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8 Hidden Messages You Missed on 'Better Call Saul' Season 6

The journey from Jimmy McGill to Saul Goodman has come to an end, with the Better Call Saul series finale of one of the year's most anticipated TV dramas and an all-time classic. There are a lot of interesting details throughout the movie series. Here are 8 hidden details that you may not notice in Better Call Saul season 6
 

#1. Season 6, Episode 9 flash-forward scenes take place a few years before the events of "Breaking Bad."

Source: Insider

The sticker on Saul's license plate on season 6, episode 9 has the year 2005.

#2. Kim was wearing the earrings and necklace that her mom stole for her throughout "Better Call Saul."

Source: Insider



We know at the start of episode 6, season 6, that a teenage Kim attempted to shoplift a pair of earrings and a matching necklace, which seemed to contrast everything the audience knew about the usually noble, upright attorney. Kim's mother scolds her and then hands her the shoplifted things, indicating that she stole them for her daughter. You may have noted that the earrings in the pair are the same ones Kim has been wearing since the first season of the show. Kim can be seen wearing the necklace on occasion.

#3. The sewer tunnel scene was filmed using the oil tanker that Nacho hid inside.

Source: Insider

The same prop was retooled for the oil tanker and sewage scenes in season six of "Better Call Saul." Lalo did not actually dive into a sewer in episode seven of season six. According to the "Better Call Saul Insider" podcast, when production fell behind during the epidemic, the creative team recreated the oil tanker in which Nacho hid in season six, episode three. The ends of the oil tanker were taken off to repurpose it for the mid-season finale to make it into a convincing sewage tunnel.
Read more: Can I Watch 'Better Call Saul' Without Watching 'Breaking Bad'? 

#4. The little black book has some familiar names written in code.

Source: Insider

If you notice, you will see "Huell and Nacho" is said to be among the many names in the little black book. AsuranFish, a Reddit member, believes they have deciphered many of the black book's pages that have been shown on air this season. Huell and Nacho are two of the names in the novel. After his death earlier this season, the latter has been crossed out. The episode's writer, Ariel Levine, claimed on the "Better Call Saul Insider" podcast that the cipher was put together by a few helpers on the show.

#5. The camera homes in on the Zafiro Añejo bottle stopper in the season premiere.

Source: Insider

The fake tequila can be traced back to season two of "Better Call Saul," when Jimmy and Kim trick a man into buying them $50 shots of the pricey tequila.Jimmy buys Kim a bottle of tequila the following season, and she keeps the cap. It's the only thing Kim takes with her when she leaves Schweikart & Cokely at the end of season five."Breaking Bad" fans will recognize the tequila from season four. Gus poisons and gives the tequila to Don Eladio, killing him and his cartel men.

#6. "Battle Hymn of the Republic" plays when Jimmy first walks into the Kettlemans' tax business.

Source: Insider

Jimmy pays attention to the music playing when Jimmy enters the trailer on season 6, episode 2. According to the aftershow "Talking Saul," that's one of the songs that plays in Saul Goodman's waiting room on "Breaking Bad."

#7. Kim lies on her bed in the same position as a portrait that hangs in her apartment.

Source: Insider

Rhea Seehorn, who plays Kim, said on the "Better Call Saul Insider" podcast of directing, episode 4, season 6 that "There is a drawing that Kim has of a woman lying on a bed in her living room that's on the bookshelf you pass as you go through the hallway to the bedroom and that is exactly how Kim is lying on the bed". Seehorn made the artwork and others that hang in the apartment, including the bird paintings seen over Kim and Jimmy's bed.

#8. Lalo is smiling when he dies because of the circumstances of his death.

Source: Insider

"Vince said to me, he said, Look, maybe you're just looking at Gus going, god damnit. You got me. You got lucky man. It was dark and you just shot out there," Tony Dalton, who portrayed Lalo, said on the "Better Call Saul" insider podcast. "That was that smile," Dalton explained. "It was like, 'Jesus. You lucky bastard. See you in hell.'"
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