done something with this! Wrongful termination. Intellectual property theft, uh, patent fraud. I mean, I could've sunk my teeth into this!
~ Saul saying how he could have helped Walter get his company back with Walter telling him "You'd have been the last lawyer I'd have gone to."


When I was twenty... um, twenty-two, I pulled a slip and fall outside Marshall Field's. Uh... I did. And I was stupid and young and I was trying to show off. So I hit the ice as fast as I could. I biffed it so hard, I heard a crack! Whew. Wasn't the ice... it was me. I actually hurt myself. I mean, I... My knee has never been the same.
~ Saul telling Walter his regrets in Saul Gone

The Ink Spots
Wound Up
Last Dumpster Dive


S.G. WAS HERE


Say nothing, you understand?! Get a lawyer!
~ Gene trying to help a criminal


Better Call Saul


I'm gonna fix it myself.
~ Gene to Ed Galbraith


Yeah? And she's waiting for you. Look at me. I got... I got no one. My parents are dead. My brother... My brother is dead. I, uh... I got no wife... No kids. No friends. If I died tonight... no one would care. What difference would it make?
~ Gene distracting a security guard


Yeah, my mind was wandering this morning, I was just not thinking of anything in particular, just random thoughts and bam, it suddenly occurred to me it's been six years. I mean, Jesus. I -- I couldn't believe it. I thought you might wanna know I'm still alive. Yep. Yeah, I'm still out here. Still getting away with it. Feds couldn't find their own ass with both hands and a proctologist.
~ Gene to Kim after finally calling her


Put that down, Marion. Put it down. Do not do it, Marion. Final warning.
~ Gene trying to stop Marion from calling the cops
Shared Sentence
Saul Done


This is how they get you? This is how they get you? This is how they get you? This is how they get you? This is how they get you? This is how they get you? Jesus. What were you thinking? What... were... you... thinking?!
~ Saul angry at being caught


Mrs... Mrs. Schrader. The loss that you've suffered, it's unspeakable. I met your husband. A few times. He was a man who stood by his word, and he was very good at his job. He was a straight-shooter. You and he are... victims. And so am I. Two years ago, a man came into my office. He said his name was Mayhew. He wanted one of my clients to lie under oath. He offered me money. I declined. Any lawyer would. That night, as I was leaving my office, I was attacked. Two men threw a sack over my head, hog-tied me, and they drove me out into the desert. And when they pulled the hood off, I was kneeling in front of an open grave. With a gun pointed at my head. That was my introduction to Walter White. From that moment on... there hasn't been a minute that I wasn't afraid. Yeah, I worked for him. I made a lot of money, but that's not why I did it. I did it because I knew what he would do to me if I refused. Over and over, I thought I would go over to the police. I even thought about talking to Agent Schrader, but I knew that Walter White would kill me wherever I was. And I was right. You look it up: October 4, 2009. They murdered ten men inside three prisons in the space of two minutes. Knifed. Throats slashed. A man was burned alive. They even killed one of my colleagues—a lawyer. He was cooperating with the DEA: Daniel Wachsberger. The news said Dan... was stabbed forty-eight times. So, yeah. When it all blew up, I ran. But not from the police. From them. Walter White might be dead, but Jesse Pinkman and the others, they're still out there somewhere. Mrs. Schrader, you are looking at a man who has lost everything. My profession, my family, my freedom. I have–I have nobody. I have nothing.
~ Saul telling Marie how he has nothing and lying about why he worked for Walter White


Two years ago, a man came into my office, he said his name was Mayhew. He wanted one of my clients to lie for him under oath. He offered me money. I refused. That night, as I was leaving my office, I was attacked. A bag was shoved over my head, I was hog-tied, I was driven out into the desert and when they pulled the hood off, I was kneeling in front of an open grave with a gun pointed at my head. That was my introduction to Walter White. I was terrified. But not for long. That night, I saw opportunity. A shot at big money. And I grabbed it, and I held it tight and for the next sixteen months, my every waking moment was spent building Walter White's drug empire.
~ Saul begins to reveal the truth about his actions before being stopped


Oh, uh, I lied to the government about Kim Wexler. Uh, I fed them a load of BS about her involvement in Howard Hamlin's murder. I just... I just wanted her to come here today. I wanted her to hear this. So, yeah, I wasn't there when the meth was cooked. I wasn't there when it was sold. I didn't witness any of the murders, but I damn well knew it was happening. I was more than a willing participant, I was indispensable. I kept Walter White out of jail, I laundered his money, I lied for him, I conspired with him and I made millions! If he hadn't walked into my office that day, Walter White would've been dead or behind bars within a month. And Agent Schrader and Agent Gomez and a whole lot of other people would still be alive. Fact is, Walter White couldn't have done it without me.
~ Saul finishes his confession about his criminal activities


The name's McGill. I'm James McGill.
~ James McGill finally shedding Saul Goodman forever


Eighty-six years. But with good behavior... who knows?
~ James talking to Kim about his sentence
Better Call Saul Intro
Better Call Saul Main Title Theme
Better Call Saul End Credits

Background

Note: Credit to the Breaking Bad Wiki

James Morgan "Jimmy" McGill, better known by his professional alias and business moniker Saul Goodman, is an Irish-American criminal defence lawyer, scam artist, and convicted criminal who is serving an 86-year sentence at ADX Montrose. Originally from Cicero, Illinois during his career as a scam artist, Jimmy moved to Albuquerque, New Mexico where he worked as a lawyer, and later resided as a fugitive in Omaha, Nebraska before being caught and apprehended in a federal prison at Montrose, Colorado. During his law career, Jimmy embraced his tendencies as a former scam artist and, after becoming a dedicated and effective criminal lawyer, he began to represent criminals while he himself became increasingly involved in the city's criminal underworld, slowly losing his morality along the way. Despite his flamboyant appearance and mannerisms, Saul was a highly competent lawyer who was able to solve problems and find loopholes in order to protect his clients. His business name, "Saul Goodman," is a play on the phrase "it's all good, man."

Dressing in flashy suits, Jimmy is the younger brother of fellow lawyer Chuck McGill and the ex-husband of former attorney Kim Wexler, the latter of whom helped inspire Jimmy to pursue his own law career alongside Chuck, and had dated for several years before their six-month marriage. Jimmy began his law career as an earnest lawyer, starting out practicing public defense and elder law before becoming a criminal defense lawyer. He originally worked as a mailroom clerk at Hamlin, Hamlin & McGill (HHM) alongside Kim, but was denied a position at the firm by Chuck and his close associate Howard Hamlin. After leaving HHM to become a solo practitioner, Jimmy began working out of Day Spa and Nail, and then got a job as an associate attorney at Davis & Main before being fired by Clifford Main. Jimmy then established his own law firms; first with Kim at Wexler McGill and later establishing Saul Goodman & Associates. Jimmy was devastated by Chuck's revelation that he greatly resented his brother and believed him to be completely unfit to be a lawyer, which led to Chuck preventing Jimmy from being hired by HHM, later proceeding to create a majority of the obstacles Jimmy faces early on in his career, beginning Jimmy's rivalry with Howard, and causing Chuck to become unintentionally largely responsible for turning Jimmy into the criminally-inclined lawyer that he later becomes.

Jimmy is successful at exposing Chuck's resentment of him in court along with suggesting that he might have a mental illness, though is suspended from practice law for a year after Jimmy fabricated Mesa Verde Bank and Trust documents. During his suspension from practicing law, Jimmy worked as a cell phone salesman at CC Mobile, where he began to use the nickname "Saul Goodman" again. Jimmy initially used it as an alias while performing scams alongside his close friend Marco Pasternak, and later makes use of it as the alternate identity for the high-energy pitchman in television ads he produced with his film crew at Saul Goodman Productions, and when he began a business reselling prepaid cell phones on the street. Jimmy then decided to practice law under this name, believing the McGill name was buried and not wanting to be seen as "Chuck's loser brother". During the period of his law license suspension, Jimmy's side business caused him to inadvertently become involved in the Albuquerque drug business as an associate of Mike Ehrmantraut and a legal representative for Lalo Salamanca, with Jimmy subsequently receiving a lot more criminals seeking his services as a result of him being Lalo's lawyer.

Jimmy and Kim got married in 2004, with Kim also becoming Jimmy's confidant to gain spousal privilege. Despite Jimmy and Kim's unconditional love for each other, Kim left him and Albuquerque after one of their schemes goes horribly wrong, starting that they are bad for everyone around them, with the couple divorcing later that year. Following Kim's departure, Jimmy began to fully embrace his criminal Saul Goodman persona as a coping mechanism, fully immersing himself in his work and criminal activity. Saul became a local celebrity in Albuquerque through his flamboyant advertisements for his services on television through commercials, and began to maintain extensive connections within the criminal underworld, serving as a go-between connecting drug distributors and other criminals-for-hire. He was also reluctant to be associated with violence or murder unless absolutely necessary. In 2010, after his association with Walter White's drug empire was revealed to the public, Saul was forced to retire from his law career, going into hiding in Omaha for several months, living as a fugitive under the alias of "Gene Takavic", a manager of a Cinnabon in Omaha. He was eventually caught by the authorities and imprisoned for 86 years in a federal prison after finally accepting himself as Jimmy McGill, and began enjoying notoriety among his fellow inmates for his past life as Saul.

The following synopsis contains massive spoilers for James McGill's backstory

Background Information

Jimmy McGill was born on November 12, 1960, to Ruth and Charles McGill Sr in Cicero, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago. He had one older brother, Charles "Chuck" McGill Jr. Jimmy later worked for his father at his small corner store and watched as he was repeatedly taken advantage of by scam artists. After one of the scam artists offered young Jimmy a life lesson about wolves and sheep, he began stealing money from his father's cash register mostly being rare coins. Over the following years, nearly $14,000 was embezzled from the store either from Jimmy or Charles Sr being taken advantage from, which eventually led to its closure. Charles Sr died six months later, which Chuck secretly blamed on Jimmy presuming that he was the one who embezzled the 14k: Jimmy blamed his father due to his over-excessive generosity.

In his teenage years, Jimmy began to play his own scams to get quick money. In one of his most famous scams, he would find the most slippery patches of ice every winter, stage a fall, and earn himself a fair amount of money, which earned him the nickname "Slippin' Jimmy". In another one of his scams, Jimmy (using the alias "Saul Goodman") worked with his close friend and fellow con artist Marco Pasternak to trick others into trading cash for fake Rolex watches. Jimmy also produced fake IDs for his classmates in high school. Jimmy apparantly used some of the money acquired by scamming to attend bartending school but it's unknown if he ever worked as one. One day, circa 1982, Jimmy attempted to show off while doing a slip-and-fall outside the Marshall Field's department store and hit the ice as hard as he could, accidentally breaking his knees in the process

In the early 1990s, Jimmy divorced his first wife when she cheated on him with a guy named Chet, who happened to owe Jimmy money. In 1992, a drunken Jimmy encountered Chet at a local Dairy Queen and decided to perform a "Chicago Sunroof" (defecating through the sunroof of Chet's car) as revenge. Unbeknownst to him, however, Chet's children were in the back seat. Even worse, Chet had ties to the local prosecutors. Jimmy was quickly brought in by the police on charges of property damage, assault, and a possible sex offense. He was booked and put in pre-trial detention

Chuck, who had become a successful lawyer in Albuquerque, New Mexico, visited Jimmy in jail at the request of their mother. A desperate Jimmy begged Chuck to use his knowledge of the law to make the charges disappear. Chuck reluctantly agreed on the condition that Jimmy move to Albuquerque and take up a legitimate job in the mailroom of his law firm, Hamlin, Hamlin & McGill (HHM), along with a stern warning not to make a fool out of Chuck in return. Although hesitant to leave Cicero, Jimmy agreed and was subsequently released due to Chuck's intervention. After wishing farewell to Marco, Jimmy moved to Albuquerque.

Jimmy and Chuck returned to Cicero seven years later, when their mother Ruth was in failing health. When she was hospitalized, the brothers sat for three days at her bedside. Eventually, Jimmy decided to step out for some hoagies, only to be devastated when, upon returning to the hospital, Chuck told him Ruth had died. When Jimmy asked if she had said anything before passing, Chuck lied and said she hadn't; in reality, she had briefly awoken and called for Jimmy, and Jimmy would never know the truth

In Albuquerque, Jimmy befriended many people, including Chuck's then-wife Rebecca Bois and Chuck's law partner, Howard Hamlin. Most importantly, he met and began a semi-romantic relationship with Kim Wexler, a co-worker in the HHM mailroom who was attending law school. In 1993, Jimmy is delivering mail at HHM and talks to his co-workers about a betting pool for the Academy Awards he has organized. He crosses paths with Kim, who is also doing mail rounds. Chuck enters the office to a big round of applause, having just won a big inheritance lawsuit using his knowledge of obscure case law. When Chuck approaches the pair, he answers Kim's questions on case law, but is annoyed by Jimmy. After Howard collects Chuck, Kim continues her rounds, and Jimmy walks past HHM's law library. He turns around and steps inside, deciding to become a lawyer like Chuck and Kim. To do so, he took a correspondence course from the University of American Samoa. After two failed attempts, Jimmy passed the bar exam himself in 2001.

At some point in 2001, Chuck and Rebecca separated, after which Chuck began developing apparent electromagnetic hypersensitivity (EHS), essentially an adverse physical reaction to electrical devices, which began to make it challenging for Chuck to lead a normal life. To accommodate this, Chuck had all his electronics removed from his house, with Jimmy often helping his brother by doing tasks such as delivering newspapers to him. When Chuck later invited Rebecca over for dinner in an attempt to reconcile with her, he created an elaborate lie with Jimmy's help to explain the lack of power and hide his condition from her. Though the dinner was initially a success, Chuck's behavior betrayed him when Rebecca answered a call on her cell phone, eventually driving him to smack it out her hand. He compounded his mistake by refusing to be honest about his condition and chastising an irate Rebecca over "cell phone etiquette," prompting her to immediately leave in a cab. Shortly after this, the two officially divorced.

While Jimmy's friends were delighted by his achievement, Chuck was secretly shocked and disgusted at the thought of his ne'er-do-well brother practicing law. Refusing to view Jimmy as a real lawyer and frustrated that he earned a law degree so easily while Chuck himself had to work hard his entire life to build his own career, Chuck pressured Howard to block his brother from working at HHM. When Howard was forced to deliver the news, Jimmy mistakenly blamed him for the decision. Shortly thereafter, Jimmy quit HHM to become a solo practitioner. Sometime in Chuck's extended leave, Jimmy delivers groceries to Chuck's house. Chuck expresses interest in hearing about Jimmy's fledgling solo practice; Jimmy clearly finds his clients distasteful, but Chuck tells him that even they deserve a good legal defense. Chuck seemingly wants a genuine conversation with Jimmy, saying that it is not too late for him to change his path, but Jimmy assumes that his brother is criticizing him and rebuffs the attempt. After Jimmy leaves, Chuck, taking his gas lantern and a copy of H.G. Wells' The Time Machine, retreats into his study.

Better Call Saul

Season 1

In 2002, Jimmy works hard at his own law practice but enjoys little success. He mostly works for the court as a public defender for $700 a case, struggles with debt, is forced to sleep in a cramped office located in the back of a Vietnamese nail salon. He also takes care of Chuck. While arriving at and departing from court, Jimmy frequently butts heads with Mike Ehrmantraut, a former Philadelphia police officer who was working as the courthouse parking lot attendant at the time. When Jimmy loses potential clients Craig and Betsy Kettleman - who have been accused of embezzling money from the county treasury - to HHM and fends off an attempted injury scam from Cal and Lars Lindholm, Jimmy decides to return to his shady techniques to level the playing field . He enlists the Lindholm brothers in an attempt to win back Craig and Betsy Kettleman.

The plan backfires, however, when the twins mistakenly target Abuelita, the grandmother of Cartel drug dealer Tuco Salamanca, who kidnaps them along with Jimmy, taking them to the desert. Using his powers of persuasion, Jimmy talks Tuco out of killing the twins, but has convince him to go for the more "fair" punishment of breaking one leg from each of the twins, since the Lindholms had falsely claimed Tuco's grandmother had broken one of their legs. After Tuco lets the trio go, Jimmy drives the twins to the hospital, where he takes pride from the fact that he got the twins off from a "death sentence" to "six months probation", claiming to be the "best lawyer ever".

Shortly thereafter, Jimmy receives a visit from Ignacio "Nacho" Varga, one of Tuco's lieutenants. Nacho, who overheard Jimmy's plan to strongarm Craig and Betsy Kettleman into business, wants to steal the money they embezzled and offers Jimmy a "finder's fee" of ten percent. Jimmy rejects Nacho's offer, claiming he made a mistake and was going to remain straight after his encounter with Tuco. Realizing Nacho is very likely intending violence against Craig and Betsy Kettleman, Jimmy attempts to warn the family. When they disappear, he is brought in by the police—first as a suspect, then as the appointed attorney for Nacho himself, who has been marked as the prime suspect. A furious Nacho threatens Jimmy to correct the situation. Stressed by the encounter, Jimmy inadvertently escalates the matter by getting into a confrontation with Mike over a parking validation dispute, but in the process figures out Craig and Betsy Kettleman staged their own abduction to evade further scrutiny.

Jimmy tracks down Craig and Betsy Kettleman and persuades them to return home, but accepts a $30,000 payment from them as both a "retainer" and a bribe for keeping quiet about their stolen money. Using this payoff, he stages a publicity stunt by creating a deliberately plagiarized version of HHM's billboard featuring himself made up to resemble Howard. When Howard files an injunction for copyright infringement, Jimmy allows himself to lose, using the incident to garner public support through the media. While filming a video about his billboard being forcibly taken down, a worker falls off the platform and dangles by a rope. While cameras are rolling, Jimmy climbs up to the platform and "rescues" the worker, who is revealed to be in on Jimmy's stunt. Jimmy appears heroic and gets the media exposure that he was aiming for.

After several abortive consultations, Jimmy enjoys some small successes with some elderly clients, leading Kim to suggest he consider practicing elder law. However, Jimmy receives an urgent call from Howard, informing him that Chuck had an altercation with the police and has been hospitalized. Rushing to the hospital, Jimmy fends off doctors, security, and Howard himself in order to bring his brother home. At Chuck's house, Jimmy sees a copy of the Albuquerque Journal he hid from Chuck, which included an article about the billboard stunt on the front page. Realizing his culpability in Chuck's collapse, Jimmy explains his actions as a "little bit of razzmatazz" and reassures Chuck that as he now has clients, the incident will not be repeated.

Deciding to go into elder law, Jimmy redesigns his image and dons a suit similar to Andy Griffith's on Matlock. He begins volunteering at retirement homes, where he helps pass out meals (which are stamped with his contact information and ads), hosts bingo games, and slowly builds a growing client base. When he visits the Sandpiper Crossing retirement home, he learns that the workers are grossly overcharging the residents. He searches Sandpiper's dumpsters and collects shredded documents as evidence. Chuck agrees that Jimmy has built a strong case against Sandpiper but tells him to take the case to HHM, since they have more resources; Jimmy reluctantly agrees. On the night before the brothers are to head to deliver the case to HHM, Chuck secretly goes outside and uses Jimmy's phone to call Howard.

During the meeting, Howard agrees to take the case and pay Jimmy 20% of the common fund share of the final settlement, plus twenty thousand dollars as a "consulting fee" for the work he has already spent building the case against Sandpiper, which Jimmy happily agrees too. However, when Jimmy suggests working for HMM on the case Howard flatly refuses to hire Jimmy. Not even given a reason as too why he was not hired for a multi-million dollar case he brought to HHM in a silver plater, Jimmy angrily turns down the deal and leaves. After seeing Kim, who urges him to take the deal, Jimmy confronts Chuck after realizing that his cell phone's battery had been drained when his brother used it to call Howard. Chuck confesses that it was he, not Howard, who blocked his career at HHM, telling Jimmy that he never considered him a real lawyer. Heartbroken, Jimmy storms out of the house, telling Chuck that he will not provide for him anymore. Jimmy accepts HHM's previous deal and hands over the Sandpiper case, apologizing to Howard and giving him the responsibility for caring for Chuck.

While hosting a bingo game at a nursing home, Jimmy suffers an emotional breakdown and recollects the "Chicago Sunroof" incident before walking away in disgust. He travels back to Cicero and reconnects with Marco. Together, they start doing scams again. After a whole week, Jimmy says that he has to return to his clients, but Marco insists that they do one last scam together. Sadly, Marco dies of a heart attack in Jimmy's arms. At his funeral, Jimmy is given Marco's old ring by his mother.

Jimmy receives a phone call from Kim telling him that Davis & Main, a law firm in Santa Fe, wants to hire him as a representative in the Sandpiper case. Back in Albuquerque, he goes to the meeting but declines the position. He then talks to Mike at his booth, wondering why they gave back Craig and Betsy Kettleman' money. As Mike states that he was hired to do a job and simply did it, Jimmy declares that he knows what stopped him and swears that "it's never stopping me again." He drives off while humming "Smoke on the Water," as Marco did during their scam sprees together.

Season 2

Jimmy openly agitates his landlady, Mrs. Nguyen, and tears down his door sign. He rents a room at a luxury hotel and begins running scams on the other guests. When confronted by Kim over his new lifestyle, Jimmy persuades her to try it out. Stunned at first, she is amused when Jimmy successfully puts the move on Ken, a loudmouthed broker. One thing leads to another, and the two spend the night together. The morning after, however, Kim admonishes Jimmy to return to reality, refusing to participate in further scams. Eventually, Jimmy decides to follow her advice, and returns to Davis & Main to accept their job offer.

Jimmy adjusts quickly to his new status and perks at D&M, including a private office (with a cocobolo desk), company car, and personal assistant named Omar. He also hits it off well with his new boss, Clifford Main, and considers establishing a live-in relationship with Kim. However, Chuck, having returned to work at HHM, attends the Sandpiper briefings— officially in his capacity as senior partner, but in reality to intimidate Jimmy. A further complication arises when Mike enlists Jimmy to represent his employer Daniel Wormald, who has implicated himself in a drug deal. Jimmy successfully gets Daniel off, but is forced to fabricate evidence of a pie fetish video to do so. When he lets the story slip to Kim, she furiously chastises him.

Jimmy embarks on a dubious recruitment campaign for the Sandpiper suit, convinced that the company is blocking traditional methods of contact with his prospects. His plan to engage a busload of Sandpiper residents is largely successful, but attracts undue attention from Chuck, Kim, and the other partners. Jimmy then proposes a TV commercial; specially timed to reach prospects during daytime hours—a point of access Sandpiper cannot block. While Cliff is open to the idea, seeing a previous ad run by D&M convinces Jimmy that the firm will never agree to the style or time of broadcast he needs.

Taking what he feels is the initiative, Jimmy compiles a video crew comprised of UNM students to film and air his own commercial advertising the Sandpiper suit. While a major windfall for the firm, the act immediately draws the ire of Cliff and his partners. Jimmy tries to soothe the waters with them, but is reprimanded for his actions. To his shock and disgust, he learns that Kim has also come under fire at HHM for allegedly approving of the tape, but in truth, for her association with him. She becomes furious with Jimmy, and refuses any offers of help in restoring her good graces with HHM. Jimmy confronts Chuck over Kim's demerit, only for Chuck to rebuff him, refusing even his offer of full responsibility for the incident.

Jimmy's frustrations continue to mount at D&M after he is "paired" with legal assistant Erin Brill for help in the Sandpiper case— in truth, she has been assigned to monitor Jimmy and force him to adhere to D&M policy. Immediately chafing under Erin's constant prodding and corrections, Jimmy dodges her as soon as he can so that he can present Kim his latest offer: a letter of legal action against HHM for mistreatment. Kim steadfastly refuses, resolving to save herself. Jimmy begins to question his decision to take his position at D&M, as Erin continues to hamper his progress in court and at the clerk's office. Seeing his old colleagues talking about the recent changes only serve to fuel the dilemma.

D&M replaces Jimmy's original ad for a more sanitized one to be played during ineffective air times. Beginning to become fed up with D&M's enslavement to policy over productivity, he begins preparations for departure and begins sleeping in his old office at the nail salon, which he still has kept under lease. Jimmy mends fences with Kim after she is tempted into another con game at the hotel.

At the courthouse, Jimmy accompanies Mike as the latter gives an amended statement to the D.A. regarding his scuffle with Tuco Salamanca. Later, as Jimmy prepares his letter of resignation for D&M, Omar informs him that resigning or being fired for cause will result in a forfeit of his bonus. Thus, Jimmy decides to go for the outlandish track by dressing in gaudy suits, making horrible messes in the office, and becoming such a general nuisance to his co-workers that Cliff proceeds to fire him without cause, thus allowing Jimmy to keep his bonus.

Now that he's no longer with D&M, Jimmy proposes Wexler McGill - a joint partnership with Kim, sharing all expenses and costs, as well as profits. Kim is intrigued, but initially disagrees— she is not prepared to risk her career with Jimmy being the kind of lawyer he is. She does, however, offer a counter proposal: she will start a solo practice for herself and share an office with him. Jimmy is intrigued, but advises Kim to hang on to her new client, Mesa Verde Bank and Trust, knowing that HHM will attempt to keep them as soon as they realize Kim is resigning. Kim is hesitant at first, but upon overhearing Howard contacting Mesa Verde after delivering her resignation letter, quickly takes steps to retain Mesa Verde's services for herself. Meanwhile, Jimmy procures an old dentist's office for renovation into the joint venture. He begins producing his own personal ad, enlisting the aid of his former college video crew and some of his elder clients.

When Chuck and Howard outmaneuver Kim to retain Mesa Verde for themselves, an outraged Jimmy springs into action. Sneaking into Chuck's house under the cover of family ties, Jimmy carefully removes documents containing the address of Mesa Verde's proposed site for a new branch: 1261 Rosella Drive, Scottsdale, Arizona. He takes the records to a nearby copy shop, where he creates doctored copies with the street number transposed into 1216. He then substitutes the altered papers into in the Mesa Verde case work. Patiently waiting for Chuck to wake up, Jimmy confronts and chastises him over stealing Kim's laurels. Chuck brushes Jimmy off, not wanting to fight again, but in so doing, fails to truly question Jimmy's presence in his home.

After waiting for Chuck to complete his legal preparation prior to the Mesa Verde hearing, Jimmy quietly restores the original documents after his brother departs to present the permit request. Jimmy's plan works perfectly—Chuck and HHM are caught in a massive clerical fiasco at the hearing, and Mesa Verde returns to Kim. However, Chuck deduces exactly what Jimmy has done and openly accuses him when Jimmy and Kim come to pick up the files. Kim defends Jimmy, criticizing Chuck for his cold and judgmental treatment of his brother. Once out of the house, however, Kim makes it clear that she knows Chuck was telling the truth. Later that evening, Kim strongly hints to Jimmy that he had best thoroughly cover his tracks. Quickly proceeding to the copy shop, Jimmy cuts a deal with the clerk to eliminate all evidence of his presence there from the other night— but not before Ernesto has questioned the clerk on Chuck's behalf. Hoping the clerk is capable of carrying out the cover-up, Jimmy watches as Chuck himself arrives and begins grilling the clerk about Jimmy's activities at the copy shop. Jimmy watches with pride as the clerk lives up to his word and adamantly denies having seen Jimmy, even in the face of Ernesto's statements. To his horror, however, Jimmy watches as Chuck has another spell, passing out and cracking his skull on the counter in the process.

Choosing his brother's safety over his deniability, Jimmy rushes Chuck back to the hospital, where he anxiously sits in the waiting room, awaiting word. Once he hears that Chuck has stabilized, Jimmy goes to see his brother, who immediately calls Jimmy out on his proximity to the shop during his accident. However, Ernesto comes to Jimmy's aid, claiming that he called Jimmy before Chuck left the house to question the store clerk. A furious Chuck tells them both to get out. In the hall, Jimmy asks Ernesto why he lied on his behalf. Ernesto replies that Jimmy is his friend, and Chuck's vendetta against him is upsetting. Jimmy thanks his friend, who only will say that he simply misses being back in the mail room, before walking away.

Convinced against his better judgement to submit Chuck to a temporary emergency guardianship order, followed by a CAT scan and workup, Jimmy sits with Kim, worried about the obvious chilling effect the Mesa Verde incident is having on their relationship. When Jimmy's new ad airs on the television, he barely notices. Kim, however, is amazed that he was able to film such a professional-looking ad on a shoestring budget. With some of his confidence back, Jimmy turns to face the newly arrived results: Chuck is not permanently injured but is in a state of self-induced catatonia from the perceived "trauma" of the CAT scan. In frustration, Jimmy sits down by Chuck's bedside and angrily pronounces he is not moving until Chuck wakes up. When Chuck eventually does so, and mockingly asks Jimmy if his next move is to the asylum, Jimmy simply tells Chuck he is taking him back home. After doing just that, Jimmy is assured by Chuck that he will be fine.

Later on, Jimmy begins his first consultations at the new Wexler McGill office, now finished and ready for business. Without warning, he is called by an irate Howard, who tells him Chuck has quit HHM and demands an explanation. Returning to Chuck's house, Jimmy is shocked to see his brother covering the walls in "space blanket" linings and insulation, and when he questions Chuck about it, Chuck calmly explains that he believes his "sensitivity" has become unmanageable and he cannot even remain indoors without protection. When Chuck breaks down and begins crying over his "failure" with Mesa Verde, Jimmy has a crisis of conscience, and he confesses his complicity in the incident. Chuck is stunned and tells Jimmy he has just admitted to a felony. Jimmy retorts that it was to make Chuck feel better, and it would be merely one's word against the other. Jimmy leaves to phone Howard and reassure him that Chuck will not be quitting HHM, not seeing the tape recorder Chuck has concealed under a stack of foil.

Season 3

Confident that he has restored his brother's confidence, Jimmy begins helping Chuck to take down the space blanket wallpaper. He reminisces upon finding an old book he and his brother used to read, and Chuck seems to respond jokingly enough, but eventually, he stops Jimmy in mid-sentence and delivers an ominous warning: he will not forget what Jimmy has done, and he will see that Jimmy pays a price. Further hints of trouble await Jimmy at his office upon his return: Captain Bauer from the airbase has learned of Jimmy's ad and is furious. Trying to defuse a heated argument, Jimmy attempts to reason with Bauer, until his own anger builds, and he coldly advises the captain to let the matter go, resulting in Bauer storming out while making a violent public scene.

While Jimmy and Kim work on hiring a new paralegal, Mike calls Jimmy and has him watch the man Mike tailed as he has breakfast in the restaurant. Jimmy notices nothing unusual and reports back to Mike as Gus Fring watches the two from a distance. Ernesto approaches Wexler-McGill but decides against entering and speaks to Kim in the parking lot about the tape. Kim relays this information to Jimmy, and she takes Jimmy on as her legal client, advising him that the tape is no legal threat to him. Jimmy suppresses his feelings of anger and betrayal in front of Kim, but later drives to Chuck's house, breaks in, berates him, and destroys the tape. However, this more or less happens all according to Chuck's plan, as he only used the tape as bait, and Howard and the private investigator are present to witness Jimmy's break-in.

Jimmy is arrested and jailed following a few harsh but hesitant words with Chuck and chooses to represent himself in court (against Kim's wishes), pleads not guilty and posts bail. Jimmy later explains what happened during his break-in and tells Kim to focus on Mesa Verde while he works his own legal battle, to which she flatly agrees. The prosecutor in Jimmy's case, Assistant District Attorney Hay, meets with Chuck and tells him that she doesn't plan to let Jimmy off easy. Chuck wishes to seek a "better solution for everyone." Jimmy talks with Kim outside of Wexler-McGill and informs her that he can avoid jail time but will have to confess to his felony break-in and submit his confession to the New Mexico Bar Association, which will likely result in disbarment. Kim convinces Jimmy to let her help him fight Chuck's plot.

Jimmy hires Mike to pose as a handyman, and Mike uses the repair of Chuck's door as cover to photograph the interior of Chuck's house in order to document the bizarre living conditions. Jimmy, Kim, Hamlin, Chuck, and ADA Hay meet in order to finalize Jimmy's confession, with Jimmy agreeing to have his confession reviewed by the New Mexico Bar Association. After the meeting, Kim confronts Chuck, telling him that she suspects he has a copy of the tape. Chuck confirms her suspicions and states that he plans to submit the tape as evidence in Jimmy's disciplinary hearing. Kim then relays the information to Jimmy, revealing that having Chuck admit the existence of the second tape was all according to their plan.

Both sides gear up for Jimmy’s hearing in front of the New Mexico Bar Association after Jimmy meets with veterinarian Caldera to acquire the services of "someone with a light touch." At the hearing, things do not seem to go well for Jimmy as the tape is played before the committee. Rebecca enters the courtroom, much to Chuck’s surprise, though he believes it's some ploy by Jimmy to throw him off balance. Later, Jimmy cross-examines Chuck about the circumstances of the recording, Rebecca’s presence, and his illness. Though Chuck remains calm throughout most of it, Jimmy reveals that Chuck had been carrying a fully charged cell phone battery planted by Huell for the entire hearing, contradicting the EHS symptoms Chuck claimed to have and suggesting he has a mental illness. This triggers a sudden and acidic tirade from Chuck as he vents all of his frustrations about Jimmy and how he never should have tried to help him. Chuck realizes, too late, that his outburst has shocked the entire courtroom, including the committee.

Jimmy is given only a year's suspension in the aftermath of his legal battle with Chuck. Afterwards, while he and Kim celebrate, Rebecca asks Jimmy to help with Chuck, who has shuttered himself in his home, but Jimmy refuses, no longer calling Chuck his brother. Jimmy must figure out how to recoup money spent on his remaining television commercial slots. With the help of his college film crew, he uses a loophole in his contract to sell the slots via a new series of commercials, in which Jimmy poses as a character named Saul Goodman.

Jimmy tries to fulfill his court-mandated community service while also trying to sell his commercials, but can't convince anybody to sign on for more than one or two spots, and more often, none at all. Cash in hand from the few spots Jimmy does secure rapidly nets deeper and deeper losses, but Jimmy papers over this careening towards poverty by bravely giving his film crew and Kim Wexler the very last of his money and insisting he is not maxing out his credit cards or emptying out his personal bank account. Finally, in a parking lot after yet another net-loss, Jimmy collapses on the ground and stays there, clearly exhausted, nearly penniless, and extremely depressed. While Kim was having a dinner with Jimmy, she wonders whether they did the right thing, and Jimmy replies what happened to Chuck was his own fault and that she should forget about him. Jimmy meets with an insurance agent to try and get a refund on his malpractice insurance policy. However, the agent is unable to grant the refund and mentions that due to his suspension, Jimmy's future premiums will rise by 150%. Jimmy is visibly shaken by this news and starts to cry. When the agent reacts sympathetically to his emotional breakdown, Jimmy seizes the opportunity to "accidentally" mention Chuck's mental illness before leaving, knowing that the insurance company will be forced to act on the information.

Jimmy's guitar store clients become suspicious of his motives and refuse to pay him for their commercial spot. Jimmy stages a "slip and fall" con, intentionally slipping on a drumstick and injuring himself in the process. Kim returns to the office to find Jimmy lying on the floor, with his half of the rent, indicating he used the "slip and fall" to coerce the guitar shop into paying him off. Despite Jimmy's assurances, Kim still expresses doubts about Jimmy's ability to pay and considers taking on another client. Jimmy later is able to make $700 during his community service, helping a drug dealer "see his sick child" by threatening the supervisor with legal action.

Jimmy talks with the Sandpiper class action representative Irene to get an update on the Sandpiper case and realizes that Sandpiper has already offered a settlement deal which if D&M and HHM accept, would give Jimmy over $1 million as his share of the settlement. Jimmy tries to convince Howard to accept the settlement, but Howard sees through Jimmy's motivations and refuses. In order to secure the Sandpiper settlement, Jimmy pulls a series of cons and social manipulations to trick Irene into thinking that holding out on the Sandpiper settlement is against the interests of her fellow elderly clients and she moves to accept it, giving Jimmy his much-needed fee. He returns to the office to give the good news to Kim

Jimmy, feeling partly responsible for Kim's exhaustion and resulting car accident, finally agrees to break their office lease and have Kim work out of her own home to save costs. Jimmy meanwhile tries to make amends with Chuck, but Chuck coldly cuts ties. Jimmy then tries to mend relations between Irene and her friends but is unable to since Irene's friends remain suspicious of her. He finally outs himself as crooked in front of his elderly clients, which both vindicates Irene and cancels the Sandpiper settlement. After insulting Jimmy and forcing him away, Chuck commits suicide by pushing a gas lantern off a table and onto a pile of newspapers, leaving Jimmy as the sole living member of his family.

Season 4

Jimmy learns about Chuck's death, racing to the house with Kim in time to see the coroners removing his brother's body from the fire-gutted house. Chuck's death sends Jimmy into a depressive mood, unable to even approve the obituary written by Howard. At the funeral, Jimmy is given condolences by Chuck's partners and co-workers. Arriving home with Kim, they find Howard outside who reveals that he believed Chuck committed suicide. Howard blames himself for trying to force Chuck out of Hamlin, Hamlin & McGill. Even though he is responsible for revealing his brother's mental illness to the insurance company and igniting the feud between Chuck and Howard, Jimmy is satisfied that no one knows of his role and with someone else to take the blame, he happily tells Howard that it is his "cross to bear," stunning Howard and Kim.

Jimmy approaches Mike with an offer to break into Neff Copiers to replace Mr. Neff's valuable Hummel figurine with a copy and then split the proceeds. Mike turns him down and offers condolences over Chuck's death. Jimmy then goes to see Caldera and is told that their contact is also not interested in the job. Angrily, Jimmy takes the phone and breaks protocol but manages to set up a meeting. His contact, Ira, breaks into Neff Copiers to steal the figure, but finds Mr. Neff living in the office. Hiding under the desk, Jimmy creates a distraction outside the store in order for Ira to complete the theft. At home the next morning, Kim gives Jimmy documents from a meeting with Howard, including a release stating that he will not contest the $5,000 inheritance, and a letter from Chuck. Jimmy reads the letter, in which Chuck expresses his approval about Jimmy turning his life around. Jimmy is apparently unaffected by the contents of the letter.

Jimmy is offered a job as a shift supervisor at CC Mobile, but he turns it down. After Kim gives him the contact information of a therapist, Jimmy lies that he took the job. When she leaves, Jimmy calls CC Mobile back to accept the position. Jimmy's new job is boring because of a lack of customers and is told that he can't transfer to another store because of a lack of positions. Jimmy goes to meet Ira to collect his proceeds from the Hummel figurine sale and is surprised that it is more than he expected. Ira tells him to contact him again using a new phone if he has another job. Jimmy becomes inspired and returns to CC Mobile where he starts an advertising campaign by painting "IS THE MAN LISTENING? PRIVACY SOLD HERE" on the store windows.

Despite his new business idea, Jimmy struggles to increase trade at CC Mobile until the owner of a contracting business arrives. Asking if what Jimmy is offering will protect him from the IRS, the customer buys a large amount of drop phones to communicate without being eavesdropped on or even tracked. After trying to spend time with Kim that evening, Jimmy goes back to CC Mobile and takes a stack of phones with him. After trying to sell to three youths who call him a "narc," Jimmy then manages to sell the stack of phones to unsavory characters at the Dog House. Heading home, he is mugged and beaten by the three youths who steal all the money he made. Kim helps him tend to his wounds at home, and Jimmy finally agrees to see a therapist. The next day, Jimmy removes the advertising sign from the front of CC Mobile. At the courthouse during his PPD check-in, Jimmy lies about associating with criminals and then decides that he will get his law license back and be a damn good lawyer.

Jimmy begins dreaming about reviving Wexler McGill, and admits to Kim that he is not going to see a therapist because he wants to move forward. Kim reluctantly accepts the decision. Jimmy heads to the Forque Kitchen and Bar for dinner with Kim, where she tells him that she has been hired at the head of Schweikart & Cokely's banking division. Jimmy wants to practice criminal law and reform Wexler McGill, but Kim's plans do not coincide with Jimmy's. Although Jimmy realizes his dreams have been dashed, he wishes Kim well with her career. Jimmy goes to HHM to collect the $5,000 inheritance. Jimmy learns HHM is going through a bad spell and admonishes Howard for wallowing and not fighting. Howard retorts with a "fuck you," and Jimmy tells him to use that rage to his advantage. Later, Jimmy takes deliver of a new set of phones at Day Spa and Nail, and has to bribe Mrs. Nguyen with one so he can keep them in the back room. At night, Jimmy finds the three youths who mugged him and offers to cut them in on his business in return for leaving him alone. Instead, they threaten him with a switchblade, causing Jimmy to run. The youths give chase but find themselves in a trap where they are captured and hung up in a piñata store. Two masked men, one of whom is Huell Babineaux, bust the piñatas while Jimmy warns them about ripping him off again. Suitably terrified, Jimmy tells them they have had their warning and leaves them hanging.

Over the course of several months, Jimmy continues to use his "Saul Goodman" alias to sell burner phones to Albuquerque's criminals while at the same time continuing his PPD. Jimmy tours a potential office site with Huell, laying out how each room would be used when his law license is reinstated. Jimmy is invited to a party with Kim at S&C where he takes over and becomes the life of the party. Kim and Richard appear to be uncomfortable, and it causes tension between Jimmy and Kim on the drive home. While selling phones, Jimmy is approached by a plainclothes cop, Platt. Platt has a Saul Goodman card he took from a drug dealer he busted and tells Jimmy to sell is phones to a different clientele elsewhere. Jimmy refuses, and the argument is broken up by Huell who knocks Platt over with a shopping bag. Huell is arrested and Jimmy tries to bargain his freedom for moving his business elsewhere. Platt refuses and arrests Huell. Charged with assault, Huell is facing two and half years in prison and threatens to skip bail. Jimmy talks him out of it and finds out that Platt is an alcoholic. He asks Jimmy to engineer Platt's drunken breakdown in court in order to get the case dismissed. Kim is disturbed that Jimmy has been selling phones to criminals and agrees to look into Huell's case although he refuses to ruin Platt.

Jimmy heads to Huell's hometown of Coushatta by bus, writing postcards in different handwriting and pens and even getting other other passengers to write messages. In Coushatta, Jimmy posts the messages and then gets on the bus back home. The letters are part of a plan to help Huell, since they all demand his release. Judge Munsinger demands the case be settled without a circus. When the prosecutor starts calling the letter writers, Jimmy sets up an elaborate con where he and members of a film crew pose as people Huell knew which convinces her that the letter-writing campaign is genuine. She begins negotiating with Kim. Jimmy and Kim reconcile and the next morning Kim compliments him on his genius idea with the phones, while Jimmy tells her that it was her idea in the first place. Their plan ends with Huell serving only four months' probation. Jimmy is surprised when Kim tells him that she wants to undertake similar schemes.

In Lubbock, Texas, Jimmy and Kim work a scam on the Department of Building Safety that results in them tricking the state into giving Mesa Verde a larger branch. Jimmy is planning for the future reinstatement of his law license, and intends to use the customers from his burner phone business as his new clients. The committee ultimately decides not to reinstate his license due to a lack of sincerity, causing Jimmy to fly into a rage. Talking with Kim, she realizes that the reason the committee ruled against him was because he did not mention Chuck – the victim of the crime that led to his suspension – once during the hearing. Jimmy is angry that he is expected to be sympathetic. Jimmy and Kim argue, with Jimmy later apologizing and admitting he messed up. Kim asks him if he still wants to be a lawyer. When Jimmy answers yes, she says they will start with that.

As part of a scheme to seem sincere about Chuck's death, Jimmy makes a point of openly grieving at Chuck's grave on the one-year anniversary of his death. Howard dedicates a new law library at HHM in Chuck's name; the film crew hired by Jimmy and Kim spreads the rumor that Jimmy anonymously donated the money for the library. Jimmy is given an appeal hearing to reinstate his law license, and at Kim's suggestion reads the letter that Chuck left him. However, Jimmy senses that it will not work and tells a story about how Chuck influenced him to become a lawyer. Jimmy's speech moves Kim and some of the committee members to tears. Jimmy's law license is returned, but Kim is shocked to learn that Jimmy did not mean one word from the speech and meant it to sway the members of the committee into reinstating his license. Jimmy also reveals that he has no intention to practice law under his own name, and requests legal accreditation for a new identity to the clerk who asks him to sign some paperwork. When Kim asks what he is trying to do, Jimmy replies, "S'all good, man!"

Season 5

Jimmy officially changes his name to Saul Goodman and holds an event to advertise his new business. However, Kim is less than pleased when Jimmy offers her advice to scam one of her clients into accepting a deal, though she eventually goes through with it.

Nacho and Blingy drive Jimmy to a garage where Lalo is repairing his car. Lalo warmly greets a fearful Jimmy and states that he is impressed with how Jimmy used his communication skills to talk Tuco out of killing the skateboarders a few years previously. Lalo tells Jimmy that he wants him to carry a message to Domigo "Krazy-8" Molina inside the Metropolitan Detention Center, which would be protected under attorney-client privilege. Jimmy tries to talk himself out of the imposed job by mentioning increased rates, but Lalo hands him over the demanded fee in cash on the spot.

At the MDC, Jimmy is in an interview room when a shackled Krazy-8 is brought before him. Krazy-8 is initially perplexed as he never hired Jimmy, though his demeanor changes when Jimmy reveals that Lalo hired him. Krazy-8 insists he hasn't said anything incriminating to the police about the origin of the drugs. Jimmy asks if he's good at memorizing information and hands him a notepad with a written script. As Jimmy sits across the street from the MDC, an unmarked police car arrives carrying DEA agents Hank Schrader and Steven Gomez. As they enter the jail and leave their weapons in a holding room, Hank and Gomez engage in conversation about expired food. They walk into the interview room and meet with Krazy-8, who has expressed a willingness to talk. Following Jimmy and Lalo's script, Krazy-8 gives the agents details about drug dealing procedures and where hidden drug money can be found. Playing his part in the charade, Jimmy loudly enters the room and pretends to have a disagreement with his client about sharing information with the police. Hank immediately sees through Jimmy's "Saul Goodman" persona, and he and Gomez are suspicious of the overblown performance. When the agents attempt to leave the room, Jimmy tells them that Krazy-8's information will lead to results; Hank insists that it has to lead to further arrests. Jimmy demands protection for his client as a confidential informant. Agreeing on that, Krazy-8 continues by sharing the exact locations of three dead drops.

Jimmy and Kim get married in a small civil ceremony with Huell as a witness. At the same time, after Lalo gets arrested for the murder of Fred Whalen, Jimmy is called in to represent him. Jimmy is eventually given information by Mike allows him to get Lalo bail at seven million dollars. Lalo promises that he can come up with the money, but will need Jimmy to collect it. However, Jimmy becomes visibly conflicted at seeing how upset Fred's parents are and has an explosive confrontation with Howard over his behavior in the courthouse.

Lalo gives Jimmy instructions on where to collect the money, but Jimmy refuses until Lalo agrees to pay him $100,000 in exchange. Jimmy informs Kim who is less than pleased by the danger Jimmy will put himself in, but reluctantly agrees. In the desert, Jimmy meets with the Cousins who silently hand over the money in two large duffle bags before taking off. However, on his way home, Jimmy is ambushed by a gang who are after the money. As they prepare to execute him, Jimmy is rescued by Mike who was tracking Jimmy and kills five of the six gangsters. However, one escapes and in the process, destroys Mike's truck and damages Jimmy's car, forcing the two men to strip it and push the car over a cliff.

Due to the danger of Tiburón returning, Jimmy and Mike are forced to trek through the desert with Jimmy carrying the heavy bags of money. Jimmy has a hard time adapting to the situation, only reluctantly filling his old Davis & Main water bottle with his own urine in lieu of water and resorting to dragging the bags when he gets tired, resulting in one ripping slightly and Jimmy injuring his foot on a cactus when he retrieves the lost money. Hunted relentlessly, exhausted and sunburned, Jimmy decides to give up, but Mike gives him a speech about how he is driven by protecting those he loves and ensuring they have a better life. With the Tiburón searching nearby, Jimmy is filled with renewed purpose, dons one of Mike's space blankets and begins walking down the road to draw the man out for Mike. Jimmy succeeds in drawing Tiburón's attention, allowing Mike to kill him with a sniper rifle. However, Tiburón's truck crashes and is wrecked in the process, leaving Jimmy and Mike without a car again and without water as Tiburón's water supply was also destroyed. Jimmy finally drinks his own urine as Mike had earlier attempted to get him to do and begins walking down the road with Mike back to civilization, the threat to them now gone.

Continuing their arduous journey through the desert, Jimmy eventually gets a signal and calls a worried Kim. The two eventually make their way to a truck stop where Victor and Tyrus Kitt pick up Jimmy and Mike. The two reveal that Gus' men have recovered all of the bodies except for Tiburón who died out in the middle of nowhere and can't be found. Mike is satisfied and tells Jimmy that he must prepare his story for what took him so long. Arriving at the jail, Jimmy hands over the bags of money, drawing the suspicions of the DA and authorities that Lalo would have so much cash on hand for his bail. As he waits, Jimmy discovers that the Cousins included an extra $100,000 in the bags at Lalo's request to pay Jimmy for his services. Lalo is released and makes it clear that he intends to jump bail and flee to Mexico while Jimmy lies that it took him so long as his car broke down six or seven miles from the pickup spot and he had to walk back. Before departing with Nacho, Lalo reveals Kim's visit to a concerned Jimmy and compliments him on his wife.

Returning home, Jimmy's sunburn is treated by Kim and he continually refuses to go to the hospital. Jimmy lies to Kim about his experiences and directs her to the money, but she discovers the truth after finding his coffee mug in the bag with a bullet hole through it. Jimmy chastises Kim for talking to Lalo and they both take the next day off with Jimmy displaying signs of PTSD from his experience. Jimmy is eventually called in on an easy case, but his trauma causes him to botch the case. Jimmy subsequently seeks Mike's advice and is told that he will eventually get through it, but he has started down a road with his choices. Jimmy expresses anger at the idea that Lalo will get away with Fred's senseless murder, but Mike implies that there is a plan in play to deal with Lalo.

That night, Jimmy is shocked to learn that Kim has quit Schweikart & Cokely to focus solely on her public defender work and chastises her for her actions, ignoring multiple phone calls. As Kim answers a knock on the door, Jimmy finally answers his phone, only to have a frantic Mike order him to leave the line open and hide the phone so Mike can listen in. The visitor proves to be Lalo who refuses to let Kim leave and demands to know again what happened in the desert while Mike covers Jimmy and Kim with his sniper rifle from across the street. Jimmy continues telling variations of the same story before Lalo reveals that he found Jimmy's wrecked and shot-up car. Kim finally intervenes, claiming that a passerby must've found the broken-down car and wrecked it for fun. Kim berates Lalo for his lack of trust, in both Jimmy and his own people and Lalo leaves, apparently satisfied. ("Bad Choice Road")

After the confrontation, Lalo leaves Kim's apartment and drives away in Nacho's car. Jimmy picks up the phone and asks Mike what happens next. Mike just replies, "We'll see" and remarks that Kim saved his life. When he ends the call and Kim asks him who he was talking to, Jimmy tells her the truth about his desert trek with Mike. Jimmy and Kim feel the apartment isn't safe and immediately go to a hotel to wait out the situation for a few days. Kim later ignores Jimmy's request to remain at the hotel and visits the courthouse. She meets with a public defender named Grant and accepts twenty pending felony cases pro bono. While in an elevator, she unexpectedly encounters Howard and his associates from HHM. On her way out, Kim tells Howard she quit Schweikart and Cokely.

This intrigues Howard, and he attempts to find out what exactly happened. Kim tries to leave but Howard beckons her into an empty courtroom for privacy. Howard warns her about Jimmy's recent harassment and suggests Kim should stop following his lead. Kim laughs at Howard and says she is insulted by the notion that she cannot decide for herself. As she leaves, Howard tells her that Chuck best understood Jimmy.

Jimmy goes to Mike's house to question him about who he works for and about the situation with Lalo. Mike tells him he's not allowed to know this information, but still reveals that Lalo will be assassinated that night. Jimmy goes back to the hotel, packs their possessions, and informs Kim when he gets back. Kim, still angered by Howard's comments, proposes a forced resolution of the Sandpiper case by sabotaging Howard, which would enable Jimmy to receive his seven-figure share of the settlement. Jimmy counsels against it, but Kim makes use of a similar finger-pointing gesture Jimmy previously used after he was reinstated, indicating she is serious about undermining Howard, which stuns Jimmy.

Season 6

Jimmy and Kim begin plotting against Howard. Prosecutor Suzanne Ericsen informs Jimmy that his client Jorge de Guzman used an alias and asks if he knows his client's real identity. Jimmy denies it but accidentally uses Lalo's real name.

Kim surveils Cliff Main and Howard Hamlin at the golf course while Jimmy sneaks into the locker room to plant a bag resembling cocaine in Howard's locker. Howard and Cliff find it, but Howard dismisses it as an employee's mistake or a prank.

At Kim's instigation, Jimmy cons Craig and Betsy Kettleman into believing they have grounds for a lawsuit against Howard. They attempt to hire Cliff to represent them, claiming Howard provided ineffective counsel because he used cocaine during his representation of Craig Kettleman. Cliff declines, as do several other lawyers, but Jimmy and Kim succeed in spreading the rumor that Howard uses drugs. Jimmy later attempts to bribe Craig and Betsy Kettleman into remaining silent about their role in smearing Howard. When they refuse the cash, Kim coerces them by threatening to reveal their shady tax return scam to the IRS. Jimmy disappoints Kim by giving Craig and Betsy Kettleman the cash before he leaves.

Suzanne approaches Kim to say she has identified de Guzman as Lalo Salamanca, and that Lalo is dead. Suzanne has also connected Jimmy to the Salamanca drug family and asks Kim to approach him about becoming an informant. Kim informs Jimmy about the conversation and asks if he intends to be a "friend of the cartel" or a "rat".

Jimmy and Kim work with Huell and Huell's associate to copy Howard's car key and remote unlock button. Huell asks Jimmy why legitimate lawyers would commit crimes and Jimmy makes an unconvincing argument about committing a wrong to accomplish a greater good. Jimmy discovers his representation of Lalo Salamanca has made him a pariah with courthouse staff, but a highly sought after defense attorney among Albuquerque's criminals. The influx of new clients causes Mrs. Nguyen to evict him from the nail salon, so he begins searching for an office. He identifies a vacancy in a strip mall, which he decides to rent because of its proximity to the courthouse, the county jail, and the city's bail bonds offices. His business starts to grow, and Jimmy succeeds at persuading Francesca Liddy to work as his administrative assistant.

As Kim meets with Cliff Main at an outdoor café, Jimmy disguises himself as Howard and takes Howard's car while Howard is visiting his therapist. Jimmy pushes Wendy out of the car in front of Cliff and Kim, further suggesting to Cliff that Howard is using cocaine and has prostitutes.

Cliff confronts Howard about his supposed cocaine use. When Howard hears Cliff mention that he was in a meeting with Kim at the time, Howard puts the pieces together and recognizes that Jimmy is continuing to harass him, so he tricks Jimmy into meeting him at a boxing gym. Howard challenges Jimmy to a bout, and Jimmy declines, but then changes his mind and enters the ring. Howard defeats him and says he hopes this ends Jimmy's harassment, but afterwards Howard directs his private investigator to begin surveilling Jimmy.

During a meeting with Viola Goto, her former paralegal, Kim obtains the name of the retired judge who will mediate an upcoming settlement conference for the Sandpiper case. Jimmy and his film crew fabricate photos that include an actor made up to resemble the mediator. Jimmy later sees the mediator at a store and tells Kim he has a broken arm in a cast, which is not depicted in the photos. Kim abandons her plan to meet in Santa Fe with Cliff Main and representatives of a foundation interested in funding her pro bono criminal defense work and returns to Albuquerque to help Jimmy hastily re-shoot the photos.

Howard's investigator delivers the photos to Howard shortly before the mediation session begins. They depict the mediator accepting money from Jimmy and are coated in a drug that causes Howard's pupils to dilate. He angrily accuses the mediator of accepting a bribe, and when he attempts to retrieve the photos as proof, he discovers they have been switched for innocuous pictures of Jimmy giving a passerby (his sound guy from his film crew in disguise) a frisbee. As Jimmy and Kim listen in on the conference call, Howard is humiliated in front of his clients and peers, and HHM and Davis & Main agree to settle the Sandpiper case. Cliff announces through the conference call that a settlement agreement has been reached as Jimmy and Kim have sex on Jimmy's office couch.

After the mediation concludes, Howard pieces together the whole plot, including Jimmy and Kim's success at causing him to rely on a fake private investigator. That night, he arrives at Kim's apartment to confront her and Jimmy. Lalo Salamanca arrives soon afterwards, intending to interrogate Jimmy and Kim about the assassination attempt on Lalo's life, and get Jimmy to kill Gus. Jimmy and Kim are absolutely horrified by Lalo's appearance while Kim tries to get Howard to leave. When Howard asks Lalo who he is, Lalo states nonchalantly he is nobody and that he merely wishes to “speak to my lawyers” (much to Jimmy and Kim's alarm). They both nervously implore Howard to leave immediately, but Howard remains oblivious to his danger, sarcastically telling Lalo to find himself better lawyers. Lalo affixes a silencer to a pistol and, once Howard finally realizes his peril, suddenly shoots Howard in the head, instantly killing him. Jimmy and Kim both scream in horror at what has just occurred before them, as Lalo shushes them to calm down, saying, "Okay...Let's talk."

Lalo orders a terrified Jimmy and Kim to calm down and sit on the couch. Handing them a written address and a map, he tells the couple that he wants Jimmy to take Lalo's station wagon to the address, use a revolver in the car's glove compartment to shoot the occupant when he answers the door, and take a photo of the body. Eager to prevent her from becoming Lalo's hostage, Jimmy suggests that Kim be sent to perform the task, over her horrified objections. Lalo agrees. Left with no choice, Kim leaves the apartment and drives away in Lalo's car. With Kim gone, Lalo binds Jimmy's hands and ties him to a chair, telling him of the assassination attempt at his compound which left his staff dead. Because he was introduced Jimmy through Ignacio "Nacho" Varga, Jimmy's former client, he suspects that he may have been in on the plan. Jimmy denies betraying Lalo and insists he had nothing to do with Nacho's actions. Lalo leaves the apartment, telling Jimmy that he expects to be told "the whole story" when he gets back. In his absence, Jimmy struggles to escape his restraints and falls over on the floor next to Howard's body.

Kim drives to the address, agonizing over what she is about to do. At a stoplight, a police car pulls up next to her; she rolls down the window and considers alerting the officers inside, but is unable to do so. Kim finally drives into a residential neighborhood and finds the house -- Gus's residence—and reluctantly walks up to the front door, ringing the bell. Just as she raises the revolver and is about the shoot the person answering the door, Mike appears from behind and disarms her, forcing her into the house. Gus watches through the surveillance monitors at the Ryman residence while Mike questions Kim. Mike is shocked to learn that Lalo is at her apartment and has taken Jimmy hostage, and sends an order for Tyrus to get there immediately. He takes the underground passage to the Ryman residence, tells Gus to stay there with two of Mike's men, then enlists two others to come with him. Watching Kim through the surveillance monitors, Gus calls Victor, who is standing in the room with Kim, and asks to speak with her directly. Kim tells Gus that Lalo had originally wanted to send Jimmy to kill him, but that Jimmy had talked Lalo out of it by sending her on the mission instead. Gus is perturbed by the fact that Jimmy had talked Lalo out of his original plan, and tells the two men guarding him to follow him somewhere.

After Lalo is killed by Gus during a gunfight, Jimmy watches Mike's henchman, Arthur, emptying the refrigerator. Kim returns home with Mike; the couple tearfully embrace. Mike sits them down and tells them what is going to happen next: Howard's car is going to be driven several states away and abandoned next to the ocean, staged as a suicide; since the car was likely seen at the apartment before his disappearance, Jimmy and Kim are to tell the police that he showed up in a drug-addled stupor and left uneventfully. Mike stresses to them that they are to act casually for the rest of the day and pretend the events of the previous night did not happen. Jimmy sees Howard's body being stuffed in the old refrigerator while Mike's men wheel a new one into the apartment.

Shortly after, Jimmy began making renovations at his business, completely changing it from a nail salon to a full on law firm and he and Kim work the day while Mike and his team do damage control from their apartment and erase all traces of Howard’s murder. When Jimmy and Kim return to the cleaned up apartment one night, they are too uncomfortable to stay there and spend the night at a motel where Jimmy tells Kim that they will go on with their lives as if nothing happened, but Kim stays silent.

Jimmy and Kim visit HHM where a memorial service for Howard is taking place. They talk with Richard, who tells them that due to Howard’s death, the law firm is downsizing, switching locations and is changing the name. Jimmy and Kim go to meet Howard’s widow, Cheryl. As they pay their respects, Cheryl firmly asks them if what Howard has been saying before he died is the truth, that Jimmy and Kim have been harassing him and making him look foolish. Jimmy, not wanting to tell her of their hand in Howard’s fate, tries to say that Howard came to their house all drugged up and Kim helps him by fabricating a story of how she witnessed Howard snorting cocaine. After Cheryl leaves in tears, Jimmy and Kim excuse themselves from the law firm and go to the parking garage where Jimmy tries to tell Kim that their troubles are over and they can put this mess behind them. An unresponsive Kim just kisses Jimmy and drives away, leaving Jimmy confused.

Jimmy soon finds out that Kim has resigned from her career as an attorney and comes to her in their apartment late at tonight to desperately make her change her mind and throughout this ordeal, he finds out that Kim is leaving him. Kim tearfully tells Jimmy that she just can’t be with him anymore due to the amount of turmoil that has happened. Jimmy at first writes off Howard’s death as Lalo’s doing, but Kim confesses that she was aware that he was alive for a while now and she chose to keep it secret because she knew Jimmy would make them hide and abandon their campaign against Howard if he knew the truth, and also tells him that they are bad for each other due to how much misery they cause for everyone else around them. Kim resumes packing her bags while Jimmy is left sadly standing in place. With Kim's departure, Jimmy had lost everything that kept him grounded; his family, his elder practice, the McGill name, and now Kim. All that was left is Saul Goodman.

Immediately following Kim's departure, Jimmy began to fully embrace his criminal Saul Goodman persona as a coping mechanism, fully immersing himself in his work and eventual criminal activity. From the time he wakes up to the time he sleeps, Saul is working an angle or case. In late 2004, months after Kim's departure, Saul treats Kim dismissively as she briefly returns to Albuquerque to sign the divorce papers in his office. She is disturbed at how callous her ex-husband has become, and by the hardened criminals that he is now taking on as his regular clientele. Saul tells Kim that he thinks she'll come to regret not taking her share of the Sandpiper money, telling her it would buy "a shitload of swampland". When both Saul and Kim sign the divorce papers, Saul nonchalantly tells Kim to "have a nice life" as she leaves, and she later notices that one of Saul's criminal clients, Emilio Koyama, is his next appointment. Outside Saul's office, when asked by Emilio's friend Jesse Pinkman if Saul is a good lawyer, Kim tells him that "he was when I knew him" before leaving.

By the next year, in 2005, Saul has become very wealthy after he received his share of the Sandpiper money in addition to Kim's share too, as she had chosen not to take her share of the money. He used the money from the Sandpiper settlement to purchase a huge mansion and filled it with extravagant luxuries, and storing several keepsakes of his old life within. Continuing to embrace his alter ego of Saul completely, he is first seen waking up with a prostitute in his bed, which he promptly dismisses, and spends a majority of the morning debating with a contact regarding a potential client who is accused of public masturbation, before going to his law firm.

Breaking Bad

In the years spanning 2005 to 2007, Saul eventually coined “Better Call Saul!” as his famous catchphrase and begins an aggressive marketing strategy, filming several low-budget, late night TV ads, recording radio ads, and putting ads featuring his likeness on benches and billboards all over Albuquerque. This caused Saul to become a local celebrity, recognized by a wide range of Albuquerque citizens, including criminal civilians (some of which would become his clients), as well as regular civilians (e.g. Walter White Jr.). Saul regularly sleeps with sex workers and begins sexually harassing his secretary Francesca, whom he has made complicit in his crimes

Saul eventually acquires Caldera’s black book, giving him access to a vast criminal network and introducing him to later associates such as Patrick Kuby. He becomes heavily involved with money laundering, purchasing several nail salons to hide his criminal revenue, as well as working with Daniel “Danny” Wormald, a former client and former associate of Mike and Nacho who runs Lazer Base, a local laser tag business that works as a money laundering front. He establishes a loan-out corporation, Ice Station Zebra Associates (a formerly fictional company he and Kim had created for several bar scams they pulled), in addition to an offshore business called Tigerfish Corporation.

Mike continues working as a private investigator for Saul, who has become a useful source of information on the criminal landscape of Albuquerque for Gustavo Fring, albeit one kept at an arms length. Saul remains unaware of Gus' true identity, only knowing him as a major drug kingpin and distributor who is extremely competent and careful, only meeting Gus once previously though being unaware that he was a drug kingpin.

By 2008, Saul has developed a widely known reputation as a criminal lawyer, who successfully helped Emilio avoid criminal charges on two different occasions, causing Jesse to think Kim was right about him being an effective lawyer.

Season 2

When Brandon "Badger" Mayhew is arrested for selling Walt and Jesse's "Blue Sky" meth, Saul decides to represent him. As the undercover cop Getz tries to convince Badger to give up his supplier, Saul enters the interview room and dismisses Getz before looking over Badger's case and discussing his retainer fee. When he spots Hank and Gomez, Saul becomes convinced that the DEA must be interested in Badger only if they think he can lead them to bigger fish.

Jesse takes Walt to Saul's law office at a strip mall. At Jesse's request, having previously been convinced by Kim to trust Saul as a lawyer, Walt and Jesse decide to hire him as their lawyer, with Jesse explaining to a hesitant Walt that they do not need a criminal lawyer (a lawyer who defends criminals), but a criminal lawyer (a lawyer who is also a criminal). Walt loses a coin toss to determine who will go into Saul's office and pay his retainer fee. Upon entering the office, Walt introduces himself as Badger's uncle "Mr. Mayhew". Saul reports that the DEA wants Badger to lead them to a mystery man named Heisenberg. Saul initially insists on making Badger give up Heisenberg, but seems to reconsider when Walt offers him $10,000. Walt has another coughing fit. Upon returning to Jesse's car, Walt reports that Saul kicked him out of the office for trying to bribe him.

Later that night, Jesse and Walt don their ski masks, kidnap Saul, and haul him to a freshly dug shallow grave in a desert wasteland. A terrified Saul presumes that the situation has to do with Lalo's promise that he will be back for answers about what Jimmy knows of Nacho's actions, Saul desperately shouts at the two men that "it wasn't me it was Ignacio, he's the one!" and asks if Lalo sent them. However, when Jesse demands that he speak English, a relieved Saul realizes that they have nothing to do with Lalo, with Jesse being confused as to who Saul is talking about. Jesse tells him he should've taken Badger's offer. Saul informs them that he doesn't take bribes from strangers. Jesse, gun aimed at Saul, instructs him to give Badger "the best legal representation ever," but says that Saul is dead if anyone snitches to the DEA. Saul suggests killing Badger, but Jesse insists that's not an option.

After recognizing Walt as the "Mr. Mayhew" from his office, Saul instructs Walt and Jesse to remove their masks and for each of them to put a dollar in his pocket. Now protected by attorney-client privilege, they hear Saul's assessment of their situation: "Somebody's going to prison. It's just a matter of who. After they pay him for his services, Saul steps back into the RV with Walt and Jesse. Saul takes note of the duo's chemistry equipment, realizing that they make the "blue stuff" and that Walt is the man known as "Heisenberg". Walt doesn't want to divulge too many details about their operation to Saul, but Jesse doesn't see the point as he is already inside their meth lab. Walt tries to turn the RV's ignition, but it won't start; to avoid overheating the engine, they switch the vehicle off. After an uneasy moment of silence, Jesse asks who the "Lalo" that Saul mentioned was; he brushes off the question by saying he's "nobody". Walt successfully restarts the RV and the trio drive off into the night. Under questioning from Hank, Badger describes Heisenberg as a middle-aged bald man. Meanwhile, Saul hands Walt the dossier for James Kilkelly, a bald ex-convict known as "Jimmy In-'N-Out," who will willingly allow himself to be put in jail as Heisenberg for a fee. Saul outlines the cost: $80,000 plus a pound of Walt and Jesse's meth. The next day, the DEA and APD stake out the bus stop. Walt and Jesse watch from a distance in Walt's Aztek. Badger arrives on time, but Jimmy is late. Eventually a different bald man sits next to Badger, who doesn't know this isn't Jimmy. When the real Jimmy sits down on a nearby bench, Badger is busy soliciting the wrong man, trying to make the deal. Walt speeds around the block to the bench and makes Jesse intervene. After Jesse exits the car, Walt zips over to the stakeout vehicle to talk to Hank, thereby blocking their view and buy time for Jesse to redirect Badger. Jesse directs Badger to the correct bench and Jimmy's arrest goes down as planned.

Saul lies on his office floor with the Swing Master and takes a call from Francesca about his upcoming schedule. Mike, now Saul's private investigator, steps into the office to update him on several ongoing cases the two are handling. Upon Saul's query, Mike divulges the full names and occupations of Walt and Jesse, and the fact that Walt has terminal lung cancer. Knowing about the chemical purity of Walt's product, Saul is eager to go into business with him. Mike advises against it, telling him that Walt is an amateur who will get himself either caught or killed if the cancer doesn't get him first. Mike continues talking about an unrelated matter, but Saul zones out of the conversation. Saul walks into Walt's classroom at J. P. Wynne High School, chiding him for being easy for Mike to locate. Walt asks if Saul is blackmailing him, but Saul says that he isn't. Saul offers to act as Walt's consigliere in his meth operation, providing him with the right connections and strategy to succeed in the drug trade, ending the conversation with "If you want to make more money, and keep the money that you make, Better Call Saul!"

Later on, Saul gives Walt a tutorial on money laundering. After all the costs associated with Badger’s arrest, he only has $16,000 left. Walt lets on that he might not have much longer to live, but he intends to cook a lot more. After one of Walt and Jesse's dealers, Jesse's friend Christian "Combo" Ortega, is murdered by an eleven-year old boy under orders from rival dealers from a rival gang, Saul proposes new distribution method for Walt and Jesse's product. Under stress, Jesse tells Jane that he is a drug dealer, though she had already deduced as much. Saul puts Walt in touch with a meth distributor named Gus, a cautious yet successful businessman who is skeptical of Jesse's dependability but agrees to purchase Walt's product. However, Gus expresses concern about Jesse's drug problem, which has escalated into heroin use due to Jane's relapse. Walt receives a large offer for the short-notice delivery of the remainder of their inventory, but at the same time receives a call from Skyler, notifying him of her imminent labor.

After successfully selling the thirty-eight pounds to Saul's contact, Walt complains that he cannot make use of the money. Luckily, Saul knows of a hacker in Belarus who could launder Walt's money through his son's "SaveWalterWhite.com" website. When Jesse's girlfriend, Jane Margolis, dies, Saul sends Mike to clean up her apartment from any evidence linking her and Jesse with the use of drugs. Saul also informs Walt about Jesse living in a crack house nicknamed "The Shooting Gallery," and sends Mike to give Walt a lift to visit Jesse.

Season 3

In the wake of the Wayfarer Flight 515 aerial disaster, Saul began organizing a class-action lawsuit for victims of the crash. At one point, Saul says, "Victims' families would be great, but I'll take anyone on the ground who suffered emotionally." Saul also began wearing the Wayfarer 515 blue ribbon to show his support for the air crash victims.

Following the success of the large sale to Gus – which leads to Saul buying better suits – Saul pushes Walt to take Gus’s lucrative offer to continue cooking. He also accepts a job from Jesse, using Jesse’s half of the earnings to purchase his aunt’s house at a dramatically lowered price – strong-arming Jesse’s parents and attorney with a potential lawsuit over the undisclosed meth lab Jesse was running out of the basement.

After Walt reveals Skyler White has threatened to expose him, Saul hires Mike to bug the White house as insurance. Forced to leave early when Walt comes home, Mike witnesses the Cousins entering with an axe, and quickly places a call to Gus to call them off. Per Gus’s direction, Saul is not informed of this threat to Walt. Saul visits Jesse's house later on, asking Jesse to try to convince Walt into going back to cooking meth.

Mike later brings Walt to Saul after Walt creates a disturbance at Skyler’s office and attempts to talk Walt into cooking meth again. Admitting that he bugged Walt’s house and making an off-color comment about Skyler, Saul is attacked and subsequently fired by Walt. Furious, Saul shuts down the laundering of Walt’s drug money.

Jesse then approaches Saul with two bags of meth he has cooked himself using Walt’s procedure and asks to set up a deal. He meets Victor under a bridge to make the exchange, only to see he has been given half of the money – the other half went to Walt.

Saul sets up an intervention between Walt and Jesse, offering to give Walt a percentage of Jesse’s future deals. Walt returns Jesse’s half of the deal's money, coldly informing both of them that he has now accepted Gus’s offer and will be cutting Jesse out of the business. Quickly dumping Jesse in favor of the much higher profits Walt can produce, Saul is once again hired to launder money for Walt – this time for a dramatically-reduced fee of five percent.

When Hank successfully deduces the existence of the RV, Walt calls Saul in a panic. Saul is at a loss, and scolds him for not having a "self-destruct" mechanism like the Starship Enterprise. After Hank locates the RV with Walt and Jesse trapped inside, Walt calls Saul for assistance. Saul has his secretary Francesca masquerade as a law enforcement official to make Hank believe his wife has been severely injured in a car accident. Saul appears regretful of his part in the cruel ruse and discards the phone used to make the call, while Francesca tells him she should be paid more for this sort of work.

Saul visits Jesse at the hospital after the latter is brutally attacked by Hank in retaliation of their ruse to lure Hank away from the junkyard. Saul takes pictures of Jesse's injured face and jokes that Walt is now the "cute one of the group." Jesse plans to ruin Hank's life and maybe even give up Heisenberg's identity if he gets caught cooking again. Out of the hospital room, Walt tells Saul that Jesse will eventually calm down, to which Saul replies, "If he doesn't, there may come a time to talk options". Saul later tries to convince Jesse into buying a property to launder his money earned selling drugs, but Jesse declines the offer.

Walt later introduces Skyler to Saul as they have a meeting in Saul's office trying to think in a scheme to launder their money. Saul suggests that they buy a laser tag franchise, but Skyler comments that Walt buying a laser tag arcade wouldn't make any sense. They later drive to a car wash where Walt worked for four years. Skyler comments that since Walt has history with this car wash, it would make even more sense for him to buy it. Saul thinks otherwise, since they don't have an inside man, and it will be difficult to use the car wash for money laundering. Later, Walter comes to Saul to inform him that Jesse found out that the men who killed his dealer and friend some weeks earlier are actually working for Gus, and Jesse is intent on killing them. They plan to get Jesse arrested, but Mike finds out about the plan and intervenes on Gus' orders.

Jesse eventually attacks the dealers against Gus' orders, and Walt saves Jesse's life by killing both dealers. Mike starts a manhunt for Jesse, but Saul helps Walt by hiding Jesse in the laser tag arcade. Mike forces Saul to give him information on Jesse's whereabouts, even threatening to severely injure Saul in case he doesn't collaborate. Saul gives Mike a fake address to keep him away for some hours and then drives Walt to meet Jesse at the arcade. He warns them that it's just a matter of time before Mike realizes that the address is fake, but he is dismissed by Walt.

Season 4

Following Gale Boetticher's murder, Walt and Jesse are taken to the superlab and held there by Mike and Victor until Gus Fring arrives to deal with the situation. Meanwhile, Saul searches his office for bugs, believing that Walt and Jesse were murdered by Gus and he would be next. He receives a call from Skyler asking where Walt is. Returning her call by payphone, Saul lies and assures her Walt is fine. He then tells Huell that they might need to leave town.

Later, after Skyler's unsuccessful attempt to buy the car wash from Bogdan for money laundering purposes, Saul touts a nail salon as the best way to launder money as he meets with Walt and Skyler at the condo.

While watching the draining soap suds from washing Holly's baby bottles, Skyler is struck by an idea and calls Saul. Outside the car wash, a man wearing a Bluetooth headset who appears to be some kind of environmental inspector, who is actually a conman, Saul's associate Patrick Kuby, shows water samples to Bogdan and declares they're full of contaminants. He tells Bogdan that he must replace his entire wastewater treatment system, and the state requires he cease operations until it's back up to code. Skyler, feeding lines to Kuby, is eventually successful and purchases the car wash. Meanwhile, Walt tells Saul he fears that Hank will connect Jesse to Gale's murder. Saul says there's nothing to worry about, but Walt catalogs his woes: Gus wants to kill him, Jesse is out of control, and Gus will eventually perceive Jesse as too big a risk. There's also the car wash he's buying with Skyler, who naively thinks Walt can walk away after his contract with Gus expires. Saul mentions that as a last resort, Walt can pay to have a "disappearer" vanish his family off the grid and set them up with new identities. Walt rejects the idea, and they're stuck at an impasse.

Later, when Walter learns Jesse is off somewhere with Mike, Walt races through Albuquerque, dodging traffic while shouting instructions to Saul on his cell phone. If Walt doesn't return within 24 hours, Saul is to deliver all of Walt's money to Skyler. On a later date, Walt slumps in a chair at Saul's office while Saul handles the fallout from his client's "little joy ride" (racing around recklessly, doing doughnuts with, and ultimately setting on fire the Dodge Challenger Skyler made him return). Walt admits that the pressure of knowing Gus wants to kill him is getting to him, and then inquires about hit men. "Wrong answer!" blurts Saul, pointing out that any for hire assailant would likely know Mike, and have to outmaneuver him. Walt tells Saul that he tried to kill Gus himself but couldn't get near him. Saul visits Andrea Cantillo at a house she's just rented in a nice neighborhood and delivers cash from Jesse. Afterward, in Saul's car, a concerned Jesse asks about the house and Andrea's son, Brock Cantillo. Saul then prods Jesse to check on them himself.

Ted enters Saul's office, and Saul informs him that his long-lost "Great Aunt Birgit" from Luxembourg has left him $621,552.33—almost precisely the amount of his debt to the I.R.S., ostensibly a coincidence that Ted seemingly doesn't realize. Saul visits the car wash and shows Skyler a credit report indicating that Ted leased a Mercedes three hours after receiving Walt's money. He won't be able to pay the income tax bill in full—and clearly wasn't going to do so anyway. At his home, Ted returns Skyler's money to her because paying off the IRS with Walt's gambling winnings "feels wrong" and in any case won't solve Ted's other money woes. Skyler accuses Ted of blackmailing her for more cash. Stung by the charge, Ted emphatically denies it but still refuses to pay the IRS. After leaving Ted's house, Skyler calls Saul.

By phone, Saul informs Skyler that Ted doesn't own a gun or have a panic button on his alarm system. Skyler replies that she doesn't want anyone hurt, just for Ted to write the IRS a check. Saul tells Skyler that he'll assign his "A-team" to deal with Ted and sends Kuby and Huell. The two visit Ted at home, order him to write the check, and tell him they'll be staying until it clears. After signing the check, Ted tries to make a run for it but ends up tripping on a throw rug and knocking himself out on the island in his kitchen.

In Saul's office, Huell is describing the mishap with Ted when Walt storms in, saying that he needs to contact Saul's connection who can "disappear" the White family and give them new identities. It'll cost at least half a million dollars, says Saul, and everyone must be packed and ready before Walt makes the call. Walt asks Saul to inform the DEA that Gus has a hit out on Hank. Saul reluctantly agrees to alert the DEA about the hit but refuses to finger Gus. Walt tells Saul to make the call in an hour.

After finishing a cook, a laundry truck drops off Jesse at his car, which he now parks in the desert to avoid arousing DEA suspicion. Jesse calls Walt, who doesn't answer, then listens to increasingly frantic messages on his own voicemail from Saul. One of which urges Jesse to come to the law office, pronto. When Jesse arrives, he is aggressively patted down by Saul's bodyguard, Huell, until Saul interrupts. He stuffs Jesse's meth money in a duffel bag for him. Confused, Jesse asks what's going on and learns that Gus threatened to kill Walt and his family.

At the hospital where Brock is being treated, two Albuquerque Police Department detectives then approach Jesse and summon him to police headquarters to question him about his theory that Brock might have ricin poisoning, which the boy's doctors think might actually be the case. Jesse says that he must have seen it on TV. When the detectives press him further, Jesse stops talking and demands his attorney, Saul Goodman. At the law office, Saul's secretary, Francesca, busy shredding documents, doesn't respond to Walt banging on the office door. He then shatters the glass door with a piece of cement and enters. Francesca, furious about the mess, refuses to provide Saul's whereabouts unless Walt pays her $25,000, well more than he has on him.

At police headquarters, Jesse stonewalls the detectives until Saul arrives. Privately, Saul tells Jesse that he'll have to remain in police custody pending a toxicology report on Brock, but that it might be just as well because someone tried to kill Walt in his own home. Following their meeting, Walt rendezvous with Saul, who relays information from Jesse about Gus' visits to Hector Salamanca. Walt doesn't recognize their significance until Saul says that Gus gloated about Hector's family line ending and later told Jesse that Hector killed someone close to him. This information supplied by Jesse through Saul later becomes vital in Walt's plan on getting rid of Gustavo Fring.

Season 5A

Saul visits Skyler at the car wash and cryptically and solemnly warns her the police may call her about Ted. "Ted's dead?" she asks, tearing up. "No, he just woke up," Saul says. Later, at Saul's office, Walt scolds Saul for giving Skyler $622,000 to pay off Ted's tax debt. Saul reminds Walt that he put himself on the line by participating in Brock's poisoning (Saul had Huell lift the ricin cigarette from Jesse). Thrusting the ricin cigarette at him, Saul tells Walt that their business relationship is done. Walt bridles at that, backing Saul into a corner of the office.

After deciding that they will continue to cook, Walt and Jesse visit Saul to discuss finding a new venue for the lab, preferably nearby and not in an RV. Saul says an in-town venue will be difficult, but Walt snaps. Jesse reports that he was able to find all the precursor chemicals except for methylamine. Walt encourages Jesse to keep looking for methylamine, but Jesse doubts he'll be able to scare any up. When Saul advises they pull out of the meth business, Walt snaps back that he's broke.

Mike waits outside Saul's office while Huell guards the door. Inside, Walt and Jesse assuage Saul's doubts about working with Mike again, who threatened to break Saul's legs. They let Mike in and he lays down ground rules: He runs the business, Walt and Jesse cover production. Saul privately asks Walt if he's okay with the arrangement, but Walt's unfazed. Saul takes the team on a tour of potential new lab venues, but Walt, Jesse, and Mike nix them all, spotting logistical problems with each. Jesse and Mike are ready to dismiss the final venue, Vamanos Pests, but Walt demurs, declaring it's perfect. The next day, the four watch the pest-control team as it tents an infested home. Walt explains his plan: If they cook inside houses undergoing fumigation, no one will bother them or question strange smells. They can hide in plain sight. Saul says the pest crew, run by a man named Ira, runs a burglary operation on the side and knows how to keep secrets. Mike suggests a vote. "Why?" asks Walt: he's already convinced, and so is Jesse.

Later, tending to his errand, Mike visits the DEA offices with Saul. Saul tells Hank and Gomez that their ongoing surveillance of Mike is tantamount to stalking, and that he's filed for a Temporary Restraining Order with a sympathetic judge. Afterward, Saul tells Mike that the TRO won't hold up long, and Hank will be back on his tail with a vengeance within twenty-four hours. Mike says this is enough. Even after Saul's efforts, Mike is eventually caught by the DEA and is on the run. In his office, Saul worries that Mike will flip if captured. Jesse insists he won't flip, but Walt worries that one of his nine men will. Mike then calls, asking Saul to fetch his go-bag. With the police watching Saul's movements, and Jesse out of the business, Walt volunteers to retrieve it. Later, Jesse admits that Saul told him that Walt "took care" of Mike's men in prison.

Season 5B

Jesse later visits Saul's office with the two bags of $5 million in cash - his pay for selling his share of the methylamine - given to him by Walt. Jesse, horrified by the "blood money," wants Saul to give the half the money to Kaylee Ehrmantraut (he fears the worst about Mike and wants his granddaughter to be looked after) and the other half to the parents of Drew Sharp, the young boy who was killed as a result of their methylamine train heist. Saul is quick to point out the flaws of this plan - how it will merely raise more questions - and Jesse leaves his office. Saul then calls Walt to inform him of the situation, and after a conversation with Walt, Jesse is saddened and guilt-ridden but nonetheless comes to terms with Saul's reasoning. Desperate to get rid of the money, he resorts to throwing stacks of money into peoples' yards as he drives by.

When Hank discovers that Walt was Heisenberg the entire time, Walt goes to Saul's office so they can discuss what to do with this problem. Saul later suggests that Walt send Hank on "a trip to Belize" like he did with Mike. Walt refuses and angrily rebukes Saul for even thinking of that. Saul has Huell and Kuby collect Walt's money from the storage bin, and Walt gives Saul a cut of the earnings, and a little extra that's meant for Walt as "insurance" in case Walt needs Saul later on.

Saul later bails Jesse out after he gets arrested for throwing money out of his car window, and chides him for not calling him sooner. He phones Walt, which leads to the three of them meeting in the desert, where Walt convinces Jesse to leave New Mexico, using the disappearer Saul mentioned to Walt earlier. While making the final preparations for Jesse's leave, Saul scolds him for smoking cannabis, and instructs him to give him the rest of the drugs. When Jesse refuses, Saul has Huell pickpocket it from Jesse. Later, when Jesse notices that it's gone, he assumes that Huell must have lifted it from him and that Huell also took the ricin cigarette. As it turns out, Walt was the one behind Brock being poisoned, and Saul unknowingly assisted him with the poisoning. Jesse returns to Saul's office in a fit of rage, and brutally assaults him. Saul tries to grab a gun from his desk drawer while yelling for Huell, but Jesse grabs it first and points it at him, accusing him of having had Huell steal the ricin cigarette from him, and helped poison Brock. Saul admits that he helped, but tells Jesse that Walt didn't tell him of his motives, and that he wouldn't have done it if he knew what Walt was going to do. Jesse leaves, and Saul calls Walt to warn him.

That evening, Saul and Kuby meet Walt in the parking lot of the hotel the White family are staying at to discuss their next move. Kuby says that he's doing everything he can to find Jesse. Saul suggests Walt 'put Jesse out to pasture' but Walt rules this out immediately, telling Saul to never hand out this idea again. The next day, Saul meets Walt at the car wash. He's concerned that Huell has gone missing and is wearing a bullet-proof vest. Walt assures him that Jesse is not on a killing spree and everything is going to be fine.

Several days later, after Heisenberg's real identity is finally exposed and Walt is on the run as one of the most wanted criminals in the country, Saul prepares to leave town and his life behind. Disposing of all the evidence he can find at Saul Goodman & Associates, he also retrieves a satchel full of cash from the ceiling while Francesca shreds documents. Saul tears open the "We the People" wallpaper behind his desk and takes out his shoe box, which he places inside his luggage. He instructs Francesca on how to dispose of the shredded documents, hands over two wads of cash and an unidentified business card to Francesca. Saul offers Francesca a hug before she leaves to dispose of the shredded documents, but she scoffs and walks out. He then takes out a disposable cell phone from his desk drawer and calls Ed, the disappearer.

After picking Saul up, Ed starts the process of setting him up with a new identity in Nebraska, to Saul's obvious displeasure. Until he can be safely moved, he has to hole-up in the basement of the extractor's shop. To Saul's surprise, he shares the basement with Walt, who is also waiting to be extracted out of New Mexico. During their time in the bunker, Saul lies on his cot as Walt tries to repair a faulty water heater. Pointing to Walt's former occupation as a scientist, Saul asks what he would do if he had a time machine. Walt is angrily dismissive of the question and recognizes that what Saul is actually talking about is past regrets. He says that his biggest regret is allowing his former business partners to take over the company he co-founded and profit off his discoveries. Saul replies that his biggest regret is an experience from his youth in which he hurt his leg in a slip-and-fall. Walt, incredulous, states that "you were always like this" and returns to fixing the water heater, leaving Saul sitting on his cot.

Walt later tells Saul of his plan to exact revenge against Jack Welker and his gang for them murdering Hank and stealing all of his money, but Saul refuses, trying to explain that he is no longer a lawyer, only another civilian trying to make a living. Saul tells Walt that "best case scenario, I'm managing a Cinnabon in Omaha". However, Saul does offer Walt one last bit of legal advice, to turn himself in in order to save Skyler from prosecution. Ed then calls for Saul, telling him that he is good to go for Nebraska. Walt interrupts and tells Ed that there has been a change of plans and that Saul will come with him, to which Saul refuses. Walt attempts to intimidate Saul the same way he did before but is interrupted mid-sentence to excessive coughing. Saul, no longer intimidated, tells Walt that "it's over" and leaves the basement, setting off to Omaha to start his new life.

After Breaking Bad

Life as Gene Takavic

Not long after Saul and Walt disappeared, the police and several DEA agents entered Saul's office only to find it empty with the hole on his wall. Around this time there was also a documentary released about Saul, which discussed his connections to Walter White and the Cartel. All of his assets were also impounded shortly after his disappearance. After being rescued by Walt from Jack Welker's Compound following the gang massacre and moments before Walt's death, Jesse seeks out the services of Saul's "disappearer" Ed again. Without Saul around to help him, Jesse is forced to figure out how to find Ed on his own using the scant information he learned when Saul called Ed for him. Ed tells Jesse that he thinks Jesse, Walt and Saul all made their own luck after Jesse tries to get Ed to help him by telling Ed about his captivity.

Following his disappearance by Ed and arrival in Omaha, Saul takes up the new identity of Gene Takavic, working behind the counter at a shopping-mall Cinnabon located in Omaha, as he had previously predicted in a conversation with Walt. He becomes tense when a customer seems to be staring at him but is instantly relieved when the man passes by him to greet a friend. Later, inside a modest apartment, Gene pours himself a glass of liquor and watches TV, flipping through channels. He then rummages around for a VHS tape inside a shoebox, which plays his TV ads from back in the days when he was still a lawyer. Gene weeps, heartbroken at the reminder of the man he used to be and can never be again.

At the end of another workday, Gene sees off his co-workers before he takes out the garbage. In the garbage room, the door (only being able to open from the outside) shuts, locking Gene inside while he throws the garbage in the dumpster. Gene calls out for anyone for several minutes until he considers using the emergency exit. However, opening the door would trigger an alarm and alert the police, who could potentially recognize him. Still paranoid, Gene resumes kicking and yelling for someone to open the regular door. After several attempts, Gene sits against the wall and finds a rusty nail. A couple hours later, the custodian (who is also taking out garbage) finally opens the door and Gene walks out right past him. On the wall, Gene has carved the message "S.G. was here."

During another workday, Gene takes a lunch break on the second floor of the mall, he sees a young man ducking into a photo booth. Gene notices a couple of DVD cases falling from the boy's coat and immediately realizes that the kid has been shoplifting. When a security guard and police officer arrive pursuing the kid, they ask Gene if he has seen him. Gene nods wordlessly in the direction of the photo booth. Watching helplessly as the kid is pulled out and arrested, Gene's old instincts flare up and he suddenly shouts at the boy to say nothing and hire a lawyer. Realizing he has just acted out of character, Gene returns to the Cinnabon and begins prepping more food before the shock overwhelms him and he passes out.

After passing out, Gene is taken to the hospital where he undergoes tests to determine the cause of his collapse and if it was a heart attack. While at the hospital, Gene grows nervous at the sight of police officers nearby and his heart rate increases but is visited by a doctor who confirms that it wasn't a heart attack and aside from a slightly elevated blood pressure, everything came back as normal. On Gene's way out, the nurse at the desk asks for another look at his driver's license, further worrying Gene. Due to the computer repeatedly kicking the driver's license back, she requests Gene's social security number and Gene grows more and more fearful of being discovered as time goes on. Fortunately, the nurse determines that she keeps making a simple typo and Gene is able to leave. Breathing heavily, Gene has a taxi take him back to the mall and spots an air freshener marked Albuquerque Isotopes in the rear-view mirror and the taxi driver appears to be staring at him as if he recognizes him. When the driver takes too long at a green light, a paranoid Gene decides to get out of the taxi early and heads towards a church, noticing that the taxi has not moved since he left it.

Gene returns to his car in the now-closed mall parking lot and goes home. Panicked, Gene empties a container of diamonds, makes a call, changes his license plates to Missouri plates and drives off listening to a police scanner. At a truck stop diner, Gene refuses a waitress' offers of food and calls Molly to let her know that he's fine and won't be back until Thursday. Gene questions if anyone has been looking for him or hanging around and brushes off Holly's concerns. Gene is relieved to find out that no one was looking for him and spends the next few days hiding in his house listening to the police scanner and keeping watch while drinking. Convinced no one is looking for him, Gene returns to work.

While on break, he is approached by a cab driver named Jeff, who excitedly recognizes him as Saul Goodman. Gene insists that Jeff, who has another man with him, has gotten him mixed up with someone else, but Jeff insists that they both know who Gene really is and pressures Gene to admit who he really is. Nervously looking at some nearby cops, Gene does his "Better Call Saul" catchphrase and Jeff introduces himself and states that if Gene ever needs a ride, to call the cab company and ask for him. After Jeff and his friend leave, Gene calls Ed from a payphone for another extraction. Ed recognizes Gene and warns him that it will be difficult and is double the price. Gene admits that he got made though there is no official involvement and promises that he has the money. Ed states that the pickup will be in the same place he got dropped off on Thursday at 7:00am and Gene remembers the location. However, after a moment of consideration, Gene changes his mind and decides to "fix it myself" before hanging up and walking away.

An elderly woman named Marion rides her mobility scooter around a supermarket, shopping for groceries. On her way home, her scooter becomes stuck in the snow. She attracts the attention of Gene, who helps her out of the snow, snipping a wire off from her scooter to ensure he has to manually wheel her home. Jeff, the cab driver, arrives home and finds his mother, Marion, chatting it up with Gene. Jeff confronts Gene outside his house, knowing he did this to get to him. Acknowledging that Jeff didn't blackmail him due to his Saul Goodman persona being found out by him, Gene persuades Jeff to join "the game".

The following night in the mall, at Cinnabon, Gene collects a Cinnabon bag after closing and walks up to the security office, knocking on the door. A guard opens, Nick. Gene thanks Nick for calling the EMT's when he fainted, and says he brought a gift. Nick let's him in the office. Gene meets Frank, a guard who eagerly accepts Gene's gift–Cinnabons. Grabbing some coffee, Gene sits with Frank eating his Cinnabon, with Franks back turned to the security monitors behind him. While talking about football, unknowingly to Frank, Gene times how long it takes for him to finish his Cinnabon, and for Frank to turn around and glance back at the security screens. This goes on for around two weeks, with Gene bringing Cinnabons after closing to the security office, and him timing how long it takes for Frank to finish his Cinnabon and glance back at the security monitors. Meanwhile, Gene maps out the malls high end department store, and makes a grid outside similar to what the store looked like. With Jeff in the game, Gene trains him to go around the store, stealing multiple items in under a few minutes before Frank turns his back at the security monitors.

The night of the heist arrives. The manager of the department store is notified of an unannounced delivery in the loading dock. Here she finds Buddy, disguised as a delivery driver, with a large wooden crate apparently containing an industrial sprayer. Having not asked for such a delivery, she asks to talk to his supervisor. Getting the "supervisors number", she calls Gene. Gene persuades the manager to keep the crate overnight, and she leaves. Continuing with his routine, Gene grabs the Cinnabons and goes up to the security office. With Franks back turned to the security monitors, Gene notifies Jeff, who is in the wooden crate, to begin the heist. Jeff goes around the department store, grabbing multitudes of clothes before accidentally falling and crashing on the floor, knocking himself out. Frank begins to look back at the screen, before Gene distracts him and begins to say a sob story. This saves enough time for Jeff to get back up, put all the stolen goods in the crate, and hide in the bathroom before morning. The next morning the crate is retrieved and the heist is a success. In Jeff's garage, the men celebrate, but it's cut short when it's revealed that Gene only did this for blackmail. He threatens that if any of them speak about his Saul Goodman persona, he would turn them in. The next day, Gene browses the department store, and finds a snazzy suit and poses with it, before putting it back and walking away.

In Alburquerque, Francesca confronts her two stoner tenants over a clogged sink. Remembering her prior arrangement with Saul, and eager to duck out of her argument with the tenants, she gets into her car and drives downtown. Along the way, she diverts her route to shake off what she suspects to be a police tail. Francesca soon finds herself at an abandoned convenience store in the middle of the desert, idling near some payphones. Just as she is about to leave, one of the phones begins to ring. On the other end of the line is Gene, calling from a diner in Nebraska. He gives Francesca instructions on how to find a hidden pouch containing several thousand dollars in cash. Afterward, she updates Gene on what has happened since he left Albuquerque: the feds seized all of Saul's assets and shell companies, Skyler White took a plea deal, Huell returned to New Orleans after being released from DEA custody, and Bill Oakley has become a defense attorney. Finally, she divulges that Kim called to check on her after "everything went down", and that she asked about Gene as well. Gene is affected by this last bit of news. He tries to bid Francesca goodbye, but she unceremoniously hangs up on him.

Driving back to Omaha, Gene reaches an intersection. Emotionally torn after hearing about Kim, he finds another phone booth and makes a collect call to a business called Palm Coast Sprinklers in Titusville, Florida, where Kim works using the alias "Viktor St. Clair." Kim answers, but after being mostly silent through Gene's attempts to engage her in conversation, Kim tells him that Gene should turn himself in, stating that she doesn't know what kind of life he's been living, but it can't be much. Gene explodes at Kim, telling her that she has no idea what he did or didn't do and challenging Kim to turn herself in since Kim's the one who's conscience has been bothering her and Gus, Mike and Lalo are all dead and can't take revenge for her revealing the truth about the scam against Howard and his murder. Calming down, Gene wonders why they're talking about this as they are both too smart to throw their lives away for no reason, but Kim simply tells Gene that she's happy that he's alive and hangs up the phone. The call ends with Gene slamming the phone down on the receiver and kicking in one of the glass panels of the phone booth.

Gene returns to Omaha and works a shift at the Cinnabon, contemplating his next move. The following morning, he visits Jeff's house and is greeted by Marion, who shows him a new laptop computer that Jeff has given her using his proceeds from the mall heist. Jeff returns home to find them together in the kitchen. Gene excuses Jeff and himself from the kitchen, perturbing Marion. In the garage, he asks Jeff to take the night shift at the cab company and to acquire barbiturates. Jeff is confused, as Gene had previously warned him against trying to contact him again. Gene nonverbally tells him that they are "back in business". The two men share a toast.

That night, Gene — using the pseudonym "Viktor" — performs at a karaoke bar. The mark in his latest scam is Alfred Hawthorne Hill, an obnoxious patron who coaxes Gene into a series of bets. At one point, Alfred orders a drink on Gene's tab, which Gene dispenses with using a tube hidden in his sleeve. Outside, Jeff picks up Alfred in his cab, leaving Gene behind. Gene disposes of the drink from a hot water bottle hidden under his shirt. Meanwhile, Jeff gives Alfred a bottled water spiked with barbiturates and sends a signal to Buddy to begin the next phase of the scam. Jeff drives Alfred to his home, a large house in an affluent neighborhood. As Alfred opens his front door, Jeff covers his lock with a strip of duct tape. When he drives away, Buddy and his dog enter the house. Leaving the dog at the foyer, Buddy finds Alfred asleep on the living room sofa. He removes Alfred's wallet from his jacket and takes out all of his state, credit, and banking cards, snapping photos of their front and back. He then goes into Alfred's office and snaps photos of his checkbook, his bank and tax forms, and his passwords. Buddy quietly leaves the house with the dog, almost forgetting to remove the duct tape from the lock.

Gene hears a knock at his front door. He goes downstairs in his apartment and collects a package, which contains a Swing Master machine. With the aid of Jeff and Buddy, Gene starts a new routine: he accosts well-off bar patrons, sends them home in Jeff's cab, and has Buddy enter their homes to steal their financial information. Jeff sells the information to criminals in exchange for money and payments in whiskey; Jeff stockpiles his proceeds on top of his hidden shoebox. Gene indulges in some of his other old habits as Saul, going to strip clubs with Jeff and Buddy and having one-night stands with the strippers. One night, Gene targets another mark, a bespectacled bar patron named Mr. Lingk. After they engage in conversation about the moral consequences of white-collar criminals, Lingk's beeper goes off and he begins taking pills; he admits to Gene that he has cancer. Gene initially seems hesitant to go through with the scam and asks Lingk if he should still be drinking in his condition; Lingk responds, "You only go around once." Gene takes Lingk outside and lets him be driven away in Jeff's cab.

After settling in to watch TV, Gene receives a call on his old earphone from a frantic Jeff. He, Jeff and Buddy reconvene in Jeff's garage, which is seen by Marion from her bedroom. Inside, Buddy tells Gene that he can't go through with the scam on the cancer-stricken mark, explaining that his own father had cancer. When Buddy says that he removed the duct tape from Lingk's lock, Gene angrily fires him and warns him to not talk about what they've been doing. He quickly enlists Jeff to drive him to Lingk's house so that he can commit the break-in himself, dismissing Jeff's own misgivings. Gene exits the cab, and breaks through a glass panel to unlock Lingk's front door.

After gaining access to Lingk's house, who is revealed to be sound asleep on the living room floor, Gene begins haphazardly pilfering his identity documents from his desk. As the job is finished, Jeff pulls up to the house, but Gene goes upstairs to steal more property, a low to which Buddy did not stoop. As Gene looks over the railing of the loft, he notices Lingk has disappeared. He eventually emerges from a bathroom on the main floor at the base of the staircase, and sits on the stairs on his phone. Gene picks up an urn containing ashes of Lingk's former dog, intending to use it to knock Lingk out cold at the bottom of the stairs, but he passes out before Gene is able to do this. He tries to escape, but parked behind Jeff is a police car on patrol. Jeff suddenly takes off in the cab and rams into a parked car, creating a diversion which allows Gene to make his escape.

Gene catches a bus back to his apartment and waits for a call to come from Jeff, which eventually comes the next morning: with Gene posing as Jeff's father, Jeff tells him he is in jail in connection to the car accident and a suspected robbery, revealing Lingk came outside to flag down the cops after having noticed his property missing and the glass panel smashed. Gene vows to get criminal defense for Jeff and that he would talk to Marion about bailing him out. Gene then calls Marion to apprise her of Jeff's situation, but lets slip that Omaha's bond declaration rules are less stringent than those in Albuquerque, raising Marion's alarm.

Later, when Gene arrives at Marion's house to pick her up, he catches her in the midst of watching old Saul Goodman TV commercials on her laptop; she performed a search on Ask Jeeves for "con man albuquerque" to reveal Gene's true identity. Faced with a threat by Marion to call the police, he rips the phone cord out of her wall and backs her into a corner as she threatens to summon the police with her LifeAlert pendant. He attempts to prevent her from following through, but after she utters "I trusted you," Gene falls silent for long enough for her to press the button. As she blows Gene's cover and true identity as Saul to the authorities on the other end of the line, Jimmy, faced with impending doom, flees out Marion's back door.

Arrested

Gene takes off from Jeff's house in his car while Marion remains in contact with her LifeAlert operator. Returning to his residence, he retrieves his shoebox and overhears information about his car being broadcast on the police radio frequency. Spotting two cops outside, he escapes through a rear window with the shoebox and a burner phone. As police swarm Omaha, Gene climbs into a dumpster and removes Ed Galbraith's business card from his shoebox. As he struggles to open the packaging to the phone, however, he spills the contents of the shoebox. He is discovered by the cops and surrenders.

As he is being booked, Gene overhears some cops in a nearby room watching one of his Saul Goodman commercials on YouTube. He makes a phone call to the Cinnabon, telling one of his employees that they will need a new manager. Later, as he paces around his holding cell, Gene hurts his hand by punching at the door. Collapsing to the floor, he notices a graffiti message etched into the wall -- "MY LAWYER WILL REAM UR ASS"—and bursts into laughter. He quickly gets up and demands another phone call.

In Albuquerque, Bill Oakley receives a call on his cell phone from the man he knows as Saul Goodman, who wants to take Oakley on as his "advisory counsel" as he represents himself in his legal proceedings. Oakley doubts he can mount a successful defense against the evidence that the district attorney and the government have gathered against Saul. When Oakley asks how he images this scenario ending, Saul confidently replies: "With me on top, like always."

Saul is extradited back to Albuquerque and held at the Metropolitan Detention Center. As he is being led through a corridor, he sees Hank's widow Marie Schrader in an adjoining room. Saul and Oakley negotiate a plea with a team of prosecutors, who are offering a reduced sentence of 30 years in prison. Knowing that Marie is watching the negotiation, Saul asks that she be allowed into the room. Marie sits across from Saul and eulogizes her late husband, Hank, and his partner, Steven Gomez, blaming their murders on Walt. Saul portrays himself as a victim of Walt, recounting how he and Jesse kidnapped him; his actions as their accomplice, he insists, were borne out of fear that he would be killed. Saul coolly reminds the lead prosecutor, George Castellano, that he only needs one juror to avoid conviction; Marie warns against making a deal.

The plea negotiation drags on into the middle of the night, with Castellano's team being forced to agree to a reduced sentence of seven-and-a-half years. Saul successfully pressures the prosecutors to have him serve his sentence in a low-security prison in North Carolina, as opposed to the maximum-security ADX Montrose. Feeling smug, Saul attempts to dangle one last piece of information in a bid to get his sentence reduced even further: the murder of Howard Hamlin. However, he is stunned to learn that Kim has already disclosed the truth of Howard's murder, meaning that he has no more leverage in the negotiations. Oakley is forced to finalize the plea deal while Saul sits in stunned silence.

Saul is sent on a passenger flight to North Carolina, accompanied by Oakley and a U.S. Marshal. Saul asks Oakley what Kim's situation is now that she has disclosed the details of Howard's murder to the authorities. Oakley says that while it remains unlikely that she will be prosecuted, Howard's widow Cheryl is planning to sue her in civil court and take her for everything she has. A thought occurs to Saul; he tells Oakley and the Marshal that he has more information about the murder to trade once they land in North Carolina.

Saul, wearing a flashy suit, enters a courtroom for his sentencing hearing; Oakley, Marie, and Kim, sitting in the back row, are also in attendance. While Castellano is making a statement to the judge defending the plea agreement, Saul rises and asks to address the court. Saul's initially repeats his speech from the MDC, recounting his kidnapping by Walt and Jesse. However, contrary to the established facts in his plea agreement, Saul throws the proceeding into disarray by confessing that, far from being a victim, he was a willing and indispensable part of Walt's drug empire. He admits to falsifying his statements about Kim, admits to the role he played in triggering his brother Chuck's suicide, credits Kim with walking away from the criminal life, and addresses himself as "James McGill" for the first time in years. Jimmy sits back at the defendant's table and looks for acknowledgement from Kim while Oakley and Castellano's team argue about the plea agreement.

Life in Prison

As a result of Jimmy's confession, the plea agreement is quashed and he is eventually sentenced to eighty-six years in prison for all of his crimes, effectively giving Jimmy a de facto life sentence.

Jimmy is transported by bus to ADX Montrose. One of the prisoners on the bus, sitting in front of Jimmy, initially threatens him but quickly recognizes him as Saul Goodman; despite Jimmy insisting that his name is "McGill", the other prisoners recognize him one by one. Eventually the prisoners use the "Better Call Saul" slogan as the basis of a chant. Jimmy smiles, amused. He later becomes a local celebrity within the prison for his past life as Saul, befriending several inmates.

Later, while he is fixing food in the prison kitchen, Jimmy is told that a lawyer has come to see him. Taken to a visitation room, he finds that the lawyer is Kim; as her membership card with the New Mexico Bar Association doesn't have an expiration date, she is allowed to visit him as an attorney. Evoking their talks together in the HHM parking garage, the two share a cigarette and lean against a wall. The two discuss Jimmy's sentence and how he had almost gotten seven years instead before his confession. As she walks out of the prison, Kim sees Jimmy watching her from the exercise yard. The two look longingly at each other through the barbed-wire fences; he gives her a pointed-gun gesture. Kim steals one last glimpse of Jimmy as she turns a corner of the prison.

Codex Statistics

Key: Slippin' Jimmy | Better Call Saul and Breaking Bad

Tier: Low 10-B | 10-B, 9-C with a gun

Name: James Morgan McGill, Jimmy, Slippin' Jimmy (Former Alias), Saul Goodman (Former Alias), Gene Takavic (Former Alias), The Lawyer, The Guy, The Magic Man, Viktor St. Claire, Charlie Hustle (By Howard Hamlin), Kevin Costner, Mr. Cumpston, Special Agent Jeffrey A. Steel ("Mijo"), Pastor Hansford ("Coushatta"), Bill ("Wiedersehen"), The Cellphone Guy ("Magic Man"), Third-Rate Huckster ("Wexler v. Goodman"), Salamanca's Guy ("Hit and Run"), Steve ("Nippy"), Gene the Cinnabon Machine ("Nippy"), Better Call Saul ("Saul Gone")

Origin: Better Call Saul

Sex: Male

Age: Unknown in Slippin' Jimmy (Is called pre-teen), 41 ("Uno"), 42 ("Chicanery"), 43 ("Something Stupid"), 48 ("Better Call Saul"), 49 ("Granite State"), 50 ("Breaking Bad")

Classification: Human, Con Artist (Formerly), Mailroom clerk at Hamlin, Hamlin & McGill (Formerly), Public Defense Attorney (Formerly), Independent Elder Law Attorney (Formerly), Associate Attorney, Davis & Main (Formerly), Elder Law Attorney, Wexler McGill (Formerly), Cell Phone Salesman, CC Mobile (Formerly), Criminal Defense Attorney, Saul Goodman & Associates (Formerly), Manager, Ice Station Zebra Associates (Formerly), Cinnabon Manager (Formerly), Inmate in federal prison (Currently)

Status: Alive (Despite all of the attempts to kill Saul, he always managed to survive)

Alignment: Chaotic Neutral (Even as a kid, Jimmy was always troubled. He watched his father get scammed all of the time and his father refused to listen to him[1]. This con artist later told Jimmy that he should figure if he will be a wolf or sheep in this world which lead to Jimmy stealing money from his father[2]. Jimmy would steal rare coins from his dad and he later blamed the closing of his dad's store on his dad[3]. As it turns out, Jimmy stole so much money from his dad that Chuck blamed him for the actual reason why the store closed and Jimmy's parents refused to believe that he stole so much money from them[4]. Jimmy later would do slip and fall stunts in order to gain money which gave him the name "Slippin' Jimmy"[5]. Jimmy also made fake IDs for his classmates in High School. One day while doing a Slip and Fall scheme, Jimmy broke his knees which he would claim was his regret in life[6]. In the 1990's, Jimmy would move Albuquerque after shitting through a sunroof in order to get revenge on a guy for fucking his ex-girlfriend without knowing that the guys kids were in the back[7]. Jimmy and Chuck returned to Cicero seven years later to visit their dying mother and he left the room to get them food. As he was gone, his mom died with her last words being "Jimmy"[8]. Jimmy would later start working in the mailroom of Hamlin Hamlin McGill but he was secretly training to become a lawyer in the background and after two failed attempts, he finally got accepted[9]. Jimmy's brother Chuck later developed a mental condition that made him allergic to electricity and had spent years bringing Chuck whatever he needed to make him feel better. Chuck later told Jimmy that it wasn't too late to change his path and become better person although Jimmy took it as insult[10]. In Season 1, Jimmy is shown to be a public law defender but barely makes any actual money and after losing some of his clients, he used the Lindholm brothers in an attempt to win back Craig and Betsy Kettleman[11]. This backfired horribly however as they didn't run into the Kettlemans but instead they ran into Tuco Salamanca[12]. Jimmy managed to convince Tuco to let him free but the Lindholm brothers were not so lucky and the deal he made with Tuco was one of their legs had to be broken[13]. Jimmy later was forced to defend Nacho who wanted to steal money from the Kettlemans but he didn't actually commit the crime he was accused of (kidnapping) and the Kettlemans actually kidnapped themselves[14]. Jimmy was later given a bribe to be quiet about the Kettlemans stolen money and he accepted it[15]. Using this money, he created a billboard to look like Howard[16]. He was later forced to take it down due to copyright infringement but while filming the video, one of the construction workers almost falls off a platform and Jimmy saves him. This was merely a stunt however meant to make Jimmy look like a hero[17]. Chuck knew this was just a stunt however and had a electromagnetic hypersensitivity breakdown after being tased[18]. Jimmy visited Chuck in the hospital and started turning off the lights and all of the electronics to protect Chuck[19]. One of the doctors suggest getting Chuck mental help as they don't believe that Chuck's electromagnetic hypersensitivity is real but Jimmy refuses[20]. Jimmy deals with the Kettlemans once and for all by having Mike turn in their stolen money and having Craig Kettleman arrested[21]. Jimmy even does the right thing by putting his bribe into the pile of cash[22]. Jimmy later went into elder law and discovered that Sandpiper Crossing had been overcharging their clients[23]. With the help of Chuck, they were able to build a strong case but would need the help of HHM[24]. Chuck secretly called Howard and told him to not allow Jimmy to get a job at HHM and when Jimmy found out that Chuck didn't want him to have the job because he doesn't consider Jimmy a real lawyer, Jimmy stops living with Chuck[25]. This lead to Jimmy having emotional breakdown while playing bingo with old people. He later explained to them why he had to move to Albuquerque and how he regrets having to move to Albuquerque[26]. Jimmy later met up with Marco in Cicero and they start pulling scams like they did when they were younger[27]. While doing one of their scams, Marco suffered from a heart attack[28]. Jimmy traveled back to Albuquerque and he told Mike how nothing was stopping them from taking all of the stolen money[29]. Mike tells Jimmy how he said it was the right to do with Jimmy responding that "I don’t even know what that means."[30]. In Season 2, Jimmy had already chosen to not work with Davis & Main and instead went to a hotel to start pulling scams[31]. Eventually, Jimmy decides to follow Kim's advice, and returns to Davis & Main to accept their job offer[32]. Mike later enlisted Jimmy to represent his employer Daniel Wormald, who has implicated himself in a drug deal[33]. Jimmy successfully gets Daniel off, but is forced to fabricate evidence of a pie fetish video to do so[34]. Jimmy later tried to get more Sandpiper folks aware of what is going on in Sandpiper by talking to the elders on a bus and later making a commercial which Davis & Main did not approve at all[35]. Jimmy wanted to leave Davis & Main but he wanted to keep his bonus so he acted like total fucking asshole so that they would be forced to fire him for his actions[36]. Jimmy later wanted to help Kim get Mesa Verde by changing the documents[37] to make Chuck and Howard look like a idiot in front of Mesa Verde[38]. Chuck realized that Jimmy did this and while at the copy shop, Chuck passed out from electromagnetic hypersensitivity[39]. Jimmy saved Chuck[40] and after seeing Chuck fill his room with foil, Jimmy admitted that he edited the documents in order to make Chuck feel better without knowing that Chuck was recording the statements[41]. In Season 3, Jimmy starts off unaware that Chuck was recording him and helps him take down the tin foil. Jimmy was later hired by Mike to watch this person who had been stalking Mike[42]. Whenever Jimmy found out what Chuck did, he broke into the house and destroyed the tape in front of Howard and a private investigator[43]. Jimmy was jailed but before the cops showed up, he told Chuck how he was going to die alone and no one was going to help him[44]. Jimmy was able to avoid jail time if he admitted that he did the break in which he did[45]. Jimmy later used Mike to get proof that Chuck lives in a bizarre house[46]. He debated Chuck in court and managed to prove that Chuck was mentally ill not only by showing the living conditions that Chuck had but by proving that his electromagnetic hypersensitivity isn't even real as Huell put a battery on Chuck and he felt nothing[47]. This caused Jimmy to only have a one year's suspension from the law instead of a permanent one[48]. Jimmy then started to lose a lot of money while trying to do community service at the same time and couldn't even get a refund on his malpractice insurance policy[49]. He tells the person their about how Chuck is mentally ill knowing that the insurance company will have to act upon that[50]. Jimmy later did a slip and fall in order to get money from the guitar store clients who refused to accept his commercial spot[51]. Jimmy later helped a person see his family who working in community service by threating to sue the officer and he was payed 700 dollars[52].Jimmy later tried to manipulate a old woman into settling the Sandpiper case just so he could get his money which caused their friends to turn against them[53].He overworked Kim so badly that she got into a car accident[54]. Then the elderly at Sandpiper found out that Jimmy didn't care about them and only wanted the money after he left his mic on by accident[55]. Later on, Chuck had a breakdown and killed himself[56] with Jimmy refusing to take any accountability for Chuck's death until the very end of the show[57]. In Season 4, Chuck's death clearly made Jimmy depressed and Howard even made it worse by telling Jimmy that Chuck's death was not a accident[58]. Jimmy asked Mike if he wanted to rob a Hummel figure from Neff Copiers with Mike saying no[59]. After Ira was going to reject the request, he simply asked Ira if they shit gold[60]. Ira accepted the deal but Jimmy had to save his ass by making Neff's car move[61]. Jimmy later read a letter from Chuck telling him that it isn't too late to change his path in life[62]. Jimmy started working at CC Mobile and started selling prepaid phones that can't be tracked by the IRS and he even started selling them on the street[63]. He later got mugged while selling his phones[64]. Kim wanted Jimmy to see a therapist but Jimmy refused as he just wanted to move forward in life[65]. He later bribed Mrs. Nguyen so he could keep his phones at the Day Spa and Nail[66]. Jimmy then got revenge on the muggers by having Huell Babineaux and another person point a gun at them and turn them into human Piñatas until they promised to never mug Jimmy again[67]. While selling phones, Jimmy is approached by a plainclothes cop, Platt[68]. Platt has a Saul Goodman card he took from a drug dealer he busted and tells Jimmy to sell is phones to a different clientele elsewhere[69]. Jimmy refuses, and the argument is broken up by Huell who knocks Platt over with a shopping bag[70]. Jimmy manages to get Huell to serve only 4 months probation by acting as a pastor and painting Huell as a hero[71]. Later in Lubbock, Texas, Jimmy and Kim work a scam on the Department of Building Safety that results in them tricking the state into giving Mesa Verde a larger branch[72]. Jimmy later found out that the committee did not want to give Jimmy his law license back so he came up with a speech that he didn't even believe in so that he could win his law license back and he finally chose to start using the name Saul Goodman[73]. In Season 5, Jimmy helps Kim scam a client into accepting a deal[74]. Jimmy tried to defend Krazy-8 but Krazy-8 had to share the exact locations of three dead drops[75]. Jimmy is later tasked to defend Lalo who killed a innocent man[76].. He later had a breakdown and insulted Howard over his behavior in the courthouse[77]. Jimmy picked up Lalo's bail money but he got ambushed in the desert with Mike saving his life[78]. Jimmy was in total shock of this event[79]. One of them escaped however and they pushed Jimmy's car off a cliff[80]. and Mike were forced to move through the desert with Jimmy carrying the money and the only drink they had was their own piss[81]. After Jimmy ripped the bags and still managed to get all of the money, he simply wanted to give up but Mike gave Jimmy a speech about what motivates him[82]. Tiburón was still nearby however so Jimmy stood in the middle of the road so that the truck would go after him. Mike manages to kill the driver the truck crashes and the only water was destroyed[83]. As show in the final season, Jimmy asked Mike while they were in the desert what Mike's regrets where and when Jimmy was asked the same, his only regret was not making more money[84]. Jimmy headed to jail to bail out Lalo[85]. Jimmy refused to see a doctor and even tell Kim what happened in the desert[86]. Jimmy is shocked that Mike doesn't feel anything and when he asked Mike, Mike told him that one day he will eventually get through it[87]. Jimmy is disgusted that he even helped Lalo but Mike tells him that there is a plan in play to deal with Lalo[88]. Lalo later visits Jimmy and Kim during night time with Kim saving Jimmy's ass by telling Lalo that Saul Goodman doesn't lie[89]. Jimmy later confessed to Kim about what happened in the desert[90]. In Season 6, Kim and Jimmy attempted to ruin Howard's reputation[91]. At Kim's instigation, Jimmy cons Craig and Betsy Kettleman into believing they have grounds for a lawsuit against Howard[92]. They attempt to hire Cliff to represent them, claiming Howard provided ineffective counsel because he used cocaine during his representation of Craig Kettleman[93]. Cliff declines, as do several other lawyers, but Jimmy and Kim succeed in spreading the rumor that Howard uses drugs[94]. Kim later asked Jimmy if he intends to be a "friend of the cartel" or a "rat"[95]. Huell later asked Jimmy why does even commit crimes if he is lawyer with Jimmy saying he is doing it for the greater good[96]. He got evicted from the nail salon due to the influx of new clients[97]. later dressed up as Howard and pushed a prostitute out of his car in order to make it look like Howard did it[98]. Howard got sick of the harassment and fought Jimmy in a boxing match in which Jimmy lost[99]. This did not stop the harassment however as Jimmy made some photos that framed the mediator accepting money from Jimmy but these photos were swapped to Jimmy giving a passerby a frisbee which made Howard look like a fool[100]. Jimmy did all of this just so he could get his money from the sandpiper settlement[101]. Howard went to confront Jimmy and Kim but that night, Lalo showed up to the house and kills Howard[102]. Jimmy forces Kim to kill Gus instead of him doing it in which Mike stops her but doesn't kill her and later saves Jimmy who was tied up[103]. Jimmy and Kim are forced to lie about Howard's death and say he died in a drug related accident to the police with Howard's car being staged like he killed himself[104]. Kim later left Jimmy leaving Jimmy with nothing but his Saul Goodman persona which uses as a coping mechanism now[105]. Jimmy, now just Saul Goodman embraced his new life by buying a mansion and sleeping with hookers[106]. Saul would dive deeper and deeper into his corruption after meeting Walter White. In Season 2 of Breaking Bad, Saul was forced to defend Badger and come up with a fake Heisenberg so that Walter White wouldn't be caught him originally refusing to accept a bribe from Walter[107]. Saul even came up with the option of killing Badger[108]. However, Saul quickly became a willing participant of Walter White's empire after he learned how much money Walter White making with Mike advising him that it would be a bad idea[109]. Saul would later teach Walter how money laundering works[110]. Saul helps Walter get his money by using a hacker to donate money to www.savewalterwhite.com[111]. Saul would later send Mike to clean up Jesse's house after Jane died and would have helped Jesse if the police thought he was behind it[112]. In Season 3 of Breaking Bad, Saul would show how shameless he is by making ads about the Wayfarer 515 crash in order to "help the victims"[113]. He later helped Jesse get his aunt's house back by threating to sue his parents because of the meth lab in the house[114]. Saul later had Mike bug Walter's house to protect Walter if Skyler ever wanted to reveal the truth about Walter[115]. Saul later tried to get Walter to cook meth again with Walter attacking him after Saul revealed that he bugged Walter's house[116]. Saul then stops laundering Walter's money[117] but Walter later uses him to launder his money once he gets back in the business[118]. Saul would later help Walter and Jesse by having Francesca lie and say that Marie got into a car accident so that Hank couldn't go into the RV[119]. After Jesse had threatened to sue Hank, Saul asked Walter what their options would be if he goes through with it[120]. Saul also tries to teach Jesse about money laundering but Jesse doesn't listen to him[121]. Skyler later gets involved with Walter's money laundering and Saul suggests some options of how they can launder money with a inside man but Skyler and Walter chose to buy a car wash instead[122]. Saul helps hide Jesse in a arcade and even gives Mike a fake address to protect Jesse[123]. In Season 4, Saul helps Skyler and Walter buy Bogdan's car wash by making it seem like the water is contaminated[124]. Saul later helps Walter calm down by telling him that the police will not connect Gale's death to Jesse and even if they do, Saul has a "disappearer" who can help Walter start a new life[125]. Walter gets so worried that he tells Saul that if he doesn't hear from Walter in 24 hours, then he needs to give all of his money to Skyler[126]. Walter went a on a "little joy ride" (A.K.A exploding a car) that Saul had to save his ass from[127]. Walter then went on a rant about how Gus wants to kill him with Saul telling Walter that hitmen won't work[128]. Saul helped Ted pay for his money that he owed the IRS but Ted refused to accept the money due to it being won via "gambling"[129][130]. Saul sent his men to force Ted to pay the money owns the IRS but Ted attempted to make a escape that lead to him getting hospitalized by hitting his head[131]. Saul later helps Walter get into contact with the "disappearer" and calls the DEA to say a hit has been put on Hank[132]. Saul tries to help Jesse escape as well but while doing so, he has Huell steal Jesse's ricin cigarette which Walter later used to convince Jesse that Gus poisoned Brock[133]. Saul then went out of his way to defend Jesse from the police when Jesse tells the doctors to check for ricin[134]. In Season 5, Saul wants to leave Walter White's empire but Walter won't let him[135]. Saul later helps Walter and Jesse find a new place to cook under Vamanos Pests[136]. Saul tried to protect Mike by getting him a temporary restraining order against the DEA but it does not last for long[137]. Saul later found out that Walter killed Mike and while he does not stop working for Walter, he gives Jesse Pinkman a gun to protect himself from Walter in a deleted scene. Saul refused to give Jesse's blood money to Kaylee Ehrmantraut and to the parents of Drew Sharp as it would raise more suspicion[138]. After Hank finds out that Walter is Heisenberg, Saul suggests actually killing him[139]. Saul later bailed Jesse out of jail and had Huell steal Jesse's dope so the "disappearer" would accept him[140]. Jesse realizes that Saul stole the dope off of him which means that Huell stole the ricin cigarette off of him[141]. He later confronted Saul who admitted that he had no idea that Walter was going to poison a child and Walter said he needed the ricin to protect Jesse[142]. Saul later warned Walter that Jesse was going after him[143]. Saul later suggested killing Jesse to Walter but Walter refused to kill him[144]. After Walter's true identity was exposed, Saul escaped Albuquerque[145]. While Walter and Saul were living together, Saul asked Walter about what his regrets were[146]. After hearing Walter's regrets, Saul asked Walter why he never told him about what happened at Gray Matter as he could have sued them with Walter telling him that he would have been the last lawyer he went to[147]. Saul later told Walter his regret was when he did a slip-and-fill and broke his knees[148]. Saul would later leave Walter White and start a new life in Omaha[149]. Now under the name Gene Takavic, Saul gave up on his life of crime and started working as a manager of a Cinnabon[150]. Gene desperately wanted his old life as seen by him crying while watching ads of his formerly glory[151]. While working, he got locked in a dumpster room and craved the words "S.G. WAS HERE"[152]. Gene later helped a criminal by telling him to get a lawyer and not say anything[153]. After realizing what he just said, he passed out while at Cinnabon[154]. After leaving the hospital, he got noticed by Jeff[155]. Jeff would later go up to Gene and ask him to say "Better Call Saul" with him doing it out of fear of the police seeing him[156]. Gene considered leaving again by using the "disappearer" but chose to deal with it himself[157]. Gene helped Jeff rob the mall by distracting the guards and having a mental breakdown in the middle of the heist so that Jeff would be caught[158]. In total, Jeff was able to steal thousands of dollars worth of products[159]. Gene then tells Jeff that he is out of the business and would blackmail Jeff if he revealed Gene's true identity[160]. Gene later called Francesca who told him that Kim wanted to know how Gene was doing[161]. Gene later called Kim who told him that he should turn himself in with Gene exploding in anger and destroying the phone booth by the end of the conversation[162]. Gene chose to go back into doing crimes by using barbiturates to make Alfred fall asleep[163]. Buddy goes to Alfred's wallet from his jacket and takes out all of his state, credit, and banking cards, snapping photos of their front and back[164]. He then goes into Alfred's office and snaps photos of his checkbook, his bank and tax forms, and his passwords[165]. Buddy quietly leaves the house with the dog, almost forgetting to remove the duct tape from the lock[166]. They later try to steal from Lingk but Buddy doesn't want to steal from him because he has cancer[167]. Gene chooses to steal from him but in order to escape, Jeff has to crash his car[168]. Gene then promises to get Jeff a criminal defense but he slips that Omaha's bond declaration rules are less stringent than those in Albuquerque, raising Marion's alarm[169]. Once he got back to Marion's house, she realizes that Gene is Saul Goodman[170]. Despite his attempts to stop her, Marion calls the police[171]. He later gets caught hiding in a dumpster by the police[172]. Saul gets mad at himself for being caught and starts throwing a laughing fit[173]. Saul is sent back to Albuquerque and comes up with a plea agreement[174]. He later lies to Marie by saying that Walter White forced him to do his actions[175]. Saul sentence got lowered down to only seven and a half years[176]. However, Saul does something as one final act of redemption[177]. In the courtroom, Saul confesses[178]. Saul confesses that he was willing participate of Walter White's empire and that he couldn't have built his empire without Saul[179]. He finally takes accountability for Chuck's and Howard's deaths as well[180]. Saul then finally removes the name Saul Goodman and tells the court to call him "James McGill"[181]. James' was given a eighty-six years in prison sentence due to his crimes[182]. James quickly became popular with the inmates due to people knowing him as Saul Goodman[183]. Kim and Saul share one last smoke with each other with James telling her that with good behavior, his sentence could get lowered[184]. They share one last moment with James doing his pointed-gun gesture with Kim looking back at him for one last time[185])

Dimensionality: 3-D

Attack Potency: Below Average Human level (Has the strength of a normal kid) | Human level (James is rarely every seen fighting throughout the show. The only time he's ever fought anyone was when him and Howard Hamlin boxed each other in which Howard was able to easily defeat him[186]), Bone level with a gun (James owns a gun[187] but has admitted before that he has never actually fired a gun[188])

Durability: Below Average Human level | Human level, Bone level with a bulletproof vest (Jimmy has a bulletproof vest[189])

Striking Strength: Below Average Class | Human Class

Lifting Strength: Below Average Human | Average Human

Travel Speed: Below Average Human | Average Human

Combat Speed: Below Average Human | Average Human, Supersonic with a gun

Reaction Speed: Below Average Human | Average Human

Stamina: Below Average | Average

Range: Below Standard Melee, Unknown with Holy Manipulation | Standard Melee, Hundreds of Meters with a Gun, Unknown with Holy Manipulation

Intelligence: Genius (Even as a kid, Jimmy was very intelligent. Him and Marco devised a scheme to steal ice cream from a church camp by making it look like the wildlife had gotten into it instead[190]. In his teenage years, he would pull slip and fall schemes on order to earn thousands of dollars by faking his injuries[191]. Jimmy later in his life became a lawyer. Jimmy's most impressive feat as a lawyer was when he manipulated Chuck into going into a rant about about awful Jimmy and proving that Chuck was mentally ill in court which caused Jimmy to only lose his license for a year instead of permanently like Chuck wanted[192]. Chuck is so intelligent that he graduated High School at just 14 and went on to win national championship for three years, won the first-year Moot Court competition at Georgetown Law[193], and had spent his entire life dedicated to studying the law[194] yet Jimmy to play him like a fool in court. He managed to get Huell, a man who physically harmed someone else, a lower sentence by creating a fake website showing Huell off as a hero[195]. He convinced the committee voters to reinstate his law license by playing them like suckers and coming up with his own lies. He managed to convince Tuco, a mentally insane man, not only to untie him but spare the lives of the skaters who wronged him with the only condition being that Tuco would break one of their legs[196]. He managed to come up with a insane story about Daniel Wormald having a pie sitting fetish in order to save his ass from the police with the cops actually believing Jimmy when it was very obvious that Daniel Wormald was a drug dealer[197]. Jimmy and Kim made a plan to make Howard look like a fool and finally forced the Sandpiper settlement to be reached[198]. After Jimmy finally became Saul Goodman, he played a massive role in building Walter White's empire[199] with him even saving Walter multiple times such as when he managed to get Hank away from Jesse and Walter's RV by making a phone call saying that Hank's wife was in the hospital[200]. After Saul had left Walter White's empire, he dipped back into crime under the name of Gene Takavic by helping Jeff steal thousands of dollars worth of products and he stalled out the police officer who was watching the cameras by coming up with a fake emotional breakdown[201]. However Saul later got caught by Jeff's mother and his reign of crime ended[202])


Powers and Techniques

Social Influencing (Jimmy has been able to convince various criminals to work with him and help him with his goals. This extends to being able to convince Tuco to let him free and he was able to make deal with Tuco who is insane man[203]), Genius Intelligence (As explained in the intelligence section), Bulletproof (Jimmy has a bulletproof vest[204]), Sleep Manipulation (Jimmy used Barbiturates to make people fall asleep[205]), Weapon Usage (James owns a gun[206] but has admitted before that he has never actually fired a gun[207]), Stealth Mastery (Him and Marco as kids devised a scheme to steal ice cream from a church camp by making it look like the wildlife had gotten into it instead[208]. He managed to help Ira by pushing a car without getting caught[209]. He later framed Howard to look like he was with a prostitute and even made sure to look like him[210]), Holy Manipulation and Purification (Him and Marco as kids exorcized demons[211])


Equipment

A Gun

Optional Equipment


  • 1977 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme: The 1977 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme was Jimmy McGill's car during his days as Slippin' Jimmy in Cicero, Illinois. When Jimmy moved to Albuquerque to work for Chuck, the car was taken by his friend Marco
  • 1998 Suzuki Esteem: The 1998 Suzuki Esteem is Jimmy's car in Better Call Saul. The car is rather in poor condition, both aesthetically and mechanically. While the rest of the car is yellow, the right rear door has been replaced by a red one.
  • 2004 Mercedes-Benz C 240: The 2004 Mercedes-Benz C 240 was Jimmy McGill's car in Better Call Saul when he worked for Davis & Main.
  • 1975 Ford Econoline: The 1975 Ford Econoline is the van that Jimmy and Huell use as a mobile store to sell prepaid phones on the street.
  • 2004 Ford Taurus: The 2004 Ford Taurus is the car that Jimmy McGill rents after the destruction of his Suzuki Esteem.
  • 1997 Cadillac DeVille: The 1997 Cadillac DeVille was Saul Goodman's car. It has a white paintjob and a bright yellow personalized plate that reads "LWYRUP", portraying the phrase "lawyer up". For Saul, his Cadillac is an important symbol of his professional success.
  • 2007 Saturn Aura: The 2007 Saturn Aura is Jimmy McGill’s car while he assumes the alias "Gene Takavic."
  • Barbiturates: Jimmy McGill (operating under the alias Gene Takovic) along with Jeff and Buddy used a barbiturate in a criminal scheme to drug wealthy single men on their way home from a bar and then rob them while they were unconscious.

Notable Techniques


  • Social Influencing: James always uses social influencing in order to try and get himself out of bad situations. He's managed to convince various criminals to not kill him and even work with him. He's managed to convince cops about his clients being innocent or lowering their sentences by falsifying evidence to support his insane stories. He managed to convince some women that he was Kevin Costner one time. He's completely willing to make up stories on the fly just to save his skin and trick others into working for him.

Other

Standard Tactics: Varies on the situation. James has used Social Influencing in order to convince various criminals to not kill him and even work with him. If Saul knows the person and doesn't think they are actually that strong like Howard, he is will to fight physically. If he has no other option, he will simply shoot the other person to death.

Weaknesses: Normal Human Weaknesses. James has almost no actual combat experience (minus snowball fights and his boxing match with Howard) and has never used his gun in combat before. He's overall one of the weaker characters in Better Call Saul and Breaking Bad and relies on his charisma most of the time. James is completely immoral with most of his actions being done out of revenge, his own gain, and to help drug lords. Although James later has a form of redemption by the end of the show. He suffers from PTSD after the shootout that happened in the desert. He has been caught before and arrested by the police. He has failed to hide details of his events before meaning they have been traced back to him before. After he left Albuquerque, him being noticed by someone caused him to faint. James is currently in prison after being caught.

Note: The reason why the page is called James McGill rather than Saul Goodman is because in Saul Gone, James wants to be called James McGill[212]

Note 2: Slippin' Jimmy is canon to Better Call Saul and Breaking Bad as it is directly stated be a expansion of the universe. Please note that any feats from Slippin' Jimmy should not be used to upgrade any of the characters however as it would make no narrative sense for any of the Better Call Saul and Breaking Bad characters to be above 10-A physically with James McGill consistently proving to be 10-B

Trivia

Trivia about James McGill
  • Jimmy's nickname Saul Goodman, as well as his role as a problem fixing lawyer, is a play on the phrase "(It)'s all good, man", pronounced in the vernacular "S'all good, man". It is revealed in a flashback that he used the nickname initially as an alias while performing scams alongside Marco Pasternak when he lived in Cicero, Illinois ("Hero").
  • For the first four seasons and season 6A of Better Call Saul, Odenkirk was nominated for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series as well as the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor for his role as Saul. Odenkirk also received nominations for the Critics' Choice Television Award for Best Actor in a Drama Series for the first four seasons, winning the award twice.
  • Jimmy is the only character who appears in every episode of Better Call Saul.
  • Jimmy has more appearances than any other character in the Breaking Bad franchise, appearing in 36 episodes of Breaking Bad and all 63 episodes of Better Call Saul for a total of 99 episodes.
  • Jimmy is the only main character in Better Call Saul aside from Mike Ehrmantraut to meet all the other main characters. He is also the only one to side with characters on both sides of the law: law enforcements and criminals.
  • Jimmy, Mike, Kim, and Chuck are the only main characters featured in the pilot episode "Uno" that also appear in the series finale "Saul Gone".
  • Jimmy, along with Gustavo Fring and Mike Ehrmantraut, are the only three characters to be featured as main characters in both Better Call Saul and Breaking Bad.
  • Jimmy is the only main character to survive Breaking Bad that wasn't in the first season.
  • In Breaking Bad, Jimmy meets every main character except for Gustavo Fring and Lydia Rodarte-Quayle.
  • The need for a character like Saul came from two paths of Breaking Bad's development around the second season. First, as Walter White and Jesse Pinkman got themselves deeper into the drug business, the writers felt they needed a character to be a guide for them. At this point, they had written that Jesse's dimwitted friends like Badger were selling their drugs, and needed to envision what type of lawyer Walt and Jesse would enlist when they run into trouble. This would later serve to introduce Walter to new concepts such as the disappearer services. Secondly, they were at a point in Hank's character arc where he had suffered a major trauma in seeing Tortuga's severed head, and he would no longer be able to serve as the series' bit of lightness. They thus made Saul more of a comical character to fill this void. The writers wrote this lawyer as loud, flashy, and over-the-top, as well as being a scammer himself. The creators decided on the name "Saul Goodman" as a play on the phrase "[It]'s all good, man", so that even his most simple-minded clients would remember his name when they get arrested. Gould credits Breaking Bad's creator Vince Gilligan for initially suggesting this idea for Saul's name.
  • The Breaking Bad episode "Better Call Saul" was written by Peter Gould, and he has been ultimately credited with creating the character. In terms of casting for the part, both Gilligan and Gould said that their crew included a number of fans of Mr. Show with Bob and David, including Gould's wife Nora, and Odenkirk's name quickly came up for the role. Gilligan offered Odenkirk a four-episode guest role without the need to audition. Odenkirk at the time had been focused on mentoring upcoming actors in comedy, and, needing an opportunity, readily took the role at the encouragement of his friend Reid Harrison, having not seen any of Breaking Bad and thinking that it was only intended for a short stint. Odenkirk watched available episodes of Breaking Bad before arriving for shooting and avoiding reading the script he had been sent knowing that it would likely be trimmed down before filming. Odenkirk based the character's speaking style on producer Robert Evans, and spent time practicing speaking in Evans' style based on the autobiography The Kid Stays in the Picture. Bryan Cranston helped Odenkirk to learn more about what Breaking Bad was about and to coach him on dramatic acting, something which Odenkirk lacked from his comedy background. Odenkirk was scheduled to appear in the second season finale, but a prior commitment on How I Met Your Mother left him unable to do so; this led Gilligan to create the character of Mike Ehrmantraut to serve in place of Saul for that fourth episode.
  • Saul was originally intended to appear in only four episodes of the second season of Breaking Bad, but instead became central to the narrative of the series. Though originally written as a "two-and-a-half-dimensional" comic relief character, Saul's role became more in-depth, as Gilligan and Gould found they could use Saul as a "further entree to the criminal underbelly" for Walt in the later seasons. This also allowed them to give the character more humanity, which the showrunners credited to Odenkirk's acting skills. They considered that like with Aaron Paul and Dean Norris, Odenkirk's acting capability significantly altered plans they had for these characters and the series in a beneficial manner, making them more central to the larger plot. As Saul had proven to be a popular character with audiences, Gilligan and Gould already had started thinking about a spin-off involving Saul and approached Odenkirk on his interest to make it happen. Odenkirk had initially turned down the continuing role, wanting to be with his family in Los Angeles and feeling he had enough fame with the success of Breaking Bad, but his children assured them that they would be fine and he should not turn the opportunity down.
  • Once Breaking Bad was completed, Gilligan and Gould worked to establish what the spinoff series would be about, ultimately coming onto the idea of a prequel named Better Call Saul that would feature Jimmy McGill and how he would become Saul Goodman. The showrunners realized that Saul was, as seen in Breaking Bad, "comfortable in his own skin" and had nowhere else to go, that they could instead explore how Saul got to that point, mirroring the same type of self-destruction that occurred to Walter White in Breaking Bad. They saw Jimmy as an "earnest, sweet guy whose brain naturally cooks up dishonest solutions to the challenges in front of him", where by the time of Breaking Bad, Saul is a "front" for one who "seemed to enjoy being a showy cheeseball", and a "hermetically sealed slickster". Rhea Seehorn said that one aspect of Jimmy she incorporated into her acting was the spontaneity of Jimmy slipping into and out of the Saul Goodman character, or as Gould had described to her, "right there at the moment", a factor that for Kim and other associates of Jimmy can cause confusion and concern.
  • In 2014, as a publicity stunt for the launch of Better Call Saul, a billboard for "James M. McGill, Attorney at Law" was placed in Albuquerque, mimicking a billboard that appeared on the series, with a phone number connecting to a voicemail message recorded by Odenkirk.
  • In conceiving the story for El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie, while looking for the most important characters in Jesse Pinkman's life, due to the film continuing his story after the events of the Breaking Bad series finale, Gilligan considered to include Saul, feeling that using him in the story would have been great. However, Gilligan eventually desisted from including Saul due to being unaware of the potential plans Gould and the Better Call Saul writers could have for the character in his show, as Gilligan left the writer's room of the show after the third season.
  • Breaking Bad established little of Saul's origins, but revealed that Saul Goodman was not his real name, and that his real last name was McGill. This gave Gilligan, Gould, and Odenkirk a chance to flesh out more of Jimmy's backstory for Better Call Saul. Odenkirk and Gilligan set Jimmy's hometown as Chicago, in part as it was Odenkirk's own hometown as well as a homage to the notorious corruption in the political history of Chicago as inspiration for the character.
  • The thing to bring Jimmy down for good is the Saul Goodman commercial, the very first thing about him the viewer ever sees in the Breaking Bad universe.
  • As revealed in "Saul Gone", Jimmy's charges are 27 RICO violations, federal conspiracy to manufacture and distribute a controlled substance, eight counts of money laundering and accessory after the fact to multiple murders, including federal officers Hank Schrader and Steven Gomez.
    • No mention is ever made of him facing charges for his criminal actions in Omaha such as the shoplifting scheme, his identity theft scheme, the robbery that Jeff got arrested for and threatening Marion, suggesting that Jimmy wasn't charged for them and was possibly not even caught for most of them.
  • Jimmy's vehicles include:
    • 1977 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme (Pre-Better Call Saul)
    • 1998 Suzuki Esteem ("Uno" – "Cobbler" & "Inflatable" – "Bagman")
    • 2004 Mercedes-Benz C 240 ("Cobbler" – "Inflatable")
    • 1975 Ford Econoline ("Something Stupid")
    • 2004 Ford Taurus ("Wine and Roses" – "Fun and Games")
    • 1998 Jaguar XJ8 (stolen from Howard Hamlin; "Hit and Run")
    • 1997 Cadillac DeVille ("Waterworks" – "To'hajiilee")
    • 2007 Saturn Aura ("Magic Man" – "Saul Gone")
  • A real telephone number, 503-4455 (505) 503-4455 based in Albuquerque was created for Jimmy's law firm and when called it consists of Jimmy on an automated switchboard system with various options. It is made clear on the Better Call Saul website (www.bettercallsaul.com) and on the Breaking Bad Facebook page that this telephone number is a long distance telephone call and not toll-free.
  • From 2014 to 2016, a website for Saul Goodman existed that advertised his services as if he was a real person. The website was created to promote the Better Call Saul series.

References

References for James McGill
  1. Better Call Saul, Season 2, Episode 7, "Inflatable"
  2. Better Call Saul, Season 2, Episode 7, "Inflatable"
  3. Season 3, Episode 8, "Slip"
  4. Better Call Saul, Season 2, Episode 5, "Rebecca"
  5. Better Call Saul, Season 1, Episode 1, "Uno"
  6. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 13, "Saul Gone"
  7. Better Call Saul, Season 1, Episode 10, "Marco"
  8. Better Call Saul, Season 2, Episode 10, "Klick"
  9. Better Call Saul, Season 4, Episode 6, "Piñata"
  10. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 13, "Saul Gone"
  11. Better Call Saul, Season 1, Episode 1, "Uno"
  12. Better Call Saul, Season 1, Episode 1, "Uno"
  13. Better Call Saul, Season 1, Episode 2, "Mijo"
  14. Better Call Saul, Season 1, Episode 3, "Nacho"
  15. Better Call Saul, Season 1, Episode 3, "Nacho"
  16. Better Call Saul, Season 1, Episode 4, "Hero"
  17. Better Call Saul, Season 1, Episode 4, "Hero"
  18. Better Call Saul, Season 1, Episode 5, "Alpine Shepherd Boy"
  19. Better Call Saul, Season 1, Episode 5, "Alpine Shepherd Boy"
  20. Better Call Saul, Season 1, Episode 5, "Alpine Shepherd Boy"
  21. Better Call Saul, Season 1, Episode 7, "Bingo"
  22. Better Call Saul, Season 1, Episode 7, "Bingo"
  23. Better Call Saul, Season 1, Episode 8, "RICO"
  24. Better Call Saul, Season 1, Episode 9, "Pimento"
  25. Better Call Saul, Season 1, Episode 9, "Pimento"
  26. Better Call Saul, Season 1, Episode 10, "Marco"
  27. Better Call Saul, Season 1, Episode 10, "Marco"
  28. Better Call Saul, Season 1, Episode 10, "Marco"
  29. Better Call Saul, Season 1, Episode 10, "Marco"
  30. Better Call Saul, Season 1, Episode 10, "Marco"
  31. Better Call Saul, Season 2 Episode 1, "Switch"
  32. Better Call Saul, Season 2 Episode 1, "Switch"
  33. Better Call Saul, Season 2 Episode 2, "Cobbler"
  34. Better Call Saul, Season 2 Episode 2, "Cobbler"
  35. Better Call Saul, Season 2, Episode 3, "Amarillo"
  36. Better Call Saul, Season 2, Episode 7, "Inflatable"
  37. Better Call Saul, Season 2, Episode 8, "Fifi"
  38. Better Call Saul, Season 2, Episode 9, "Nailed"
  39. Better Call Saul, Season 2, Episode 9, "Nailed"
  40. Better Call Saul, Season 2, Episode 9, "Nailed"
  41. Better Call Saul, Season 2, Episode 10, "Klick"
  42. Better Call Saul, Season 3, Episode 2, "Witness"
  43. Better Call Saul, Season 3, Episode 2, "Witness"
  44. Better Call Saul, Season 3, Episode 3, "Sunk Costs"
  45. Better Call Saul, Season 3, Episode 3, "Sunk Costs"
  46. Better Call Saul, Season 3, Episode 4, "Sabrosito"
  47. Better Call Saul, Season 3, Episode 5, "Chicanery"
  48. Better Call Saul, Season 3, Episode 6, "Off Brand"
  49. Better Call Saul, Season 3, Episode 7, "Expenses"
  50. Better Call Saul, Season 3, Episode 7, "Expenses"
  51. Better Call Saul, Season 3, Episode 8, "Slip"
  52. Better Call Saul, Season 3, Episode 8, "Slip"
  53. Better Call Saul, Season 3, Episode 9, "Fall"
  54. Better Call Saul, Season 3, Episode 9, "Fall"
  55. Better Call Saul, Season 3, Episode 10, "Lantern"
  56. Better Call Saul, Season 3, Episode 10, "Lantern"
  57. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 13, "Saul Gone"
  58. Better Call Saul, Season 4, Episode 1, "Smoke"
  59. Better Call Saul, Season 4, Episode 3, "Something Beautiful"
  60. Better Call Saul, Season 4, Episode 3, "Something Beautiful"
  61. Better Call Saul, Season 4, Episode 3, "Something Beautiful"
  62. Better Call Saul, Season 4, Episode 3, "Something Beautiful"
  63. Better Call Saul, Season 4, Episode 5, "Quite a Ride"
  64. Better Call Saul, Season 4, Episode 5, "Quite a Ride"
  65. Better Call Saul, Season 4, Episode 6, "Piñata"
  66. Better Call Saul, Season 4, Episode 6, "Piñata"
  67. Better Call Saul, Season 4, Episode 6, "Piñata"
  68. Better Call Saul, Season 4, Episode 7, "Something Stupid"
  69. Better Call Saul, Season 4, Episode 7, "Something Stupid"
  70. Better Call Saul, Season 4, Episode 7, "Something Stupid"
  71. Better Call Saul, Season 4, Episode 8, "Coushatta"
  72. Better Call Saul, Season 4, Episode 9, "Wiedersehen"
  73. Better Call Saul, Season 4, Episode 10, "Winner"
  74. Better Call Saul, Season 5, Episode 1, "Magic Man"
  75. Better Call Saul, Season 5, Episode 3, "The Guy For This"
  76. Better Call Saul, Season 5, Episode 7, "JMM"
  77. Better Call Saul, Season 5, Episode 7, "JMM"
  78. Better Call Saul, Season 5, Episode 8, "Bagman"
  79. Better Call Saul, Season 5, Episode 8, "Bagman"
  80. Better Call Saul, Season 5, Episode 8, "Bagman"
  81. Better Call Saul, Season 5, Episode 8, "Bagman"
  82. Better Call Saul, Season 5, Episode 8, "Bagman"
  83. Better Call Saul, Season 5, Episode 8, "Bagman"
  84. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 13, "Saul Gone"
  85. Better Call Saul, Season 5, Episode 9, "Bad Choice Road"
  86. Better Call Saul, Season 5, Episode 9, "Bad Choice Road"
  87. Better Call Saul, Season 5, Episode 9, "Bad Choice Road"
  88. Better Call Saul, Season 5, Episode 9, "Bad Choice Road"
  89. Better Call Saul, Season 5, Episode 9, "Bad Choice Road"
  90. Better Call Saul, Season 5, Episode 10, "Something Unforgivable"
  91. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 2, "Carrot and Stick"
  92. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 2, "Carrot and Stick"
  93. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 2, "Carrot and Stick"
  94. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 2, "Carrot and Stick"
  95. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 3, "Rock and Hard Place"
  96. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 3, "Rock and Hard Place"
  97. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 4, "Hit and Run"
  98. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 5, "Black and Blue"
  99. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 5, "Black and Blue"
  100. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 7, "Plan and Execution"
  101. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 7, "Plan and Execution"
  102. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 7, "Plan and Execution"
  103. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 8, "Point and Shoot"
  104. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 9, "Fun and Games"
  105. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 9, "Fun and Games"
  106. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 9, "Fun and Games"
  107. Breaking Bad, Season 2, Episode 8, "Better Call Saul"
  108. Breaking Bad, Season 2, Episode 8, "Better Call Saul"
  109. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 11, "Breaking Bad"
  110. Breaking Bad, Season 2, Episode 9, "4 Days Out"
  111. Breaking Bad, Season 2, Episode 12, "Phoenix"
  112. Breaking Bad, Season 2, Episode 13, "ABQ"
  113. Breaking Bad, Season 3, Episode 2, "Caballo Sin Nombre"
  114. Breaking Bad, Season 3, Episode 2, "Caballo Sin Nombre"
  115. Breaking Bad, Season 3, Episode 2, "Caballo Sin Nombre"
  116. Breaking Bad, Season 3, Episode 4, "Green Light"
  117. Breaking Bad, Season 3, Episode 4, "Green Light"
  118. Breaking Bad, Season 3, Episode 5, "Más"
  119. Breaking Bad, Season 3, Episode 6, "Sunset"
  120. Breaking Bad, Season 3, Episode 7, "One Minute"
  121. Breaking Bad, Season 3, Episode 9, "Kafkaesque"
  122. Breaking Bad, Season 3, Episode 11, "Abiquiú"
  123. Breaking Bad, Season 3, Episode 13, "Full Measure"
  124. Breaking Bad, Season 4, Episode 3, "Open House"
  125. Breaking Bad, Season 4, Episode 4, "Bullet Points"
  126. Breaking Bad, Season 4, Episode 5, "Shotgun"
  127. Breaking Bad, Season 4, Episode 7, "Problem Dog"
  128. Breaking Bad, Season 4, Episode 7, "Problem Dog"
  129. Breaking Bad, Season 4, Episode 10, "Salud"
  130. Breaking Bad, Season 4, Episode 11, "Crawl Space"
  131. Breaking Bad, Season 4, Episode 11, "Crawl Space"
  132. Breaking Bad, Season 4, Episode 11, "Crawl Space"
  133. Breaking Bad, Season 4, Episode 12, "End Times"
  134. Breaking Bad, Season 4, Episode 13, "Face Off"
  135. Breaking Bad, Season 5, Episode 1, "Live Free or Die"
  136. Breaking Bad, Season 5, Episode 3, "Hazard Pay"
  137. Breaking Bad, Season 5, Episode 6, "Buyout"
  138. Breaking Bad, Season 5, Episode 9, "Blood Money"
  139. Breaking Bad, Season 5, Episode 10, "Buried"
  140. Breaking Bad, Season 5, Episode 11, "Confessions"
  141. Breaking Bad, Season 5, Episode 11, "Confessions"
  142. Breaking Bad, Season 5, Episode 11, "Confessions"
  143. Breaking Bad, Season 5, Episode 11, "Confessions"
  144. Breaking Bad, Season 5, Episode 12, "Rabid Dog"
  145. Better Call Saul, Season 4, Episode 5, "Quite a Ride"
  146. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 13, "Saul Gone"
  147. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 13, "Saul Gone"
  148. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 13, "Saul Gone"
  149. Breaking Bad, Season 5, Episode 15, "Granite State"
  150. Better Call Saul, Season 1, Episode 1, "Uno"
  151. Better Call Saul, Season 1, Episode 1, "Uno"
  152. Better Call Saul, Season 2 Episode 1, "Switch"
  153. Better Call Saul, Season 3, Episode 1, "Mabel"
  154. Better Call Saul, Season 3, Episode 1, "Mabel"
  155. Better Call Saul, Season 4, Episode 1, "Smoke"
  156. Better Call Saul, Season 5, Episode 1, "Magic Man"
  157. Better Call Saul, Season 5, Episode 1, "Magic Man"
  158. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 10, "Nippy"
  159. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 10, "Nippy"
  160. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 10, "Nippy"
  161. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 11, "Breaking Bad"
  162. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 11, "Breaking Bad"
  163. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 11, "Breaking Bad"
  164. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 11, "Breaking Bad"
  165. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 11, "Breaking Bad"
  166. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 11, "Breaking Bad"
  167. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 11, "Breaking Bad"
  168. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 12, "Waterworks"
  169. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 12, "Waterworks"
  170. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 12, "Waterworks"
  171. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 12, "Waterworks"
  172. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 13, "Saul Gone"
  173. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 13, "Saul Gone"
  174. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 13, "Saul Gone"
  175. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 13, "Saul Gone"
  176. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 13, "Saul Gone"
  177. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 13, "Saul Gone"
  178. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 13, "Saul Gone"
  179. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 13, "Saul Gone"
  180. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 13, "Saul Gone"
  181. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 13, "Saul Gone"
  182. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 13, "Saul Gone"
  183. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 13, "Saul Gone"
  184. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 13, "Saul Gone"
  185. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 13, "Saul Gone"
  186. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 5, "Black and Blue"
  187. Breaking Bad, Season 5, Episode 11, "Confessions"
  188. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 8, "Point and Shoot"
  189. Breaking Bad, Season 5, Episode 13, "To'hajiilee"
  190. Slippin' Jimmy, Season 1, Episode 6, "Cool Hand Jimmy"
  191. Better Call Saul, Season 1, Episode 1, "Uno"
  192. Better Call Saul, Season 3, Episode 5, "Chicanery"
  193. Better Call Saul, Season 4, Episode 1, "Smoke"
  194. Better Call Saul, Season 1, Episode 9, "Pimento"
  195. Better Call Saul, Season 4, Episode 8, "Coushatta"
  196. Better Call Saul, Season 1, Episode 2, "Mijo"
  197. Better Call Saul, Season 2, Episode 2, "Cobbler"
  198. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 7, "Plan and Execution"
  199. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 13, "Saul Gone"
  200. Breaking Bad, Season 3, Episode 7, "One Minute"
  201. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 10, "Nippy"
  202. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 12, "Waterworks"
  203. Better Call Saul, Season 1, Episode 2, "Mijo"
  204. Breaking Bad, Season 5, Episode 13, "To'hajiilee"
  205. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 11, "Breaking Bad"
  206. Breaking Bad, Season 5, Episode 11, "Confessions"
  207. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 8, "Point and Shoot"
  208. Slippin' Jimmy, Season 1, Episode 6, "Cool Hand Jimmy"
  209. Better Call Saul, Season 4, Episode 3, "Something Beautiful"
  210. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 4, "Hit and Run"
  211. Slippin' Jimmy, Season 1, Episode 2, "The Exor-sister"
  212. Better Call Saul, Season 6, Episode 13, "Saul Gone"

Gallery

Images & Artwork

Battle Records

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