Drunk, Jimmy decides to poop through the sun roof onto the white leather interiors of the car. Unfortunately, Chets kids were in the backseat. He gets the DA to charge Jimmy with indecent exposure and threatens to have him listed as a sex offender. So ends the story.
Jimmy goes through several outrageous schemes to get the Kettlemans to hire him. The first involves paying some skaters to get hit by Betsy's car but they instead get struck by a car containing Tuco Salamanca's abuelita. Later, Jimmy calls in an anonymous tip to the Kettlemans to convince them to go into hiding.
He flips the switch at the end, half-expecting something terrible to happen, but apparently, nothing does. He gains confidence that he can keep Slippin' Jimmy in his back pocket and bring him out from time to time. The switch toggles between legit Jimmy and Slippin' Jimmy, and he's become more comfortable using it.
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.
Jimmy was able to rally his usual UNM students and his “actor” to reshoot the candid photos of Jimmy handing the fake Casimiro a bribe. Then, with only moments to spare, Jimmy was able to drop those photos off in the capable hands of “Janidowski”, the fake P.I. that Jimmy hired.
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).
In the Season 2 episode titled "Balm," it was revealed that Jimmy O kicked Chibs out of Ireland as well as the IRA, and took his wife and daughter for himself. Jimmy was also responsible for the visible scars on Chibs' face.
John is disappointed with Jimmy as he had previously given him his word that he wouldn't take part in rodeo riding again. However, as Mia was eager for her boyfriend to not give up, Jimmy broke his promise to his boss.
Chuck predicts Jimmy will break into his house to destroy the tape, enabling him to have Jimmy arrested. As Chuck guessed, Jimmy kicks in the door and expresses anger that Chuck tricked him by playing to Jimmy's concern for Chuck's health. Jimmy destroys the tape and Howard and David make their presence known.
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)").
So, there you have it. A Chicago Sunroof is not a real thing.
Ken is conned by Jimmy and Kim into buying them shots of expensive tequila.
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.”
It is displayed in his name change: his birth name of Jimmy McGill, which ties him to the legacy of his brother, or Saul Goodman, the expert con artist and money grabber. He was best when he was bad. Desire, or passion, is not as simple as a dualistic split between good and evil.
When he's alone in his future office, pondering his altruistic actions, Jimmy suddenly kicks the door in a rage. He just gave away $1.6 million. And since Kim regained the trust of her boss Howard Hamlin (Patrick Fabian), she won't team with Jimmy and expand his law practice.
While Jimmy previously gave John his word he would stop rodeo riding, he says once he recovers he will continue his newfound passion, breaking his promise. Instead of leaving Jimmy to his own accord to navigate rodeo life, John sends him out with horse trainer Travis.
In Yellowstone, characters get branded to signify they are a part of the ranch forever and to indicate their loyalty. The brand bounds wearers to the ranch and in a way, the ranch owns them now.
Jimmy did not die in Yellowstone; instead, he was sent to the 6666 ranch in Texas as punishment for breaking a promise to John Dutton.
IGN voted Agent Stahl's death #10 in their list of the biggest deaths, They said: "The ending of Season 3 was one of the more gratifying twists the show ever had. Things seemed bleak when Agent Stahl informed the club that Jax had made a deal and ratted them out.
Easy, Clay (Ron Perlman) paid him a visit and secretly passed him a knife to kill himself, simply saying, "No more, brother." (As any SOA fan knows, prison has not been kind to Otto, which is a huge understatement). Instead, Otto uses it to take out Toric, stabbing him three times.
Unlike most of the gang members, who are American, Chibs is from the United Kingdom and is Scottish. He is nicknamed 'Chibs' because of his facial scars ("chib" is Scottish slag for a knife or other stabbing implement), which are real scars Flanagan received in a mugging.
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.
It's clear in the show that the symptoms are real and debilitating — but it's also clear that they're mostly in Chuck's head. EHS, the show implies, is simply a manifestation of Chuck's mental illness.
UPDATE, 3/3: On Monday night's episode of Better Call Saul, "Alpine Shepherd Boy," Chuck confirms that he indeed does suffer from electromagnetic hypersensitivity.