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.
Kim Wexler's birthday is February 13, 1968. She's 34 when we first meet her in 'Better Call Saul' in early 2002.
Kim is originally from Nebraska, which is where we find Saul managing a Cinnabon in Omaha (as he once speculated he may) in the post-Breaking Bad flash-forward that began this series.
When Jimmy didn't seem to care about the letter, Kim was racked with guilt and that's why she wound up crying. While the scene played out on Better Call Saul, I actually thought Jimmy was making up the words about how proud Chuck was of him.
Jimmy is 49 at the end of Better Call Saul season 6. However, since the show depicts multiple time frames, this is something of a flash-forward that fills in Breaking Bad 's gaps after the Breaking Bad timeline concludes, so his Breaking Bad and Gene timelines naturally overlap.
Deborah Rhea Seehorn was born in Norfolk, Virginia, on May 12, 1972. Her mother was an executive assistant for the United States Navy, while her father was an agent in the Naval Investigative Service.
nov 12, 1960 - James Morgan McGill is born.
He is sentenced to 86 years in prison, where he is revered by fellow inmates who recognize him as Saul. Kim is allowed to visit him under false pretenses and they share a cigarette. As she departs, he goes to the prison yard to see her off and gestures finger guns. Kim acknowledges the gesture and leaves.
This makes Chuck either 58 or 59 at his time of dying, depending on the month. 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.
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.
60–64 years old (Better Call Saul, Season 1, Episode 1: “Uno”)
Even though Jimmy tries to be optimistic in his talk with Kim, the reality is that he received an 86-year sentence for his crimes in Breaking Bad. This was designed to give Jimmy no way out since he fully confessed to everything in Better Call Saul's finale, which means any future deals are off the table.
He is the older brother of criminal defence lawyer and convicted criminal Jimmy McGill, and the ex-husband of Rebecca Bois.
Because Jimmy McGill decided to turn his court hearing into a therapy session, the deal he cooked up becomes obsolete. Rather than seven years playing golf, Jimmy gets 86 years at Montrose, which is the very prison he said he didn't want during the initial negotiation with the prosecution.
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 might've been proud of his brother then, but his final words to Jimmy were "you've never mattered all that much to me." This stinging farewell supersedes whatever niceties might've been written in Chuck's posthumous letter.
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.
Rhea Seehorn's Kim Wexler. Kim becomes as close to Bob Odenkirk's Jimmy McGill as can be during Better Call Saul's latter seasons, but doesn't receive so much as a glancing mention during Breaking Bad - an oddity the spinoff needed to address before the end.
Type of Villain
Kimberly "Kim" Wexler is the tritagonist of the 2015 AMC crime drama Better Call Saul, the prequel to Breaking Bad. She serves as the tritagonist of Seasons 1 and 2, a major character in Season 3, one of the two tritagonists (alongside Nacho Varga) of Seasons 4 and 5, and the deuteragonist of Season 6.
Beth Hoyt: Mrs. Wexler.
Kim Wexler is an ESTJ personality type. She is strong-willed and organized, valuing structure in all areas of her life. Dedicated and assured, she is comfortable taking the lead. Rules and guidelines are important to people of the ESTJ personality type.
The season takes place in 2002, six years prior to the events in Breaking Bad, and features Bob Odenkirk reprising his role as James Morgan "Jimmy" McGill, known in Breaking Bad as Saul Goodman. Jimmy is a struggling lawyer looking after his successful brother Chuck, a former attorney.
Although in the first season it seemed that he was initially supportive of Jimmy, Chuck harbored resentful feelings toward him because of his conman past and charisma, in addition to Jimmy's approach to his career. From the second season onward, Chuck transforms into Jimmy's nemesis.
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).