The unseen shooter was Mike Ehrmantraut, who was tracking Jimmy for Gus Fring. Mike finds his truck was also disabled in the shootout, so he places a still-shaken Jimmy and the money in Jimmy's car and begins driving back to Albuquerque. Jimmy's car soon breaks down.
Im rereading a summery for the Bagman episode and its says, "Juan Bolsa arranged the attack on Jimmy to protect Gus' business." Maybe I'm having a brain fart but how is taking the money and killing Jimmy protecting Gus?
The Colombian Gang are minor antagonists of Better Call Saul, serving as the main antagonists of the episode "Bagman" and the posthumous overarching antagonists of the episode that follows called “Bad Choice Road”.
Gus explicitly says it was Bolsa who hired the crew to kill Jimmy and get the 7 million.
He is stuck, and everywhere he turns, cops are surrounding him. He finally takes to hiding in a dumpster, trying to scramble for his phone to call Ed the Disappearer. But his luck seems to have run dry, and he fumbles everything he's holding. That's when the police find and capture him.
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.
$7,100,000 in $100 bills would weigh 150 lbs, meaning each bag weighed 75 lbs. The names of the gang members who try to rob Jimmy are revealed through the credits, and they are all named according to their roles throughout the episode: Jefe, which means "Boss" in Spanish, was the leader of the gang.
Lalo insists Jimmy is fine because "he's like la cucaracha" (cockroach in Spanish), which, according to Lalo, indicates that Jimmy is a "born survivor."
bagman (plural bagmen) (informal) A person who collects, transports, or distributes illicit money, especially for the purpose of bribery, extortion, or the making of other improper payments. quotations ▼ An assistant to a police detective, most commonly in the British police force.
That night, at the laundromat, Jimmy finds the three youths who previously mugged him. He offers to cut them in on his phone business if they agree to not hassle him.
Mike Ehrmantraut drives to the site where he committed the ice-cream truck robbery. Using information Nacho Varga provided, he finds the body of the Good Samaritan who was killed after freeing Ximenez Lecerda. He then makes an anonymous call and reports the location to the police. At home, Chuck McGill shares with Dr.
The overriding intention behind Mike's Better Call Saul safe-swapping trick was to ensure Nacho's death without casting suspicion over Gus Fring.
Click to start this article in. It isn't a stretch to say Lalo ordered the hit on Jimmy. There wasn't anything random about the attack; in the moment, it felt like a coordinated assault, with Jimmy's aggressors knowing exactly where he'd be on the road with the money.
Picking up right where the midseason finale left off, “Point and Shoot” has Lalo lay out why he's come to Jimmy and Kim's apartment. Essentially, he wants Jimmy to take his car, drive to Fring's home, get a pistol out of the glove compartment, and shoot the person who answers the door.
But, in this trial, he also renounces his Saul Goodman persona and returns to Jimmy McGill in honor of his great, successful brother.
Lalo died smiling as a nod to the maniacal personality he carried throughout life, but also to stress the satisfaction he derived from having been right about Gus. The familiar, creepy smirk was one final act of rebellion. Even in his most painful moment, he refused to let Gus see a glimmer of defeat on his face.
Lalo Salamanca is simply a psychopath. His way of thinking is different than most people's. Unlike Jack Welker, Salamanca isn't motivated by the moment's pleasure. Lalo Salamanca is just being who he is.
Because of the rivalry between Gus and Hector, Lalo becomes dedicated to disrupting Gus' legitimate restaurant business Los Pollos Hermanos and Lavandería Brillante, as well as his reputation with the cartel. Unlike his other rivals such as Walter White, Gus was highly fearful of Lalo due to his cunning and resilience.
Jean-Marie Weber, the biggest bag man in Olympic history.
A recent study found that the average woman's purse weighs 6.27 pounds. That's like carrying around a 5 pound container of sugar everywhere you go! We're on a “bigger is better” trend, and with all that extra space, we tend to fill it up just because it's there.
They're a fashion accessory -- and, really, an absolute necessity -- but modern handbags are quite literally weighing down the modern woman. A new survey has shown that the average weight of a woman's handbag has increased by 38pc over the past five years and now tips the scales at 2.37 kilos (5lbs).
Bob Odenkirk is not just the lead actor on Better Call Saul, he is also one of the show's producers. For his work acting in and producing the series for the first season, Odenkirk was reportedly making $150,000 per episode. For the sixth—and final—season of the series, Odenkirk reportedly made $200,000 an episode.
After Bolsa and Gus visit Hector and promise him vengeance for Lalo's supposed death, Gus realizes from Hector's demeanor that Lalo is still alive.
Jimmy talks privately with Kim and admits to anonymously warning the Kettlemans; he says he thought that his client Nacho was a threat, but he couldn't say so directly, due to attorney-client privilege. Kim realizes that Jimmy must be right that the Kettlemans weren't kidnapped.