| "Hero" | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Better Call Saul episode | |||
| Episodeno. | Season 1 Episode 4 | ||
| Directed by | Colin Bucksey | ||
| Written by | Gennifer Hutchison | ||
| Featured music | "Unsquare Dance" byDave Brubeck Quartet | ||
| Original air date | February 23, 2015 (2015-02-23) | ||
| Running time | 47 minutes | ||
| Guest appearances | |||
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| Episode chronology | |||
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| Better Call Saulseason 1 | |||
| List of episodes | |||
"Hero" is the fourth episode of thefirst season of theAMC television seriesBetter Call Saul, aspin-off series ofBreaking Bad. The episode aired on February 23, 2015, on AMC in the United States. Outside of the United States, the episode premiered on thestreaming serviceNetflix in several countries.
In the episode's cold open,Jimmy McGill (Bob Odenkirk) is shown in his hometown ofCicero,Illinois, in 1992, scamming an unsuspecting bar patron with his friend Marco Pasternark (Mel Rodriguez). In the main story, Jimmy McGill finds the missing Kettleman family, who were camping in the woods outside their home to avoidNacho Varga (Michael Mando) stealing the money they embezzled from theBernalillo County treasury.Betsy Kettleman (Julie Ann Emery) bribes Jimmy not to reveal the money to authorities. Meanwhile, Jimmy impersonates the likeness of his former boss,Howard Hamlin (Patrick Fabian) in a billboard ad, and stages a scenario in which he saves a man from falling from the billboard.
In aflashback to 1992,Jimmy McGill and his new friend Stevie leave a bar and Jimmy jokes that his name is Saul Goodman.[a] In an alley, they discover a barely conscious drunk man next to a wallet full of cash. Stevie takes the cash and Jimmy takes the man'sRolex watch. Jimmy estimates the Rolex to be worth more than the wallet, leading Stevie totrade the found money plus additional cash of his own for the watch. After Stevie runs away with the watch, a cheap counterfeit, Jimmy and the "unconscious" man, his partnerMarco Pasternak, return to Jimmy's residence to split the proceeds of their scam.
In the present, Jimmy givesthe Kettlemans the option of hiring him. Instead, they offer abribe if he does not reveal they are in possession of the stolen $1.6 million,[b] and, while Jimmy attempts to convince them further he accepts after the Kettlemans say that he's the kind of lawyer that guilty people hire.Nacho Varga is released from custody and accuses Jimmy of warning the Kettlemans. Jimmy denies this but claims that whoever did warn the family had probably warned them for the sake of their children, and that Nacho should be grateful the warning prevented him from committing kidnapping or murder, because he was noticed while surveilling the Kettlemans.
Jimmy enters the money from the Kettlemans in his accounts as aretainer so it appears to be a legitimate payment. He spends the money on a personal makeover that imitatesHoward Hamlin’s appearance and a billboard advertisement that shares obvious similarities with Hamlin Hamlin & McGill.Kim Wexler confronts Jimmy, and Howard sues him fortrademark infringement. The court rules for HHM and Jimmy is ordered to remove the billboard.
After failing to persuade news outlets to cover his predicament as ahuman-interest story, Jimmy hires a freelance media team to record his video plea for sympathy. During filming, the worker removing the billboard falls and is held up only by his safety harness. Jimmy climbs up and pulls the worker to safety while passersby watch and record, as does his media team. Howard and Kim realize Jimmy staged the rescue for publicity.
The next day, Jimmy bringsChuck McGill's daily newspapers, but hides the local one that includes a report on the rescue. Chuck becomes suspicious when he notices the missing paper, so he braves exposure to electricity to run to his neighbor's driveway and takes theirs, leaving a $5 bill as payment.
The episode was written by supervising producerGennifer Hutchison, who was also a writer and producer onBreaking Bad.[1][2] It was directed byColin Bucksey, who directed four episodes ofBreaking Bad.[3] This is the first episode chronologically in which the name Saul Goodman is used.[4]
Upon airing, the episode received 2.87 million American viewers, and an 18-49 rating of 1.4.[5]
The episode received a positive reception from critics. OnRotten Tomatoes, based on 22 reviews, it received a 95% approval rating with an average score of 8.19 out of 10. The site's consensus reads,"'Hero' marks the essential early evolution of Saul's conning skills, beginning his amusing transformation into the well-knownBreaking Bad personality."[6]