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1[[WMG:[[center:[-'''[[Characters/BreakingBad Main Character Index]] | [[Characters/BetterCallSaul Better Call Saul]]'''\
2[[Characters/BreakingBadWaltsFamily Walt's Family]] ([[Characters/BreakingBadWalterWhite Walter White]]), [[Characters/BreakingBadHeisenbergsEmpire Heisenberg's Empire]] ([[Characters/BreakingBadSaulGoodman Saul Goodman]]), [[Characters/BreakingBadDEAAndPolice DEA and Police]], '''Juarez Cartel''', [[Characters/BreakingBadLosPollosHermanos Los Pollos Hermanos]], [[Characters/BreakingBadMadrigalElectromotive Madrigal Electromotive]], [[Characters/BreakingBadAryanBrotherhood Aryan Brotherhood]], [[Characters/BreakingBadOtherCriminals Other Criminals]], [[Characters/BreakingBadOtherCivilians Other Civilians]]-]]]]]
3A powerful Mexican drug cartel active in at least two states: in Michoacán and in Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua Mexico, across the border from El Paso, Texas.
4----
5[[foldercontrol]]
6
7!!Non-Salamanca Leadership
8[[folder:Don Eladio Vuente '''(SPOILERS)''']]
9!!Don Eladio Vuente
10[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/break410_2691.jpg]]
11[[caption-width-right:250:''"There's no place for emotion in this. You of all people should understand. Business is business."'']]
12!!!'''Portrayed By:''' Creator/StevenBauer
13!!!'''Appearances:''' ''Series/BreakingBad'' | ''Series/BetterCallSaul''
14
15->''"You don't want to be looking over your shoulder? You're in the wrong business, my friend!"''
16
17The absolute head of the Juarez Cartel and Gustavo Fring's main competitor for control of the Southwest drug trade. Both Juan Bolsa and Hector Salamanca answer to him.
18----
19* ArchEnemy: To Gustavo Fring, given that he ordered the murder of his beloved partner, Max Arciniega because of his ego. He shares this position with Hector Salamanca who killed Max [[{{Sadist}} with visible relish]] on Eladio's orders.
20* ArcVillain: In ''Breaking Bad'', specifically Season 4. Up until then, Eladio had been an unseen GreaterScopeVillain who was represented by other members of the cartel, most notably the Salamancas and Juan Bolsa. This changes when he begins organizing moves against Gus' operation. Although he's dangerous enough to be one of the main antagonists of the season, his role in the story remains largely detached from the central conflict between Gus and Walt. As soon as he and the cartel have been dealt with for good, the focus shifts back to the main story.
21* AManOfWealthAndTaste: As befits the head of a drug cartel, Eladio enjoys the finer things in life: an enormous home, ridiculously expensive tequila, cigars, and gorgeous women.
22* AssholeVictim: He is poisoned by Gus along with all of his capos with tequila with his death being much slow and painful compared to the capos as he drowns in his own pool while trying to lunge at Gus. This was long overdue for Eladio's past crimes especially having killed Gus' partner Max and sadistically tortured Gus over it decades ago on top of being an overall unpleasant cartel head who mistreats his loyal associates in both ''Breaking Bad'' and ''Better Call Saul''.
23* BadBoss: He seemed willing to push Hector aside in favor of Gustavo during ''Better Call Saul''. A risky move regarding both people, considering he had Gustavo's partner murdered, by ''Hector'' no less. Other than that, his employees seem to be constantly on guard waiting for the moment he decides to kill them, to the point where nobody bats an eye over Eladio casually threatening a waiter with amputation during a party. Even his favorite enforcer Lalo theorizes Eladio is just enjoying the bad blood between the Salamanca muscles and Gustavo the earner since it keeps them divided and constantly trying to cater his favors by bringing more money. Eladio has so many people looking at him with hatred that Gustavo doesn't surprise him and thinks he can just cower him with force, but he is proven ''wrong'' later on that ended up costing him his life.
24* BigBadEnsemble: With Gus in season 4. After the departure of Tuco, the Cousins, and Juan Bolsa, it is his cartel that causes problems for Gus during the season, and his tensions with Gus solidify again.
25* BitchInSheepsClothing: His manner of talking to his employees is full of MoodWhiplash and leaves his employees and the audience on edge regarding when he's gonna get ''truly'' murderously angry.
26* ButForMeItWasTuesday: It really just doesn't seem to dawn on him that his ordered murder of Max is more or less Gustavo Fring's [[{{Revenge}} sole motivating factor]] in their partnership together. It's implied by the final season of ''Better Call Saul'', where Eladio outright tells Gus he can see the hatred in his eyes, that it's not an uncommon backstory for his underlings, but to him killing Max may be "business is business" but it wasn't business for Gus: it was personal.
27* CastingGag: Steven Bauer as the head of a cartel is hilarious considering Vince Gilligan has often referred to the show as taking Walter from being a teacher to becoming [[{{Film/Scarface 1983}} Scarface]].
28* CreateYourOwnVillain: Earned the mortal and forever hatred of Gus Fring by having Max murdered in front of Gus' eyes and then forcing Gus to look into Max's eyes. His blunder in making Gus a part of his organization despite this, allowed Gus to plot his revenge and eventually kill him.
29* DidntSeeThatComing: While in ''Better Call Saul'', establishes that Eladio knew of Gustavo Fring's hatred of him, he clearly never suspected that hatred would really be strong and motivate the man to devise a plan to kill him and destroy the rest of the Juarez Cartel in revenge until it was too late in ''Breaking Bad''.
30* DiscOneFinalBoss: Of ''Breaking Bad'''s fourth season. Don Eladio and his cartel are built up as a major threat (big enough to rival [[BigBad Gustavo Fring]] even), but they are taken out of the game before they have a chance to reap the spoils of their efforts, leaving Gustavo as the remaining villain.
31* DivideAndConquer: Eladio runs the cartel like this, pitting subordinates against one another so no one can consolidate enough power to challenge him. Lalo [[LampshadeHanging lampshades]] this in a conversation with Gus, musing that Eladio would be displeased if they got along too well, before laughing it off and dismissing the idea.
32* TheDon: He's the absolute leader of the cartel.
33* DramaticNecklaceRemoval: Gustaavo has Mike rip off Eladio's necklace when he falls in the pool, so he can later taunt Hector with it.
34* TheDreaded: Just about everyone is terrified of Eladio, and for good reason. Gustavo and Max are understandably intimidated, and even long after the former has become a feared kingpin in his own right, he still approaches Eladio with extreme caution. Bolsa frequently warns Hector Salamanca about disrespecting him and while Hector is the most likely to be insubordinate, he's never once seen being a dick to Eladio's face. Keep in mind that Bolsa doesn't even ''like'' Hector, which illustrates just how terrible [[EvilerThanThou Eladio must be by comparison]]. This would prove to be one of his biggest FatalFlaw as Eladio becomes overly reliant on this and makes him so arrogant that he leaves a blind spot.
35* DroppedABridgeOnHim: Eladio is established as a major player in the drug trade and one of Gustavo Fring's greatest adversaries, but Gustavo quickly establishes himself as the one on top after he poisons him midway through ''Breaking Bad''. He does get more screen time and relevance in ''Better Call Saul'' to make up for this.
36* EvenEvilHasStandards: It says something that even ''Eladio'' is wary of [[PsychopathicManchild Tuco]], questioning if Nacho is all there in the head for associating with him. Considering how villainous Eladio himself is, it speaks volumes about the depths of Tuco's insanity.
37* EvilHasABadSenseOfHumor: Don Eladio has the sense of humor of a 14 year old. He doesn't just shit talk Hector about his lame money tributes and his later crippled condition but his lame joke about the "frunk" is another good example. Bolsa and even ''Gus'' aren't amused at all.
38* EvilVersusEvil: His conflict with Gus can be summed up as this. When they first met, Gustavo was no innocent angel, since he was trying to get into the cartel and flood the country with drugs to enhance his wealth. Eladio, however, is much more brutal and unreasonable, although they're both equally unreasonable. On the whole, the much more pragmatic and cautious Gus is likely better to have as a drug kingpin than Eladio, but not by much though.
39* ExcellentJudgeOfCharacter: For all his StupidEvil tendencies, Eladio is not as thick as he looks when it comes to seeing through people:
40** When conversing with Nacho in ''Better Call Saul'', he subtly tells him to stop kissing his ass with the atypical yes-man attitude - and tell him what he truly wants behind his depressed façade.
41** He also knows ''exactly'' [[AxCrazy what kind of person]] Tuco is, and just barely tolerates him being in the Cartel because of his propensity for ''undirected'' violence. In general though, Don Eladio doesn't seem to want Tuco in his presence, to the point where he's the only Salamanca that is never invited or seen at his hacienda.
42** In "Better Call Saul", he understands the dynamics between Gustavo and the Salamancas and how to use them to his advantage. Also, despite brushing off the Salamanca's testimony, when Hector told Eladio to look into Gustavo's eyes and see him for who he really is, Eladio sees the immeasurable hate Gus has for him under his polite demeanor. [[SubvertedTrope That said]], it's clear that he arrogantly believes that Gustavo's hate is second only to his fear of him and thinks he is all about business, which in ''Breaking Bad'' would prove to be [[StealthPun dead]] wrong for Eladio.
43* {{Expy}}: While portrayed by the same actor who played the [[AffablyEvil amoral but otherwise likable]] Manny Ribera in ''{{Film/Scarface|1983}}'', Eladio is more similar to Alejandro Sosa, the BigBad of [[{{Film/Scarface 1983}} the same film]]. Both are tyrannical drug lords who [[BitchinSheepsClothing actively cultivate the image of being refined and charming businessmen]] despite having no qualms about committing barbaric atrocities to consolidate their power. Additionally, both characters introduce themselves under the pretext of showing polite interest in a business proposition from one of the story's major characters, only to leave him with a menacing ultimatum by having his associate killed before his eyes. They even both retain Creator/MarkMargolis as hitmen/enforcers.
44* FauxAffablyEvil: When he's first introduced in ''Breaking Bad'', Eladio initially appears to be very gregarious and benevolent, almost like a guy you'd have a beer with (particularly when compared to his [[TheDragon menacing and surly right-hand man, Hector Salamanca]]). However, this is ultimately revealed to be a mask for a personality full of MoodWhiplash, but is generally cold, calculating, and sadistic. In ''Better Call Saul'', Lalo specifically warns Ignacio to be straightforward with Eladio when he meets him, but to do it in as few words as possible so he can't construe some offhand remark as an insult.
45* FatBastard: As we see when he is swimming, he is very overweight, which is also given a nod through the Regalo Helado puppet made in his likeliness. [[spoiler: When Gustavo declares his hatred against Eladio with what was intended to be his dying words by Lalo, he makes a slew of insults directed at his girth, calling him a "fat pig" and a "greasy, bloated pimp."]]
46* FatalFlaw:
47** {{Pride}} and [[{{Narcissist}} Egotism]]. This is probably his biggest one as a lot of the problems that will later on happen in ''Breaking Bad'' and ''Better Call Saul'' all started because Eladio only saw Gus and Max's actions as "subverting his authority" rather then as the business proposition that it was, which would have expanded his criminal empire to great heights. While Eladio undoubtedly needed to show his authority, he did so in a way that actually robbed him of a prime business opportunity and set a ''VERY'' driven man in Gus on the path of revenge to destroy Eladio and the cartel later on, and frankly everyone probably knew it. But in Eladio's pride, he both thought he didn't need the help nor did he have to worry about Gus' revenge due to Eladio overestimating his own power, arrogantly thinking that he is untouchable. Because of this, he pays the ultimate price of being poisoned and dying alongside the destruction of his cartel as a result of his hubris and short-sightedness.
48** {{Greed}}. This is more minor but he also should've known better then to accept a deal from the man (Gus) he wronged years ago, but given how large and organized the money that Gustavo brings in was all too good for Eladio to easily accept and take without ever seeing how he is playing into Gus's plan of revenge in the long term. Case in point in "Better Call Saul", even when Eladio knows that Gus hates him and killed Lalo, he still keeps him around because he doesn't want to lose his big source of income and because of the above FatalFlaw example.
49* GreaterScopeVillain: As the [[TheDon undisputed leader of the Juarez Cartel]], he presides over a massive criminal empire that comprises most of the series' major antagonists, including Tuco, the Salamanca Twins, and Juan Bolsa. However, he never directly acts against Walt and the two don't even meet or talk; instead, it's Gustavo Fring and the other mentioned characters that cause trouble for the franchise's protagonists.
50* {{Greed}}: Is more than a little eager to jump into bed with Gustavo Fring after he sees the kind of cheddar he is hauling in, despite the fact he murdered Gustavo's partner when they pitched him more or less that very same idea out of wounded pride.
51* HateSink: He might as well be the worst person the cartel has to offer, and when even ''Hector'' is somehow less bad in comparison, that says something. Eladio is simply a smug, cocky, entitled, and abusive bully underneath his bluster as a cartel don, and all of his appearances are an emphasis to show that he is a feared figure just as much as he is a detestable one. So no one except Hector will feel sad that he gets killed by the man he wronged long ago.
52* {{Hypocrite}}: Gus himself points out in his video insulting the Cartel that while Eladio may talk about honor, he himself ''isn't'' honorable. Which is true since throughout "Breaking Bad" and "Better Call Saul" showed that Eladio is more on business and profit over anything else.
53* ItWillNeverCatchOn: He shows a lot of skepticism towards not only Gus and Max's plan, but of meth as a profitable popular drug as a whole. Along with Hector, he also questions the idea of using fronts and the need to diversify outside of cocaine, both of which would become necessary after the price crash of the latter.
54* JerkassHasAPoint:
55** He laughs at Nacho's desire of not having to look over his shoulder for danger as this is not something you'll ever get from being in the Cartel.
56** His call to toss Hector aside is indeed an UngratefulBastard move as the Salamancas are the cartel's strongest enforcers, but Gustavo Fring does bring in more money, and Hector has proven himself to be a liability due to his insistence of trying to assert dominance over Fring. However, this would later on turn out to be a fatally wrong choice as Eladio ended up getting poison in revenge and finally realizing too late that Hector was right about Gustavo.
57** Eladio shuts down Funetes' complaints about how Jesse Pinkman isn't anywhere close to being a professional chemist by pointing out that Fuentes himself is a college graduate, yet somehow is a less than competent meth cook than Jesse.
58* JerkWithAHeartOfJerk: He seems bubbly, quirky, and fun, but he's really just a mean-spirited thuggish BadBoss who likes to bully people for his own sadistic gratification and knowing he can get away with it due to his higher status that prevents people from.
59* JustJokingJustification: Pulls this when shit-talking Hector, but it's transparent to all parties involved, including himself.
60* KarmicDeath: Eladio meets his end by being poisoned by the man whose lover he killed, drowning in his own pool in the process. Furthermore, said pool is where he murdered Max and forced Fring to look into his dead eyes and watch him bleed out to further traumatize him.
61* KickTheDog: He heckles Bolsa for being short on his tributes and being upstaged by Lalo Salamanca, not knowing Lalo screwed Bolsa and Gus over with his plan to rat out Gus' low level dealers to the DEA.
62* LackOfEmpathy: Shown in "Salud"
63** Gus Fring's murder of three of his most loyal subordinates hardly seems to faze him (Unaware that he is next), given that he immediately throws a party for Gus after being sufficiently convinced of his unconditional submission.
64** During the party, he [[KickTheDog offhandedly threatens a servant pouring him a shot of rare tequila with amputation if he spills "even one drop"]] (with a festive smile on his face, no less).
65** Later while speaking with Gus, he coldly "advises" him in a rather humiliating fashion to let go of any personal grudges he has (including the cartel's murder of his beloved partner/lover Max) and submit to his authority for the sake of "good business."
66--->'''Eladio:''' "Gustavo, cheer up, man. Gustavo, I'm not angry. I had to spank you. But what choice did I have? Look, once every twenty years you forget your place. There's no place for emotion in this. You of all people should understand. Business is business."
67* LargeAndInCharge: He towers over nearly all of his subordinates at 6'2".
68* ManBehindTheMan: To Juan Bolsa, the Salamanca family, and Gaff given that all their actions are made pursuant to direct orders from the cartel's leadership.
69* MoodSwinger: Eladio often acts jolly and nice for a moment only to switch to angry, threatening or even murderous mode in an instant, which he uses as an intimidation factor toward his henchmen and others. His subordinates are constantly on edge when around him, as they never know when or why Eladio could become angry at them, only that it can happen anytime, and that it could very well be the last time.
70* {{Narcissist}}: He has a really BIG ego probably from the result of him being top leader of the cartel that as shown in "Saborosito" on Better Call Saul when he criticizes the bobblehead of the ice cream mascot inspired by him from Hector. In "Salud", he refers to Gus as 'tu' instead of 'usted', showing that he sees no equals and see only himself as the top boss.
71* PayEvilUntoEvil:
72** He gives Benicio Fuentes, the wannabe chemist, a ''thorough'' put down in ''Breaking Bad'', pointing out that Jesse Pinkman could cook way better meth than him despite his lack of college degrees.
73** In ''Better Call Saul'', Eladio taunts and heckles Hector Salamanca by calling his money stash cute in contrast to Gustavo's significantly larger stash. In fairness, this ''is'' [[{{Jerkass}} Hector]] we're talking about here.
74* ObfuscatingStupidity: In most of his appearances, Eladio appears to be a PsychopathicManchild with a horrible sense of humour, to the point it seems strange just how someone like him could be a don of an extremely powerful cartel. However, there are moments when Eladio drops his act, and shows just how cold and calculating he actually is, suggesting his FauxAffablyEvil persona is a deliberate act.
75** Best example of this is when Eladio throws a party for Gus after seeming convinced that Gus accepts his role as a subordinate. He acts jovial and like a StupidEvil boss would, but shows surprising ProperlyParanoid tendencies when he checks whether Gus' gift is safe to open, and then halts his whole act for a tense couple of seconds when Gus seems to not want to down the drink first. The moment Gus does, all the laughs and smiles are back on, and Eladio acts like he trusted Gus the whole time. Of course, Eladio couldn't have predicted Gus would actually be insane enough to just [[SelfPoisoningGambit poison himself to achieve his goals]].
76** When dealing with Nacho, he keeps his act for a good while, acting as if they're good buddies just chatting, but when Nacho fails to produce satisfactory answers for too long, Eladio drops the act for a while, and suddenly starts asking direct questions and probes Nacho in a very uncharacteristic way up until he hears everything he wants. Once Nacho tells Eladio everything, the "laughing moron at the top" persona comes back in full swing. Clearly, Eladio is perfectly content with his subordinates thinking he's an idiot and underestimating him, since that gives him an advantage, but when it's necessary, he shows just how intelligent and calculating he actually is.
77** While incorporating it into his PsychopathicManchild behaviour, Eladio is shown to be able to [[BerserkButton always say something that insults his subordinates where it hurts the most]], but always in a manner that inspires rivalry between the various clans, but no animosity against himself. It seems to work pretty much perfectly as well, at least for the Gus-Salamanca feud, up until the Salamancas are destroyed in a large part by accident, leaving Gus free to concentrate on acting against Eladio.
78* OpportunisticBastard: As seen in {{Greed}}, he doesn't seem to plan ahead, but latches onto convenient money-grabbing opportunities.
79* OrcusOnHisThrone: Eladio is the head of a powerful drug cartel and possibly the most powerful criminal in both shows, but all of his appearances are at his villa. Even when the Cartel is dealing with serious issues, Eladio never displaces himself and seems more than happy to let Bolsa, the Salamancas, or Gaff do the hard work in his stead.
80* PoliticallyCorrectVillain: At least ethnic-wise. Eladio has no problem working with Gus, even though Gus is a Chilean who's strongly implied to be homosexual, as long as he's in charge and Gus brings in enough money. Working with a (presumably gay) South American would be unthinkable for a traditional Mexican gangster, yet Eladio never even brings Gus' heritage up.
81* PoliticallyIncorrectVillain: He mocks the now-disabled Hector by imitating him ringing his bell, which Bolsa's silently disgusted by.
82* PragmaticVillainy:
83** When told that Jesse is a recovering addict, Eladio refuses to let him have a drink. However, this could very well be because Eladio didn't want Pinkman (who was his presumptive new cook at the time) to develop any habits that might impede his cooking.
84** [[spoiler:It's implied that Eladio knows Gustavo killed Lalo, but lets him live because of his high earning capability, but not before firmly reminding him to remember who's the boss.]]
85* {{Pride}}: Eladio's arrogance, along with his avarice, sees him easily seduced by Gus with a grand and easy cash flow, when Eladio should really know better than to rub elbows with an utterly calculating man with a massive grudge against him but he arrogantly thinks he can cower Gus into submission. Which turns out this would lead to his death.
86* ProperlyParanoid:
87** Despite being in good business with him, Eladio does ''not'' really trust Gustavo and gets enraged when it's suggested that he's keeping any secrets. Given the fact that [[SecretKeeper Eladio knows]] more about [[TheSpook Gus]] than perhaps anyone seen in the setting, he's totally justified in being suspicious.
88** This is heavily demonstrated during the events of "Salud" in ''Breaking Bad''. Before he even opens Gustavo's "gift", he looks at Gaff to make sure the case is safe to open. He then makes Gustavo take the first shot of the rare tequila, in case if it was poisoned. [[SelfPoisoningGambit It was. Gustavo drank it anyway knowing this]]. (Earlier, he's seen taking some pills that likely slowed or dulled the poisons working, and when he uses Eladio's bathroom later, he induces himself to vomit, thus preventing the poison from running its course.) And finally, when Gustavo is going to leave his sight, he has his bodyguard go with Gus to keep an eye on him. Eladio ''really'' didn't trust Gustavo and was trying to be careful not to give Gus any opening to use against him (not knowing that he already did before it was too late). He was right to be paranoid, he just wasn't quite paranoid enough.
89* PsychopathicManchild: He's basically an overgrown school yard bully who bends people to his whims. His humor also suggests he has the maturity of a 14 year old.
90* SecretKeeper: He does know Gustavo's past, and possibly his true identity if Gus changed his name, in Chile. He even tells Gus that it's the only reason why he kept him alive.
91* SmugSnake: Despite being one of the most powerful villains in the series '''by far''', his overestimation of his own power along with underestimation of Gustavo Fring [[FatalFlaw proves to be his undoing]].
92* TheSociopath: He doesn't seem to understand why Gustavo might hold a lasting forever grudge against him for murdering his closest friend/lover right in front of him, since Eladio himself views people as tools who can be dismissed or forgotten about on a whim. He considers his own lack of emotion a benefit, as he tells Gustavo, "There's no place for emotion in this. You of all people should understand. Business is business."
93* SoftSpokenSadist: He needles Hector with a smooth voice and disarming mannerisms.
94* StupidEvil: Had Eladio not murdered Max to sadistically torture Gustavo into being a very dangerous person, it's quite likely that he wouldn't have met his consequently karmic death at his hands out of revenge years later. In spite of his ExcellentJudgeOfCharacter, Eladio kept doing a lot of unwise actions that eventually led to his death and destruction of his cartel.
95* TensionCuttingLaughter: The MoodWhiplash we're talking about; it's an effective intimidation tactic to keep his underbosses on edge.
96* TakingYouWithMe: Subverted. After realizing that Gus has poisoned him, this is clearly the last thought that crosses his mind judging by his DeathGlare and lunge in Gus' direction. However, he succumbs to the poison before he can bring this desire about and falls into his pool drowning.
97* TooCleverByHalf: Despite being an ExcellentJudgeOfCharacter, Eladio's greed and overconfidence in his own authority gives him a big blind spot when it comes to Gus in ''Better Call Saul''. He knows that Gus hates him for murdering Max, and it is heavily implied that he's aware that [[spoiler: Gus had killed Lalo]], but he chooses not to act on it because he doesn't want to lose Gus as an earner and arrogantly believes he can be intimidated in to falling back in line. This attitude repeats in ''Breaking Bad'', [[spoiler: and it ends with his death and the total dismantling of the Juarez Cartel]].
98* UngratefulBastard: Accused of this by Hector. He easily discarded the Salamancas, who helped build his criminal empire and gave him their best enforcers, for a Chilean in Gus who brings more money and does chicken, but one who has a serious grudge against Eladio and Hector for the murder of his lover. Turns out Hector is right all along and it would later on prove to be one of Eladio’s greatest mistakes.
99* VillainsOutShopping: Eladio is often seen lounging around on-screen, namely enjoying swimming as a hobby.
100* YouDontLookLikeYou: Steven Bauer, who was pushing his 60s at the time of shooting, looks unbelievably older in ''Better Call Saul'' than his character did in ''Breaking Bad'' in the present day.
101* YouExclamation: When he realizes he was poisoned by Gus, he can only scream "''Tu?!?!''" (Spanish for "you") before trying to lunge at him.
102[[/folder]]
103
104[[folder:Juan Bolsa]]
105!!Juan Bolsa
106[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/bolsa_juan_610.jpg]]
107[[caption-width-right:250:''"I don't tell you how to fry your chickens, Gustavo. You should really leave matters of my organization's politics to me."'']]
108!!!'''Portrayed By:''' Creator/JavierGrajeda
109!!!'''Appearances:''' ''Series/BreakingBad'' | ''Series/BetterCallSaul''
110
111->''"Today, you are going to die...but there are good deaths and there are bad deaths."''
112
113A high-level member and one of the three founders of the Juárez drug cartel alongside Hector and Eladio. He is also the cartel's liaison with Gustavo Fring.
114----
115* AffablyEvil: In ''Better Call Saul'' at least. In the prequel, Bolsa is a professional, calm criminal even when liaising with Gustavo Fring, who hates the Cartel's guts, and we never get to see his [[FauxAffablyEvil Faux]] side like we do in ''Breaking Bad'' (barring during the interrogation of Nacho), so he qualifies as this trope. He doesn't even like Hector but, nevertheless, tries to non-confrontationally discourage him from insulting Don Eladio.
116* ALighterShadeOfBlack: While he is a villain, Bolsa was initially this to the Salamancas, contrasting them in every way from his [[AffablyEvil attitude]] and the way he practically encourages his workers, his preference for diplomacy, and disdain for extreme cruelty. It seems that Bolsa's professionalism degraded over the years however, as he becomes just as brutal as the Salamancas in ''Breaking Bad'', killing Tortuga in a ridiculously cruel manner and then desecrating his corpse to stage a further attack on the DEA.
117* AscendedExtra: In ''Breaking Bad'', he was primarily a SatelliteCharacter to the Cousins. While his role in ''Better Call Saul'' is still a comparatively smaller one next to Gus, Hector, and even Lalo, his role in the Cartel is nonetheless much more clearly depicted this time around.
118* AssholeVictim: His assassination is orchestrated by Gustavo Fring. Given how much of a ruthless SmugSnake he was, he had it coming. This is even more emphasized in retrospect, as he was a part of the deaths of [[spoiler:Ignacio Varga]], and [[spoiler:Gustavo's partner Max]].
119* AxCrazy: A very subtle example. Despite the fact that he's calm and collected, Bolsa has the Cousins decapitate a DEA informant, strews his body parts around the desert as a warning, and [[spoiler:mounts his decapitated head on a turtle. Then he sends the turtle at Mexican Federal Police with a bomb strapped to it.]] Averted in ''Better Call Saul'' however, where Bolsa's ironically one of the calmer members of the Cartel.
120* BaldOfEvil: He's bald and a ruthless member of the cartel.
121* BecameTheirOwnAntithesis: Retroactively. In ''Better Call Saul'', Bolsa is established to have been a genuinely polite ConsummateProfessional cartel founder who respects everyone around him (even traitors), and looks down upon the Salamanca family for indulging in brutal, sadistic cruelty to their enemies. By the time of ''Breaking Bad'' however, Bolsa has become just as bad, if not ''worse'' than Hector and his family ever were at their peak, with him slaughtering a DEA informant and sending his decapitated head to the DEA full of explosives to gain retribution. This is likely because the last time Bolsa had to deal with a traitor within the Cartel, said traitor stabbed him in the leg and nearly shot him while using Bolsa as a HumanShield, so one can understand why he would resort to previously uncharacteristic brutality towards another informant.
122* BoringButPractical: Bolsa is much less emotional than Hector and goes about things in a calm, professional manner. Nor is Bolsa the blatantly threatening killer that Hector is. Hector enjoys wielding his power, runs roughshod over everyone, and has a voice like Satan himself. Bolsa looks more like a harmless middle manager. This quietly competent style of management works wonders for him; his partnership with Gus helps him gain favor with Don Eladio.
123* CharacterizationMarchesOn: In ''Breaking Bad,'' Bolsa was very much a FauxAffablyEvil cartel member, having little patience for Gustavo Fring's antics, and indulging in barbaric cruelty such [[ThereIsNoKillLikeOverkill as overseeing the decapitation of one of his traitorous minions and mounting his head on a tortoise boobytrapped with explosives]]. By contrast, ''Better Call Saul'' depicts Bolsa as being genuinely AffablyEvil, bordering on a NobleDemon that disapproves the brutality of the Salamancas and their long-standing feud with Gustavo. It's implied this changed after the butchered interrogation of Nacho which almost led to his death, as well as the tension that awoke when Gustavo was suspected of killed Lalo.
124* CoDragons: Was this with Hector to Don Eladio on the business side. With Hector falling out of favor with Eladio, he becomes a more traditional dragon.
125* CopKiller: By proxy, willing to blow up several DEA members using Tortuga's severed head on a turtle for a touch of BlackComedy. Of course, killing a DEA agent and being connected to an assassination attempt on another makes the U.S. government ''extremely mad'' and makes the Mexican government mark him as particularly dangerous. He and his bodyguards end up getting tracked down by the Mexican Federal Police (with some help from Gus) and gunned down with submachine guns [[LeaveNoSurvivors without being given a chance to surrender]] (to be fair to the cops, the cartel guys all had guns, including Bolsa).
126* EtTuBrute: Bolsa, barring his role in Max's murder, was nothing but an ally to Gustavo. He secretly backs Gustavo during the latter's power struggle against the Salamancas, even going as far as sending his men to make sure Lalo stays in prison. In exchange for all this, Gustavo betrays and kills him anyway, but probably because Gustavo still holds the death of [[spoiler:his partner Max]] against him and didn't want his help in taking care of the Salamancas.
127* EvenEvilHasStandards:
128** Lalo's act of [[DisproportionateRetribution murdering a store clerk for inconveniencing him]] does not go unnoticed, and Bolsa chides him for it, albeit for [[PragmaticVillainy potentially rousing suspicion]].
129** On a more significant note, Gustavo notes that Bolsa does not ([[Recap/BreakingBadS2E7NegroYAzul initially]]) have much patience for the extreme brutality the Salamancas thrive in. True to form, when overseeing Nacho's execution, he promises him a dignified death if he cooperates, in contrast to the Salamancas at the scene itching to torture him. Subverted, however, when he tries to hand him over to them regardless once he insults them after he "confesses".
130** In "[[Recap/BetterCallSaulS6E9FunAndGames Fun and Games]]", even though he disguises it with a smile when Eladio looks at him, Bolsa has an unimpressed and disgusted look on his face when Eladio mocks Hector by imitating his ringing bell.
131* {{Expy}}: He's basically the Mexican equivalent of Johnny Sack from ''Series/TheSopranos'', right down to "Juan Bolsa" being the Spanish version of his name. Like Johnny, Bolsa acts as an intermediary between two major criminal empires, although in this case it's between the Mexican Cartel and Gustavo Fring's empire instead of two Italian mob families.
132* ExtremeDoormat: He uses Eladio's name more than his and follows whoever earns the most cash, even if he has to ignore the blatant bad blood the person has with the Cartel. He also chides the Salamancas, but never goes further than repeating what Eladio wants from them, as he is scared of them.
133* FauxAffablyEvil: In ''Better Call Saul'', Bolsa appears to be the most reasonable member of the cartel. He's polite, genial, understanding, and calmly professional, even as [[spoiler:he's preparing Ignacio Varga to die at the Carterl's hands for betraying them]]. Most of the time, he comes across as a pretty nice guy, until he tries handing Varga over to the Salamancas despite promising him he wouldn't before Varga escapes and takes him hostage. By the time of ''Breaking Bad'' though, snitching on the cartel is enough for Bolsa to have your head hacked off, stuffed with explosives and traveling on the back of a turtle. Then again [[PayEvilUntoEvil Tortuga was a cowardly, opportunistic rat]].
134* {{Foreshadowing}}: He angrily chides Lalo for his senseless murder of Fred, a totally innocent and hapless clerk. While it seems strange a hardened drug lord would care about this, he points out the situation surrounding it is "messy" and not something to be brushed off. This murder ultimately becomes a major plot point when Lalo is caught for it.
135* GreaterScopeVillain: In season 3. He doesn't actively participate in the revenge against Walt and Hank and doesn't even care, but being Don Eladio's lieutenant and a high-ranking member of the Juárez Cartel, his influence is much more prominent, with the Cousins being just enforcers working for the cartel. In contrast to the Cousins, Juan's recourses are so superior that he even mentions that his brother is a police chief, suggesting vast influence.
136* HairTodayGoneTomorrow: He's balding in both shows, but shown with hair in flashbacks in ''Breaking Bad''.
137* HorribleJudgeOfCharacter: He seems to believe that Gustavo Fring is genuinely all about business even when Lalo reminds him of several incidents saying otherwise. Setting his sights only on the massive amounts of cash, he knows about the death of Gustavo's partner Max since he was apart of it and doesn't suspect that he'd ever be working against their interests. He isn't ''completely'' without doubts, but nevertheless hopes that he is in the right about Fring. It's not until the Mexican federales are at his door in ''Breaking Bad'' that Bolsa ''finally'' realizes what Fring was really up to all this time, but it was already too late for Bolsa to do anything about it.
138* HiddenDepths: In his mansion, Bolsa is quite the avid virtual golfer.
139* INeedAFreakingDrink: Makes a B-line for a decanter the moment Eladio leaves [[spoiler:after the meeting regarding Hector's accusation is resolved. He doesn't even say a word to Gus.]]
140* KarmicDeath: He's killed through the machinations of Gustavo Fring, who he wronged many years before along with Hector Salamanca and Don Eladio.
141* KnowWhenToFoldEm: While Bolsa may hate the DEA as much as the rest of the Cartel and will happily make an example to them by hacking off an informant's head and delivering it to them on an exploding turtle, he tells Marco and Leonel Salamanca that directly killing one of their agents is off-limits, due to the amount of heat it would bring on them. Unfortunately, [[spoiler:thanks to the machinations of Gustavo Fring, the Cousins promptly ignore that order, resulting in Bolsa's death.]]
142* TheManBehindTheMan: He anonymously masterminds a plot to sabotage Lalo's bail from prison in Gustavo's interests, not knowing [[UnwantedAssistance that Gus wants Lalo to get the money.]]
143* ManOfWealthAndTaste: Wealthy enough to afford virtual golf in 2005 anyway.
144* MirrorCharacter: To Mike Ehrmantraut. They both act as TheConsigliere to their respective leaders, but while Mike is Gus' HyperCompetentSidekick who is genuinely always on top of everything, Juan is a clueless idiot who never has any idea what is really going on and [[HeadInTheSandManagement leaves his minions to work out their issues amongst themselves while telling Eladio what he wants to hear]].
145* MouthOfSauron: He generally acts as a representative of the Cartel's leadership, and doesn't act independently of Eladio much throughout both shows.
146* NotSoHarmlessVillain: He reminds the audience that he is of much higher standing than the Salamancas when he has no problem with orchestrating a scheme to sabotage them if they go against the cartel's interests.
147* NothingPersonal: Tries to go for this angle with Hector, but [[EvilIsPetty Hector]] will have none of that.
148* OnlySaneMan: Of the Juarez Cartel's upper management, he is shown to be the most level-headed and [[PragmaticVillainy practical in terms of goals.]] While Bolsa doubtlessly has a ruthless side, he is not unhinged like [[PsychopathicManchild Eladio,]] [[{{Revenge}} Gus,]] or [[AxCrazy Hector and his family.]] Even though ''Breaking Bad'' unfortunately shows that the "unhinged" part didn't remain hidden for long, he's still the one of the more reasonable cartel members.
149* PayEvilUntoEvil: Tortuga and the El Paso cops weren't exactly the nicest people Hank worked with, so their death/injuries aren't Bolsa's biggest sin.
150* PetTheDog: Despite grumbling that Hector has always been nothing but trouble, Bolsa ensures that Hector's territory remains his even after he and Tuco are put out of commission, rather than seizing it for himself.
151* PragmaticVillainy: It's all about the money for Bolsa. Killing ForTheEvulz is something he does not take well, if only because it's bad for business, and he only does so when the person has betrayed the Cartel in some way. He is also growing increasingly tired of the feud between the Salamancas and Gustavo and warns them that [[BadBoss Eladio]] is getting angry.
152* TheRival: Seems to be one with Hector, although Bolsa doesn't seem to purposefully engage all that much. He even sincerely cautions Hector about insulting Eladio and otherwise seems rather modest. Justified as while Bolsa wants to look better toward Eladio, he is scared of Hector in some aspects, as he wouldn't even rat on Hector when he pissed in Eladio's pool in ''Breaking Bad''.
153* SanitySlippage: ''Better Call Saul'' and flashbacks in ''Breaking Bad'' show that Bolsa, while not without a ruthless side, is considerably more pragmatic and reasonable compared to other members of the Cartel, one who doesn't give in to random acts of sadism for the sake of it. By the present day in ''Breaking Bad'', that sensibility is gone as he indulges in brutality even when the situation doesn't require violence.
154* SatelliteCharacter: In ''Breaking Bad''. All of his interactions (aside from a couple of scenes with Tortuga) are with either Gustavo Fring or the Cousins, and he's never seen interacting with any other character. He never even meets Walter White, though he's aware of who he is and what he's been up to with Tuco and Gustavo. He gets more focus in ''Better Call Saul''.
155* ScrewTheRulesIHaveConnections: He claims this when the Federal Police come knocking on his door, boasting that his brother is a police chief so he'll be out of jail soon. The cops simply gun him down instead.
156* ShoutOut: His name translates to "John Bag/Sack", a reference to John "Johnny Sack" Sacrimoni from ''Series/TheSopranos''.
157* SmugSnake: It's played subtly but he is entirely confident that he's smarter than Gus. Simply put, he isn't, and is proven wrong in a spectacularly badass fashion.
158* TookALevelInJerkass: After all the shit he had to deal with, including being taken hostage by Varga after the latter confessed to treason, Bolsa became a much worse person to work under. Notably, his professionalism and tolerance for bullshit degrades heavily, and he is much more spiteful and angry towards betrayal in any form.
159* SwitchToEnglish: When he talks with Gustavo over the phone, he speaks English (which they're both fluent in).
160* VillainousBreakdown: After the Salamanca twins are killed due to Fring's machinations, Bolsa shows a great deal more anger and drops his facade. He correctly accuses Gustavo outright of being behind the Cartel's recent troubles. His breakdown doesn't last very long, as he's swiftly gunned down by the Mexican government.
161* VillainsOutShopping: In his various phone calls to Gustavo, he can be seen vacationing on a ranch or playing virtual golf in his mansion.
162* YesMan: He's this to Don Eladio compared to the defiant Hector.
163[[/folder]]
164
165[[folder:The Dons]]
166!!The Cartel Dons (Paco, Cesar, Renaldo, Artuno, Cisco, Luis, Escalada)
167[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/m0kul2u.jpg]]
168The capos of the Juarez Cartel, all subordinate to Don Eladio. They all partake in the celebrations at Eladio's party, and all of them end up dying by way of Gustavo Fring's poisoned tequila as revenge against the cartel.
169----
170* AffablyEvil: Two of the capos share a jovial laugh when they see Jesse start to relax at Eladio's party.
171* AlasPoorVillain: Hector is visibly upset at their deaths, [[FamilyValuesVillain despite none of them being relatives of his]]. This is part of the reason why [[{{Revenge}} Gus targets them all]].
172* AssholeVictim: Gus certainly believes they deserved their fates, even though they weren't present for Max's murder. Notably, only one of their subordinates tries to avenge their deaths, and he was [[UndyingLoyalty a Salamanca]].
173* BaldOfEvil: Two of them are bald, and they're all gangsters.
174* BeardOfEvil: Several of them have one.
175* ChuckCunninghamSyndrome: An interesting example. In ''Series/BreakingBad'', all the Dons were shown to be very powerful and involved with the Cartel, even if they all answer to Eladio. However, not a single other Don appears or is mentioned beforehand in ''Series/BetterCallSaul'', even as Eladio plays a big role in the prequel's plot.
176* DirtyOldMan: During Eladio's party, many of them flirt with girls half their age.
177* DroppedABridgeOnHim: Despite being powerful cartel members, they're wiped out all at once by Gus' poison.
178* FatBastard: Some of them are overweight, and every last one of them are powerful drug lords, so while the specifics are unknown, they're likely not saints.
179* ManOfWealthAndTaste: Like Don Eladio.
180* MinorMajorCharacter: While they're clearly the most powerful members of the cartel along with Eladio and all but two of them are given names, they appear onscreen for 10 minutes at most before dying. None of them even show up in the prequel ''Series/BetterCallSaul'', despite Eladio playing a much bigger role in the prequel.
181* UnknownRival: Unlike Eladio, Hector, and Bolsa, they weren't present for his partner Max's murder, so they never had any reason to suspect Gus of working against them.
182* VillainRespect: While they aren't present for the cooking, they are all visibly impressed by Jesse being able to cook better methamphetamine than any of their master cooks, with some of them smiling approvingly at him during the party.
183* WeHardlyKnewYe: Unlike Eladio and Bolsa, they don't appear in any flashbacks or [[Series/BetterCallSaul prequels]] and they all die within minutes of being introduced.
184[[/folder]]
185
186!!The Salamanca Family
187[[folder:In General]]
188!!The Salamanca Family
189!!!'''Appearances:''' ''Series/BreakingBad'' | ''Series/BetterCallSaul''
190->''"Me and my family: we built this whole business!"''
191-->-- '''Hector Salamanca''', "Lantern"
192
193A brutal and psychotic crime family influential in the Juarez Cartel. For various reasons, they butt heads with Walter White many times, but their greatest enmity lies with his employer: Gustavo Fring.
194----
195* AbusiveParents: Or at least Hector was. He was shown to have physically abused Leonel and Marco back in TheEighties, specifically by nearly drowning the former to teach the latter about the importance of family [[BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor after Leonel says he wished his brother were dead]]. Hector was also more than willing to leave Tuco in jail for at least six months for having brutally assaulted Mike Ehrmantraut, although he does get upset when Tuco extends his own sentence.
196* AppealToForce: The Salamancas are the muscle of the Juarez Cartel, and their attitude is generally that rules don't apply to them because, well, they have the muscle.
197* BigScrewedUpFamily: The Salamancas are notorious for being one of the largest and most unstable crime families in the entire show. It's telling that those in the family tend to be stone-cold killers ''at best'', while the worst members have PsychopathicManchild-like traits.
198* TheDreaded: Those in the game know that a Salamanca getting involved in any kind of situation is bad news bears. Nacho Varga does everything he can to get out from under Hector's thumb when he thinks things are going out of hand in ''Better Call Saul'', and Jesse is incredibly wary of doing business with Tuco during the first season of ''Breaking Bad''.
199* EvilUncle: The Salamanca family is run by Hector, whose several nephews tend to be the main muscle within the drug trade. Hector was also abusive to his family ever since they were children so that they would become the powerful drug enforcers and hitmen seen in the present day.
200* TheFamilyThatSlaysTogether: The one redeeming quality about the Salamanca family is that they are all extremely loyal to each other, no matter what happens.
201* FamilyThemeNaming: At least three members of the family have their first names end with the letter "O" (Tuco, Marco and Lalo).
202* HowTheMightyHaveFallen: The Salamancas used to be one of the pillars of the Cartel, providing most of its muscle, before they started taking major hits during the events of Better Call Saul. By the time of Breaking Bad, while they're still powerful, they're a shadow of what they once were.
203* {{Hypocrite}}: For a family that lives by the motto that "family is all", they sure don't seem to respect the families of other people throughout the franchise. In ''Better Call Saul'', Hector bullies Nacho Varga into using his father's business as a front for his illegal activities, despite the man never being staunchly against crime in all forms. Tuco also ignores Walt's concern for his family in ''Breaking Bad'', telling him that he should just get another one when they go into Mexico together.
204* MachoLatino: They are fixated with putting up a manly and intimidating Latin image, given their recurring obsession with huevos, respecting their rivals through a show of strength, aggressiveness in the cartel business and [[PoliticallyIncorrectVillain disdain towards homosexuality]], especially regarding Gus Fring's suspected relationship with Max Arciniega.
205* ThickerThanWater: Even when at their absolute worst, the Salamancas are always there for each other. When Hector has his stroke and becomes disabled in ''Better Call Saul'', Lalo immediately drops everything to help take over the family business. Later down the line, Leonel and Marco immediately seek retribution towards Walter White and later Hank Schrader for their involvement in their cousin Tuco's death.
206* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: Gonzo is said to be Tuco's brother-in-law, so Tuco definitely has an unnamed sister who is married to Gonzo. Other than that, nothing is known about this character and whether she's spared from Gus' vendetta or not is unclear.
207[[/folder]]
208
209!!!Dons
210[[folder:Hector]]
211!!Hector Salamanca
212
213!!!'''Portrayed By:''' Creator/MarkMargolis
214!!!'''Appearances:''' ''Series/BreakingBad'' | ''Series/BetterCallSaul''
215
216[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tiosalamanca.jpg]]
217[[caption-width-right:250:''"La familia es todo."'' [[note]]''"Family is all."''[[/note]]]]
218[[caption-width-right:250:[[labelnote:As he appeared in 1989]]https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/younghector.png ''"<My advice? Stick to chicken.>"''[[/labelnote]]]]
219[[caption-width-right:250:[[labelnote:As he appears in ''Better Call Saul'']]https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/s3_018_copy.jpg ''"How about the payment is you get to live?"''[[/labelnote]]]]
220
221->''"I am the cartel, and from now on you are my mule. You are going to bring my product north."''
222
223The Salamanca family's elderly uncle, an aggressive cartel member who once worked for Don Eladio. In the present day, Hector is confined to a wheelchair thanks to a stroke, and can only communicate with a bell.
224----
225* AbusiveParents: His actual children are unseen, but he was a parental figure to the Cousins – and presumably, Tuco and Lalo as well. In "[[Recap/BreakingBadS3E7OneMinute One Minute]]", he beats the "family is all" mantra into his nephews, Marco and Leonel by drowning the former and forcing the latter to save him. It's also worth noting that the (normally) sane Lalo attributes his rage and sadism to Hector's upbringing after [[spoiler:Bolsa chides him for killing Fred Whalen and burning down the [=TravelWire=].]]
226* AlasPoorVillain: Hector's a massive asshole and sadist on top of his chosen profession. Still, it still isn't hard to feel slightly bad for him over the course of both shows. [[spoiler:Gustavo dodges blame for Lalo's death by successfully convincing the cartel that Hector is crazy. Hector likely knows exactly what Gustavo has in mind but is unable to convince anyone he's right, not even the Cousins. Eladio even mocks him for his disability afterward, and he spends the rest of his life in a nursing home only able to watch as his family and life's work burns before his eyes while Gus happily rubs salt into his wounds. At that point, the absolute sadness and anger his face expresses right before he commits MurderSuicide on Gustavo kind of makes you feel sorry for him.]]
227* AppealToForce: Deconstructed; he follows the old gangsta modus operandi of being a blatant {{Jerkass}} as long as everybody around you fears you. Though in the end, it's implied to be the reason he's got such a lack of cash haul compared to Gus and Bolsa, since Hector doesn't have it in him to show any sense of cordiality or compromise.
228* AllForNothing:
229** In ''Better Call Saul'', the deal Hector made with Mike and then Gus in order to get Tuco out of prison quickly turns out to be rendered moot by Tuco starting a fight in prison and getting put into solitary confinement.
230** Similarly, his attempts to prevent Tuco from being poisoned by Walt and Jesse also are in vain, as the two of them are able to overpower and shoot Tuco when their backs are against the wall, with Hank Schrader finishing the job after he stumbles across what's going on after Walt and Jesse fleet the scene.
231* AnOfferYouCantRefuse: What he propositions Mike with, then Gus, with thousand-dollar deals so as to get Tuco out of prison.
232* AngryEyebrows: A result of his stroke. Due to his inability to communicate post-paralysis, anger is one of the few emotions that he can communicate. And when he shows these eyebrows, you know he is pissed. Three examples stand out:
233** When Nacho angrilly confesses that he swapped out Hector's heart medication, Hector flashes one of these so intense that he could have killed Nacho with his DeathGlare alone.
234** When Don Eladio dismisses Hector's accusations against Gus due to a lack of evidence, Hector combines this with his bell-ringing contorted in protest.
235** He spends the whole run of ''Breaking Bad'' refusing to look Gus in the eye, but when he finally does, he ''really'' makes it count.
236* ArchEnemy:
237** Hector's fierce rivalry with Gustavo Fring began after he shot Gus's partner Max in cold blood, and then forced Gustavo to ''look into the eyes'' of the corpse, all while telling him that [[TheyDiedBecauseOfYou Max's death was his fault and no one else's]]. Furthermore, Hector had never wanted Gustavo in the Cartel because of his racism towards South Americans, and has wanted to push him out ever since. In turn, Gustavo has wanted nothing but to extract his vengeance against Hector and his family, which he does over the course of many years through meticulous planning and currying good favor with Don Eladio. This only fuels Hector's hatred for Gustavo as he continues to steal his business and later cause the death of his entire family, all while he's unable to do anything about it thanks to his paralysis. It's no wonder that Hector is willing to form an EnemyMine with Heisenberg to finally destroy the man once and for all.
238** To Mike Ehrmantraut in ''Better Call Saul''. After Hector threatens his family due to a business deal gone wrong, Mike spends his time in the early seasons trying to get revenge on Hector, eventually coming into the employ of Gustavo Fring due to their mutual goals. That said, this is entirely one-sided as Hector never considered Mike to be that much of a threat, with Nacho even telling Mike that he ''forgot'' about him after he paid the man 50 thousand dollars. Mike himself eventually drops his vendetta against Hector over time, as he starts to become the ruthless ConsummateProfessional for Los Pollos Hermanos.
239** To Nacho Varga. Having been forced into committing terrible deeds while under his family's thumb, Nacho wants nothing more than to subdue Hector and escape from the Salamancas whenever possible. He goes to the point of directly causing Hector's stroke and subsequent paralysis by swapping his medication, something he's particularly proud of when he's at the end of his life. Of course, learning that Nacho had betrayed his family ''and'' caused his permanent disablement '''enrages''' Hector, with his hatred practically boiling over as Nacho recounts what he did. It's clear that Hector would've sadistically tortured the man to death had Nacho not killed himself instead, leaving him only able to spitefully shoot his corpse multiple times his only option for retribution.
240* AscendedExtra: While he wasn't exactly a minor character in ''Breaking Bad'', Hector nonetheless only appears sparingly throughout the show before he blows himself and Gustavo Fring to high heaven in the Season 4 finale. By contrast, he plays a much bigger role in ''Better Call Saul'', being a formidable opponent for Mike Ehrmantraut and Ignacio Varga.
241* AssholeVictim: A non-lethal variant in ''Better Call Saul''. While his stroke and subsequent fate is quite horrible, it still is hard to pity him given what a petty, cruel, and ruthless asshole he was.
242* AxCrazy: In flashbacks, he is revealed to have been a particularly sadistic member of the Juarez Cartel who possessed a [[MoralMyopia pronounced lack of empathy towards those outside the organization]] and was horribly abusive towards his own family ([[InsaneTrollLogic even while professing to value them above all things]]). In this manner, he served as [[EvilMentor the role model]] for his AxCrazy nephews, Tuco and the Twins.
243* BadBoss: He shouts at his underlings a lot and treats them with blatant contempt, as well as chastising Ximenez Lecerda for the crime of daring to say hello to Don Eladio.
244* BaitTheDog: Moments before his death, Gustavo again tries and fails to get Hector to look at him. He goes to inject Hector with poison, and Hector suddenly gives him a (weirdly) compassionate look, which stuns Gustavo. The glance turns into an expression of pure wrath, and Hector kills everyone in the room, including himself.
245* BaldOfEvil: Is mostly bald and one of the evilest characters featured on the show.
246* BattleTrophy: The service bell is a gory reminder of the time that he and Lalo burned down a hotel and tortured the manager. Most likely the hotel manager refused to pay them protection money.
247* BeardOfEvil: Has one while housing with Tuco, but is afterward cleanshaven for the rest of his screen time.
248* BeAsUnhelpfulAsPossible:
249** When brought into the station as a witness against Jesse following Tuco's death, he refuses to respond to any questions except those regarding the current location and date, and that was just to prove that he wasn't senile. He finishes his interrogation by shitting on the station floor. As Gomez points out, an "OG Latino gangbanger" would never help the feds.
250** Later, as part of his EnemyMine deal with Heisenberg, Hector contacts the DEA out of the blue to seemingly snitch on Gustavo Fring's whereabouts...only to instead ding out expletive language at them before promptly going back home. Hank's at least happy that he didn't shit on the floor again:
251-->'''Hank:''' Guess that's progress.
252* BestServedCold: Gustavo waits until Hector reawakens to cancel his physical therapy. Effectively trapping his conscious mind in a dumb, motionless body with only one working index finger. One finger ends up being all Hector needs to kill Gus.
253* BetterToDieThanBeKilled. Hector's wheelchair self-destructs and takes out his would-be executioners.
254* BigBadEnsemble: Along with [[spoiler:Chuck]] during Seasons 2 and 3 of ''Better Call Saul''. He is the BigBad for the storylines of Mike, Nacho, and Gustavo. What keeps him from being an ArcVillain like [[spoiler:Chuck]] is that he's the head of the Salamanca cartel with vast criminal connections and sets up many plot points for what's to come in ''Series/BreakingBad'', namely Mike and Gustavo meeting and eventually working together. What keeps him from being the sole BigBad of those seasons, however, is that [[spoiler:Chuck]] is still the main obstacle to Jimmy the protagonist who inadvertently molds him into Saul Goodman.
255* BigBadWannabe: A defining trait. Hector deludes himself into thinking he's a well-respected and widely-feared crime lord who deserves the utmost praise, even stating that [[IAmTheNoun he is the Cartel]]. Although he ''was'' pretty fearsome in his prime, in the present story, his fellow dons and superiors barely tolerate him, Gustavo and Mike constantly undermine and disrespect him, and even Nacho, despite being a street-level gangster, nearly kills him [[spoiler:and [[DyingDeclarationOfHate dies bragging about it]]]].
256* BringMyBrownPants: One of the most epic examples in TV history is when he decides to spite Hank and Gomez instead of ratting Jesse out. It is ''loud'' to say the least, [[PoopingWhereYouShouldnt and some of it makes it to the floor]].
257* BullyingADragon: His efforts to intimidate Mike by threatening his family, who he seems to think is relatively harmless for an ex-cop. This is especially true once Mike begins going well out of his way to try to see Hector either arrested or dead. He doesn't fare better with Gustavo, who already took Hector's spot as Eladio's favorite.
258* ButtMonkey: He doesn't have luck during ''Better Call Saul'''s third season. His nephew picks a fight with a guard in jail and promptly extends his jail sentence; his boss starts casting him aside in favor of Gustavo; and finally his second VillainousBreakdown leads to his heart attack in the finale.
259* CassandraTruth: His attempts at convincing Don Eladio that Gustavo plans to cut him out has the same energy as Chuck [=McGill=]'s "Chicanery" situation. Knowing his state in ''Breaking Bad'', this means he knew Gustavo was working against the Salamancas for years, and was unable to convince them or do anything about it. It goes a long way to explaining his depressed, unkempt appearance at the start of ''Breaking Bad''.
260* ChekhovsBoomerang: In ''Breaking Bad''. Hector seems to be a relatively unimportant character until he's brought back in Season 3, then plays an even bigger role in Season 4.
261* ChekhovsGunman: Who would have thought that Tuco's crippled uncle would ultimately be the one to take out Gus Fring?
262* TheConsigliere: To Don Eladio before being usurped by Gus.
263* CoolCar: He has this in common with Tuco, driving around in a 1960 Chevrolet Impala.
264* CreateYourOwnVillain: Hector never trusted Gustavo, and advised against letting him into the cartel. He also ''underestimated'' Gus, believing he was all hat and no cattle. Gustavo might have been a loyal soldier, but Eladio and Hector wanted to make sure he knew his place. So they executed his partner and recruited Gus by fiat. This would have dire consequences for the cartel.
265* CruelMercy: After wiping out the Juarez Cartel and all of Hector's remaining relatives, by all indications, Gus fully intended to let Hector live out the remainder of his life crippled and forced to stew in the knowledge that everything he'd built in his youth was now destroyed, and it wasn't until he believed that Hector was going to rat him out to the DEA that Gus finally moves to end his life once and for all.
266* DarkLordOnLifeSupport: Hector used to be a cruel murderer for the Cartel and, thanks to Nacho's medicine tampering, is now confined to a wheelchair and needs a nasal cannula.
267* DeathGlare: Gives an epic one to Gus before he activates the bomb that takes both of them out.
268* DefiantToTheEnd: Spends his final moments glaring at Gustavo Fring with all the [[DeathGlare hatred he can muster]] as he furiously dings his wired bell to blow himself and his mortal enemy up together.
269* DesecratingTheDead: He furiously shoots at [[spoiler:Nacho's]] corpse after he's dead from suicide, out of impotent rage for [[spoiler:causing the stroke that put him in a wheelchair in the first place.]]
270* TheDeterminator: In an impressive display of will and determination, he protects his nephew, Tuco, by shoving a [[PerfectPoison ricin-laden]] burrito intended for him off the dinner table despite being physically handicapped by a stroke. Similarly, he lifts himself up out of his wheelchair to void his bowels [[{{Troll}} just for the sake of crudely insulting his DEA captors]].
271* DirtyCoward: Whenever he's with the other Cartel bosses or his underlings, Hector has no problem shit-talking Don Eladio, pissing in his pool and letting his resentment of the man known. When he's actually in the man's presence though, Hector is quiet and submissive, clearly scared of disobeying him at any point.
272* DirtyOldMan: Implied, when Tuco assumes that Hector's anger at Walt and Jesse stems from their changing the channel from his "Mamitas". It's actually a ''major'' plot point in ''Better Call Saul''. [[spoiler:Once he's in early recovery from the stroke, it's not obvious to anyone whether or not Hector is mentally sound. It's not until Gustavo catches him perving on a nurse half his age that he realizes that his mind is crystal clear, so Gus has Hector's treatment canceled so that he'll never be able to physically recover.]]
273* DisabledSnarker: In "Face Off" when he goes to the DEA and attempts to have his nurse spell out ''SUCK MY DICK'' and ''FUCK YOU'' to Hank.
274* TheDragon: Was once this for Don Eladio, that is, until Eladio cut him off in favor of Gustavo's distribution system and Nacho induced a stroke in Hector.
275* TheDreaded:
276** During his tenure as a veteran enforcer for the Juarez Cartel. This is evidenced when he brazenly urinates in Don Eladio's pool in full view of Juan Bolsa and swiftly silences the latter's protest by daring him to snitch. Similarly, the impact he left on fearsome gangsters such as Tuco and the Salamanca Twins is so strong and pervasive that he can command their complete attention even in his infirmity with a simple "ding" of his bell.
277** In general, Hector and his family have quite a bad reputation according to people's reaction when his name gets brought up. Even the Los Pollos Hermanos employees who have never heard of him can tell rather quickly that he is bad news.
278* DudeWheresMyRespect: Insists on getting respect because the Cartel was, in his eyes, propped up by the Salamanca family and their money. Pushing this trait far enough will make him lose his shit.
279* DyingMomentOfAwesome. In "Face Off." Hector dies staring down the man who wiped out his entire family and triggering an explosive device that takes both of them and Tyrus out.
280* EndOfAnAge: Hector derisively referred to Gus as "Chicken Man" because he didn't understand the logic in laundering drugs through a front business. Hector's other weakness is that he resorted to bullying whenever he didn't get his way. Gus and Lalo, meanwhile, understood the value of not fully showing your hand.
281* EnemyMine: While Hector very much hates Walt and Jesse for their involvement in his nephew's death, he utterly ''loathes'' the DEA and Gustavo Fring even more. He refuses to rat Jesse out to the DEA in Season 2 due to his hatred of the DEA, simply to spite the organization, and he begrudgingly teams up with Heisenberg to kill Gustavo in the finale of Season 4.
282* EstablishingCharacterMoment:
283** ''Breaking Bad:'' In his first appearance, he's perceived as a catatonic invalid, and he does nothing to challenge this perception until it benefits him and he can protect his nephew in the process. It perfectly establishes that while his body may be crippled, his mind is as sharp as ever, and he'll do anything he can to protect his family, even if it means overpowering his own disability.
284** ''Better Call Saul:'' He's introduced by meeting Mike in the latter's favorite diner, and playing nice as a means of letting Mike's guard down. Hector then quickly reveals his relation to Tuco and makes an indirect threat towards Mike and his family unless Mike cooperates. Already we see that any amicability this man has is a farce and that he's willing to hurt people close to you to get what he wants.
285* EvenEvilHasLovedOnes:
286** There is a framed picture of him, a child, and two baby twins seen in the nursing home he is kept in during the finale of ''Breaking Bad'''s fourth season. The kids are Tuco and the Salamanca twins. A flashback reveals that the Salamancas believe "family is all," which is why they're all so AxCrazy about avenging each other. He even keeps Eladio's necklace on the photo frame. In fact, the first sign that Walt and Jesse get that he has mental faculties intact is when he knocks Tuco's burrito to the floor to stop them from poisoning him.
287** This is further proven in ''Better Call Saul'', where Hector tries to get Tuco out of jail, willing to send $50,000 to Mike to do so. He is also close to his other nephew Lalo, enjoying his presence and Lalo's gift, his trademark ringing bell. He is also clearly devastated after hearing about Lalo's death [[spoiler: and overjoyed when Lalo calls him to tell him that he's alive.]]
288* EvenEvilHasStandards:
289** He'll never help the feds. Ever. Not even if he was in jail for over a decade, or if it was to help avenge the death of his beloved nephew. Even for the guy who killed everybody he ever knew, he would rather blow himself up than turn him over to the DEA.
290** In ''Better Call Saul'', Hector appears sincerely angered that Tuco attacked Mike, citing it as showing disrespect to a seemingly harmless old man, even forcing his nephew to spend time in jail as punishment for his actions. Given that Hector is even older than Mike, this makes sense.
291* EvilCannotComprehendGood: Hector tells Nacho that he wants to use Manuel's upholstery shop as his new front. Nacho protests that his father is "not in the business". Hector's reply is that Nacho's father will make more money than he ever did selling car upholstery. He has no understanding at all that Manuel [[ScrewTheMoneyIHaveRules will not want to touch blood money for moral reasons.]]
292* EvilCripple: His stroke hasn't made him any less of an evil {{Jerkass}}.
293* EvilIsPetty:
294** Old school gangster Hector refuses to ever talk to the authorities under any circumstances, even if it's for a chance to avenge his murdered nephew. So what does he do when Hank and Gomez call him in to talk about Jesse? He lets out the ''loudest, wettest shit in television history'' right in the middle of the interrogation.
295** Similarly, as part of the plan to lure Gus to him, Hector calls in Merkert and Hank to pretend he'll talk. Instead, he has the orderlies spell out "Suck my dick" and "fuck you", at which point the two of them take their leave.
296** His manner of intimidating the customers and Los Pollos Hermanos employees ranges from blatantly lighting a cigar when it's against Los Pollos Hermanos' rules, helping himself to a drink for free, as well as scraping dog shit off the bottom of his shoe in Gustavo's office.
297* EvilMentor: To Tuco, Lalo, and the Salamanca Twins, Leonel and Marco, who are trained by him to be drug traffickers and [[ProfessionalKiller professional assassins]] respectively.
298* EvilOldFolks: Even before his stroke, he was a bad-tempered old man who resorted to violence if you tested his patience.
299* EvilSoundsRaspy: When he speaks English, Hector has a particularly raspy, snarling voice.
300* EvilUncle: He is the uncle of Tuco, Lalo, and The Cousins, and has a history of treating them very abusively (emphasis on the cousins) and is implied to be the reason why they have become the maniacs they are today.
301* FaceDeathWithDignity: Instead of letting Gus kill him, he chooses to stare his ArchEnemy in the eyes and blows himself up, dying on his own terms while taking Gus with him.
302* FakeDefector: In ''Breaking Bad'''s Season 4 finale, it looks like Hector is going to the DEA to give away information about Gus, drawing the latter's attention to him. But an old-school gangster-like Hector would never become an informant and was actually manipulating Fring, but the latter was too blinded by his vendetta to realize that.
303* FalseFlagOperation: On Walt's suggestion, he pretends that he's going to snitch to the DEA to cause Gus to finally kill him, drawing him into the range of Hector's wheelchair bomb to kill him for good.
304* FateWorseThanDeath: Subjected to one of these by Gustavo, whose partner he killed. After helping to make sure that he will never walk or talk again after his stroke, Gustavo shows up years later to see the crippled and decrepit Hector and describes in vivid detail the deaths of Cartel members he orchestrated or carried out, and taunts him about whether or not today will be the day that he finally kills him. Made even worse once Gus has killed every last one of his living family members.
305* FauxAffablyEvil: He's way more fastidious in ''Better Call Saul'' than we're used to in ''Breaking Bad''. He comes at Mike politely and tries bribing him into accepting the gun charge. Given how he's portrayed in ''Breaking Bad'' flashbacks, this is a surprise. He discards the mask after Mike turns his offer down, and as things continue getting progressively worse for him, his temper (which wasn't great to begin with) degrades. He later puts on a charming image with Nacho when he wants to use his father's store as a front, though Nacho's savvy enough about it. When meeting Manuel in person he tries invoking a grandfatherly, amiable demeanor, but Manuel, who's aware of his notoriety, clearly sees it only is skin deep, and treats him with contempt.
306* FatalFlaw: His EntitledBastard tendencies and inability to get with the times hold him back from being as skilled a crime lord as Gus Fring or Lalo Salamanca.
307* ForegoneConclusion: He'll get a stroke in ''Better Call Saul'' in order to be paralyzed for ''Breaking Bad''. In the Season 3 finale, he suffers a heart attack that results in his paralysis. "Something Stupid" reveals that he was initially on the road to recovery, but Gus persuaded the doctors to cancel therapy on him and keep him immobile.
308* TheFriendNobodyLikes: The scenes where he's with Eladio and Bolsa convey that the latter two don't really enjoy Hector's arrogant and belligerent personality. Bolsa finds himself in the stressful position of having to mediate for Hector and Gustavo which just compounds Hector's bad image. By "[[Recap/BetterCallSaulS3E9Fall Fall]]", the feeling is very much mutual.
309* GoodSmokingEvilSmoking: When coming to Los Pollos Hermanos to meet with Gus, he lights up a cigar inside the serving area in full contempt of the strict no-smoking policy, just to prove a point about the power he holds over Gus.
310* GoOutWithASmile: As he kills himself and Gus, he musters the most spiteful and manic grin known to man.
311* GreaterScopeVillain: He is implied to be the man chiefly responsible for transforming the Salamanca family into one of the leading forces within the Juarez Cartel. He also bears the most responsibility for molding Leonel, Marco, and Tuco into [[AxCrazy murderous, sadistic maniacs]], as well as transforming Gus into the man he would become due to killing Max.
312* GreenEyedMonster: He's quietly (but not subtly) furious when Bolsa and Gustavo gain Eladio's favor with their superior cash haul.
313* HandicappedBadass: Even with his debilitating stroke, Hector manages to be badass in his own way, such as the time he shat himself during Hank's interrogation of Jesse and two seasons later, snarking at them using the Nurse's laborious communication system. He ultimately blows himself up to kill both Gus and Tyrus with his bell, ending the cycle of revenge between Gus Fring and the Salamancas/Juárez Cartel.
314* HairTriggerTemper: Not as bad as with Tuco, but he can explode at the slightest reason.
315* HateSink: Ruthless cartel boss aside, Hector is a pretty unlikable asshole who spends most of his screen time jerking around on others, throwing petty tantrums, and lording himself over others unless he's under the presence of a higher power. His being paralyzed does little, if anything, to deter his general nastiness.
316* HumiliationConga: This is his story arc over the time span of ''Series/BreakingBad'' and ''Series/BetterCallSaul'', as his position in the Cartel’s hierarchy progressively changes for the worst over time. His first appearances in chronological order are in the ''Breaking Bad'' episodes "One Minute" and "Hermanos", where he is shown pissing into Don Eladio's pool (even daring Bolsa to tell it to the boss) and discussing over the phone the opportunity of conducting business with Gus Fring. So he is clearly unafraid of, and even defiant to, the ‘'jefe’’. He is also one of the heads of the Cartel, consulted about any important business decisions. By his next appearance in the flashback of the ''Better Call Saul'' episode "Sabrosito", his relationship with Eladio and Bolsa has subtly changed: he is unusually subdued and humble and the boss has no qualms about belittling and mocking him in front of one of his subordinates, while Bolsa has clearly become Eladio's right-hand man. Come the beginning of ''Better Call Saul'', and while his family still controls a sizable part of the cross-border drug trafficking and he is still feared, he is seen as a relic of a bygone era and Don Eladio does not even bother anymore to deal with him in person, sending his orders through Bolsa instead. At the end of the series he is a mute cripple confined to a wheelchair, Don Eladio treats him with the fleeting respect one would reserve to a once brilliant but now senile relative, and his family’s territory is unceremoniously reduced to the benefit of the man he hates most, Gustavo Fring.
317* HonorBeforeReason:
318** Has the opportunity to have Jesse dead to rights when it came to implicating him to the DEA. The only problem is Hector refuses to be a rat, even for someone partially responsible for the death of his nephew. Justified since he has the Cousins for settling this type of problem.
319** This also extends to Gus and continues even in the fourth season, when his entire family is dead and the cartel is destroyed. Completely severed from the high-level crime he was deeply entrenched in, he is in a unique position to turn the DEA on his hated enemy, but ''even then'' he keeps his mouth shut.
320* HowTheMightyHaveFallen: Though once a powerful enforcer of a drug cartel out in Mexico, he now is little more than a wheelchair-bound old man incapable of speaking.
321* {{Hypocrite}}:
322** Pushes the family values side of things but has no problem not so subtly trying to charm Nacho into getting his father involved in the drug business. Either that or he [[ObliviouslyEvil genuinely]] thinks that it's in Nacho's interest.
323** In a flashback to his younger days, Hector takes a call from Eladio and expresses his lack of regard for Gustavo Fring, dismissing him and all "South Americans" as "filthy" and immoral. As soon as he hangs up, he waterboards one of his nephews with an ice chest.
324** When meeting Mike Ehrmantraut for the first time, Hector notes that Tuco's disrespectful attitude is worthy of letting him sit in jail for at least six months. This is coming from a man who refuses to treat anyone who isn't part of his family with respect, even shit-talking his own boss behind his back when things aren't going his way.
325* IAmTheNoun: Hector shows the depths of his arrogance when he declares to ''be'' the Cartel, showing no consideration for how Eladio and Bolsa might feel... and react.
326* IronicHell: Of sorts: the reason Gustavo keeps demanding that Hector looks at him is in retaliation for Hector shooting Gustavo's partner Max and forcing him to stare into his dead lover's eyes.
327* ItsAllAboutMe: Eladio already has Gustavo as a distributor in New Mexico and Hector brings way less money than him, but Hector wants to do his own racket there and even fashioned himself as ''the'' Cartel. He even wants to take over Nacho's dad's store only because he doesn't have full control over Los Pollos Hermanos and wants ''his'' front to himself. His VillainousBreakdown in "Lantern" stems primarily from the fact that Hector feels that ''he'''s the most important part of he Cartel, and is pissed that he isn't getting what he thinks he's owed.
328* ItsPersonalWithTheDragon: From the perspective for the Cartel as a whole, he's merely one of Eladio's CoDragons and primarily oversees the muscle and distribution of their drugs, but to Nacho, Mike and Gus, he's the main antagonist of their storylines and the one whose presence eventually forces their paths to intersect. This dynamic continues even after [[spoiler:his stroke at the end of Season 3 and subsequent disability thereafter]], as Lalo Salamanca steps in to replace his position, with his deep bond with Hector, and [[GeniusBruiser competence]] compared to the rest of his family, making it clear that he's basically Hector's Dragon in turn. Lalo actually turns out to be an [[SuperiorSuccessor even greater headache]] for the trio to deal with than Hector ever was.
329* {{Jerkass}}: Hector isn't just a murderous gangster, he's also a truly colossal prick. He is, after all, a petty, PoliticallyIncorrectVillain. Even without his abusive parenting and stone-cold personality, the dude pisses in his boss' pool ForTheEvulz and threatens Mike's granddaughter.
330* KnowWhenToFoldEm: While he still resents him for his favoritism toward Bolsa and Gustavo, even Hector fears Don Eladio and knows better than of angering or disrespecting him to his face, becoming unusually quiet and submissive and never acting openly dickish in Eladio's presence. That said, Hector is more than willing to insult Eladio when the guy isn't actually around, as he makes clear to Bolsa:
331-->'''Hector:''' The boss...can '''''suck''''' me!
332* LackOfEmpathy: He sips his coffee and reads his newspaper while Domingo gets the shit beaten out of him by Nacho like it's a regular morning.
333* LaserGuidedKarma: Everything bad that happens in Hector's life throughout the series is because of his own doing.
334** His BadBoss tendencies and desire to force Nacho's father into becoming an accomplice of his drug operations or die if he refuses to backfire hard on him, with Nacho switching his heart medicine with sugar pills in order to kill him and save his father, leading to his near-death experience and leaving him stuck in a wheelchair for the rest of his life.
335** Earlier in Gustavo's life, Hector shot his partner Max in the back of the head, and forces the devastated young man to look into his cold, dead eyes as he bleeds into Don Eladio's pool. Gustavo gets back at him years later by destroying the cartel he worked so hard to build, and causes the deaths of what remains of his family, all while he's trapped in his wheelchair and unable to do anything about it.
336* LastOfHisKind: After Gus' murder of Don Eladio and company, he is the last surviving member of the Salamanca family and the Juarez Cartel.
337* LeaveNoWitnesses: After Mike attacks one of his trucks, Hector executes both a witness who stumbled upon it and the driver of the truck.
338* LudicrousGibs: Although it's kept mostly off-screen, his body presumably explodes into bloody pieces when he blows himself up to kill Gus and Tyrus. All that's left of Hector after the fact are the remains of his wheelchair and a dismembered leg on the ground.
339* MeaningfulName: "Hector" means "to restrain" in Greek. He is restrained in a wheelchair with an oxygen tank. He also does a good job of restraining Walt and Jesse when they are held captive by Tuco.
340* MutualKill: He ultimately takes out Gustavo Fring in a suicide bombing with the help of Heisenberg.
341* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: When Gus tells him that Jesse, the junkie he refused to rat out to the DEA to protect his code, later went on to serve him and kill his grandson, Hector has this expression on his face followed by a silent VillainousBreakdown.
342* NotEnoughToBury: In the aftermath of [[spoiler:his MurderSuicide by pipe bomb, all that's left of Hector is the blasted remains of his wheelchair (and a severed leg which might belong to him or Tyrus)]].
343* ObfuscatingDisability: Played with. When Walt and Jesse see that he's paralyzed, they assume he's not mentally cognizant and quietly discusses their scheme right in front of him. Hector does nothing to challenge their perception until he knocks Tuco's ricin-laced burrito off the table, whereupon they realize he's much craftier than he appears.
344* OnceForYesTwiceForNo: He can only communicate with a bell. Once for yes, nothing for no.
345* OOCIsSeriousBusiness:
346** The first sign that Walt and Jesse get that he isn't completely senile is when he forces himself to knock Tuco's burrito to the floor, showing that he realized they had poisoned him. This moment also makes Tuco realize that they had tried to do something to him.
347** After Gustavo Fring decides to pay his respects to Hector for what appears to be the loss of his nephew Lalo, Hector decides to look at Gustavo straight in the eyes and smugly smile at him, something Gustavo knows he would ''never'' do under normal circumstances. This tips him off that Lalo is in fact still alive and plotting to kill him. It's worth noting that after Lalo dies for real, Hector blatantly refuses to make eye contact with Gustavo again until the moment comes where he's able to kill him.
348** While he resents and often insults Don Eladio behind his back, Hector becomes quiet and submissive when Eladio is present, never acting dickish or disrespectful to Eladio's face and not even defending himself when humiliated by his boss, showing how even he is terrified by the cartel leader. Also when Lalo decides to go directly after Gus, after the assassination attempt on his life, Hector, who's very reckless and StupidEvil, does rein him in, advising him to find proof of Gus' betrayal beforehand to not risk Don Eladio's wrath for eliminating a huge source of money.
349* OutlivingOnesOffspring: Given that Gus mentions that Hector's grandson Joaquin was his last living relative and with him dead, the Salamanca name will die with Hector, this suggests that Hector outlived his own children.
350* OutOfFocus: After being a major physical presence in the earlier seasons of ''Better Call Saul'', Hector barely appears after his stroke. His influence is still felt throughout the show but Lalo overtakes his role as the BigBad.
351* ParentalFavoritism: Well, Uncle Favoritism but he clearly acts as a paternal figure to all his nephews and out of them, he seems to have the most affection for Lalo. This likely stems from the fact Lalo is the most competent and dangerous of the four.
352* PetTheDog: While he's primarily doing it to try to manipulate the man into doing what he wants, Hector is genuinely apologetic to Mike about Tuco's beatdown towards him, noting that he intends to keep Tuco in jail for at least six months for not showing respect to his elders.
353* PoliticallyIncorrectVillain: In a flashback in "One Minute", he derides Gus as a "dirty South American". Then, in a flashback in "[[Recap/BreakingBadS4E8Hermanos Hermanos]]", he manages to direct several disrespectful barbs at Gus and Max in the space of several minutes -- namely targeting their races and sexualities. He also makes jibes against Gustavo's presumed relationship with Max by calling Los Pollos Hermanos "Los ''Culos'' Hermanos".
354* PragmaticVillainy: Hector tends to veer into StupidEvil but he does have moments of restraint:
355** Hector forces Tuco to serve a least at little bit of jail time for attacking Mike, because attacking an elder in broad daylight over a minor slight was a ''very'' stupid thing for Tuco to do, and certainly isn't acceptable behavior for someone involved in drug smuggling.
356** After Lalo reveals his survival to him, and that Gus is the one behind the assassination attempt on his life, and expresses his wish to go directly after Gus, Hector does tell him to wait. He then communicates to Lalo that he should get proofs of Gus' involvement and betrayal of the cartel, knowing the risks of Lalo facing Don Eladio's wrath, should he kill Gus without a good enough justification.
357* ProfessionalKiller: He was this back in his Cartel days, personally shooting Gus Fring's lover Max.
358* ProperlyParanoid: Hector is correct when he discusses that Gustavo is not to be trusted due to their first interaction (where Hector killed Max) and is waiting for a golden opportunity to get revenge, but Eladio and Bolsa are deaf to Hector's warnings due to the sheer amount of money Gustavo brings. Lalo is the only one who believes him [[spoiler:but he gets killed by Gustavo before he managed to expose him, and the Cartel only realizes this once it's literally too late for them.]]
359* PsychopathicManchild: Despite being elderly and attempting to pass himself off as a suave gentlemen when not actively killing people or dealing with drug lords, Hector Salamanca isn't nearly as composed as he'd like others to believe. With his lording over others, pettiness, disrespectful attitude, smug demeanor and having tantrums over things not going his way, Hector instead comes across a petulant child most of the time. Even his insistence of having controlling his own front by taking over Nacho's father's store, despite being under orders to use Gus's distribution network is similar to a spoiled child not wanting to share his toys.
360* RetiredMonster: By circumstance rather than choice.
361* RiseAndFallGangsterArc: An interesting example in that we see more of the "fall" than the "rise". Back in [[TheEighties the late 80s]], Hector Salamanca was a ruthless killer and one of the most powerful members of the Juarez Cartel, being respected by both Eladio and Bolsa, and had a powerful family that was willing to do anything for him and their business. By the time of the TurnOfTheMillennium however, Hector's prestige and performance had taken a big hit, with Eladio preferring Gustavo Fring's new more practical method of shipping drugs across the country with Hector still stuck in his old ways. In his desperation to gain back his feared reputation, Hector ends up becoming permanently disabled, all but losing his position within the Cartel, and being unable to do anything as his hated rival destroys his business and his family as he spends the rest of his days in a nursing home.
362* SavedByCanon: Hector will survive ''Better Call Saul'' only to die years later in a suicide bombing as revenge for the deaths of his family.
363* SharpDressedMan: He looks very dapper when entering Los Pollos Hermanos.
364* SmarterThanYouLook: Though his pride and sadism frequently sabotage him, there's a reason Hector was a high ranking member in the cartel for decades, surviving in the criminal underworld and being a capable earner for Eladio even if he was far inferior to Gus's machine like ability to make money. Hector advised Lalo to get proof of Gus's betrayal before revealing his survival and after his stroke, occasionally played up his handicap to be underestimated, sabotaging Walt and Jesse's attempt to poison Tuco. Hector is a skilled crime lord, but is just overshadowed by the genius of Gus and his nephew Lalo.
365* SmugSnake: It's true that Hector is not a man to be crossed, but he vainly boasts that he "is the cartel" when in truth he's (admittedly influential enough) upper middle management at best.
366* StupidEvil:
367** He's not stupid all the time but his direct approach to dealing with Gustavo, Bolsa, and Eladio is unsubtle, crass, and suicidally disrespectful.
368** [[spoiler:After being told that he must keep Lalo's survival a secret, he instantly blows the lid by making peace with Gustavo Fring. It's an act so stupidly out of character that Gustavo knows immediately Lalo has to be alive. In fact, his smug smile and direct look at Gustavo in the eyes, indirectly tipping him off about Lalo's survival, is implied to be the reason behind his later refusal to ever look Gustavo in the eyes again during ''Breaking Bad'', as Gus's paranoia and preparations for Lalo's inevitable attempt on his life is ultimately what allowed him to triumph (for at least 5 years), and Hector is acutely aware he blew the best chance his family had of dealing with Gustavo out of his petty need to gloat against his enemy.]]
369* SuddenlySpeaking: Sorta. In all present-day scenes in ''Breaking Bad'', Hector's stroke had rendered him mute. ''Better Call Saul'' takes place before ''Breaking Bad'' and before Hector's stroke. So this is the first time we've seen Hector speak outside of flashbacks in either show and also the first time we've seen him speak in English (the two ''Breaking Bad'' flashbacks were in Spanish).
370* TheSpeechless: He's unable to speak due to his stroke. We only hear him speak in two flashbacks here, as well as in ''Series/BetterCallSaul''.
371* SuicideAttack: In the Season 4 finale, with the help of Walter, he lures Gus into a bombing in which both are killed.
372* TakingYouWithMe: He blows himself up so he can take Gus down with him.
373* TearsOfRemorse: While he doesn't actually cry, Hector gives Gustavo a brief look of regret and despair right as he's about to inject him, implying that he genuinely does regret what he did to Gustavo all those years ago. That said, his remorse is nothing compared to the utter fury in him for what he's done to his family and life's work, as his [[DeathGlare second]] [[DefiantToTheEnd look]] demonstrates.
374* ToughLove: Hector's way of educating his nephews may be brutal, but he genuinely loves them. Losing family members seems to be his biggest fear and is what Gus uses to torment him.
375* TrespassingToTalk: Hector intimidates the customers of Los Pollos Hermanos into leaving before basically taking over the place just so he can speak to Gus. He even sits in Gus's office chair and uses Gus's pen to scrape dog shit off his shoe...onto Gus's papers.
376* VillainousBreakdown:
377** After hearing that Tuco has landed himself in solitary with a greatly extended sentence for punching a guard and knifing someone, he has a violent fit that leaves him scrabbling for his pills, played as a tease for the stroke that will leave him paralyzed. After Juan Bolsa shows up to firmly remind Hector that he's under orders to use Gus's distribution network, Hector completely loses it and goes on an indignant, furious and near-suicidally disrespectful rant as to how their empire was "built with Salamanca blood," leading to his suffering a heart attack. He's practically on the verge of tears by the time the heart attack swoops in.
378--->'''Bolsa:''' It's what the boss wants.\
379'''Hector:''' [[BadBoss The boss]] can suck me!\
380'''Bolsa:''' I'd watch what I say if I were you.\
381'''Hector:''' [[ItsAllAboutMe Who you think you are? You should be kissing my ass right now! Me and my family? We built this whole business!]]\
382'''Bolsa:''' We all did. Together.\
383'''Hector:''' No, no! Salamanca did! Salamanca money! Salamanca blood!\
384'''Bolsa:''' You have to calm down.\
385'''Hector:''' That ''hacienda'', I paid for it! And you treat us like dogs!\
386'''Bolsa:''' Hector, this isn't personal--\
387'''Hector:''' It ''is!'' [[LastWords It is personal-!]]
388** He has a silent one, due to his condition, [[spoiler:when Nacho finally tells him that he's the one who's responsible for his condition, by switching his heart medicine with sugar pills and telling him what kind of man Hector truly is. Hector cannot say anything but his [[DeathGlare face and breath]] make it clear that he's full of murderous fury, and he uses one of the twins' guns to shoot Nacho's lifeless body after he killed himself]].
389** During his accusation of Gustavo Fring at the Cartel Meeting, he was smug and assured that Gus would be killed for secretly undermining the Cartel. Unfortunately for Hector, Lalo's actual death at the hands of Gus, the fact that he covered his tracks ''too'' well, and Fring's composure lead Don Eladio and Bolsa to respectfully dismiss Hector's accusations, to which he delves into a nonverbal YouHaveToBelieveMe rant by furiously ringing his bell.
390* VillainousValor: Hector may be an asshole who's BullyingADragon, but he stands on equal footing with Mike when the two of them have their showdown, displaying no fear and remaining completely [[NervesOfSteel stoic]] regarding their encounter possibly turning fatal. He also won't hide his resentment and will be honest about it, unlike Bolsa and Gus, suicidal as it is. Downplayed in that he's a DirtyCoward when in comes to not saying anything bad to Eladio's face.
391* VillainsNeverLie: He never lies, according to Tuco. Notably, in his interviews with the DEA, he never really ''lies'' to them; he only remains silent, insults them, and shits himself. This is what separates him from [[ManipulativeBastard Gus]] in his eyes, as he's honest about his resentment and doesn't hide it like the latter does.
392* VillainRespect: His second negotiation with Mike in order for him to take ownership of the gun to help Tuco's situation. When Hector says Mike's payment is his life, and the fact that with one word, he can have the twins kill his family, Mike is still holding his ground about needing the $50,000. In the end, Hector can't help but admire such guts Mike displayed and agreed to the $50,000.
393* WorthyOpponent: He agrees to pay Mike ten times what he originally offered. Anybody else probably would have been shot in the head, but Hector appreciates a man with the giant balls to face him without fear. The fact that Mike completely schooled the enforcers he sent probably had something to do with it too. [[spoiler:(He might, however, [[UnderestimatingBadassery still have underestimated the headache Mike could well give him]] despite the respect.)]]
394* WouldHurtAChild: He drowns Marco almost to death in a childhood flashback, and ''Better Call Saul'' shows him using the Cousins to threaten to kill Mike's granddaughter.
395* YouHaveFailedMe: He tends to do this with his employees. Eladio even warns poor Ximenez that Hector doesn't do second chances. Sure enough, he has Ximenez killed by The Cousins after Mike holds him up.
396[[/folder]]
397
398[[folder:Lalo]]
399See [[Characters/BetterCallSaulCartel here]].
400[[/folder]]
401
402!!!Others
403[[folder:Tuco]]
404!!Tuco Salamanca
405[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/TucoSalamanca_4732.jpg]]
406[[caption-width-right:300:''"Nobody moves crystal in the South Valley but me, bitch!"'']]
407!!!'''Portrayed By:''' Creator/RaymondCruz
408!!!'''Appearances:''' ''Series/BreakingBad'' | ''Series/BetterCallSaul''
409
410->''"I like doing business with a family man. There's always a lot of collateral."''
411
412A drug distributor in Albuquerque's South Valley who initially acts as Walt and Jesse's first "boss". Freshly released from prison after doing a stint for [[Recap/BetterCallSaulS2E4GlovesOff assaulting Mike Ehrmantraut in a road rage incident,]] Tuco is an unstable, paranoid man who snorts meth all day. At first Walter (and reluctantly Jesse) want to be Tuco's main supplier, but they change their minds when they witness Tuco beating one of his subordinates to death over a minor misunderstanding. And by "minor misunderstanding," [[InsaneTrollLogic we mean being supportive.]]
413----
414* ArcVillain: For the first two seasons of both shows.
415** Tuco serves as the preeminent threat to Walt and Jesse in ''Breaking Bad'', from his introduction towards the end of the first season until his death at the beginning of Season 2. Subsequently, his organization ceases to pose a direct threat to the series' protagonists until more than a season later (by which time Gustavo Fring has all but eclipsed them as the story's foremost antagonist).
416** In ''Better Call Saul'', Tuco serves as Jimmy [=McGill=]'s first encounter with the Juarez Cartel after a scam gone wrong, with him having to negotiate with the man to prevent him and the people he's working with from being killed at his hands. Later in Season 2, Nacho and Mike come up with a plan to get Tuco incarcerated in prison due to his unstable behavior, taking him out of the game for the rest of the show.
417* AssholeVictim: It's outright cathartic when Jesse and Walt get payback on Tuco, and even more when Hank kills him, considering how much of a psychotic prick he was.
418* AxCrazy: It's impossible to overstate just how murderously insane Tuco is. He snorts meth off a Bowie knife right out of the bag, [[NoIndoorVoice he's almost always screaming]], and is no problem with beating someone to death just for talking out of turn. He also has all kinds of gruesome fates planned for the skateboarders who insulted his Abuelita, and even gets threatening towards No-Doze for making a little comment against ''Jimmy''. After he dies, being "another Tuco" is shorthand between Walt and Jesse for someone possibly being AxCrazy.
419* BadBoss: His underlings are terrified of him and for good reason. Tuco's mental instability and rampant drug use mean he can and will kill you for the most spurious of reasons, most of which exist only within the [[InsaneTrollLogic twisted logic]] of his own head. He kills No-Doze for saying something ''[[MakesJustAsMuchSenseInContext supportive]]''.
420-->'''Jesse:''' Did you not see him beat a dude to death for, like, ''nothing?''
421* BadPeopleAbuseAnimals: He's shown spending his free time waiting for his cousins to arrive firing out the window at cows with his assault rifle. Walt and Jesse are even more horrified of him than they already were.
422* BerserkButton: People helping him without being asked to, because it makes him feel like they think he's too stupid to do things without their help. During his first appearance, he snaps at Skinny Pete for the heinous crime of vouching for him in front of Jesse without being asked to. Later, He kills No-Doze for simply speaking out in his support for much of the same reason.
423-->'''Tuco:''' You're just speaking for me, like I ain't got the goddam sense to speak for myself! Is that it?
424* BigBad: Of season 1. Although Krazy-8 was the first antagonist in the series, in the end, he was just a small-time thug. Contrasting, Tuco is the first big shot to introduce the Cartels and represents a far more dangerous threat to Walt.
425* BloodKnight: Getting put into checkmate via a police audience? [[VillainRespect No reason to stop punching with an appreciative smile]]. Hector even notes that Tuco aspires to be a boxer, hence his hot-headedness.
426* BoomHeadshot: Hank finally takes him out with a well-aimed shot to the forehead.
427* TheBrute: Of the Salamanca family. He's an important enforcer, but that's the limit of his talents. He's not as skilled a ProfessionalKiller as his twin cousins, and certainly not as clever as Lalo or Hector.
428* BunnyEarsLawyer: Despite being [[AxCrazy a hollering, red-faced lunatic]], he is nonetheless one of the Cartel's most reliable and trusted enforcers according to Juan Bolsa. It seems likely his terrifying reputation kept everyone in line and eager to please.
429* ChronicVillainy: He can't even behave when in jail on a fairly short sentence that only requires good behavior.
430* CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass: Tuco doesn't think at all. He still manages to engage in a gunfight with Hank after being hit in the head with a rock, shot at close range, and kicked into a ditch.
431* {{Cloudcuckoolander}}: He has shades of this, notably when he [[ItAmusedMe brutally pummels one of his thugs for his own sadistic gratification]] and then is irrationally furious when the man dies as a result. The same goes for the time he beat up Mike over a (staged) fender bender.
432* CoolCar: Drives a 1970 Pontiac Tempest GT-37.
433* ComicallyMissingThePoint: Jimmy's entire negotiation with him to spare the skateboarders in ''Better Call Saul'' is a long, LONG string of Tuco taking small tidbits in the other man's words and twisting them into something they...really aren't.
434-->'''Jimmy:''' Ever heard of the Code of Hammurabi? Eye for an eye?\
435'''Tuco:''' Eye for an eye...you want me to blind them!\
436...\
437'''Jimmy:''' See, I'm suggesting you make the punishment fit the crime.\
438'''Tuco:''' "Punishment fit the crime." Colombian neckties! I cut their throats, and pull their lying tongues out through the slits. Biznatch!
439* DeadpanSnarker: Usually overshadowed by his AxCrazy LargeHam tendencies but he snarks at Walt's choice of meeting him in an abandoned car park asking if they closed the mall.
440* TheDeterminator: After being critically wounded by a gunshot from Jesse, he engages in a pitched gunfight with Hank, and holds his own for a couple of volleys before being killed.
441* DiscOneFinalBoss: Tuco was planned to last longer, but at the actor's request, he ends up dead early in Season 2, a victim of his own impulsive decisions.
442* DontYouDarePityMe: {{Deconstructed|trope}} and PlayedForHorror. Tuco ''really'' hates the idea that he isn't capable or needs support from others (besides his family and certain close ones), and that can involve his own ''allies'' if they were to act "too" supportive. At his best, Tuco would give a calm but stern warning to cut it out, as seen with No-Doze in ''Better Call Saul'', and at his worst (when he's hopped up on meth), he'll ''beat them to near-death'' like with No-Doze in the first SeasonFinale of ''Breaking Bad''.
443* TheDreaded: While not as powerful as Gustavo Fring or as industrious as his cousin Lalo, Tuco's violent and unstable personality still leaves him a force to be reckoned with. It certainly says something that even ''Don Eladio'' is wary of him.
444* DisproportionateRetribution:
445** Early in ''Better Call Saul'', Tuco plans on brutally executing the Lindholm twins for insulting his grandmother. Jimmy has to talk him down so that he ''only'' breaks one of each of their legs.
446** He also attacks Mike for "accidentally" sideswiping his car (a gambit set up by Mike and Nacho to get Tuco out of the way without killing him). Although Mike did grab him and knock his gun away before he started seriously beating on Mike that's like beating someone for defending himself from a mugger.
447* DramaticIrony: He's the most incompetent of the Salamancas, even when taking into Hector's paralysis into account, and seems to be the only one who doesn't have any animosity towards Gus Fring. Yet, his death ends up playing a big role in Gus' eventual death.
448* DrugsAreBad: Though he's frighteningly erratic at the best of times, after some meth, he typically becomes sadistically violent. He once killed a man named Dog Paulsen by shooting him point-blank with a shotgun, while hopping up on a peanut butter crank.
449* EnfantTerrible: In his childhood, if the family photograph in "Face Off" is anything to go by. The picture depicts him standing casually, but glowering at the camera.
450* EtTuBrute: He's on the verge of tears upon realizing that his brother-in-law Gonzo might have betrayed him.
451* ExtremelyProtectiveChild: He tries to torture Jimmy and the two skaters for trying to scam his grandmother, and it takes both of Jimmy and Nacho's combined efforts to talk him out of it (although the skaters still get a broken leg each for insulting her earlier).
452* EvenEvilHasLovedOnes:
453** Despite being an awful person, he still gladly takes care of his elderly uncle, who apparently beat the "family is all" mantra into all the young Salamancas. He also notably becomes extremely distressed when he thinks that Walt or Jesse interfered with Hector in some way.
454** His love for his grandmother in ''Better Call Saul'' is even more genuine (especially when compared to his fear of Hector at the time), and he tries to hide his criminal activities from her. Insulting her in any way will either get you a painful death or some broken legs.
455** In his own words, Tuco loves Gonzo like his blood brother. Most notably, Tuco never mistreats Gonzo as he does No-Doze. The possibility that Gonzo might have turned rat hurts him deeply.
456** According to Nacho, Tuco really liked Dog Paulsen and regretted killing him after becoming sober from taking a whiff of the peanut butter crank.
457* EvenEvilHasStandards: While Tuco obviously doesn't tolerate disrespect towards him and his family, he won't take kindly to people kissing his ass or helping him ''too'' much, as he thinks it makes him look weak and stupid.
458* EvilIsHammy: He is so horrifyingly AxCrazy and proudly shows it off in every single scene he is in.
459* EvilIsPetty: He literally beats his subordinate to death for simply reminding Walter to remember to only work for Tuco, because he found this disrespectful... or he just wanted an excuse to become violent.
460* FatalFlaw:
461** [[HairTriggerTemper Wrath]]. He has a very, ''very'' short fuse, and would quickly resort to a NoHoldsBarredBeatdown towards anyone he feels has disrespected him or his family. On one hand, this makes him rather predictable, but at the same, all the more terrifying by the unpredictability of ''what'' will set him off. His unpredictable anger and violence issues are what drove Walt and Jesse to poison him after witnessing him beat No-Doze to death for over "nothing", and when they were making the ricin, Gonzo's accidental death from trying to give a proper burial for No-Doze causes the cops to find the location of Tuco's operation and nearly arrested him again.
462** His [[GettingHighOnTheirOwnSupply drug addiction]] serves as another flaw. It makes his bad temper and mood swings ''worse'' and guarantees a fatal consequence on ''anyone'', besides his own family, or a one-way trip to the hospital ''at best''. In ''Better Call Saul'', Nacho mentioned to Mike that Tuco shot and killed his supplier Dog under the pretense of treachery while all hopping up on a "peanut butter crank" (i.e. meth), and in ''Breaking Bad'' he brutally beats No-Doze to the point that the latter died soon after taking a whiff of Walt's Blue Sky meth. On the flip side, Walt and Jesse can take advantage of Tuco's drug addiction by lacing the Blue Sky meth with ricin and giving a half-ass sales pitch to Tuco that it gets the user insanely high than ever. If wasn't for outside interference, such as Jesse overselling it by mentioning "Chili Powder" as the secret ingredient (which Tuco hates) and Hector pushing the ricin-laced burrito off the table, Tuco's addiction would have done him in rather than getting killed by Hank.
463* FirstEpisodeTwist: Sure, he shows up very early in the show and it ''is'' a prequel, but the revelation that ''Tuco'' was the grandson of the skateboarders' scam victim was a large surprise for those who've seen ''Breaking Bad'' and didn't expect his actor to reprise the role. His appearance also marks where the show begins to shift towards the dramatic.
464* FreudianExcuse: Possibly. Bolsa mentions that Hector instructed him in the drug cartel business and treated him like a son. Judging by the glimpse of Hector's shockingly brutal parenting methods in "Sunset" coupled with Tuco's glaringly apparent signs of mental illness, it is heavily implied that the time Tuco spent with his uncle [[SanitySlippage left him extremely traumatized]].
465* TheFriendNobodyLikes: While Hector and his family do love him, the same cannot be said for his enforcers and dealers, who clearly fear him more than they respect him. His best friend at the time Nacho quickly turns on him after he starts losing it, and even ''Eladio'' considers him too insane to be around.
466* GettingHighOnTheirOwnSupply: Part of what makes him so dangerous is that he is constantly snorting the very meth that he's supposed to sell or peddle, making his already pretty bad temper even worse.
467* HairTriggerTemper: Tuco is constantly one broken shoelace away from attacking whoever's at hand. He dishes out {{No Holds Barred Beatdown}}s like candy to his victims including Mike, Jesse, and No-Doze. Nacho even puts a hit on him partly because he is sick of his boss's kill-happy attitude. Hell, "continue punching the insulter even though the police have boxed me in"? One hell of a temper, dude.
468* HandCannon: In ''Better Call Saul'' he usually carries a snubnose revolver chambered to ''.454 Casull''.
469* HiddenDepths: Tuco is frequently shown cooking (food, that is) whenever he happens to have some downtime, and he is clearly quite passionate about it; it is pretty much the only time where he genuinely seems to just relax, let his guard down, and enjoy himself. Seeing how it is a task that takes some concentration and planning ahead and is something associated with people with a nurturing personality, this hobby seems quite a bit at odds with the impulsive, violent, and mentally unstable drug lord persona he projects to the outside world.
470* HisOwnWorstEnemy: Tuco's insanity, hot temper, ultraviolence, and drug addiction are his worst enemies in the line of Cartel work, more than it's considered an advantage by keeping his underlings in line. He cannot think and plan for any consequences that would arise from his actions, and any potential allies he has will quickly see him as a workplace hazard and would plan his downfall. If left to his own devices, Tuco would find himself either in jail swiftly with an extended sentence by picking fights, losing his base of operations and his gang to the DEA, or potentially getting poisoned by Walt and Jesse before finally kicking the bucket at the hands of Hank.
471* ImperialStormtrooperMarksmanshipAcademy: He unloads an entire M4 magazine at Hank Schrader and doesn't hit him once. Meanwhile, Hank manages to shoot him in the head with a pistol [[CombatPragmatist while he was reloading]]. Justified because Tuco had a severe gunshot wound to the abdomen, and was probably high on drugs as well. He was also blazing away on fully automatic from the hip while jerking around, while Hank actually crouched and used his gun's sights. No surprise that he hit nothing but air.
472* InsaneTrollLogic:
473** He somehow concludes that Gonzo was a DEA informant with no other evidence beyond the fact Gonzo has been acting "pouty" over the death of No-Doze and hasn't been able to get in contact with him for two days.
474** Earlier on when No-Doze tells Walt and Jesse "Don't forget who you work for." -- a statement that would sound like mere emphasis or supportiveness to any saner mind -- Tuco gets [[TranquilFury unusually stern]], asking No-Doze why he felt the need to say that, saying that he was implying the two were stupid. When No-Doze denies this as tactfully as he can, Tuco concludes that No-Doze is implying that ''Tuco'' is stupid, and [[NoHoldsBarredBeatdown reacts accordingly]]. Jesse even lampshades this to Walt to emphasize how insane Tuco is to beat someone to death for over "nothing"[[note]]Technically speaking, Tuco ''did'' have a reason...[[EvilIsPetty just the most convoluted and pettiest one]] [[ItMakesSenseInContext could make with a twisted mind like his]][[/note]].
475** In ''Better Call Saul'', Tuco somehow concludes that the term "eye for an eye" means "blind someone". Jimmy is not impressed.
476* {{Irony}}: Despite being the most outwardly vicious and AxCrazy of the Salamancas, we only ever see him kill one person on-screen, fewer than even the mostly wheelchair-bound Hector.
477* {{Jerkass}}: He's aggressive, violent, and extremely confrontational (especially if he's on meth). There are times when there's absolutely nothing you can say to save yourself.
478* KnightOfCerebus:
479** The first couple of episodes had BlackComedy and the Jesse/Walt OddCouple, but the Tuco arc was very dark and dramatic in comparison. Things became more humorous after his death but were still darker than in Season 1.
480** It's even more prevalent on ''Better Call Saul'', as the show was pretty light-hearted in the beginning until he shows up and nearly kills Jimmy and two skateboarders who had attempted to scam his grandmother.
481* LargeHam:
482** In direct contrast to the other, more understated villains in ''Breaking Bad'', Tuco screams, postures, boasts, and goes off the rails. He even lets out a [[EvilLaugh dramatically sinister-sounding laugh]] when he finds a condom in Jesse's wallet in "Grilled."
483** Double-subverted in ''Better Call Saul''. Though he's actually [[SoftSpokenSadist very calm]] when his Abuelita is around, as soon as he takes Jimmy out into the desert he turns back into the screaming, AxCrazy madman that we are familiar with.
484* LivingLieDetector: Nacho tells Mike that Tuco will stare at a dealer for five minutes, calling it his lie detector. Though it's more for intimidation than it shows actual intelligence, as he had failed to see Jimmy's CassandraTruth earlier, despite being actually ''sober'' for once.
485* MeaningfulName: His name is Spanish slang for "rat" or "little terrorist".
486* TheMillstone: Although his [[BunnyEarsLawyer fearsome management style and reputation is good at making underlings]] fear him according to Juan Bolsa, his temper is really bad for business to the point his partner was ready to kill him for it and despite Hector's intervention he keeps stretching his prison sentence by picking a fight while he's in there, ''[[TooDumbToLive with a guard no less]]''.
487* MoodSwinger: When we first meet him, he's actually fairly quiet which makes him seem like a character who's all business. Then he gets a whiff of Walter's meth, and we see how he really is. His moods always run to the extreme, and he can go from being happy at a successful business arrangement to beating someone to death in an instant.
488* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: According to Nacho, Tuco felt bad for killing Doug after he became sober from the effects of meth.
489* TheNapoleon: He goes eye to eye with Jesse (Raymond Cruz is 5'7", which is just a little shorter than Aaron Paul's height), yet is probably one of the most unstable and terrifying villains on the show.
490** In ''Better Call Saul'', Tuco gives up a clear foot in height to the Lindholm brothers and Jimmy McGill in the desert, but is able to terrorize them thoroughly with violence and threats of violence. It helps that the latter three are NOT fighters and Tuco is a brutal cartel capo with a penchant for beating people within an inch of their lives or even to death.
491* NoHoldsBarredBeatdown: It's ''[[HairTriggerTemper extremely easy]]'' to get him to administer one to you. Just say something, ''anything'', that's remotely insulting towards him (even if you didn't mean it that way) and you'll quickly find yourself beaten within an inch of your life and sent to the hospital if you aren't killed outright.
492* NoIndoorVoice: When he's not speaking quietly, he's shouting at the top of his lungs.
493* OffscreenMomentOfAwesome: During his stint in jail, Tuco managed to stab a prisoner and slug a guard hard enough in the jaw to ''break it''. Unfortunately, it backfires on him and his family significantly [[SubvertedTrope as he gets locked up in solitary confinement over the issue.]]
494* OutOfFocus: Of all the members of the Salamanca family (discounting Joaquin, who was already a very minor character in ''Breaking Bad'' and doesn't feature at all in the prequel show), Tuco is easily the least relevant on ''Better Call Saul''. Compared to his cousins and uncle, Tuco only terrorizes Jimmy briefly in Season 1 and is tricked into getting arrested after attacking Mike in Season 2. From then on, Tuco spends the entirety of the show in jail, only getting released so that the events of ''Breaking Bad'' will occur.
495* PetTheDog:
496** He was willing to let Jimmy take the skateboarder when he genuinely apologized and swore they wouldn't bother his abuelita anymore. [[NiceJobBreakingItHero Then they say Jimmy was on the scam]] and Tuco goes ballistic.
497** After beating the snot out of Jesse during their first encounter, he briefly looks at Skinny Pete like he's about to do the same to him, then just walks away and allows him to bring Jesse to a hospital offscreen. That's downright merciful by his standard.
498* PsychopathicManchild: He shows various signs of this. In addition to being prone to violent tantrums, Tuco possesses a highly impulsive personality which often leads him to make rash judgments with little forethought of the consequences. This is evidenced by the shock and distress he displays when one of his thugs dies after he [[NoHoldsBarredBeatdown gives him a fatal beating]]. He also appears to have considerable difficulty [[ItsAllAboutMe comprehending (let alone genuinely empathizing with) others' needs and feelings]] aside from [[EvenEvilHasLovedOnes his uncle, Hector, whom he both fears and idolizes]]. This is made apparent by his response to Walt's protest over his plan to take him to Mexico because he has a family: "So what? You'll get another one."
499* PutOnAPrisonBus: Sent to prison for at least five years during the events of ''Better Call Saul''. His uncle arranged to make it six months but [[StupidEvil his behavior]] makes it harder. {{Enforced|Trope}} due to Raymond Cruz not wanting to play the role too often, as he finds it exhausting to be that AxCrazy even for pretend.
500* RasputinianDeath: Gets hit on the head with a rock, shot at point-blank range on the abdomen, kicked and beat, shoved into a ditch (all of which is the work of Jesse), then finally shot in the head by Hank.
501* RealLifeWritesThePlot: Tuco was supposed to be on the show a bit longer, but actor Raymond Cruz didn't enjoy playing such a disturbed character for so long and asked to be written out. As he was originally planned to be one of the {{Big Bad}}s later on, Tuco's early death caused the creation of Gus. Cruz did return to play the part again for ''Series/BetterCallSaul''.
502* RealMenCook: Seems to be a pretty decent one. He makes burritos for himself, Walt, Jesse, and his uncle, and ''Better Call Saul'' sees him cooking lunch in an apron.
503* RealMenWearPink: Wears a salmon pink shirt in his first appearance. Since hotter colors on the show mean he's further up on the crime scale, this was suitable.
504* RedOniBlueOni: The Red to Nacho's Blue in ''Better Call Saul''.
505* ScrewTheRulesIHaveConnections: He probably wouldn't last as long in the cartel if it weren't for his Uncle. Said uncle is how he manages to get his prison sentence reduced, though he doesn't exactly help in keeping it that way.
506* ShoutOut: His first name may be a reference to Creator/EliWallach's character in ''Film/TheGoodTheBadAndTheUgly''.
507** His death at the hands of Hank mirrors [[spoiler: Ramón Rojo's in ''Film/AFistfulOfDollars'' (also from the ''Film/DollarsTrilogy'')]], where the villain ultimately lost because his weapon took longer to reload than the hero's.
508* SmallRoleBigImpact:
509** He's only in four episodes of ''Breaking Bad'', but his death has profound consequences for a lot of characters, namely Hank for doing it and Walt and Jesse for largely being responsible for it. His death is what sends the Cousins after all of them, causing long-term effects for the rest of the series.
510** He only gets one scene in ''Better Call Saul'''s second season, but that one scene marks a big shift in Mike's life as it brings him into conflict with the other Salamancas and that's a major step in his path towards working with Gustavo Fring. His appearances in Season 1 also introduce Jimmy [=McGill=] to the criminal underground, paving the road that Jimmy will eventually go down to become Saul Goodman.
511* SoftSpokenSadist: When his Abuelita is around he speaks in a very low and frightening whisper, as he obviously doesn't want to disturb her in any way. [[LargeHam When she's not around, however...]]
512* StarterVillain: In both series, he appears as an antagonist early in the show before being written off to make way for other [[BigBad Big Bads.]]
513* StimulantSpeedtalk: From his first episode onwards, Tuco frequently gets high on the meth he's supposed to be distributing, and not only features a very volatile, talkative personality, but he's also prone to ranting at high speed after every snort and shouting things that make sense only to him. Screaming "Tight! Tight! Tight!" is probably the ''least'' bewildering thing that he says under the influence.
514* StockYuck: Walter's ricin-infused meth gets turned down when Jessie oversells it as his recipe by claiming it contains his secret ingredient: chili powder.
515-->''"I hate chili powder."''
516* StupidEvil: While not an outright idiot, Tuco is so incredibly hot-tempered and short-sighted that he effectively shoots himself in the foot, not caring if he beats one of his subordinates to death and buries his body in almost plain sight, thus making him a high priority for DEA to snoop around. He also extends his own prison sentence in ''Better Call Saul'', simply because he ''had'' to pick a fight with a prison guard.
517* SuddenSequelDeathSyndrome: He dies two episodes into Season 2 of ''Breaking Bad''.
518* TensionCuttingLaughter: Shortly before beating an underling to death anyway.
519* TranquilFury: Very calmly tells his TooDumbToLive sidekick No-Doze, [[UnwantedAssistance "Stop Helping"]]. Fast forward to, ''Breaking Bad'', and it's [[NoHoldsBarredBeatdown not so tranquil]].
520* TooDumbToLive: "Hey, my uncle got me a really sweet deal only getting 6 months in prison, better stab this other inmate and assault a guard!" Really it's a ''miracle'' that he was actually out of prison by 2008.
521* TookALevelInJerkass: While he's still awful and HotBlooded in ''Better Call Saul'', Tuco isn't nearly as bad as he would become in his first appearance. It seems it's much easier to actually negotiate with him since he isn't on meth all the time.
522** Though he shot and killed his supplier Dog due to believing he was supplying his competitor, he felt bad afterward according to Nacho. Cut to ten years later, he brutally beats his associate No-Doze to death for speaking out of turn, and later goes out of his way to ''defend'' his actions, even after sobering up.
523** He beats Mike half to death in 2004, but it's only after the latter went out of his way to provoke him, even having to resort to ''grabbing his collar'' for Tuco to land a punch. In ''Breaking Bad'' he beats people around for fun and clearly takes sadistic pleasure in making those he doesn't respect bleed.
524* TheUnfavorite: Implied to be this amongst Hector's nephews. Compared to how much Hector relies on Lalo and the Cousins to serve as the muscle for the Salamanca drug empire, Tuco is always regulated to running smaller organizations for them. Furthermore, Hector has no problem forcing Tuco to remain in jail after [[DisproportionateRetribution he beats Mike half to death for grabbing his collar]], clearly seeing his nephew's temper as a liability. With that said, Hector still loves Tuco in his own way, as he's genuinely upset when Tuco extends his own prison sentence, attempts to warn him of Walter and Jesse poisoning him, and later calls out for a hit on the former when Tuco's shot at Hank's hands.
525* VillainOfAnotherStory: He only appears in three episodes of ''Better Call Saul''. Justified as his appearance was only meant to be an Easter egg for ''Breaking Bad'' fans.
526* VillainsOutShopping: He is seen calmly doing housework when not on business in a way that almost makes him seem half normal.
527* VillainRespect:
528** When Tuco realizes that Mike Ehrmantraut had just set him up to be arrested by the dozens of cops surrounding him, he simply chuckles with amusement and punches him out.
529** When Walter shows up to demand his payment, and then blows up his headquarters as a show of courage, Tuco smirks before handing him what he's owed. In general, it seems like Tuco likes those who stand up to him, and despises suck-ups and cowards. It says a lot that Walter later talks him out of killing Jesse while he's high and holding a gun to his face.
530* WithFriendsLikeThese: He apparently regarded his supplier Dog Paulson as a friend. After getting high, he shot him in the head for allegedly selling out to his rivals. This caused Nacho, another friend of his, to turn on him.
531* WorfHadTheFlu: Tuco's wounds (the result of Jesse hitting him on the head with the rock and shooting him in the abdomen), along with still being high on meth, prevent him from being at his most dangerous in the climactic gunfight between him and Hank.
532[[/folder]]
533
534[[folder:The Cousins]]
535!!"The Cousins" Leonel & Marco Salamanca
536[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/salamanca_cousins_3466.jpg]]
537[[caption-width-right:300:''[[TheQuietOne "..."]]'']]
538!!!'''Portrayed By:''' Daniel and Luis Moncada
539!!!'''Appearances:''' ''Series/BreakingBad'' | ''Series/BetterCallSaul''
540
541->''"Hemos esperado suficiente. No vamos a esperar más."'' [[note]]"We have waited long enough. We will not wait any longer."[[/note]]
542
543Tuco's cousins, ruthless hitmen and enforcers for the Juarez Cartel and their uncle Hector. Best described as two human [[Franchise/{{Terminator}} Terminators]], they go after Walter White to avenge Tuco's murder.
544----
545* AbsurdlySharpBlade: Their axe can apparently cut right into asphalt.
546* AlwaysSomeoneBetter; [[DownplayedTrope Downplayed]]: Marco seems to be the more dominant of the two, often having to save Leonel whenever he is spotted by a cop or pinned down in a shootout; he's also the one taking charge during most of their assignments or in business meetings, giving the impression that he's TheLeader of the two. Not to mention, Marco used to bully Leonel when they were kids. Nevertheless, this hardly matters given Leonel is still very dangerous, neither cousin appears to care about one-upping the other, and are both highly effective as a team.[[note]]This dynamic probably reflects the fact that Luis Moncada (Marco's actor) is older than Daniel (Leonel's actor), therefore indicating that Marco is the eldest twin. Luis' greater experience as an actor may also explain why Marco has a bit more dialogue and a slightly more active role.[[/note]]
547* ArcVillain: The villains of the first half of ''Breaking Bad'''s third season, hunting Walt and later Hank to avenge Tuco's death.
548* AnArmAndALeg: After Hank crushes him between two cars, Leonel needs both of his legs amputated. This doesn't stop him from trying to crawl up to Walt and murder him.
549* ArmorIsUseless; [[AvertedTrope Averted]]: They purchase a pair of bulletproof vests before heading off to kill Hank, ones that prove to be very effective with Marco taking 5 close-range pistol shots to the chest.
550* AssholeVictim: Both InUniverse and out, no one, except Hector, feel bad about their deaths, with Gomez firmly believing that they totally deserve it.
551* AvengingTheVillain: Their objective is to avenge Tuco's death.
552* AxCrazy: They kill almost everyone they come across. They also have a literal ax as their favored weapon.
553* BadBoss: [[spoiler:They're willing to shoot one of their own men for shooting in Nacho's direction when they need him alive.]]
554* BadassInANiceSuit: And boots. Even the production crew wanted to have a look at the skull-tipped shoes.
555* BaldOfEvil: Both are completely bald and very, very evil.
556* BewareTheQuietOnes: They barely speak in the entire series (save for their flashback as children), and on the rare occasion they do speak, it's in a low, menacing whisper.
557* BigBadEnsemble: With Gus in season 3. It is they who attempt to assassinate Walt or Hank during the first half of the season, as well as the catalysts behind the conflict between Gus and [[TheCartel The Juarez Cartel]].
558* BigBrotherBully: Downplayed. Marco used to bully Leonel as a kid, but this clearly stopped by the time they became adults (probably due to Hector's unorthodox parenting methods).
559* BigBrotherInstinct: Marco immediately checks on Leonel after Hank injures him, with clear signs of worry all over his face in a rare moment of emotion.
560* BondVillainStupidity: When Marco has Hank cornered, he decides not to execute him with his pistol and leaves to go get his ax. This gives Hank time to reload his pistol and kill Marco with a headshot.
561* BoomHeadshot: Marco's fate at the hands of Hank, ironically with the very hollow point bullet Marco himself got as a freebie from the arms dealer.
562* CarFu: How Leonel gets disabled by Hank.
563* ChekhovsGun: The hollow-point bullet given to Marco for free by an arms dealer early in "One Minute" is dropped, unnoticed, by Marco when he's reloading during his attack on Hank. [[BoomHeadshot Hank puts it to good use]].
564* ChekhovsGunman: They are mentioned by Tuco in the Season 2 premiere before finally appearing in the flesh in "No Más".
565* CoDragons: Serve as this for Hector Salamanca and Juan Bolsa within the Cartel, as they're some of the most capable and deadly killers in the Salamanca family. Though Hector is helpless in a wheelchair, having the twins at his beck and call is part of the reason he's still so feared.
566* TheComicallySerious:
567** They both sit patiently in Walt's bedroom while they wait for the latter to finish his showering. Once Walt is done showering, they plan on assassinating him...until they get a page from Los Pollos Hermanos. At that point, [[QuizzicalTilt all the brothers can do is stare at each other in confusion]] before hightailing it out of the house before Walt sees them.
568** Their quiet and intimidating stature also makes them somewhat goofy when they're doing something as mundane as watching Hector recover in the hospital. The enthusiastic and unfazed Dr. Marueen Buckner from Johns Hopkins really drives the point home [[GleefulAndGrumpyPairing as they answer her questions bluntly]]. And after the doctor recommends talking to the comatose Hector, they stand there in awkward silence for a moment and then tell others in the room to speak instead.
569* CommutingOnABus: They leave Hector's side by Season 3 of ''Better Call Saul'', later only mentioning in passing that they are keeping an eye on Tuco's time in jail among other things. It's entirely possible they were only brought along in order to intimidate Mike, and once he agreed to Hector's deal they simply returned to their own business. By Season 4 onwards, they take more active roles following their uncle's stroke and begin appearing much more frequently.
570* CopKiller: They kill a tribal police officer who stumbles upon them while investigating the death of a woman whose house they took over, and they later attempt to kill Hank.
571* CreepyTwins: They do everything together and hold the following creed to heart, "Family is all."
572* CruelAndUnusualDeath: The way they murder their victims is extremely savage and brutal.
573* DeathGlare: Poster boys to say the least.
574* DiscOneFinalBoss: After serving as the main threat for the first half of Season 3, they're both [[{{Pun}} axed]] off at the season's midpoint.
575* DisproportionateRetribution: They full-on slaughter the whole group of illegal immigrants in the van just because one chatty lad spotted their boots.
576* TheDividual: They look similar, dress similarly, and act together in almost perfect synchrony.
577* TheDeterminator: Leonel was just crushed by a car and had both legs amputated. When he sees Walt, he unhooks himself from his [=IVs=], rolls out of his hospital bed, and drags himself toward Walt by his bloody stumps, death-staring him the whole time. While Walt is surrounded by half a dozen cops. Until Gomez and the others can stop him.
578* TheDreaded: Mike is a mixture of angered and shocked by them just appearing overlooking the pool while he's supervising Kaylee, especially when Marco makes a gun gesture toward Kaylee.
579* EstablishingCharacterMoment: Killing everyone in the truck they used to get into the United States, and torching the truck for good measure.
580** Even before that, their enigmatic actions, always in perfect synchronization with each other, throughout the Season 3 premiere establish them as single-minded in multiple ways, in the sense that they are both [[TheDividual dividuals]] and [[{{Determinator}} determinators]].
581* EtTuBrute: They clearly don't realize just how much Nacho hates them in ''Better Call Saul'', and take [[spoiler:his attempt on Lalo's life]] very personally. Unlike Hector's fury at Nacho, the Cousins look more emotionally hurt by [[spoiler:his final words and condemnation of them]].
582* EvenEvilHasLovedOnes:
583** The whole reason they go after Walt (then later Hank) is that they hold him responsible for Tuco's death. During the parking lot shootout, after Leonel is incapacitated, Marco abandons his pursuit of Hank to check on him and only abandons him when Leonel tells him to.
584** They also care deeply for their cousin Lalo, with them visiting the site of his (supposed) death with a solemn attitude. Leonel even looks genuinely shocked at how the body appears to have been burned so horrifically, [[DueToTheDead and covers it up with a jacket to pay his respects]].
585* EvenEvilHasStandards: Leonel shares Hector's contempt for the DEA. After seeing Walt in the midst of DEA agents rather than tell anyone about Walt's true identity he merely attempts to crawl towards him violently.
586* FacialDialogue: Regularly communicate with each other this way.
587* FieryCoverup: A trait shared by all Salamancas. They burn the car with [[spoiler:Arturo's corpse in it]] after it was supposedly attacked by a rival gang.
588* FingerGun: Marco gives Mike's granddaughter an ImpliedDeathThreat using this gesture.
589* {{Flanderization}}: They talk even less and are even more deadly in ''Better Call Saul'' than they were in ''Breaking Bad''.
590* ForTheEvulz: Some of the murders they carry out are pretty unnecessary and have nothing to do with TheCartel's business, [[{{Sadist}} suggesting that there is some pure enjoyment to it]].
591* TheHeavy: Of season 3. With Juan Bolsa being the GreaterScopeVillain, it is they who have the greatest prominence in the USA and who trigger the greatest conflicts during the first half of the season. Plus, it's they who trigger the biggest conflict between Walter White, Hank, and Gus, after all.
592* HorribleJudgeOfCharacter: Either they are really submissive to the Cartel's hierarchy or have completely missed the tension between Gus and their uncle. When the enemy of their family allows them to kill Hank and take the heat from the police and Bolsa on him, they accept readily.
593* IWillOnlySlowYouDown: Marco pauses from pursuing Hank when he sees Leonel severely wounded, but his twin insists that he finish off Hank.
594* ImplacableMan: No obstacle seems to deter them from their [[RoaringRampageOfRevenge objective]]. That is, until they go up against Hank.
595* KarmicDeath: Leonel is given a lethal injection in the hospital by Mike, the grandfather of the little girl he threatened to assassinate back in 2002.
596* LanguageBarrier: Unlike the rest of the Salamanca family, Marco and Leonel primarily converse in Spanish due to not knowing much English (in ''Breaking Bad'', they utter a grand total of ''three'' non-Spanish words between the two of them). That said, the fact that [[TheQuietOne they barely speak period]] doesn't make this much of an issue for people.
597* LeaveNoWitnesses: During his shootout with Hank, Marco shoots one bystander dead, and another only survives because he'd run out of ammo shooting at Hank and the other pedestrian. As the attack was an ambush, they were simply in the wrong place at the wrong time.
598* LeeroyJenkins: While Nacho is laying out the plan to attack the Espinosa compound, the Cousins decide to walk out during his explanation and attack right then and there in broad daylight.
599* LivingMacGuffin: The first half of season 3 frames their revenge quest as a major plotline, but it turns out to be a red herring from what the season is really about.
600* LockedOutOfTheLoop: They are remarkably unaware of how much their uncle and Gustavo Fring hate each other, and Lalo doesn't update them on it either. This backfires on the whole family since they can't confirm what their paralyzed uncle is saying but also years later they trust Gustavo enough to take on his offer which leads to their deaths.
601* MadeOfIron:
602** While wearing a bullet-proof vest, Hank shoots Marco several times in the chest at close range, which does nothing to make him take a few steps backward. For comparison, the arms dealer they shot earlier was launched off of his feet by one bullet, evidently breaking his rib.
603** During the Espinosa shootout, a bullet wound can be seen on Marco's shoulder, but he doesn't seem to notice it.
604* MakeAnExampleOfThem: Their method of killing, which is [[TruthInTelevision what the real Cartels do]]. They die because of their insistence on abiding by this rule, which allows Hank to defend himself.
605* MisplacedRetribution: Downplayed. While Walter White was ''indirectly'' responsible for the death of their cousin Tuco, Gustavo Fring notes that the Cousins' real vendetta should be with Hank Schrader, who was the man who actually pulled the trigger on him. The Cousins attempt to justify this by noting that their uncle insisted on never targeting anyone associated with the DEA under any circumstances, though Fring is easily able to sway them into ignoring this rule [[LoopholeAbuse by pointing out that said rule only applied while in Mexico]], and that there's no such restrictions when on Gustavo's territory in America.
606* NightmareFuelStationAttendant: You know it's time to run when they come for you. Almost everything about them is disturbing in nature.
607* NoChallengeEqualsNoSatisfaction: Deconstructed - in "One Minute", Marco gets close to killing Hank, but rather than finish him off right away, Marco declares the battle to be too easy. Marco returns to his car to grab an axe, so that Hank is killed off dramatically, but it ends up giving Hank the time to reach for a bullet and shoot his head.
608* NonverbalMiscommunication; Averted: They rarely say anything to each other, and yet they work like they can read each other's minds.
609* NotQuiteDead: After the confrontation with Hank, Leonel survives and [[HalfTheManHeUsedToBe loses his legs]], but is determined to kill Walter. That is until Mike gives him a lethal injection.
610* NotSoStoic: While the Cousins are generally pretty reserved and serious, they occasionally let the mask slip when external conflict challenges them to do so.
611** Marco is visibly concerned with Leonel's injuries at the hands of Hank, but shows little else beyond a look of fear. Later, Leonel, while in a hospital bed, shows silent but clear signs of anger upon seeing Walter. While this isn't much emotion, it's more than they generally show.
612** When meeting [[MotorMouth Jimmy McGill]] for the first time out of the desert, Leonel and Marco are nothing short of baffled that he's the one man Lalo trusts so much, exchanging a confused look with one another before dropping off their bag and taking off.
613** In season 6, [[spoiler:both Leonel and Marco are visibly upset when they find and cover up Lalo's "corpse". They also offer an angry BringIt gesture in their standoff against Nacho, yet are also hurt and shocked by his final speech and suicide.]]
614* OffWithHisHead: They killed Tortuga in this manner.
615* OminousWalk: They're masters of it, especially when [[UnflinchingWalk there's an explosion just behind them]].
616* OneManArmy: The two of them cleared out the lair of a rival gang with little effort.
617* OneSteveLimit: Marco Salamanca shares his first name with Marco Pasternak in ''Better Call Saul''. Aside from them both having connections to Jimmy [=McGill=] though, they aren't related in any way.
618* PetTheDog:
619** The closest thing they have to a slightly civilized moment is when they refuse to hurt a peasant family in Mexico after stealing their clothes.
620** After shooting their armor dealer to test its effectiveness, they also spare his life and leave the money behind.
621** Even if it leans toward [[PragmaticVillainy pragmatism,]] they go through great strides to ensure [[spoiler:Nacho's survival following a (staged) shootout,]] even offering a blood transfer. A more genuine petting moment comes when Nacho [[spoiler:helps rescue Leonel from being pinned down by rival gangbangers]], after which Marco gives him a slight nod of respect.
622* PragmaticVillainy: Surprisingly subvert the BallisticDiscount and let the man who sold them their bulletproof vests live by only shooting him once.
623* ProfessionalKiller: Their role within TheCartel, but their vendetta against Walt is personal. Notably, in a series where gunfights often devolve into hiding and firing randomly, they more often than not hit their intended target.
624* PsychoForHire: Behind the obvious personal reasons with Walt and Hank, [[{{Sadist}} they seem to take too much pleasure in slowly and painfully murdering their victims when they set their minds to it]].
625* [[TheQuietOne The Quiet Ones]]: The pair speaks almost exclusively with cold stares. Even when they talk, they tend to keep things short.
626* QuizzicalTilt: While waiting to kill Walter in his bedroom, Leonel briefly inspects the plastic eyeball in Walt's suitcase, giving this look.
627* RealMenLoveJesus: Their first on-screen appearance in the series shows them crawling to a shrine dedicated to Santa Muerte in order to gain her blessing for their quest to kill Heisenberg. They do it again later (though without the crawling) when they switch their target to Hank.
628* RevengeBeforeReason: They kill literally everyone who so much as slightly inconveniences them. Even when crippled, outmatched, and unarmed, they do not hesitate to try to kill their enemies.
629* RoaringRampageOfRevenge: They go on one seeking revenge on Walt for his involvement in Tuco's death. Then they are redirected to Hank by Gus.
630* RuleOfCool: They seem to live by it. They wear awesome clothes (shiny sharkskin suits and cowboy boots with silver skulls on the toes!), they're incredibly calm and collected, they walk unflinchingly away from exploding vehicles and towards those with targets in them, and they decide to kill Hank with an ax for the showmanship of it, rather than just shooting him down. [[DeconstructedTrope The last part two bits are their undoing.]]
631* RunForTheBorder: After inflicting a MobWar against the Espinozas in ''Better Call Saul'', they are sent back to Mexico to wait for the heat to die down.
632* SharpDressedMan: They're introduced wearing expensive suits which they ditch soon after to facilitate an inconspicuous border crossing, but once that's done, they're quickly [[{{Pun}} dressed to kill]] again.
633* SickbedSlaying: The fate of Leonel: poisoned by Mike Ehrmantraut in the hospital.
634* SignatureMove: Decapitation via ax seems to be their preferred method of killing.
635* SilentAntagonist: For the most part.
636* SingleMindedTwins: Both are more or less obsessed with killing "Heisenberg."
637* [[TheSociopath The Sociopaths]]: Probably the best portraits of true psychopaths shown in the series. They are undeniably brutal and ruthless, they like to murder their victims in extremely brutal ways, and they have zero remorse for their actions.
638* [[TheStoic The Stoics]]: Both are some of the coldest killers shown in the series.
639* ThereIsNoKillLikeOverkill: Deconstructed. Marco prepares to shoot Hank while the latter is laying down on the ground, but chooses not to do it, due to the battle being to easy. Marco instead grabs an axe to chop Hank to death , but it ends up providing Hank the time to reload a bullet Marco had dropped and then shooting it at him.
640* TriggerHappy: Are more often shooting at someone else than not. Without even hesitating, Leonel even shoots their arms dealer in the chest to test out his vests, simply because he was already wearing one.
641* UndyingLoyalty: To their uncle, Hector Salamanca. Due to their uncanny ability to precisely discern his exact thoughts and feelings without the need for speech, they ''literally'' function as living extensions of his will.
642* UnflinchingWalk: All the time, no matter what's happening. After an explosion a couple of yards away, one of them continues to smoke his cigarette.
643* UnwittingPawn: A rare example of villains who end up unknowing pawns of another villain. Marco and Leonel are only interested in avenging Tuco's death and don't see much beyond that, but Gus is happy to manipulate their myopic quest for revenge so that the two of them die trying to kill Hank. Thus, the Cousins end up attempting to kill a DEA agent (normally, cops are off-limits as assassination targets because of the intense heat that such hits generally bring) and the manner of their deaths helps shut down the border to the Cartel, leaving Gus with uncontested domination of the meth market in the southwest.
644* UsedToBeASweetKid: When they were children in TheEighties, Marco and Leonel were ordinary Mexican kids who loved to play and talk together, even if Marco was initially more of a BigBrotherBully at the time. Their upbringing under Hector twisted them into the silent, stoic hitmen they would become in their adult years.
645* VillainBall: Marco's decision to finish Hank off with an ax rather than just shooting him when he's down and helpless [[BoomHeadshot backfires spectacularly]].
646* VillainCred: After seeing Nacho [[spoiler:fight through his wounds to join the shootout with them]], Marco looks him in the eyes and gives him a subtle nod.
647* VillainousFashionSense: Just as in ''Breaking'', wherever they go, both are always dressed in sharp suits, and with close-up shots of their distinctive boots.
648* VillainRespect: Interestingly, despite [[spoiler: being mortal enemies by this point, the Cousins seem to indeed have a degree of lasting respect for Nacho. When confronting him face-to-face, they withdraw their weapons and allow him to make the first move with a BringIt gesture, only attacking when he reloads and strikes. This is retroactively in complete contrast to their near-identical encounter with Hank Schrader, where they attack him from behind the moment they see him. They also appear more hurt than angered when Nacho tells off the Salamancas, and are genuinely shocked by Nacho's suicide.]]
649* TheVoiceless: More often than not.
650* WhyDontYouJustShootHim: Marco decides that shooting Hank to death isn't enough and decides to go grab his ax instead. Hank doesn't have that same compulsion and blows his head off when he comes back.
651* WouldHitAGirl: They kill a woman on a tribal reservation and take over her house, and it's heavily implied they killed an elderly woman to steal her wheelchair-accessible van for Hector. Later, when Marco is attacking Hank, he shoots and kills a passing man who happens to surprise him, and a female passerby narrowly escapes the same fate thanks to Marco running out of bullets at that moment.
652* WouldHurtAChild: Hector is willing to send them after Mike's granddaughter if he doesn't comply.
653* YourHeadAsplode: Marco's head after receiving a BoomHeadshot from Hank causes the former's head to be blown open like a cabbage.
654[[/folder]]
655
656[[folder:Joaquin]]
657!!Joaquin Salamanca
658[[quoteright:221:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/czxzljv.png]]
659!!!'''Portrayed By:''' Gabriel Nunez
660!!!'''Appearances:''' ''Series/BreakingBad''
661
662An enforcer for Don Eladio, and Hector's grandson.
663----
664* AlasPoorVillain: His grandfather Hector is left completely broken after his death. Even his killer Jesse is clearly uncomfortable with how sadistically Gus taunts Hector about the event.
665* BeardOfEvil: Is a bearded enforcer.
666* BullyingADragon: Goes after Gus, Jesse, and Mike even though Gus warned the Cartel they'd die. Subverted in that he [[NotSoHarmlessVillain wounds Mike]], one of the most dangerous members of Gus' crew.
667* LastOfHisKind: He and Hector were the sole remaining members of the Salamanca family and considering Hector is a decrepit old man, his death effectively wipes out the family.
668* LeeroyJenkins: Even after witnessing Gus poisoning Joaquin's bosses, and when Gus was given the opportunity for any surviving cartel members to leave, Joaquin still chooses to attempt to kill Gus, Jesse, and Mike. Subverted in that he actually manages to surprise Mike and wound him and would have killed both him and Gus were it not for Jesse.
669* NotSoHarmlessVillain: Despite being a Salamanca, Gus and Mike don't seem to see him as an important loose end in their plan (even though Gus clearly knows who he is), and were perfectly happy to leave without chasing him down after the mass poisoning of Eladio and The Dons was complete. This almost gets them both killed when he comes back to avenge his bosses.
670* OneShotCharacter: Dies in one episode, "Salud". Jesse guns him down at the end when he tries to kill him and Mike.
671* PosthumousCharacter: Of a sort. We don't find out his name or his significance until after he's been killed and Gus is boasting about it to Hector. Heck, it wasn't even indicated that Hector ''had'' any other living relatives before then.
672* TheQuietOne: He clearly takes after his uncles Leonel and Marco.
673* RedShirt: He only appears in one episode and has no characterization beyond being Hector's grandson.
674* {{Revenge}}: Being a Salamanca, when he finds out Eladio and the other dons are dead, he rushes to kill the men responsible. This gets him killed by Jesse.
675* SmallRoleBigImpact: Joaquin doesn't even have any dialogue, but if it weren't for his last-ditch effort to kill Gus, Mike would have never been wounded and would have been present for Gus' showdown. In addition, since he's killed by Jesse and not Mike, Gus has to bring Jesse along with him to Hector, thus allowing him to learn about the one place where Gus is vulnerable. This knowledge would later prove decisive in his assassination.
676* UndyingLoyalty: The only Cartel soldier that tries avenging Eladio even though there is no one left to reward him for it.
677* WouldYouLikeToHearHowTheyDied: Gus relates his demise to Hector to taunt him, putting the final nail in the elderly gangster's coffin.
678[[/folder]]
679
680[[folder:"Abuelita"]]
681Click [[Characters/BetterCallSaulCartel here]].
682[[/folder]]
683
684!!Lieutenants
685[[folder:Krazy-8]]
686!!Domingo Gallardo Molina AKA "[=Krazy-8=]"
687[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/6vdg46t.jpg]]
688[[caption-width-right:250:''"Walter, I don't know what you think you're doing here, [[{{Irony}} but trust me, this line of work doesn't suit you.]]"'']]
689!!!'''Portrayed By:''' Max Arciniega
690!!!'''Appearances:''' ''Series/BreakingBad'' | ''Series/BetterCallSaul''
691
692->''"I got my share man. I swear."''
693
694A former street-level dealer of Tuco Salamanca's, and now a meth distributor associated with his cousin Emilio and Jesse Pinkman. Unbeknownst to Walt and Jesse, Krazy-8 is a DEA informant, who acquired the customers of the dealers he ratted out.
695----
696* AintTooProudToBeg:
697** When dragged off for a beatdown on Hector's behest, [=Krazy-8=] desperately begs Nacho for mercy. [[MyGodWhatHaveIDone This visibly shakes Nacho later that day.]]
698** When Saul confronts him at the prison as his lawyer, he's initially confused and standoffish. Upon hearing Saul clarify that Lalo sent him, he [[YouHaveFailedMe assumes the worst]] and anxiously promises he stayed quiet. Saul stops him since they, fortunately, have something else planned for him.
699* AscendedExtra: He died rather early in ''Breaking Bad'', but becomes a recurring character in ''Better Call Saul''.
700* AssholeVictim: He might've once been a good person before and still remains a charming son-of-a-bitch later, but the fact that Domingo was still a stone-cold killer and opportunist might sour people's feelings about his death in ''Breaking Bad''.
701* BitchInSheepsClothing: He's a SmugSnake up until he faints, and Walt and Jesse lock him up in Jesse’s basement. There he puts on a friendly facade only to persuade Walt to release him.
702* BlatantLies: Tells Walter that he's willing to "live and let live" if Walter will just let him go. He sells it so well that even the audience almost believes it, and of course, Walter ''wants'' it to be true.
703* ButtMonkey: All throughout ''Better Call Saul''. First, he is intimidated by Tuco. Then Hector has him brutally beaten for being short on payments. Then Lalo humiliates him with a nickname that he will be stuck with for years. And then he gets arrested in an incredibly embarrassing manner - all while we know that he's doomed to die in a basement, choked by a bike lock by a chemistry teacher in way over his head.
704* CharacterDevelopment: His arc in ''Better Call Saul'' consists of showing how this nervy little guy ended up as a merciless killer with nerves of steel; he steadily rises through the ranks of the cartel, slowly gaining confidence and losing his gentler side altogether.
705* ChildhoodFriends: With Nacho, or at least their parents were/are friends.
706* DeathByIrony: With the context of ''Better Call Saul'', his fate in ''Breaking Bad'' is especially ironic. If Krazy-8 were still the naive, nervous newcomer he was there when he was bike locked to a pole, he very realistically could have convinced Walt into sparing him, but the pragmatic stone-cold killer that he became ended up getting choked to death.
707* DickDastardlyStopsToCheat: A more justified example than most, since you can't really blame the guy for seizing a chance to arm himself when his captor was still in two minds about murdering him, but he's still undone by a lapse into this. His one act of deception, undermining his and Walt's entire conversation and understanding, is what spurs Walt to kill him; he'd have walked out alive had he not pocketed that piece of broken plate.
708* TheDragon: He's technically Nacho's NumberTwo after Nacho's promotion in light of Hector's stroke.
709* DramaticIrony: When [=Krazy-8=] was first introduced on-screen in ''Series/BreakingBad'', he was a ruthless, deadly opponent capable of keeping his cool under dire circumstances. Domingo, as seen in ''Better Call Saul'', is a nervous and easily-cowed young man who's far from the killer that Walter White will eventually deal with.
710* EmbarrassingNickname: His nickname "[=Krazy-8=]" seemed pretty apt and badass in ''Series/BreakingBad'', since he was introduced training his dog to rip people apart. As it turns out, it comes from Lalo teasing him for folding to a poorly played hand of Texas Hold 'Em.
711* EvenEvilHasStandards: Is disgusted by Walt keeping him locked in a basement, saying he wouldn't do something so degrading to his worst enemy. Though it's more likely that it's just a guilt trip ruse.
712* HiddenBadass: He deserves some credit: he survives Walt's initial attack that killed Emilio, frees himself even in a dazed state, and remains calm when [[FaceDeathWithDignity faced with death]]. Even while trapped and being choked to death, he manages to stab Walt with a shard of the broken plate.
713* HiddenDepths: He attempts to invoke this to get Walt to release him, but it was merely a ruse so he could stab Walt as soon as he got out. The fact that he's able to manipulate Walter so successfully rather than rage and bluster or plead and beg like a common crook would do is in itself a straight example.
714* TheInformant: Played with. Krazy-8 originally became an informant for the DEA under Lalo's orders, so that he could feed information about Gustavo Fring's drug empire to him and Hector. With that said, he still remains an informant long after Lalo dies, if only so he can benefit himself at this point.
715* ManipulativeBastard: Domingo is surprisingly clever for a StarterVillain. He nearly convinces Walt to spare him; he would have succeeded had Walt not noticed the broken plate in the garbage. Additionally, the audience learns after his death that he was a snitch for the DEA, and his business model revolved around selling out his competition (including his own cousin) and absorbing their customer base.
716* MeaningfulBackgroundEvent: Sold Walt the crib they used for Walt Jr. years before the show. Becomes a BrickJoke when Walt sets the crib up again for Holly.
717* TheMole: Subverted. He weasels his way into becoming a protected DEA informant, but it's all part of a plan to install him as Lalo's informant in the DEA so he can send them after Gustavo Fring's operation.
718* NoBodyLeftBehind: His body is dissolved in hydrofluoric acid by Walt.
719* NoHoldsBarredBeatdown: He gets this from a highly reluctant [[BenevolentBoss Nacho]] through [[BadBoss Hector]] for being short on his payments.
720* NoMrBondIExpectYouToDine: Played with; Walter makes sandwiches for him while he's imprisoned in Jesse's basement.
721* NotQuiteDead: After the explosion in the pilot.
722* PayEvilUntoEvil: On the receiving end. Walt's murder of him is a big step but is arguably justified due to Krazy-8's ruthless cunning and plan to kill Walt.
723* PoliticallyIncorrectVillain: When telling Walt what he knows about his life, Krazy-8 notes that he has a handicapped son, referring to him as retarded.
724* RealLifeWritesThePlot: Krazy-8 was supposed to die in the pilot of ''Breaking Bad''. The actors and crew enjoyed working with Max Arciniega, so the character was kept alive for two more episodes.
725* RenegadeSplinterFaction: He worked for the Salamancas during the prequel, but that seems to no longer be the case during ''Breaking Bad'' given that the DEA considers Krazy-8 and Tuco to be rivals.
726* SacrificialLamb: Walt being forced to murder him is a major part of the second and third episodes of ''Breaking Bad''.
727* SlowlySlippingIntoEvil: His first appearances in ''Better Call Saul'' happen when he's still new to the drug trade, and ''very'' naive about how vicious and brutal it is. As he continues selling drugs (and after getting a beating from Nacho for coming up short on cash) he gets a much better understanding of the cruel realities of organized crime and starts becoming hardened.
728* SmallRoleBigImpact: His role as a DEA informant in ''Breaking Bad'' is flipped on its head when it's revealed the truth isn't what it seemed.
729* StarterVillain: Of ''Breaking Bad''. He is the first enemy Walt makes, but is a mere small time criminal. While he spends most of his screentime as Walt and Jesse's prisoner, Walt choosing whether or not to kill him is the first big test of Walt's (lack) of morals.
730* TheStoolPigeon: Becomes a snitch to the DEA for Lalo to rat out Gustavo's dealers.
731* TookALevelInJerkass: Domingo's naivety and nervousness gradually disappear as he becomes more accustomed to life as a Cartel dealer and informant. Compare his meek behavior when in front of Lalo Salamanca while playing cards with his manipulative, vengeful behavior when locked up in Walter White's basement.
732[[/folder]]
733
734[[folder:Emilio Koyama]]
735!!Emilio Koyama
736[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/6c9033b5_008c_4791_857b_1bb7a27b4a38.jpeg]]
737[[caption-width-right:250:''"I say we cap 'em both."'']]
738!!!'''Portrayed By:''' John Koyama
739!!!'''Appearances:''' ''Series/BreakingBad'' | ''Series/BetterCallSaul''
740
741->''"I don't do no paperwork."''
742
743Jesse's partner as well as Krazy-8's cousin. He's arrested by the DEA after being sold out by Krazy-8, and later becomes Walt's first victim when he and Krazy-8 confront Walt. Jesse later dissolves his body in his bathtub, and it falls through the ceiling in a hilariously bloody fashion.
744----
745* AssholeVictim: The first of many in ''Breaking Bad''. Jesse seems more annoyed at having to dispose of his body than saddened by his death.
746* BeardOfEvil: A thin goatee.
747* TheBusCameBack: Holds the out-of-universe record for longest gap between on-screen appearances, with fourteen years between ''Breaking Bad''`s first episode and ''Better Call Saul''`s second-to-last episode.
748* CallForward: He shows up as one of Saul's clients in ''Better Call Saul'', several years before his death in ''Breaking Bad''.
749* DumbMuscle: He's quite an imposing figure, but he's clearly not too bright.
750* EvilFormerFriend: According to Jesse, they met in elementary school.
751* EvilIsPetty:
752** Blows smoke in Walt's face when Walt tells him to put his cigarette out.
753** He kicks an already unconscious Jesse in the gut after tying him up.
754* FallGuy: Sold out by his own cousin so that Krazy-8 could get Jesse and Emilio's customers.
755* FalseFriend: He's pretty quick to suggest capping his childhood friend Jesse, believing him to be a snitch.
756* GoodSmokingEvilSmoking: Not only on the evil side of the scale but also on the [[StupidEvil stupid side]], smoking a cigarette in a meth lab filled with volatile chemicals. Walt calls him out on this, prompting Emilio to carelessly dispose of his cigarette outside the window, causing a brush fire.
757* HandCannon: Carries a large .357 revolver.
758* {{Jerkass}}: Unlike [[FauxAffablyEvil Krazy-8]], he comes off as unlikable and petty from the start.
759* TheKlutz: His laughable attempt at escaping the DEA after being caught makes Jesse look competent and athletic in comparison.
760* LudicrousGibs: Thankfully he wasn't alive by that point, but Jessie ignoring Walt's instructions on which chemicals to use to dissolve his body in a ceramic bathtub results in the acid eating through the tub's bottom, the floor and the ceiling below it and depositing his gory remains everywhere.
761* MinorMajorCharacter: His sole appearance in ''Breaking Bad'' was to act as the catalyst for Jesse and Walt's partnership, and from there the gradual escalation of events as their criminal activities sparked greater and greater conflict within the Albuquerque criminal underworld. In ''Better Call Saul'', it's revealed that his tendency to get caught by the law brought him into contact with Saul for legal aid, which in turn showed Jesse who to turn to when he and Walt were in need of somebody with an intricate understanding of the legal system to get Badger out of trouble, and through Saul, getting the duo deeply involved with Gus' Los Pollos Hermanos drug operations, eventually resulting in Heisenberg creating his own meth empire.
762* NeverFilledOutOfficialPaperwork: Loudly announces to Francesca that he "doesn't do paperwork." Saul doesn't care.
763* NoBodyLeftBehind: After getting his deceased body dissolved in hydrofluoric acid.
764* SacrificialLamb: He's Jesse's first partner and the first person Walt kills.
765* UnwittingInstigatorOfDoom: His acts of petty crime lead to him seeking out Saul's aid, which leads to his partner Jesse having an informed viewpoint about whom to look for when he and Walt later need the expertise of a ''Criminal'' Lawyer, and through Saul, wind up deeper involved in Gus' operations.
766* UnwittingPawn: To Krazy-8, who gets him arrested by the DEA and then manipulates him into thinking Jesse was the snitch.
767* WeHardlyKnewYe: He shows up in the first episode and is noteworthy mostly as being the reason for Walt and Jessie's initial partnership and then the escalation of tensions by the episode's end when his release leads to Krazy-8 using him as an excuse to muscle in on Jesse's new meth operation, and becoming Walt's first kill, albeit in an indirect manner. He technically shows up more as a corpse (including having to deal with his liquified remains splattered around Jesse's hallway) than he does alive.
768[[/folder]]
769
770[[folder:No-Doze & Gonzo]]
771!!No-Doze & Gonzo
772[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gonzo.PNG]]
773[[caption-width-right:350:That's No-Doze on the left and Gonzo on the right.]]
774!!!'''Portrayed By:''' Cesar Garcia (No-Doze) & Jesus Payan, Jr. (Gonzo)
775!!!'''Appearances:''' ''Series/BreakingBad'' | ''Series/BetterCallSaul''
776
777Two of Tuco's closest henchmen.
778----
779* AnArmAndALeg: Gonzo's arm gets torn off while moving No-Doze's body which, as Hank gleefully point outs, led to him bleeding out and dying.
780* AssholeVictim: Somewhat with No-Doze, who's more aggressive, short-tempered, and obnoxious when compared to Gonzo. That said, [[AlasPoorVillain no one at the scene of his death except Tuco felt he deserved his fate.]]
781* BaldOfEvil: Both of them have shaved heads and they are loyal henchmen of the psychotic Tuco.
782* BeardOfEvil: They're both bearded thugs that follow Tuco.
783* BigGuyLittleGuy: Gonzo is the big guy to No-Doze's little guy.
784* BloodFromTheMouth: No-Doze, after his beating at the hands of Tuco.
785* CoDragons: Serve as Tuco's closest enforcers.
786* CruelAndUnusualDeath: No-Doze's beatdown wasn't pretty, and getting your arm ripped off by a falling car and bleeding out definitely qualifies as this for Gonzo.
787* DisproportionateRetribution: Tuco beats No-Doze to death when No-Doze merely tells Walt and Jesse to remember who they work for.
788* EvenEvilHasStandards: Gonzo is clearly upset when Tuco accidentally kills No-Doze and tries to recover the body so he can give him a decent burial.
789* FallGuy: Gonzo becomes this for Tuco when he thinks that since Gonzo hadn't been answering his calls for the last few days (on account of being dead and all), Tuco assumes that he's a police informant.
790* FatBastard: A downplayed case with Gonzo. While he is a thug in league with Tuco Salamanca, he is depicted as empathetic and is basically the only half-decent one in Tuco's inner circle.
791* HandCannon: No-Doze carries one.
792* LaserGuidedKarma: No-Doze smirks at the sight of Tuco brutally beating the shit out of Jesse. He meets his death the same way not long afterward.
793* NoGoodDeedGoesUnpunished: Gonzo attempts to remove No-Doze's body from the scrapyard to give him a proper, respectful burial. But he disturbs a precarious stack of cars in the process, and they fall on and crush him to death. Then the DEA find their corpses and laugh at his pathetic demise.
794* NoHoldsBarredBeatdown: No-Doze, after laughing at Jesse receiving one, gets one at the hands of Tuco that leaves him dead.
795* PayEvilUntoEvil: Even if Tuco's beating of No-Doze is over the top, it's undeniable that No-Doze was still a petty thug.
796* ReligiousBruiser: Gonzo wears a large cross medallion and didn't want to leave No-Doze's body without a proper burial on the basis that it wasn't, "very Christian".
797* SacrificialLamb: No-Doze's death underlines just how brutal and dangerous Tuco is.
798* SuddenSequelDeathSyndrome: No-Doze succumbs to his brutal beatdown in the Season 2 premiere and Gonzo follows shortly afterward.
799* TattooedCrook: They're both pretty heavily tattooed.
800* TokenGoodTeammate: Gonzo is much more empathic than Tuco and No-Doze: he prevents Walt from getting in the way of Tuco's beating of No-Doze seemingly in part to stop Walt from becoming another victim, and of course, he's disturbed by leaving No-Doze's body unburied and tries to remedy that later, although that proves to be a mistake on his part.
801* TooDumbToLive:
802** Gonzo, who by his own fault, is killed when a car crushes his arm while he tries to move No-Doze's body. Hank immediately wants to call Leno when he finds out the real cause.
803** No-Doze isn't too smart either, considering he was warned by Tuco about speaking for him -- and we later find out in ''Series/BetterCallSaul'' that this was far from the first time Tuco had done so -- but still kept running his mouth.
804[[/folder]]
805
806[[folder:Gaff]]
807!!Gaff
808[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gaff_2951.jpg]]
809[[caption-width-right:250:''"You're staying. You belong to the cartel now."'']]
810!!!'''Portrayed By:''' Creator/MauriceCompte
811
812The chief buttonman and deliverer of important messages in the Juárez Cartel's New Mexico territory. By the time of his appearance, he was recently promoted by the Dons of the cartel, replacing Tuco Salamanca's role of informing the cartel about the activity across the border after the latter's death.
813----
814* AssholeVictim: Given how often he kills Gus’ employees and [[{{BullyingADragon}} strong arms Gus and his men,]] chances are you’ll cheer when Mike chokes the life out of him.
815* BrutalHonesty: Tells Gus bluntly, "This is not a negotiation".
816* BeardOfEvil: Has a beard and is evil.
817* ColdSniper: He's a skilled but ruthless sniper, willing to suffocate a whole crew of men in Gus' refrigeration trucks to make a point.
818* TheDragon: He serves as this to Don Eladio, being his chief assassin.
819* EliteMook: After Tuco's death, Gaff was promoted to his position.
820* EvilCounterpart: He's the Cartel's answer to Mike Ehrmantraut; both are intelligent, loyal, dangerous and can be relied upon for their ruthless efficiency. At the end of the day, though, Gaff just can't measure up to Mike.
821* {{Jerkass}}: He doesn't show Gus much respect during cartel meetings, and obviously resents not being able to just outright kill him. He's also arrogant enough to be surprised by the many guns due to Mike's planning.
822* JerkWithAHeartOfJerk: Praises Jesse's skills (unlike the petulant Fuentes) only to remind him that the Cartel owns him.
823* MouthOfSauron: Speaks on behalf of Eladio during his conflict with Gus in Season 4.
824* ProfessionalKiller: Part of his job working for the Cartel.
825* RazorFloss: Mike strangles him to death with a wire while he's distracted by the Cartel bosses dying from Gus' poison.
826* RuthlessForeignGangsters: Romanian-American in ethnicity and uses more ruthless tactics than German-American Mike Ehrmantraut such as the use of the exhaust fumes to wipe out one of Gus' truck crews or picking apart Gus' goons to get Gus' response.
827* TheStoic: He largely comes across as bored, not showing much in the way of reaction even when dying.
828* YouAreInCommandNow: Gaff replaces Tuco as the cartel's eyes and ears across the border.
829[[/folder]]
830
831[[folder:Benicio Fuentes]]
832!!Benicio Fuentes
833[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/fuentes_benicio_3948.png]]
834[[caption-width-right:250:''"This is ridiculous! I'm not letting some infant who can't even synthesize phenylacetic acid teach me my business!"'']]
835!!!'''Portrayed By:''' Creator/CarloRota
836
837The lead meth chemist for the cartel.
838----
839* AllThereInTheScript: His full name isn't stated in the episode.
840* AssholeVictim: He dies alongside his cartel colleagues as a result of Gus' poison. Considering what an arrogant asshole he was (on top of his profession as a meth manufacturer), nobody stops to mourn him.
841* BaldOfEvil: Fuentes is bald and an immense asshole, on top of being a cook for the cartel.
842* DroppedABridgeOnHim: Despite having more screentime than any of the Dons, his death happens offscreen, and his body is only shown in a wide shot of the pool once Gus re-enters the scene.
843* BeardOfEvil: He has a little goatee.
844* EvilBrit: He speaks with a posh English accent and is an amoral, arrogant chemist.
845* EvilCounterpart: He's the cartel's answer to Walter; both are [[BaldOfEvil bald]], [[BeardOfEvil bearded]], [[{{Jerkass}} abrasive]] and [[{{Pride}} arrogant]] chemists who look down on Jesse for being BookDumb. The main difference between the two is that Walter has extreme standards on how to run his lab, and is much smarter and observant to boot (on top of being actually able to create pure meth), while Fuentes is a KnowNothingKnowItAll whom even Jesse makes a fool of.
846* EvilGenius: He ought to be this since he's the cartel's lead meth chemist, but as a chemist, he doesn't match up to Jesse.
847-->'''Fuentes:''' ...he's no chemist, I'll tell you that.
848-->'''Don Eladio:''' I don't care if he's a pig farmer. He cooks better meth than ''you'' do, with all your fancy college degrees.
849* {{Hypocrite}}: Fuentes is quick to complain about Jesse's unpreparedness for cooking meth because he didn't synthesize and bring his own phenylacetic acid. He has the gall to say this when his ''entire lab'' looks absolutely filthy and disorganized, which Jesse rightfully calls him out for.
850* InsufferableGenius: Emphasis on the insufferable over the 'genius'. He's grievously offended when Jesse arrives on the scene, [[JerkassHasAPoint even though Jesse's scathing criticisms about his lab's lack of sanitation is entirely correct]].
851-->'''Jesse:''' Don't you have standards? I mean, this place is disgusting. All right, we're gonna scour every vat, every tank, every cook surface. We clean up every possible source of contamination. And then we cook.
852-->'''Fuentes:''' Who do you think you are?
853-->'''Jesse:''' [[TheReasonYouSuckSpeech I'm the guy your boss brought here to show you how it's done. And if this is how you run your lab, no wonder. You're lucky he hasn't fired your ass. Now, if you don't want that to happen I suggest you stop whining like a little bitch, and do what I say]].
854* {{Jerkass}}: Fuentes is abrasive and arrogant from the get-go.
855* NotEvenBotheringWithTheAccent: Fuentes is clearly Spanish, but when speaking English, he talks in Rota's native English (as in, born in England) accent. Note that this ''can'' be a case of TruthInTelevision, since some people do learn to speak English without their native accent. Other times, people may assume the accent of the person who is teaching them a non-native language.
856* OhCrap: When the Capo he’s talking to suddenly collapses as a result of Gustavo's poison, he has a look of concern on his face.
857* ShutUpHannibal: He gets two of these. One from Jesse when Fuentes insults both his poor understanding of Spanish (and he subtly insults Gustavo when asking if Jesse as a chemist was a joke) and his lack of basic chemistry knowledge. He gets a second one from his own boss later on, who says that even with Fuentes's college degrees, Jesse still cooks better meth.
858--> '''Jesse:''' Tell this asshole if he wants to make my product, he's got to do it my way. The ''right'' way.\
859'''Fuentes:''' I speak English.\
860'''Jesse:''' So you understand what ''asshole'' means. Now go get me my phenylacetic acid, ''asshole''.
861* SmallNameBigEgo: He's so arrogant that you get the feeling he still would've behaved the same way if Walt or Gale were there instead of Jesse (though Walt or Gale would at least have been able to make phenylacetic acid).
862* SmugSnake: He thinks he's a lot better of a chemist than he actually is.
863[[/folder]]
864
865[[folder:Tortuga]]
866!!Tortuga
867[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tortuga_8732.jpg]]
868[[caption-width-right:250:''"Tortuga means turtle, and that's me. I take my time but I always win."'']]
869!!!'''Portrayed By:''' Creator/DannyTrejo
870
871The [=DEA's=] informant on the Mexican Cartel. He is beheaded, his head is put on a tortoise, and the head is rigged with bombs, blowing up all of the [=DEA=] members who are sent to meet him except for Hank.
872----
873* AssholeVictim: What Bolsa does to him is pretty horrific, but considering what an arrogant jerk he was, it's hard not to say his deeds didn't catch up with him.
874* CigarChomper: He enjoys puffing on a cigar in his appearances.
875* CruelAndUnusualDeath: After boldly boasting to Hank that his name Tortuga means "turtle", he is then beheaded with his head placed on the back of a tortoise for the delight of the DEA. Hank's reaction to this is what saves his life, or at least his limbs.
876* DecapitationPresentation: After the Cousins hack off his head, they stuff it with explosives and place it on a tortoise, and then send it to the DEA's meeting place with a message: ''HOLA DEA''.
877* DeathByCameo: Trejo's not exactly Creator/HarrisonFord or anything, but he's a beloved and recognizable cult actor. He was also a bigger name than most of the lead actors at the time and was listed as a special guest star. His run on the show lasts all of two scenes and one EarlyBirdCameo in the "Negro y Azul" video, not including time spent as a severed head.
878* DeathByIrony:
879** Deliberately invoked by Juan Bolsa and the Cousins. They place his severed head on a tortoise (which was given as a "gift" to [[MeaningfulName Tortuga]] in the first place); and to add (additional) insult-to-injury, Juan writes "Hola DEA" on the tortoise, and uses it as a weapon against the same organization that Tortuga had tattled to.
880** On a meta-note, it's probably not coincidental that a character played by Creator/DannyTrejo was killed with a {{Film/machete}}.
881* DiedOnTheirBirthday: Tortuga is [[OffWithHisHead decapitated]] by Marco and Leonel Salamanca after he is distracted by an apparent birthday gift.
882* TheInformant: He's a high-ranking member of the Juarez Cartel (high enough to report directly to Bolsa at least) and has turned informant for the DEA.
883* {{Jerkass}}: He lounges around in his motel room, ordering crass personal items listed on [=SkyMall=] via DEA agents who have to toady to him. He's not even NiceToTheWaiter, treating his bartender disdainfully.
884* MeaningfulName: Tortuga likes to remind people of his name's meaning and what he takes from it. His name means "tortoise" in Spanish, which he claims is reflective of his way of getting things done -- slow, but successful. Appropriately, he also takes far too long to realize he's about to be killed by the Cousins on Bolsa's orders, and after it happens, his head is delivered to the [=DEA=] on the back of a tortoise.
885* OffWithHisHead: On Bolsa's orders, the Cousins cut his head off with a machete.
886* OhCrap: The second he sees what Bolsa has written on the tortoise, his expression drops and he goes for his gun. By that point, he's way too late to save himself.
887* TheRat: Within the Cartel, informing the DEA.
888* SmugSnake: Tortuga is suicidally confident of his own abilities. He thinks he can outwit the Cartel while keeping the DEA virtually begging him for scraps of information, all while living the high life and bragging about himself. His arrogance gets him violently beheaded.
889* TooDumbToLive: After blabbing to the DEA as a paid informant, Tortuga decides to go drink at a shady BadGuyBar in the middle of Mexico, and treats Bolsa dropping in unannounced (while saying "I knew I'd find you here") as a pleasant surprise; even when Juan repeatedly complements him for how "quick" he is with words, the guy never puts it together. He's naturally a little wary when Bolsa says he's got a belated birthday gift for him in the back of the bar, but is easily lured into a false sense of security again when he receives a pet turtle. By the time he finally learns that his boss wants to execute him for his treachery and he tries to pull his gun, it's too late, and Tuco's twin Cousins are hacking off his head.
890* VisualPun: PlayedForHorror as his gruesome fate shows that he couldn't get a''head'' of the situation.
891[[/folder]]

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