In one of the best Better Call Saul episodes, Season 5's "JMM," Kim's year of birth can be spotted on her driver's license. The details on the license reveal that she was born in 1968. Kim is, therefore, 8 years younger than Jimmy, who was born in 1960. This means that during the show's timeline, she is in her 30s.
Kim Wexler's birthday is February 13, 1968. She's 34 when we first meet her in 'Better Call Saul' in early 2002.
That means that in Better Call Saul season 1, Jimmy McGill is 41 years old, with the events of those episodes covering May-July 2002. Jimmy is still 41 in season 2, while season 3 spans him turning 42.
Background. According to her driver's license in "JMM", Kim was born in 1968 and was raised in several Nebraska towns, including Red Cloud, but is intentionally vague about her past. In a flashback in "Wexler v. Goodman", Kim is shown to have become self-reliant as a teenager due to her mother's alcoholism.
Since Kim is not a character in Breaking Bad, some viewers have long assumed that she must die at some point between the pre–Breaking Bad events in Better Call Saul and Jimmy's transformation into Gene post-Saul. But that is not the case.
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.
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.
In addition, those earrings signify Mrs. Wexler's acceptance of a crime, insinuating that this was the moment that Kim started to question her beliefs regarding crime. The fact that Kim has worn those earrings since she was a teenager means that she's still carrying around the tragedies of her past.
While the actor, Rhea Seehorn, who portrays the character Kim Wexler is attractive, she's not a ravishing beauty. She is, however, the primary female actor in the series and, with few exceptions, she is the most attractive female in the cast.
“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.
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).
Antisocial personality disorder
Just as we start to make up our minds about Jimmy, a new side of him is revealed that's incompatible with that judgment. The early part of the series tells the story of Jimmy becoming a lawyer after years of pulling small-time cons as “Slippin' Jimmy.”
Marco's ring was the pinky ring of the deceased scam artist Marco Pasternak that was given to his friend and parter in crime Jimmy McGill by his mother ("Marco"). Jimmy continued to wear the ring for years, even after becoming the sleazy criminal lawyer "Saul Goodman" ("Breaking Bad (TV series)").
The date on the grave fits with a scene in Better Call Saul season 2's finale (set in 2002), where Chuck is rushed to hospital and his age is given as "late 50s." By comparison, Jimmy is in his early 40s when Chuck commits suicide.
Alexander "Sandy" McSouthers was a 65-year-old doorman but is also Sam Westing, Barney Northrup, Julian R. Eastman, and Windy Windkloppel (as discovered at the end of the story).
Turtle Wexler is thirteen years old in The Westing Game. However, she acts much more like an adult than a teenager. She uses her share of the Westing Game money to invest in the stock market.
While interesting and complete as individual characters, Jimmy and Kim really seem to complete each other — but you wouldn't exactly call their relationship "healthy." As Kim said herself, while they love each other, together they're "poison."
Kim Wexler - ISTP (The Craftsperson)
Kim is a true ISTP, as she is observant and has a passionate interest in troubleshooting. Kim approaches many aspects of her life with flexible logic, and she always looks for a practical solution.
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.
It most poignantly appears on the show in episode 9 of the show's fifth season, entitled "Bad Choice Road," when Kim quits her cushy job as partner and head of Schweikart & Cokely's banking division but makes sure to double back to her office to retrieve the bottle stopper she kept in her desk drawer.
It is theorized (but not outright confirmed) that the drug which Jimmy and Kim received from Dr. Caldera, and put on photos which were then given to Howard, was Atropine, a common nerve agent that causes the eyes to dilate and drastically increases a person's heart rate for a short period of time.
Kim suggests that Jimmy and her get married halfway through the fifth season simply as a means to protect her in case she has to testify against him in court, and they have one of those 15 minute courthouse weddings with Huell Babnieaux (Lavell Crawford) serving as their only audience member.
Kim, the most talented lawyer you could ever have, has quit the bar and will no longer be practicing law. When a distraught Jimmy rushes home, he discovers she is leaving him. Her bags are already packed, and a later scene reveals Saul at some distant point in the future.
Kim Wexler is back! After she and Saul (Bob Odenkirk) had a shocking break-up three episodes ago, “Better Call Saul” fans have been going through a Wexler withdrawal.
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.