“It's super sad.” And by the way, she wants to set the record straight: “Kim did not write Chuck's letter.” Saul's writers confirmed to her that Jimmy's late brother really did write the letter Jimmy received after his death. It wasn't her character's invention, as some fans have theorized.
Chuck leaves most of his estate to his ex-wife, with only a $5,000 bequest to Jimmy, which is just enough to prevent him from contesting the will. When Kim picks up Jimmy's inheritance check, Howard gives her a letter Chuck wrote to Jimmy. Kim eventually gives it to Jimmy, who reads it in her presence.
But Kim is still more affected by Chuck's words than the average person would be, and this could be due to her troubled childhood. Through flashbacks, Better Call Saul revealed the Wexler family lived in constant poverty, and Kim's mother was cruel and uncaring.
It's probably because she witnessed so much of the drama between Chuck and Jimmy. Plus, she loves Jimmy and can see how he's pretending not to care even though she knows deep down he does. That's why she gives Jimmy the recommendation to go speak with a therapist.
But as Monday's series finale confirmed, Kim Wexler lives on. In the last two episodes, she confesses to her role in torpedoing the reputation of Howard Hamlin (Patrick Fabian) and inadvertently leading him to the moment of his death.
Monday's episode revealed that after breaking things off with Jimmy/Saul (Bob Odenkirk), Kim shockingly moved down to Florida to live out the rest of her days. Fans were relieved to learn that Wexler was alive.
A potential indicator of Kim Wexler's future is the color blue, which she wears repeatedly throughout Better Call Saul. Though the meaning behind color in Breaking Bad is wide open to interpretation, one possible reading of blue tones is purity and innocence - but always with tragic consequences.
One of the subplots of the show follows Chuck's obsessive compulsive order (OCD), a mental illness where people suffer from intrusive thoughts and compulsions.
Dear Jimmy, I have left many things unsaid in our relationship through the years. Rather than allow these unspoken thoughts to die with me, I've chosen to record them here for you. I hope you will take my words in the spirit in which they are intended.
Ultimately, things reached a point where Chuck's final words to Jimmy were, "The truth is you've never mattered all that much to me." So, why didn't Jimmy solve the situation by telling this to Kim?
But Kim revealing, at the worst possible moment, that she was the one who wrote the letter to Jimmy? While he may have dismissed it, it's nonetheless clear the impact Chuck had on him.
Jimmy learns in that scene that it was Jimmy's act of spilling the beans to the insurance carrier that lead to Chuck's death. Jimmy now knows he was the responsible one - and that Howard mistakenly blames himself. And Jimmy/Saul owns it.
And by the way, she wants to set the record straight: “Kim did not write Chuck's letter.” Saul's writers confirmed to her that Jimmy's late brother really did write the letter Jimmy received after his death. It wasn't her character's invention, as some fans have theorized.
Kim Wexler breaks up with Jimmy before he fully forms into the Saul Goodman that we know in the sequel. It's a headlining moment that has required patience from viewers, as Kim has to make a rather strong and heartbreaking decision.
Chuck had baited Jimmy into breaking and entering his house in order to destroy the audio tape of Jimmy incriminating himself—creating the pretense for Jimmy's criminal prosecution.
Regardless of cause, the symptoms themselves are definitely real. EHS sufferers have a range of complaints, from headaches and itchy skin to blurred vision and heart palpitations. In Monday night's episode, when Jimmy drinks too much on a date, he stumbles back to Chuck's house, cell phone still in his pocket.
The character's name is Chuck, and he's convinced he has a condition called electromagnetic hypersensitivity (EHS). “For reasons unknown, my nervous system has become sensitized to certain frequencies of electromagnetic radiation,” Chuck tells his doctor after a spell that puts him in the hospital.
Set to burn down at the end of season 3, Chuck McGill's house was not actually on fire at all. Its residents have always seen fans come and go, eager to discover the filming locations of their favorite series. Better Call Saul received scores ranging from 97% to 99% on the review aggregator site Rotten Tomatoes.
Antisocial personality disorder
Sometimes he even exceeds normative morality to the point of altruism (like when he saves the twins' lives from Tuco's revenge in Season 1, how he takes exceptionally good care of his brother Chuck during his illness and how he risks his career to save his assistant Huell from jail).
The symptoms are certainly real and can vary widely in their severity. Whatever its cause, EHS can be a disabling problem for the affected individual. EHS has no clear diagnostic criteria and there is no scientific basis to link EHS symptoms to EMF exposure.
The stopper was a token of Jimmy and Kim's romance, something to allow Jimmy to remember his only companion during the worst times in his life as Saul. It's a beautiful symbol, one that audience members will remember long after the show's airing.
Well, thankfully we now know that she is indeed alive in the post-Breaking Bad world of Jimmy McGill's new alias Gene Takavic. In 'Waterworks', we see that Kim now works at a sprinkler manufacturer in Florida, and she gets a call from 'Gene' after all these years.
Naming things and their color helps to ground you in the moment and manage anxiety. Instead of thinking about all the supposedly harmful electricity around him, he instead devotes all of his attention to noticing things, remembering their names and the names of their colors, and repeating them to himself.