The episode's title, "Winner," references the ABBA song "The Winner Takes It All," which Jimmy and his brother Chuck sing in a flashback. This moment of rare brotherly bonding underscores the tragedy of their relationship; Chuck’s lifelong refusal to believe Jimmy could change eventually becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.
Immediately after winning his license back, Jimmy reveals the entire speech was a performance, mockingly calling the panel "suckers". [S4E10] Winner
In the final moments, Jimmy shocks Kim by announcing he will no longer practice under the name "McGill," ending the episode with his trademark phrase: "S’all good, man!" . The Execution of Werner Ziegler The episode's title, "Winner," references the ABBA song
This paper explores of Better Call Saul , an episode widely considered the definitive turning point where Jimmy McGill fully embraces his "Saul Goodman" persona and Mike Ehrmantraut commits his first cold-blooded execution for Gus Fring. The Death of Jimmy McGill and the Birth of Saul In the final moments, Jimmy shocks Kim by
Jimmy delivers a seemingly heartfelt speech about his brother to the bar association. Both the audience and Kim Wexler are moved to tears, believing he has finally processed his grief.
Parallel to Jimmy’s moral descent is Mike’s completion of his "break bad" arc. After Werner Ziegler escapes the secret lab construction to see his wife, Gus Fring deems him a liability who must be eliminated.