In the end, it meant that Howard's boss Clifford Main (Ed Begley Jr.) decided to agree to the offer that the Sandpiper Crossing clients offered to the residents, meaning that Jimmy and Kim did indeed win.
Irene has refused because the lawyers have advised her they believe they can get Sandpiper to offer more. Jimmy stands to receive $1.16 million, and tries to persuade Howard Hamlin to accept, but Howard refuses. Howard and Chuck McGill meet with their malpractice insurance agents.
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.
Sandpiper's attorneys deny the company is defrauding residents, but concede some were overcharged. The company offers $100,000 in compensation, but Jimmy presents evidence that Sandpiper's fraud makes them eligible for a RICO case. Chuck demands Sandpiper pay $20 million to settle, which their attorneys refuse.
Jimmy found himself about to receive $1.16 million from a settlement agreement in a class-action lawsuit he initiated on behalf of a group of senior citizens against the Sandpiper retirement-home chain. In order to win that settlement, he'd meddled with the social order amid a group of old women.
At the end of his four-hour shift, his supervisor credits Jimmy with only thirty minutes. Jimmy shoots a commercial for a reclining chair store but the owner declines Jimmy's offer to shoot more.
Main story. Jimmy gives the Kettlemans the option of hiring him but instead, they offer a bribe if he does not reveal they are in possession of the stolen $1.6 million, and he accepts. Nacho Varga is released from custody and accuses Jimmy of warning the Kettlemans.
In the end, it meant that Howard's boss Clifford Main (Ed Begley Jr.) decided to agree to the offer that the Sandpiper Crossing clients offered to the residents, meaning that Jimmy and Kim did indeed win.
Question: Whatever happened to the $1.4 million Jimmy was to collect as his share of the Sandpiper settlement in Better Call Saul?
Now we're back in Saul's technicolor office, as he and Kim sign their divorce papers while Francesca hovers anxiously.
The ultracompetent attorney who married Jimmy McGill (Bob Odenkirk), the man most likely to bring out the shadier side of her character, never appears in Breaking Bad, which led some viewers to assume she would die before Saul finished its run. But as Monday's series finale confirmed, Kim Wexler lives on.
She tells Jimmy that they are bad for one another—that the chaos they've created together is too much for her conscience, despite having “the time of [her] life” doing it. She cancels her own law license, packs her bags, and leaves Saul for an unknown destination.
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.
Howard is initially resistant, but then tells Kim the truth—that Chuck secretly asked him to block Jimmy. Jimmy figures out on his own that Chuck was responsible. He gives HHM the Sandpiper case, disengages from daily interaction with Chuck, and obtains Howard's agreement to continue Chuck's care.
Meeting with Kevin in a parking garage, Jimmy lays out his terms: Acker is allowed to keep his house, receives $75,000, and a public apology from Mesa Verde; while the photographer receives $100,000 for future use and credit for the bank's logo.
In fact, Cinnabon is marking the AMC show's final episode on Monday with a Saul-centric promotion: It's pushing a coupon code (CALLSAUL) for a buy-one-get-one-free “Center of the Roll” mini-treat offer, available via the chain's app.
Saul Goodman
By combining his legal income with the cuts he gets by making the wishes of gangsters come true, his net worth could easily sum up to the tens of millions.
He hires Mike Ehrmantraut to break into the Kettlemans home and steal the stolen money. Once Jimmy gains possession of the money, he sends it off to the district attorney's office, then calls the Kettlemans and lets them know where the money is going and that now would be a good time to take Kim's deal.
We know that Saul gets paid $700 per case as a public defender, so $950 per hour is quite a jump. Even when Saul thinks he has snagged a rich client in Episode 5 (oops, spoiler!), he cites an hourly rate of $450.
Lalo is killed by Gus in the season six episode "Point and Shoot". Gordon Smith said it was considered for Mike to kill Lalo, but this idea was discarded in order to let the "biggest big bads" in the series – Gus and Lalo – come face to face.
Inspired by the colorful display, he executes a plan to get fired by doing everything he can think of to be irritating at work, from dressing in flashy suits to playing bagpipes in his office to not flushing the toilet after trips to the bathroom.
In the season 4 finale, after his license is reinstated, Jimmy applies to practise law under a new name and tells Kim, “S'all good, man!” In the season 5 premiere, Jimmy starts practising law under the name Saul Goodman, taking on shady clientele from the underworld he traversed as a burner cell phone salesman.
Lalo tasked Jimmy with picking up the $7 million in bail money, believing he's the perfect guy for the job. Jimmy's task was the focus of this week's episode, "Bagman." Meeting the cousins in the middle of the desert to get the money sounds easy enough on-paper, but nothing's that simple in the Breaking Bad universe.
To quickly recap, Jimmy/Saul has had his license suspended due to criminal charges he faced for breaking into his older (now deceased) more successful brother Chuck's home to destroy audio recordings of Jimmy confessing to manufacturing evidence.
He did it to help Kim. As much as he'd have liked the notoriety of representing them, and the money he could charge them for doing so, he didn't want to see Kim hurt, especially while he stood to benefit from her loss.