When Better Call Saul wrapped, it didn’t just hang up the phone, it broke the whole damn line. What started as a wild idea, a spin-off about a sleazy, two-bit criminal lawyer who once offered nail salon consultations and burner phones. Turned into one of the finest pieces of television this side of Albuquerque. Better Call Saul may have begun as the sideshow to Breaking Bad’s meth-fueled circus, but over six gripping seasons, it cooked up its own brand of greatness—layered, tragic, stylish, and criminally good.
Let’s be real: nobody expected Jimmy McGill, aka Saul Goodman, aka Gene Takavic, to carry the torch after Walter White blew up the desert. But not only did he carry it—he damn near lit up the whole TV landscape. Against all odds (and DEA agents), Better Call Saul managed to match and, in some ways, outshine Breaking Bad, delivering…