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.
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)").
In the episode, Jimmy McGill agrees to travel to the desert as a "bagman" to pick up the $7 million that will serve as bail money for Lalo Salamanca. Once there, Jimmy finds himself in the middle of a shootout, where he encounters Mike Ehrmantraut.
Jimmy discovers that Chuck secretly used Howard to get him off the case—the same way Chuck used Howard to block Jimmy from becoming an attorney at HHM. Jimmy confronts Chuck, who tells Jimmy that he doesn't consider him a "real lawyer" since he is still the same "Slippin' Jimmy" from Cicero.
Jimmy pulls a series of psychological and social manipulation tricks to turn Irene's friends against her so that she believes refusing the Sandpiper settlement is against the interests of her fellow clients. She decides to accept, meaning Jimmy will receive his much-needed share.
When Jimmy was suspended from practicing law and went broke, he attempted to force a settlement in the case to earn his $1.16 million cut of the payout.
decided to agree to the offer that the Sandpiper Crossing clients offered to the residents, meaning that Jimmy and Kim did indeed win.
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.
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.
Chuck (Michael McKean) on Better Call Saul (2015-) suffers from one such unusual condition. He describes it as electro-hypersensitivity, a condition slightly less fantastic-sounding than some other real-world maladies but one which strikes us as bizarre in today's world of computers, technology, and cell phones.
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.
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.
ground himself every time he enters Chuck's house? Chuck has a mental illness where he believes that he is allergic to electricity, and Jimmy does this to keep his brother at ease. This is also the reason why all cell phones are left outside.
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.
"Point and Shoot" proved to be a tense, taut, terrifying outing that picked up with Jimmy and Kim trembling in the wake of another Lalo apartment drop-by. Lalo gave Jimmy one hour to go to Gus' house, ring the doorbell, and shoot him right then and there, but Jimmy "persuaded" Lalo to send Kim instead.
In fact, the outfits are part of Jimmy's campaign to make himself noxious enough to be pushed from the job he loathes at Davis & Main.
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.
A look into the mysterious—and controversial—condition that may explain Chuck's space blanket. 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.
Jimmy was extremely upset about Chuck's death, until Howard took the blame — essentially exonerating Jimmy. The reason Jimmy felt bad is that, while he does have a good heart, he is also very selfish. He initially blamed himself for Chuck's death. But hearing Howard's explanation rejuvenated Jimmy.
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.
Chuck (played by Spinal Tap's Michael McKean) is a recluse on extended leave from his legal firm who lives without electricity and wraps himself in a shiny “space blanket” to ward off the effects of exposure to Saul's mobile phone.
At the end of his four-hour shift, his supervisor credits Jimmy with only thirty minutes. Jimmy shoots a commercial for a reclining chair store but the owner declines Jimmy's offer to shoot more.
In fact, Cinnabon is marking the AMC show's final episode on Monday with a Saul-centric promotion: It's pushing a coupon code (CALLSAUL) for a buy-one-get-one-free “Center of the Roll” mini-treat offer, available via the chain's app.
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.