Finn underreported more than $1.3 million of income from EFI on his individual income tax returns from 2014 through 2019, prosecutors said. According to his plea agreement, he admitted to “creating false business expenses to lower his tax due and owing by writing checks to family members and friends.”
He is Finn the Human's biological father, but he doesn't care about him at all, the reason behind his behavior is because of brain damage that he suffered in the past.
Finn has a complex relationship with his biological father, Martin Mertens, who is shown to be a scoundrel. In season 6, Martin reveals to Finn that he was forced to abandon him as an infant after reaching a crossroads too dangerous for an infant and that he always meant to return for him.
In the end of the episode, he technically no longer exists. It is unknown if Finn considers him dead, or if his departure with the Comet is even considered death.
Finn finds his long-lost father after following the Lich to the Citadel.
Clarke and the other main characters refuse to give Finn to the Grounders, but several others in Camp Jaha are angry and want to give him up. Finn eventually turns himself in at the drop ship.
When did Finn turn 14 in Adventure Time? Pendleton Ward stated in an interview that Finn turned 14 by the end of the second season, although the show didn't mention outright when the once-grass-sword-wielding protagonist turned 14.
Pap is an abusive drunkard who channels his anger at the world into violence against his son. His main motivations in the book are jealousy, greed, and alcoholism.
Finn & Roselinen
He becomes a local hero after slaying a fluffy dragon and ends up hitting it off with the king's daughter, Roselinen. Finn lives a long, fulfilling life in the pillow kingdom with Roselinen and their two children, but the idea of finding his way back home never leaves his mind.
But in the belly of the beast of chaos, Finn finally found himself in a place he couldn't punch his way out of, stating, “I always figured I'd go out saving someone.” But Finn was (thankfully) spared from death, and in the closing credits, we see that he never bothered to replace his lost mechanical arm.
He then decides to stage a fight between the two in real life to see if he can finish the dream. However, during the fight, Flame Princess destroys the Ice Kingdom and discovers that Finn set up the fight. Feeling betrayed, she breaks up with him.
Finn may be the last human in the Land of Ooo, or possibly the world. In the episode "Her Parents," Lady Rainicorn's dad says he thought humans were extinct. This lends new significance to his title "Finn the Human," as his humanity may be unique in Ooo.
The trip culminates with a visit to Founder's Island, where Finn meets his biological mother, Minerva Campbell (voiced by Sharon Horgan), and discovers what happened to the remainder of the human race.
A better estimate of Finnish IQ is likely to be the unadjusted Scholastic Achievement score which Lynn and Vanhanen (2012) give to every country by combining TIMSS, PISA, and various other national assessments. On this basis, they give Finland a score of 555.6.
However, it is revealed that the Lich is actually disguised as Billy. Finn and Jake then follow him through the multiverse. "The Lich" would be the inception of a three-episode arc that would not be concluded until the second episode of the fifth season.
The end of the series showed him chilling in a lake with his adoptive brother Jake without a robotic arm, perhaps to play catch up with his former perilous lifestyle as he was greeted by humans, including his mother. We can only presume Finn lived and died a normal, satisfying life.
Years later, Finn and Roselinen have married and had two children, Bonnie and Jay. Quilton tells them that an ancient book has been discovered revealing that the door to Finn's world appears periodically.
Finn is shown to be Thalassophobic, since he is afraid of the ocean.
Finn was, for a long time, the only confirmed human in the Land of Ooo, to the point where he had an epithet, "The Human", and was referred to by many as "Finn the Human". The reason for this is revealed in the episode "Her Parents," as Lady Rainicorn's dad believed that humans were extinct.
Jay & Bonnie Mertens are Finn and Roselinen's children in the Pillow World as seen in "Puhoy." They were raised by their parents and around their grandfather, Quilton, but never met their father's side of the family. They appear to be extremely close to their parents throughout the episode.
The pair was forced to split up, with Jake sent on to the highest deadworld (the 50th) and Finn relegated elsewhere. Ironically, this is because Finn spent every moment of his life after Jake's death simply waiting for his own death, as it meant he would get to see Jake again.
Pendleton Ward has stated that Finn got his hat as a baby when he skinned a bear out in the woods. This is possibly confirmed in the episode "Little Dude," where Finn remarks at the end that he needs a new hat, and Jake replies that they need to go skin an evil bear.