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{{short description|Fictional character in the Breaking Bad franchise}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2024}}
{{Infobox character {{Infobox character
| name = '''Gustavo "Gus" Fring''' | name = Gus Fring
| series = ] | series = ]
| image = ] | image = Gustavo Fring BCS S3E10.png
| caption = ] as Gus Fring in ''Better Call Saul''
| caption =
| creator = ] | creator = ]<br>]
| portrayer = ] | portrayer = ]
| first = {{Plainlist|
| first = "]"
| last = "]" * ''''']''''':
* "]" (2009)
| occupation = ] distributor<br>Fast food restaurant chain proprietor
* ''''']''''':
* "]" (2017)
}}
| last = {{Plainlist|
* '''''Breaking Bad''''':
* "]" (2011)
* '''''Better Call Saul''''':
* "]" (2022)
}}
| aliases = {{Plainlist|
* The Chicken Man
* The Chilean
}}
| occupation = {{Plainlist|
* Co-founder and proprietor of ]
* Industrial laundry owner
* Drug ]
}}
| nationality = ]
| origin = ]
| full_name = Gustavo Fring
| nickname = Gus
| alias = Chicken Man
| lbl21 = Date of birth
| data21 = c. 1958 <br /> ]
| lbl22 = Date of death
| data22 = ]
| significant_other = ] (deceased)
}} }}
'''Gustavo "Gus" Fring''' is a fictional character in the American television drama series '']'' on ]. He is portrayed by ] and was created by series creator ]. Gus is one of the most prominent ] distributors in the southwestern United States. He owns and operates several legitimate businesses, including a chain of fast food restaurants (called ''Los Pollos Hermanos'') and an industrial laundry facility, as fronts for a vast and sophisticated drug operation. Gus maintains a friendly and low-key exterior; he takes an active role in managing his front businesses and personally supervises employees and serves customers at his fast food restaurants. In order to keep up appearances, Gus is a ] for the ] and has made large donations to the agency's Albuquerque office. However, Gus is ruthless and ] in managing his vast drug empire. He employs a number of enforcers and has personally killed rivals and associates.<ref name=AMC>{{cite web|url=http://www.amctv.com/shows/breaking-bad/cast/gustavo-fring|title=Gustavo Fring|publisher=]|accessdate=October 23, 2011}}</ref>


'''Gustavo Fring''' is a ] ] portrayed by ] in the '']'' franchise, serving as one of the main ] in the ] series '']'' and a major character in its prequel '']''. He is a ] businessman and major ] distributor in the ] who uses several legitimate businesses, including a chain of successful fast food restaurants called ] (The Chicken Brothers) and an industrial laundry facility called Lavandería Brillante (Bright Laundry), as fronts used to ] for a vast drug operation.
For his portrayal of Fring, Esposito won the ] award at the ] and was nominated for an ] award at the ]. '']'' ranked Fring number 3 in its list of the 20 Best Characters of 2011.<ref>{{cite web|last=Jackson|first=Josh|title=The 20 Best TV Characters of 2011|url=http://www.pastemagazine.com/blogs/lists/2011/12/the-20-best-tv-characters-of-2011.html?p=2|work=]|accessdate=June 30, 2012|date=December 5, 2011}}</ref> '']'' named him #3 in their 2013 list of The 60 Nastiest Villains of All Time.<ref>Bretts, Bruce; Roush, Matt; (March 25, 2013). "Baddies to the Bone: The 60 nastiest villains of all time". '']''. pp. 14 - 15.</ref>


Though outwardly he works with the Mexican cartel to distribute cocaine, he secretly plots revenge against its members over the death of his business associate and romantic partner ] at the hands of his sworn archenemy ], the patriarch of the cartel-backed drug trade in the Southwest. To become independent of the cartel's meth, he constructs a secret lab under his industrial laundry to manufacture ].
==Character biography==
Little is known about Gus' past. A ] national, Gus emigrated to ] in 1986 during the dictatorship of ].<ref name="her">{{cite episode|title=]|series=]|credits=]|network=]|city=] | airdate=September 4, 2011|season=4|number=8|number=|url=http://www.amctv.com/shows/breaking-bad/episodes/season-4/hermanos}}</ref> {{ref|1|^}} With his longtime friend and partner, ], Gus started a chicken restaurant called Los Pollos Hermanos. Max was murdered by the ], leading Gus to emigrate to the United States in 1989, where he re-established Los Pollos Hermanos as a chain of ] restaurants. Using his restaurants' supply chain as a front, Gus began distributing drugs in the ] on behalf of the cartel, an operation that eventually grew to encompass ].


Fring was created as a character to replace that of ] (played by departing actor ]) during the second season of ''Breaking Bad''. Gus, as a stoic businessman, was created to be opposite to the chaotic Tuco and act as a ] to protagonist ]. The character has received high acclaim, with critics hailing Gus as one of the best villains in television; as such, Esposito's performance in the role has earned him several nominations and awards.
Gus claims to have children, yet they have never been seen and little else about his family life has been revealed. It is implied that Fring may be using an ]; neither Hank nor Mike can find any record of his existence before his arrival to Mexico. ], the cartel's leader, mentions that he spares Gus' life only because he knows who Gus is, and warns him that he "isn't in Chile anymore"; in a flashback scene, ] mockingly refers to him as "Grand ]". Gilligan has stated that he purposely left Gus' origin ambiguous, comparing it to ].<ref name="NYTimes">{{cite web | url=http://artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/10/09/vince-gilligan-of-breaking-bad-talks-about-ending-the-season-and-the-series/ | title=Vince Gilligan of ‘Breaking Bad’ Talks About Ending the Season, and the Series |work=The New York Times | date=October 9, 2011 | accessdate=October 11, 2011 | author=Itzkoff, Dave}}</ref> Gus drives a ], stating that he chose it for its "safety record".


== Character development ==
===Season two===
] portrays Gus Fring in both ''Breaking Bad'' and ''Better Call Saul'']]
{{main|Breaking Bad (season 2)}}
Gustavo Fring is named after the former ] ].<ref name="DieWelt">{{Cite news |date=January 31, 2017 |title=Breaking-Bad-Schurke nach deutschem Trainer benannt |language=German |work=] |url=https://www.welt.de/sport/fussball/article161675759/Breaking-Bad-Schurke-nach-deutschem-Trainer-benannt.html |url-status=live |access-date=February 1, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170201175142/https://www.welt.de/sport/fussball/article161675759/Breaking-Bad-Schurke-nach-deutschem-Trainer-benannt.html |archive-date=February 1, 2017}}</ref>
When ] seeks a buyer for his chemically pure meth, his lawyer, ], puts him in contact with Gus. Walter and his partner, ], arrange a meeting with the seldom-seen Gus at a Los Pollos Hermanos restaurant, but Gus seemingly never shows up. Walter later realizes that Gus is the restaurant proprietor, and that he had purposely scheduled the meeting at his own restaurant in order to observe Walter and Jesse. Upon being confronted by Walter, Gus tells him that he is not interested in conducting business since Jesse was late and ] during the meeting, and is thus potentially unreliable.


When ] was unable to continue as Tuco Salamanca in '']''{{'s}} ] due to his commitment to appear in '']'', the ''Breaking Bad'' writers wrote Tuco out of the series and created the character of Gus to be his opposite. While Tuco was a meth user and "a screaming lunatic", Gus would be "a bit of a buttoned-down, cold-blooded, soft-spoken businessman".<ref>{{Cite news |last=Morgan Jeffery and Jamie Wotton |date=May 14, 2012 |title='Breaking Bad' Vince Gilligan Q&A: 'I want UK fans to see the show' |work=] |url=https://www.digitalspy.com/tv/ustv/a380786/breaking-bad-vince-gilligan-qa-i-want-uk-fans-to-see-the-show/ |url-status=live |access-date=April 8, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191115194723/https://www.digitalspy.com/tv/ustv/a380786/breaking-bad-vince-gilligan-qa-i-want-uk-fans-to-see-the-show/ |archive-date=November 15, 2019}}</ref>
Walter persuades Gus to reconsider his decision, promising that he will never have to deal with Jesse and that their product will earn him enormous returns. Gus eventually buys thirty-eight pounds of Walter's meth for $1.2 million; the timing of the transaction forces Walter to miss the birth of his daughter, Holly. Shortly afterwards, Gus is given a tour of the ]'s ] field office, along with other local ]. While there, he discovers that Walter is dying of lung cancer and that his brother-in-law, ], is a DEA agent.


Initially, Giancarlo Esposito was offered a character that was described to him as "very admirable, very polite", and he decided to play that character as if he had "some kind of a secret". Without knowing what that secret was, Esposito understood the potential Gus had as a growing character, therefore rejecting offers for guest appearances as originally intended for the character and insisting on becoming a series regular.<ref name="Reuters">{{Cite news |last=Potts |first=Kimberly |date=October 9, 2011 |title=How Giancarlo Esposito Forced 'Breaking Bad' to Get Even Better |work=] |url=https://www.reuters.com/article/idUS233462123820111009 |url-status=live |access-date=October 23, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111011161153/http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/10/09/idUS233462123820111009 |archive-date=October 11, 2011}}</ref> To achieve Gus's trademark calmness, Esposito used ] techniques, which allowed him to convey the character as being "a very good listener".<ref name="Time" />
===Season three===
{{main|Breaking Bad (season 3)}}
Pleased with how well Walter's product has sold, Gus offers him $3 million for three months of his time. Walter, whose family life is in shambles and who has no desire to continue cooking, respectfully declines the offer. Later, Gus intervenes in a plot by the cartel to kill Walter, narrowly saving his life. Gus finally persuades Walter to accept his offer after showing him a large-scale "superlab" housed under an industrial laundry facility that he owns, outfitted with top-of-the-line equipment and capable of producing at least two-hundred pounds of meth a week. He partners Walter with ], the talented chemist who set up the superlab.


The humanity of Gus's personality played an integral role in his development.<ref name="AOL">{{Cite web |last=Ryan |first=Maureen |date=October 9, 2011 |title=Gus Fring Speaks: Giancarlo Esposito on 'Breaking Bad's' Most Memorable Villain |url=http://www.aoltv.com/2011/10/09/gus-fring-giancarlo-esposito-on-breaking-bad/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111024220427/http://www.aoltv.com/2011/10/09/gus-fring-giancarlo-esposito-on-breaking-bad/ |archive-date=October 24, 2011 |access-date=October 23, 2011 |website=]}}</ref> The loss of Max, his partner, contributed to Gus's evolution into a ruthless criminal; he stops at nothing to avenge Max's death, including the gradual killing of Hector's entire family. The loss of Max also cultivated Gus's desire to create a new "family" by empowering his meth empire, as well as the chicken restaurants.<ref name="entw">{{Cite magazine |last=Franich, Darren |date=December 18, 2011 |title=Best of 2011 (Behind the Scenes): 'Breaking Bad' creator Vince Gilligan talks about That Scene from the season finale |url=http://popwatch.ew.com/2011/12/18/breaking-bad-vince-gilligan-season-finale/ |url-status=live |magazine=] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120606091934/http://popwatch.ew.com/2011/12/18/breaking-bad-vince-gilligan-season-finale/ |archive-date=June 6, 2012 |access-date=September 18, 2012}}</ref> Moments before dying, Gus manages to calmly adjust his tie even after having half his face blown off. Esposito saw it as an important gesture of "when a person goes to what they've always done&nbsp;... to be complete in his leaving this world".<ref name="Time">{{Cite magazine |last=Poniewozik |first=James |date=October 10, 2011 |title=Interview: Talking Gus Fring with Giancarlo Esposito |url=https://entertainment.time.com/2011/10/10/interview-talking-gus-fring-with-giancarlo-esposito/ |url-status=live |magazine=] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111022202706/http://entertainment.time.com/2011/10/10/interview-talking-gus-fring-with-giancarlo-esposito/ |archive-date=October 22, 2011 |access-date=October 23, 2011}}</ref>
Gus' protection of Walter puts him at odds with the cartel, which holds him responsible for the death of ], Hector's nephew. Gus promises one of his superiors, ], that the cartel will be free to kill Walter once his cooking tenure has been completed. When ], Hector's twin nephews, push back against this agreement, Gus offers his permission to kill Hank. However, Hank manages to survive the hit after being warned by an unknown caller of the imminent attack. Hank kills Marco and critically injures Leonel. Gus later sends his enforcer, ], to poison Leonel in his hospital bed.


Gus's popularity, as well as his importance to the series' development, made room for possible "flashback" type appearances in future episodes,<ref name="NYTimes" /><ref name="EW">{{Cite magazine |last=Tucker |first=Ken |date=October 10, 2011 |title='Breaking Bad' face off: Gus Fring/Giancarlo Esposito talks about THAT SCENE |url=http://watching-tv.ew.com/2011/10/10/breaking-bad-face-off-gus-fring/ |url-status=live |magazine=] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111029062733/http://watching-tv.ew.com/2011/10/10/breaking-bad-face-off-gus-fring/ |archive-date=October 29, 2011 |access-date=October 23, 2011}}</ref> but that idea did not come to fruition until 2017 when Gus was brought back for the ] of '']''.<ref>{{Cite magazine |last=Snierson |first=Dan |date=April 17, 2017 |title=Better Call Saul creators on the return of multiple Breaking Bad characters |url=https://ew.com/tv/2017/04/17/better-call-saul-breaking-bad-witness/ |url-status=live |magazine=] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180613015111/http://ew.com/tv/2017/04/17/better-call-saul-breaking-bad-witness/ |archive-date=June 13, 2018 |access-date=August 13, 2022}}</ref> When conceiving the story for '']'', Gilligan considered including Gus in the story, but ultimately desisted from the idea due to his feelings that the film should focus only on the most important characters in ]'s life, which Gus was not.<ref name="Fernandez-Oct2019">{{Cite web |last=Fernandez |first=Maria Elena |date=October 14, 2019 |title=The ''Breaking Bad'' Movie Almost Had a Very Different Ending |url=https://www.vulture.com/2019/10/el-camino-breaking-bad-movie-vince-gilligan.html |url-access=limited |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191015033833/https://www.vulture.com/2019/10/el-camino-breaking-bad-movie-vince-gilligan.html |archive-date=October 15, 2019 |access-date=August 11, 2022 |website=]}}</ref>
The attempted assassination of Hank causes the U.S. and Mexican governments to launch a crackdown on the cartel. The ] kill Bolsa, who realizes all too late that Gus has engineered the entire fiasco in order to seize control of the methamphetamine market. After learning that Hank was contacted moments before the hit, Walter makes the same conclusion. He requests a meeting with Gus to discuss the future of their arrangement. Gus offers to extend their agreement to a long-term, $15 million-a-year deal, which Walter accepts. Gus reluctantly lets Walter keep Jesse as his cooking partner, but makes it clear that he dislikes Jesse and only tolerates him because he respects Walter's abilities.


== Character overview ==
Walter's relationship with Gus is jeopardized when Walter kills two of Gus' dealers to protect Jesse. Gus, along with Mike and Victor, meets Walt in the desert and demands that he explain himself. Walt implies that he suspects Gus of having ordered the dealers to kill 11 year old Tomas, which Gus angrily denies. Gus seemingly accepts Walter's plea to regard the episode as a "hiccup" and allow him to continue cooking meth, but re-appoints Gale as Walter's assistant. Gus visits Gale at his apartment and surreptitiously instructs him to learn Walter's formula so as to be able to cook alone should Walter die from cancer. Walter again deduces Gus' true intentions and plots with Jesse to kill Gale. Walter surmises that any delay in production would weaken Gus' position, and that without Gale, Gus would be forced to retain Walter as the only cook capable of producing the high-quality meth needed to sustain the operation. Walter sets out to kill Gale, but is intercepted by Victor and brought to the lab where Mike is waiting for him. Under the pretext of luring Jesse to the lab to betray him to Mike, Walter convinces Mike to allow him to call Jesse. Instead, Walter instructs Jesse to kill Gale. ] rushes to Gale's apartment but arrives too late, finding Gale dead on the floor.
Gus has a mysterious background; his name is likely an alias, since neither the DEA nor his own enforcer ] could find any record of him prior to his arrival in Mexico. He is supposedly a native of Chile, and is sometimes referred to by cartel members as "The Chilean". In the ''Better Call Saul'' episode "]", he tells a comatose ] a story about a ] that ate the fruit from a ] tree which he tended during his childhood in Chile.<ref name="Piñata">{{Cite episode |title=Piñata |episode-link=Piñata (Better Call Saul) |series=Better Call Saul |series-link=Better Call Saul |network=] |date=September 10, 2018 |season=4 |number=6}}</ref> In the ''Better Call Saul'' episode "]", ] refers to a mysterious incident involving Gus which took place in ].<ref name="Magic Man" />


Gus emigrated to Mexico in the 1980s during the Chilean dictatorship of ].<ref name="Hermanos">{{Cite episode |title=Hermanos |episode-link=Hermanos (Breaking Bad) |series=Breaking Bad |series-link=Breaking Bad |network=] |date=September 4, 2011 |season=4 |number=8}}</ref> In a flashback during the ''Breaking Bad'' episode "]", Hector mockingly refers to him as "Big ]",<!-- per the subtitles: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WNogwJIKbKU --> implying that Gus had a connection to the Pinochet regime.<ref name="One Minute">{{Cite episode |title=One Minute |episode-link=One Minute (Breaking Bad) |series=Breaking Bad |series-link=Breaking Bad |network=] |date=May 2, 2010 |season=3 |number=7}}</ref> As mentioned in the ''Better Call Saul'' episode "]", Gus and Peter Schuler had a shared experience in Santiago, which Gus mentions to Peter to calm him down when he panics over Lalo's attacks on Gus's business.<ref name="JMM" /> In "Hermanos", Eladio says that when he ordered Max killed, he spared Gus because of his unstated but apparently powerful connection to Chile.<ref name="Hermanos" /> ] has stated that he purposely left Gus's origins ambiguous, comparing them to ].<ref name="NYTimes">{{Cite web |last=Itzkoff |first=Dave |date=October 9, 2011 |title=Vince Gilligan of 'Breaking Bad' Talks About Ending the Season, and the Series |url=http://artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/10/09/vince-gilligan-of-breaking-bad-talks-about-ending-the-season-and-the-series/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111012165407/http://artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/10/09/vince-gilligan-of-breaking-bad-talks-about-ending-the-season-and-the-series/ |archive-date=October 12, 2011 |access-date=October 11, 2011 |website=]}}</ref>
===Season four===
{{main|Breaking Bad (season 4)}}
In the aftermath of Gale's murder, Walter and Jesse are taken before Gus in the superlab. Gus calmly changes into a ] and, in a gruesome show of force, fatally slashes Victor's throat with a ] in front of the horrified duo. Walter and Jesse are spared a similar punishment, although Walter knows that he has fallen out of favor with Gus and fears that he will eventually be killed. Walter decides to pre-emptively do away with Gus, illegally purchasing an untraceable ] for the task.


Gus runs at least two legitimate businesses: a chain of successful fried chicken restaurants called ] (The Chicken Brothers) and an industrial laundry facility called Lavandería Brillante (Bright Laundry) in ]. Gus's restaurants are located across the southwestern United States, with his flagship restaurant in Albuquerque, and the firm's chicken farm and distribution center on the outskirts of the city. The company is a subsidiary of Madrigal Electromotive GmbH, a multinational company based in Germany that has ownership stakes in multiple subsidiaries.
Jesse, guilt-ridden over Gale's murder, descends into a drug-fueled depression and attempts to cope by opening his house to strangers for a tweaker party that carries on for several days, even while he's away at work. In response to Mike's concerns that Jesse's recklessness at home could attract unwanted attention, Gus instructs Mike to take Jesse along as a passenger on a series of seemingly mundane pick-up runs around the city. Aware that Jesse can't be scared into behaving, Gus instead orchestrates a ruse to boost Jesse's loyalty and self-esteem. During the final pick-up of the day, one of Gus' henchmen posing as an armed robber approaches Mike's idling car, where Jesse is waiting for Mike to return. Jesse, unarmed, grabs the wheel and foils the robbery, which turns into a car chase that leaves Mike behind until Jesse meets up with him later that evening to explain why he drove away. Later, Jesse helps Mike retrieve stolen meth from a pair of junkies. Impressed with Jesse's mettle, Gus deems him ready to take on a greater role in the operation.


While his restaurant chain is a legitimate business, it serves as a front for Gus to distribute ] for a Mexican cartel and later develop his own ] production and distribution business. Gus operates in partnership with two Madrigal executives: ], a German who serves as the company president, and ], the company's ]-based vice president of global logistics.
Meanwhile, Gus' conflict with the cartel escalates. The cartel sends several men to kidnap Gus' chemical supplier, but the operation is foiled by Mike. The cartel also attacks Gus' delivery trucks and distributes his meth to local junkies. Gus arranges a meeting with the cartel where he offers a one-time payment of $50 million in exchange for a settlement of grievances and a complete severance of their partnership. The cartel refuses, reiterating its demand that Gus hand over Walter. In a flashback scene, the origin of Gus' animosity toward the cartel is revealed: twenty years earlier, during a meeting in which Gus and Max sought to enter the meth business with the cartel, Hector shot Max in the head as Gus was forced to watch.


Gus maintains a positive public image: he is a ] for Albuquerque civic causes, including the local ] (DEA) office. In addition to befriending the special agent in charge, Gus makes large donations to the office's charitable events. Underneath this outwardly pleasant front, he is ruthlessly cruel and ] in managing his vast drug empire. He employs a number of enforcers and has personally killed both rivals and allies.<ref name="AMC">{{Cite web |title=Gustavo Fring |url=http://www.amctv.com/shows/breaking-bad/cast/gustavo-fring |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150504205601/http://www.amctv.com/shows/breaking-bad/cast/gustavo-fring |archive-date=May 4, 2015 |access-date=October 23, 2011 |website=]}}</ref>
Hank is asked by an Albuquerque police detective for help in deciphering what appears to be information about a meth lab written in Gale's notebook. He begins to suspect that Gus is involved in "blue sky" when he finds a Los Pollos Hermanos napkin among the evidence collected from Gale's apartment, knowing that Gale was a ]. Hank retrieves Gus' fingerprints during a visit to Los Pollos Hermanos and matches them with prints found in Gale's apartment. Gus is questioned, but his explanation satisfies both the DEA and the police. Hank remains suspicious, however, and investigates Gus on his own. He obliviously asks for Walter's help in attaching a tracking device to Gus's car at Los Pollos Hermanos; Gus is warned by Walter and removes the device before driving anywhere but home and the restaurant.


=== Sexuality ===
In an attempt to defuse tensions with the cartel, Gus agrees to share Walter's formula. Because he does not trust Walter, Gus and Mike take Jesse to Mexico, where Jesse cooks a demonstration batch of "blue sky" in the cartel's own superlab, which turns out to be 96.3% pure. To Jesse's alarm, Gus seemingly agrees to have Jesse work for the cartel on a permanent basis. However, during a party celebrating the agreement, Gus kills Don Eladio and the rest of the cartel's top leadership with a poisoned bottle of ]. To convince Don Eladio and his crew that the tequila is safe, Gus drinks the first shot, having taken capsules that delayed the poison and allowed him to purge. Gus, Jesse, and Mike shoot their way out of Don Eladio's compound and drive to an elaborate medical tent that Gus arranged for in advance. There, Gus is treated by his private doctors and quickly recovers, but is still weak from the ordeal. Mike's bullet wounds require more time with the doctors, leaving Gus with no option but to give in to Jesse's demand to let Walter live in exchange for help crossing the border on foot.
Much of Gus's motives are driven by revenge for the death of his partner ] by the Mexican cartel. Gus and Max's relationship was long implied to be more than business before their confirmation as lovers by showrunner ] in 2022. In the ''Better Call Saul'' episode "]", Hector suggests that a better name for Los Pollos Hermanos might be "Los Culos Hermanos" (The Butt Brothers), insinuating that Gus and Max were ].<ref name="Sabrosito">{{Cite episode |title=Sabrosito |episode-link=Sabrosito |series=Better Call Saul |series-link=Better Call Saul |network=] |date=May 1, 2017 |season=3 |number=4}}</ref> In "Magic Man", Lalo discusses Gus with Bolsa and refers to Max as Gus's boyfriend.<ref name="Magic Man" /> As shown in the ''Better Call Saul'' episode "]", after arriving in Albuquerque, Gus acquired a small villa on the Mexican side of the Mexico–U.S. border. The villa serves as the residence for ], and contains a fountain which is dedicated to Max.<ref name="Dedicado a Max" />


Gus's homosexuality is touched on in the episode "]", in which he relaxes after having eliminated Lalo as a threat to his plans by visiting a wine bar and conversing with David, his favorite ]. Gus drops hints of his interest in David before deciding to cut the visit short and depart.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Fienberg |first=Daniel |date=July 19, 2022 |title='Better Call Saul' Director Breaks Down Pivotal 'Fun and Games' Scenes |work=] |url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/tv/tv-features/better-call-saul-michael-morris-fun-and-games-interview-1235183042/amp/ |url-status=live |access-date=July 20, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220720155514/https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/tv/tv-features/better-call-saul-michael-morris-fun-and-games-interview-1235183042/amp/ |archive-date=July 20, 2022}}</ref> In 2020, Gilligan stated that "I personally think Max was more than just a friend to Gus. I think they probably were lovers."<ref name="lovers">{{Cite magazine |last=Franich |first=Darren |date=August 3, 2020 |title='Breaking Bad': Vince Gilligan talks finale |url=https://ew.com/article/2011/12/18/breaking-bad-vince-gilligan-season-finale/ |url-status=live |magazine=] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201110054124/https://ew.com/article/2011/12/18/breaking-bad-vince-gilligan-season-finale/ |archive-date=November 10, 2020 |access-date=November 10, 2020}}</ref> Gould later confirmed that Gus and Max were lovers on the '']'' podcast ''The Watch.''<ref>{{Cite web |date=July 21, 2022 |title='Better Call Saul' showrunner confirms Gus Fring's sexuality |url=https://www.nme.com/news/tv/better-call-saul-showrunner-confirms-gus-frings-sexuality-3274241 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220724085527/https://www.nme.com/news/tv/better-call-saul-showrunner-confirms-gus-frings-sexuality-3274241 |archive-date=July 24, 2022 |access-date=July 22, 2022 |website=]}}</ref>
Gus deems Jesse fit to cook Walter's formula and run the superlab on his own. However, Jesse insists that he will not cook for Gus if Walter is killed, offering Gus the option of firing him instead. Gus' henchmen kidnap Walter and take him out to the desert, where Gus fires him, tells him that he intends to neutralize Hank, and threatens to kill his entire family if Walter attempts to interfere. Afterwards, Gus visits Hector in his nursing home and tauntingly informs him of the deaths of the rest of the Salamanca family members and the end of the cartel.


== Character biography ==
Walter frantically searches for a way to kill Gus. He plants a ] in Gus' Volvo, but Gus manages to evade the trap. Walter then learns from Jesse about Gus's visits to Hector's nursing home. Realizing that Gus and Hector are enemies, Walter visits Hector and offers him an opportunity to exact revenge on Gus. The two hatch a plot to lure Gus back to Hector's nursing home, starting with Hector paying a visit to the DEA. Gus learns about Hector's visit from Tyrus, and decides that Hector must be eliminated. Against Tyrus' advice, Gus insists that he take care of Hector personally.
=== Background ===
The ''Breaking Bad'' episode "]" shows that Gus and his long-time business partner and boyfriend ] started ] as a front to sell methamphetamine that Max "cooked". They approached ], the leader of the Juárez cartel, with an offer to expand their drug trade with cartel help. Eladio declined, as the cartel preferred to continue distributing cocaine. Instead, Eladio had ] kill Max for selling meth in cartel territory without permission. Eladio spared Gus, but forced him to co-operate with the cartel on Eladio's terms.<ref name="Hermanos" />


For the next 20 years, Gus remains outwardly loyal to the cartel but nurses a grudge against Eladio, ], and particularly Hector, waiting for his chance at revenge. After establishing himself in Albuquerque, Gus secretly looks to end his dependency on cartel cocaine by producing and distributing meth in the United States. Because the Salamanca family drug business controlled by Hector also includes Albuquerque, Gus is forced to deal with him but seeks to undermine the Salamancas.
Gus and Tyrus return to the nursing home and visit Hector in his room. Gus prepares to inject Hector with a lethal poison, taunting Hector for the last time. However, Hector begins ringing his bell frantically, activating a homemade bomb Walter had attached to his wheelchair earlier. The subsequent explosion immediately kills Hector and Tyrus. A dazed and horribly disfigured Gus walks out of Hector's room, calmly adjusts his tie, and collapses dead outside the doorway.


=== ''Better Call Saul'' ===
==Character development==
==== Season 3 ====
{{See also|Better Call Saul (season 3)}}
] pays Mike to help remove ], Hector's nephew, from the day-to-day activities of the Salamanca family drug business. Instead of killing Tuco, Mike arranges for Tuco to assault him in view of the police, leading to Tuco's arrest.<ref>{{Cite episode |title=Gloves Off |episode-link=Gloves Off |series=Better Call Saul |series-link=Better Call Saul |network=] |date=March 7, 2016 |season=2 |number=4}}</ref> Mike fears Hector will learn that he arranged for Tuco's imprisonment and is concerned that Hector will retaliate against Stacey and Kaylee. Mike acts preemptively by preparing to assassinate Hector, but is interrupted at the last moment. Mike tracks this interruption to Gus, who explains that he wants to be the one to determine when Hector will die. However, Gus encourages Mike to continue to disrupt the trucks Hector uses to bring ice cream store supplies and drugs from Mexico and send cash back to the cartel.<ref>{{Cite episode |title=Sunk Costs |episode-link=Sunk Costs (Better Call Saul) |series=Better Call Saul |series-link=Better Call Saul |network=AMC |date=April 24, 2017 |season=3 |number=3}}</ref>


After Mike disrupts two shipments without revealing his identity, Hector demands that Gus temporarily use his Los Pollos Hermanos trucks to ship both Hector's and Gus's drugs. Gus, who had wanted this result from the start, appears to reluctantly agree. He later attempts to pay Mike, but Mike refuses the money. Instead, he asks for assistance laundering the $250,000 he stole from one of Hector's trucks, which Gus provides by arranging for Madrigal Electromotive to hire Mike as a contracted security expert and pay him monthly consulting fees.
Initially, ] was offered to play a character that was described to him as "very admirable, very polite", and he decided to play that character as if he had "some kind of a secret". Without knowing what that secret was, Esposito understood the potential Gus had as a growing character, therefore rejecting offers for guest appearances and insisting on becoming a series regular.<ref name=Reuters>{{cite news|url=http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/10/09/idUS233462123820111009|title=How Giancarlo Esposito Forced 'Breaking Bad' to Get Even Better|last=Potts|first=Kimberly|date=October 9, 2011|agency=Reuters|accessdate=October 23, 2011}}</ref> In order to achieve Gus's trademark calmness, Esposito utilized ] classes he had been taking regardless of the series, which allowed him to convey the character by "being a good listener". The humanity of Gus's personality played an integral role in his development, especially the very deep relationship with ], which was interpreted by some viewers &ndash; and even Esposito himself &ndash; as possibly homosexual.<ref name=AOL>{{cite web|url=http://www.aoltv.com/2011/10/09/gus-fring-giancarlo-esposito-on-breaking-bad/|title=Gus Fring Speaks: Giancarlo Esposito on 'Breaking Bad's' Most Memorable Villain|last=Ryan|first=Maureen|date=October 9, 2011|publisher=]|accessdate=October 23, 2011}}</ref> The loss of Max is partially what turned Gus into a ruthless villain, who is not above anything when it comes to avenging Max's death, including the murder of children and the gradual killing of ]'s entire family. However, the loss of Max is also what cultivated Gus' desire to create a new "family" by empowering his meth empire, as well as the chicken restaurants. Gilligan has stated that he decided against the show officially confirming or denying whether or not Max and Gus were, in fact, lovers; however, he also said that they "probably were lovers."<ref name="entw">{{cite web|url=http://popwatch.ew.com/2011/12/18/breaking-bad-vince-gilligan-season-finale/|title=Best of 2011 (Behind the Scenes): 'Breaking Bad' creator Vince Gilligan talks about That Scene from the season finale|author=Franich, Darren|work=Entertainment Weekly|date=December 18, 2011|accessdate=September 18, 2012}}</ref>


With the new transport agreement in place, Nacho and ] arrive at the Los Pollos Hermanos warehouse and farm to pick up a drug shipment, and Nacho attempts to strong-arm his way into taking six kilos instead of the agreed-upon five. When Gus's subordinate ] calls Gus for guidance, Gus recognizes an opportunity to infiltrate the Salamanca organization and tells Tyrus to give Nacho the extra kilo. Nacho fears that Hector will learn of his role in Tuco's imprisonment and is concerned about Hector's intent to take over Nacho's father's upholstery store for use as a front business.
Even moments before dying, Gus manages to calmly adjust his tie after having half his face blown off. Giancarlo Esposito saw it as an important gesture of "when a person goes to what they’ve always done", in order "to be complete in his leaving this world."<ref name=Time>{{cite web|url=http://entertainment.time.com/2011/10/10/interview-talking-gus-fring-with-giancarlo-esposito/|title=Interview: Talking Gus Fring with Giancarlo Esposito|last=Poniewozik|first=James|date=October 10, 2011|work=Time magazine|accessdate=October 23, 2011}}</ref> Gus's death scene has made an impact on fans of the series, who compared his face to that of ] as seen in the film '']''; some proceeded to create ] masks and T-shirts.<ref name=Halloween>{{cite news|url=http://nymag.com/daily/entertainment/2011/10/download_a_gus_fring_halloween.html|title=Download Our Gus Fring Mask for Halloween|last=Paskin|first=Willa|newspaper=]|accessdate=October 23, 2011}}</ref> His popularity, as well as his importance to the series' development, made room for possible "flashback" type appearances in future episodes.<ref name=NYTimes /><ref name=EW>{{cite web|url=http://watching-tv.ew.com/2011/10/10/breaking-bad-face-off-gus-fring/|title='Breaking Bad' face off: Gus Fring/Giancarlo Esposito talks about THAT SCENE|last=Tucker|first=Ken|date=October 10, 2011|work=Entertainment Weekly|accessdate=October 23, 2011}}</ref>


He secretly swaps Hector's angina medication for a ], hoping to induce a fatal heart attack. At a meeting between Juan Bolsa, Gus, Hector and Nacho, Bolsa informs them that the use of Gus's trucks to move the drugs and cash for both organizations will be a permanent arrangement. Hector's angry outburst leads to a stroke, and Gus calls for an ambulance while administering first aid that saves Hector's life, though he is comatose. Nacho follows Mike's previous advice to switch the placebos for Hector's real medication so that foul play will not be suspected. Gus appears to notice Nacho's actions, but says nothing.<ref>{{Cite episode |title=Lantern |episode-link=Lantern (Better Call Saul) |series=Better Call Saul |series-link=Better Call Saul |network=] |date=June 19, 2017 |season=3 |number=10}}</ref>
==Note==
{{note|1}}Gus left Chile in 1986, the same year in which the ] attempted to assassinate Pinochet.<ref name="umd">{{cite web | url=http://www.start.umd.edu/start/data_collections/tops/terrorist_organization_profile.asp?id=222 | title=Terrorist Organization Profile: Manuel Rodriguez Patriotic Front | publisher=] | accessdate=July 06, 2012 | author=National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism}}</ref> Although there are no existing Chilean records of Gus, there are two instances which demonstrate his likely involvement in the Pinochet government:<ref name="her"/><ref name="pin">{{cite web | url=http://tv.yahoo.com/news/breaking-bad-postmortem-giancarlo-esposito-reacts-season-4s-031000424.html | title=Breaking Bad Postmortem: Giancarlo Esposito Reacts to Season 4's Explosive Finale | publisher=] | date=October 9, 2011 | accessdate=July 01, 2012 | author=Bryant, Adam}}</ref> Hector Salamanca refers to Gus as "Grand ],"<ref name="om">{{cite episode | title=] | series=] | credits=] | network=] | url=http://www.amctv.com/shows/breaking-bad/episodes/season-3/one-minute | city=] | airdate=May 2, 2010 | season=3}}</ref> and Don Eladio tells Gus that he is "not in Chile anymore" but spares his life because he knows who Gus really is.<ref name="her" />


==References== ==== Season 4 ====
{{See also|Better Call Saul (season 4)}}
Hector is rushed to the hospital, while Gus, Nacho, and Arturo are summoned to a meeting with Bolsa at the Los Pollos distribution plant, where Bolsa declares that until further notice, the Salamanca operation will continue with Nacho and Arturo in charge.

] (the Cousins) arrive to watch over Hector. Gus hires a doctor to oversee Hector's recovery. While reviewing Hector's medical records, Gus realizes there is no nitroglycerin in Hector's system, meaning Nacho tried to kill him. When Nacho and Arturo arrive at the chicken farm to pick up their next shipment, Gus suffocates and kills Arturo, tells Nacho that he knows what Nacho did, and unless Nacho follows his orders, he will inform the Salamancas. Tyrus and ] make Arturo's death and a violent attack on Nacho look like the work of the Espinosas, while Victor sells the drugs from Nacho's car to them. Nacho falsely identifies the Espinosas to the Cousins, who massacre the Espinosas to recover the "stolen" drugs before returning to Mexico to avoid the authorities. Gus orders Hector's treatment halted after he has regained movement in his right index finger, leaving his recovered mind trapped in his unhealed body.

Gus works with Mike to plan the construction of an underground meth "superlab" under Lavandería Brillante, an industrial laundry he owns, using a design provided by chemist ]. Mike escorts engineers through the laundry and questions them about their ability to construct the lab as Gus secretly listens in. Gus offers the job to ] after being impressed by Werner's forthright description of the difficulty and risk. Gus provides long-term housing and amenities for Werner's crew, while Mike provides security and transportation designed to keep their presence a secret. Werner inadvertently provides details of underground concrete construction to patrons during an outing at a bar and Mike ends the conversation. The next day, Mike makes a veiled warning to Werner that Gus will have him killed if he makes the same mistake again, and Werner acknowledges that he understands.

Lalo Salamanca arrives to oversee the Salamanca drug business. He is immediately suspicious of Gus and surveils his restaurant and chicken farm. With construction behind schedule, Werner misses his wife and effects an escape to rendezvous with her. Mike convinces Gus to let Mike find Werner and bring him back instead of killing him. Mike tracks Werner to a money wire store and then to a nearby resort. Lalo follows Mike, kills Fred the money wire clerk to obtain the information Mike discovered, then calls resorts until he finds Werner. By pretending to work for Gus, Lalo discovers from Werner some of the details of the lab's construction before Mike arrives and ends the call. Knowing that Lalo can track Werner's actions back to Gus, Gus says Werner must be killed. Gus offers to send men to do it, but Mike accepts responsibility because Werner escaped on his watch, so he reluctantly kills Werner himself.

==== Season 5 ====
{{See also|Better Call Saul (season 5)}}

Gus arranges for Nacho to take cocaine of inferior quality when picking up the Salamancas' drugs at Los Pollos Hermanos. Rumors of the "stepped on" product reach Nacho and ], who report them to Lalo. Lalo confirms the impurity of the cocaine during a visit to Salamanca street dealers. In a meeting with Lalo and Juan Bolsa, Gus falsely claims that Werner Ziegler was working under Mike's supervision to construct a chilling system for Gus's chicken farm and that Werner fled after stealing cocaine. Gus goes on to claim that in an effort to hide the loss, he replaced the stolen cocaine with locally produced methamphetamine. The story explains events of which Lalo is aware, including Werner's departure from Albuquerque, pursuit by Mike, and subsequent death. Lalo accepts Gus's cover story and apology but remains suspicious. Juan reminds Lalo that Gus enjoys the trust of Don Eladio, and indicates that Lalo should let the matter drop. Because Lalo remains suspicious, Gus shuts down construction of the underground meth lab and has Mike send Werner's workers home. Gus offers to continue paying Mike during the delay, but Mike declines out of frustration over Gus's seeming lack of compassion for Werner.<ref name="Magic Man">{{Cite episode |title=Magic Man |episode-link=Magic Man (Better Call Saul) |series=Better Call Saul |series-link=Better Call Saul |network=] |date=February 23, 2020 |season=5 |number=1}}</ref>

Gus coerces Nacho into providing inside information on the Salamancas. Nacho gains Lalo's trust, and after Domingo is arrested, Nacho and Lalo use ] to secure Domingo's release from jail in exchange for the location of several of Gus's dead drops. Nacho reports the plan to Gus, who plans to cancel the drops, but Nacho advises that this will reveal a mole within the Salamanca organization.<ref>{{Cite episode |title=50% Off |episode-link=50% Off |series=Better Call Saul |series-link=Better Call Saul |network=] |date=February 24, 2020 |season=5 |number=2}}</ref> Gus agrees and on the night of the transfer he tensely waits as Victor and Diego make sure that the DEA and local police seize nearly a million dollars but find no leads to Gus.<ref>{{Cite episode |title=The Guy for This |episode-link=The Guy for This |series=Better Call Saul |series-link=Better Call Saul |network=] |date=March 2, 2020 |season=5 |number=3}}</ref><ref>{{Cite episode |title=Namaste |episode-link=Namaste (Better Call Saul) |series=Better Call Saul |series-link=Better Call Saul |network=] |date=March 9, 2020 |season=5 |number=4}}</ref>

Mike spends several weeks feeling depressed over Werner's death and drinks to excess. After he is injured by a local gang, Gus has him taken to a pueblo Gus owns just inside the Mexican border, which includes a fountain dedicated to Max. Dr. Barry Goodman tends to Mike's wounds and Mike stays to heal. Gus visits and asks Mike to join his organization, saying that he wants Mike with him because Mike understands his need for revenge.<ref name="Dedicado a Max">{{Cite episode |title=Dedicado a Max |episode-link=Dedicado a Max |series=Better Call Saul |series-link=Better Call Saul |network=] |date=March 16, 2020 |season=5 |number=5}}</ref>

Gus arranges for Nacho to report to Mike about his activities to undermine the Salamanca organization. Mike works under an assumed name to secretly point the police toward Lalo for the murder of Fred the money wire store clerk. Lalo is surrounded by police and arrested.<ref>{{Cite episode |title=Wexler v. Goodman |episode-link=Wexler v. Goodman |series=Better Call Saul |series-link=Better Call Saul |network=] |date=March 23, 2020 |season=5 |number=6}}</ref> In jail under an assumed name, Lalo contacts Nacho and says he wants Nacho to burn down one of Gus's Los Pollos Hermanos restaurants. Gus and other subsidiary owners provide status reports to Peter Schuler, Madrigal's CEO. Afterward, Gus briefs Peter and Lydia on the status of the meth lab, and Gus assures Peter he will get the plan back on track. When Gus returns home, he and Nacho preserve Nacho's role as the mole in the Salamanca organization by destroying the restaurant. Gus wants Lalo released, so he has Mike provide Jimmy with the details of his investigation into Lalo. Jimmy uses the information to accuse police of witness tampering, enabling him to win a motion to release Lalo on bail.<ref name="JMM">{{Cite episode |title=JMM |episode-link=JMM (Better Call Saul) |series=Better Call Saul |series-link=Better Call Saul |network=] |date=March 30, 2020 |season=5 |number=7}}</ref>

Jimmy drives to a remote desert location to pick up the bail money from The Cousins. As he starts his return trip, he is cut off by several gunmen who take the money and prepare to kill him. The gunmen are suddenly attacked by an unknown shooter. All but one are killed, and the survivor gets away in the only attacker's vehicle that is still drivable. The unseen shooter was Mike, who was tracking Jimmy for Gus. Mike's truck was also damaged, so Jimmy and he recover the money and begin the drive back to Albuquerque in Jimmy's car. When the car breaks down, Jimmy and Mike take the money and walk cross-country to avoid the surviving gunman. After a night in the desert, Mike kills the surviving gunman and they resume walking.<ref>{{Cite episode |title=Bagman |episode-link=Bagman (Better Call Saul) |series=Better Call Saul |series-link=Better Call Saul |network=] |date=April 6, 2020 |season=5 |number=8}}</ref>

Jimmy and Mike eventually make their way to a truck stop, where Tyrus and Victor pick them up. Mike and Jimmy agree on a cover story for Jimmy to tell Lalo after Jimmy posts his bail. Jimmy tells Lalo he was alone and walked after his car broke down so that he would not put the money at risk. Lalo says he intends to return to Mexico in order to avoid the scrutiny of police and prosecutors. Mike briefs Gus on the events in the desert, and Gus realizes the attack was ordered by Juan Bolsa to protect Gus's business. Mike tells Gus that Nacho wants to end his work as an informant on the Salamancas, but Gus refuses to part with a valuable asset.<ref>{{Cite episode |title=Bad Choice Road |episode-link=Bad Choice Road |series=Better Call Saul |series-link=Better Call Saul |network=] |date=April 13, 2020 |season=5 |number=9}}</ref>

As Gus oversees the cleanup and rebuilding of the Los Pollos Hermanos restaurant that was burned down, Mike informs him that Lalo has returned to his home in ], and that Nacho is with him. Gus says he has sent gunmen to kill Lalo, and that Nacho may be able to help. Nacho receives a call instructing him to leave Lalo's back gate open at 3 a.m. Nacho asks for Lalo's family to be spared. Lalo is awake at 3 a.m. so Nacho sets a kitchen fire as a distraction. When Lalo goes to investigate, Nacho opens the gate and flees. The gunmen enter, kill Lalo's family, and wound Lalo. Lalo escapes the house through a hidden tunnel, then sneaks back in and kills all but one gunman. He then forces the survivor to call the middleman who arranged the killing and report that Lalo is dead.<ref name="s5e10">{{Cite episode |title=Something Unforgivable |episode-link=Something Unforgivable |series=Better Call Saul |series-link=Better Call Saul |network=] |date=April 20, 2020 |season=5 |number=10}}</ref>

==== Season 6 ====
{{See also|Better Call Saul (season 6)}}
In the aftermath of the firefight at Lalo's home, Lalo kills a local farmer to use as a body double and the Cousins report that Lalo is dead.<ref name="Darwish41822">{{Cite news |last=Darwish |first=Meaghan |date=April 18, 2022 |title='Better Call Saul' Season 6 Premiere Sets Up Jimmy-Kim Scheme & Raises Stakes for Nacho (Recap) |work=] |location=New York, NY |url=https://www.tvinsider.com/1041144/better-call-saul-season-6-premiere-recap-wine-and-roses-episode-2-carrot-and-stick/ |url-status=live |access-date=May 16, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220514224930/https://www.tvinsider.com/1041144/better-call-saul-season-6-premiere-recap-wine-and-roses-episode-2-carrot-and-stick/ |archive-date=May 14, 2022}}</ref> Gus is skeptical, wondering how all the hitmen died, but succeeded in killing Lalo.<ref name="Darwish41822" /> Gus arranges for Nacho to hide at a motel while he awaits transport to the U.S.<ref name="Darwish41822" /> Gus and Juan Bolsa meet with Hector Salamanca to offer condolences and promise revenge, but Hector's demeanor convinces Gus that Lalo is still alive.<ref name="Darwish41822" /> Mike and Gus's men break into Nacho's safe and remove his cash and the fake Canadian IDs he had made for himself and his father.<ref name="Darwish41822" /> Victor delivers a duplicate safe, into which Mike places the cash, Nacho's fake ID, and an envelope.<ref name="Darwish41822" /> Juan Bolsa and his men break into the duplicate safe and find the envelope containing the motel's phone number and details of an offshore bank account.<ref name="Darwish41822" /> Nacho believes he is being observed, confronts the watcher, and confirms he is working for Gus.<ref name="Darwish41822" /> Nacho realizes Gus has betrayed him to the cartel and prepares to flee, but the Cousins arrive to search for him.<ref name="Darwish41822" />

Nacho escapes the ambush and hides from the Cousins.<ref name="Sheeran42622">{{Cite news |last=Sheeran |first=Conor |date=April 26, 2022 |title='Better Call Saul' Season 6 Episode 3 Recap: "Rock and Hard Place" |work=One37pm |location=Los Angeles, CA |url=https://www.one37pm.com/popular-culture/better-call-saul-season-6-episode-3-recap |url-status=live |access-date=May 16, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220426161230/https://www.one37pm.com/popular-culture/better-call-saul-season-6-episode-3-recap |archive-date=April 26, 2022}}</ref> After making a farewell call to his father, he calls Mike and asks to speak to Gus.<ref name="Sheeran42622" /> Nacho offers to give himself up as long as his father is protected.<ref name="Sheeran42622" /> Gus arranges to smuggle Nacho into the U.S., and Mike and Nacho review Gus's plan for Nacho to absolve Gus of blame for Lalo's death.<ref name="Sheeran42622" /> Nacho will say he was working for a rival drug family, then attempt to flee.<ref name="Sheeran42622" /> Victor will then kill him, ensuring that he is not tortured by the Salamancas.<ref name="Sheeran42622" /><ref>{{Cite news |last=Owen |first=Dan |date=April 27, 2022 |title=Better Call Saul, 6.3 – 'Rock and Hard Place' |work=Frame Rated |url=https://www.framerated.co.uk/better-call-saul-6x3-rock-hard/ |url-status=live |access-date=May 16, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220428162511/https://www.framerated.co.uk/better-call-saul-6x3-rock-hard/ |archive-date=April 28, 2022}}</ref> As Mike takes up a firing position with his rifle, Gus, Victor, and Tyrus hand Nacho over to Juan Bolsa, Hector Salamanca, and the Cousins.<ref name="Sheeran42622" /> Nacho claims he was working for the rival Alvarez family when he killed Lalo, and backs up his story by revealing that he attempted to kill Hector, but that Gus saved him.<ref name="Sheeran42622" /> Rather than attempt to flee so Victor can kill him, Nacho uses a piece of broken glass to free himself from his restraints, seize Juan's gun, and kill himself.<ref name="Sheeran42622" />

Convinced that Lalo is alive, Gus takes precautions including wearing a bulletproof vest under his clothes and carrying a gun.<ref name="Segal5222">{{Cite news |last=Segal |first=David |date=May 2, 2022 |title='Better Call Saul' Season 6, Episode 4 Recap: The Wicked Flee |work=] |location=New York, NY |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/02/arts/television/better-call-saul-recap-season-6-episode-4.html |url-status=live |access-date=May 16, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220516135923/https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/02/arts/television/better-call-saul-recap-season-6-episode-4.html |archive-date=May 16, 2022}}</ref> While a body double takes his place in his home, Gus uses a tunnel system to enter a nearby house, which is revealed to be an operations center from which he oversees vast surveillance activities that scour Albuquerque for signs of Lalo.<ref name="Segal5222" /> His belief that Lalo is alive causes Gus sleeplessness and distractions while working at his restaurant.<ref name="Segal5922">{{Cite news |last=Segal |first=Davis |date=May 9, 2022 |title='Better Call Saul' Season 6, Episode 5 Recap: Psych 101 |work=] |location=New York, NY |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/09/arts/television/better-call-saul-recap-season-6-episode-5.html |url-status=live |access-date=May 16, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220516135917/https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/09/arts/television/better-call-saul-recap-season-6-episode-5.html |archive-date=May 16, 2022}}</ref> Gus visits the construction site of his planned meth lab and inspects it carefully before hiding a handgun in the track of an excavator.<ref name="Segal5922" />

Lalo kills ] at the apartment of ] and ],<ref>{{Cite episode |title=Plan and Execution |episode-link=Plan and Execution |series=Better Call Saul |series-link=Better Call Saul |network=] |date=May 23, 2022 |season=6 |number=7}}</ref> then provides Jimmy the address and description of a man he wants Jimmy to shoot. Jimmy convinces Lalo to send Kim instead. Mike apprehends her at the front door of Gus's house, and she points out Gus's body double as the man Lalo wanted killed. Mike and his men leave for Jimmy and Kim's apartment, but when Kim tells Gus that Lalo agreed to send her instead of Jimmy, Gus recognizes the shooting is a distraction. He drives to Lavandería Brillante, where Lalo ambushes him and kills his bodyguards. Lalo is using a video camera to obtain evidence of Gus's planned meth lab for ], which will prove Gus's disloyalty to the cartel. Lalo forces Gus at gunpoint to lead him to the site. Gus then insults Eladio and the Salamancas as Lalo videotapes him, but Gus's speech is a diversion that enables him to cause a power outage which turns off the lights. In the darkness, he reaches the handgun he had hid previously and fires at Lalo. After turning the lights back on, he finds that he is wounded, but that he has fatally wounded Lalo. As Gus is treated at home, Mike supervises the burial of Lalo and Howard beneath the meth lab.<ref>{{Cite episode |title=Point and Shoot |episode-link=Point and Shoot (Better Call Saul) |series=Better Call Saul |series-link=Better Call Saul |network=] |date=July 11, 2022 |season=6 |number=8}}</ref>

Hector contacts Don Eladio with information about Lalo's survival and subsequent disappearance, and claims Gus killed Lalo. Eladio meets with Juan Bolsa, Gus, Hector, Marco, and Leonel. Gus refuses to respond to Hector's allegations and, since there is no proof that Lalo survived, Eladio accepts that he was killed in the first assassination attempt. To keep peace between Hector and Gus, Eladio divides between them the drug territory around Albuquerque. After returning to the U.S., Gus tells Mike to immediately re-start work on the planned meth lab. Gus later patronizes a restaurant where he converses pleasantly with David, his favorite ]. When David leaves to retrieve a rare bottle to show Gus, Gus cuts his visit short and leaves the restaurant.<ref>{{Cite episode |title=Fun and Games |episode-link=Fun and Games (Better Call Saul) |series=Better Call Saul |series-link=Better Call Saul |network=] |date=July 18, 2022 |season=6 |number=9}}</ref>

=== ''Breaking Bad'' ===
==== Season 2 ====
{{See also|Breaking Bad (season 2)}}
When ] seeks a buyer for his high-quality meth, ] arranges a meeting with the unknown purchaser. Walt and his partner, ], arrive at a Los Pollos Hermanos restaurant in the South Valley, but the buyer seemingly never shows up, with Jesse and Walt unaware that Gus, the restaurant manager, had been silently watching them. Walt realizes this later and arranges a second meeting with only himself and Gus. Gus tells him that he is not interested in conducting business since Jesse was late and ] for the first meeting, and is thus potentially unreliable. Walt persuades Gus to reconsider his decision, promising that he will never have to deal with Jesse and that their product will earn him enormous returns. Gus eventually agrees to purchase 38 pounds of Walt's meth for $1.2 million but only if it can be delivered within a limited time at a remote location. With Jesse unconscious after using ] with his girlfriend ], Walt is forced to miss the birth of his daughter ] to make the delivery.<ref>{{Cite episode |title=Mandala |episode-link=Mandala (Breaking Bad) |series=Breaking Bad |series-link=Breaking Bad |network=AMC |date=May 17, 2009 |season=2 |number=11}}</ref> Shortly afterward, Gus is given a tour of the ]'s ] field office, along with other local ]. While there, he discovers that Walt has ] and that his brother-in-law, ], is a DEA agent.<ref>{{Cite episode |title=ABQ |episode-link=ABQ (Breaking Bad) |series=Breaking Bad |series-link=Breaking Bad |network=AMC |date=May 31, 2009 |season=2 |number=13}}</ref>

==== Season 3 ====
{{See also|Breaking Bad (season 3)}}
Gus is pleased with the quality of Walt's blue meth and offers him $3 million for three months of his time to cook more in a high-tech "superlab" hidden under an industrial laundry that Gus owns. Walt initially refuses, but Gus eventually convinces Walt that he should cook for his family's financial security. Gus provides him with ], the talented chemist who set up the superlab, to help cook, but Walt needs to placate Jesse after Hank assaults him, so he convinces Gus to bring Jesse back as his assistant. Gus informs the cartel that once Walt is done with his three months, they will be free to kill him. ] are impatient and travel from Mexico to the US to carry out the murder, but Gus intervenes and points them to Hank, who actually killed Tuco. Gus anonymously warns Hank about the pending attack, enabling Hank to kill Marco and critically injure Leonel, despite becoming nearly paralyzed from the waist down. Gus uses his influence with the police to distract them at the hospital so Mike can fatally inject Leonel.

The attempt on Hank's life leads to a large-scale crackdown on the cartel, and Juan Bolsa is killed. Realizing his own life was at stake, Walt agrees to continue cooking in the superlab for an extended period for $15 million with Jesse aiding him, but Gus is still concerned about Jesse's loyalties. Jesse learns that drug dealers who work for Gus were responsible for the death of ], the young brother of Jesse's girlfriend ]. Before Jesse can kill them himself, Walt runs them over with his car and tells Jesse to flee. Walt explains to Gus that this was just a "hiccup" in their agreement. Gus agrees to overlook the matter but reinstates Gale as Walt's assistant, and privately tells Gale to learn all of Walt's methods so that he can take over from Walt. Walt realizes that Gus is trying to groom Gale as his replacement, meaning his life is at risk, so he secretly meets with Jesse and asks him to find out where Gale lives. Once Jesse finds Gale's apartment, Walt sets out to kill him, but Victor stops him and brings him to the lab, where Mike is waiting. Walt asks Mike to let him call Jesse and convince him to come to the lab, but instead, Walt tells Jesse to kill Gale. Victor rushes to Gale's apartment, but Jesse arrives first and murders Gale.

==== Season 4 ====
{{See also|Breaking Bad (season 4)}}
Furious upon learning of Gale's murder, Gus arrives at the lab, where Walt and Jesse have been secured by Victor and Mike. Knowing he was recognized at Gale's apartment, Victor fears for his life and attempts to show his usefulness to Gus by beginning to cook meth, which he learned how to do while guarding Walt and Jesse. Walt begs for Gus to spare them, but they are shocked when Gus slices open Victor's neck and lets him bleed to death in front of them. Gus calmly tells Walt and Jesse to get back to work and increases oversight in the lab by installing security cameras and having Mike and Tyrus watch them while they work. Mike suggests to Gus that they may be able to drive a wedge between Walt and Jesse. Mike takes Jesse out of the lab to help pick up dead drops and carry out other tasks and arranges for Jesse to foil a planned attack on him, which boosts Jesse's confidence and increases his sense of loyalty to Mike and Gus. Gus is impressed by Jesse's mettle and has Mike involve him in more work outside the lab. Worried about their safety, Walt gives Jesse a cigarette with a capsule of ] hidden inside and tells him to poison Gus when he gets the chance, but Jesse does not follow through.

Gus arranges to meet with Don Eladio and the other cartel leaders to work out the differences that have caused the cartel to disrupt Gus's business and he brings Mike and Jesse with him. Jesse cooks a superior batch of meth and Gus offers to have him stay in Mexico and work for the cartel. Jesse is apprehensive but the offer is a ruse. During the party at Eladio's house to celebrate their rapprochement, Gus tricks Eladio and most of the other cartel leaders into drinking from a poisoned bottle of tequila. Gus takes the first drink to alleviate suspicion but forces himself to vomit afterwards. During the fight that ensues after cartel leaders begin dying, Jesse helps the ill Gus and wounded Mike escape, killing Hector's last known living grandson, ], in the process. He brings them to Dr. Goodman at a makeshift hospital Gus had arranged at his villa. After recovering, Gus returns to Albuquerque and taunts Hector, telling him the cartel leaders are all dead, and that because of Joaquin's death, the Salamanca family line ends with Hector. Jesse is no longer loyal to Walt and refuses to serve as his protector. With the DEA beginning to connect Gale's death to Gus, Gus fires Walt and threatens to kill Walt's family if he retaliates or informs.

After failing to enlist Jesse's help in killing Gus, Walt poisons Andrea's son Brock and convinces Jesse that Gus is responsible. Jesse agrees to help Walt, who tries to kill Gus with a ] attached to his car; Gus senses something amiss and walks away. Walt recovers the bomb and Jesse tells him about Gus's routine, including visits to Hector at the nursing home. Persuaded by Walt's promise of final revenge against Gus, Hector pretends to be a DEA informant. Gus visits Hector and prepares to kill him with a lethal injection, but Hector begins ringing the bell on his wheelchair, which activates the pipe bomb. Gus tries to flee but the bomb explodes, killing Hector and Tyrus; Gus appears unharmed at first, but the camera pans to reveal that the blast blew off the right side of his face. He reflexively adjusts his tie before collapsing to the floor, dead.<ref>{{Cite web |last1=O'Connell |first1=Kimberly Nordyke, Lesley Goldberg, Mikey |last2=Nordyke |first2=Kimberly |last3=Goldberg |first3=Lesley |last4=O'Connell |first4=Mikey |date=April 10, 2023 |title=21 of the Most Shocking Character Deaths in Television History |url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/lists/most-shocking-tv-deaths/ |access-date=April 11, 2023 |website=The Hollywood Reporter |language=en-US |archive-date=April 11, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230411040536/https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/lists/most-shocking-tv-deaths/ |url-status=live }}</ref>

==== Season 5 ====
{{See also|Breaking Bad (season 5)}}
Gus's death has numerous consequences. The investigation into his death reaches his restaurant business and the destroyed superlab, which Walt and Jesse burned after Gus died. Knowing that the security camera recordings stored on Gus's laptop can incriminate them, Walt, Jesse, and Mike use an electromagnet outside the police station to destroy the computer and its hard drive while it is in the police evidence room. The police recover the account numbers and access codes for the offshore accounts Gus previously set up to pay his employees for their silence and seize the accounts. Mike, Walt, and Jesse partner in a new meth business, with Mike continuing to pay Gus's former employees out of his share of the profits in order to assure their continued silence. When police successfully interdict these payments, Walt fears his identity will be exposed and attempts to obtain the employees' names from Mike so he can have them killed. When Mike refuses, Walt kills him. Walt then obtains the names from Lydia Rodarte-Quayle and has Gus's former employees killed in prison before they can reveal Walt's identity, effectively bringing an end to Gus's drug distribution empire.

== Reception ==
For his portrayal of Gus, Esposito won the ] for ] at the ] and received three nominations for the ] for ]. '']'' ranked Gus number 3 in its list of the 20 Best Characters of 2011.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Jackson |first=Josh |date=December 5, 2011 |title=The 20 Best TV Characters of 2011 |url=http://www.pastemagazine.com/blogs/lists/2011/12/the-20-best-tv-characters-of-2011.html?p=2 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130626205744/http://www.pastemagazine.com/blogs/lists/2011/12/the-20-best-tv-characters-of-2011.html?p=2 |archive-date=June 26, 2013 |access-date=June 30, 2012 |website=]}}</ref> '']'' named him {{Numero|3}} in their 2013 list of The 60 Nastiest Villains of All Time,<ref>Bretts, Bruce; Roush, Matt; (March 25, 2013). "Baddies to the Bone: The 60 nastiest villains of all time". '']''. pp. 14–15.</ref> and in 2016, '']'' ranked him {{Numero|7}} of their "40 Greatest TV Villains of All Time".<ref name="Rolling Stone">{{Cite magazine |last=Collins |first=Sean T. |date=February 9, 2016 |title=40 Greatest TV Villains of All Time |url=https://www.rollingstone.com/tv/lists/40-greatest-tv-villains-of-all-time-20160209 |url-status=live |magazine=] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170722205719/http://www.rollingstone.com/tv/lists/40-greatest-tv-villains-of-all-time-20160209 |archive-date=July 22, 2017 |access-date=April 29, 2016}}</ref> Gus's depiction as a gay man has received praise as an example of a compelling antagonist driven by his sexuality.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Giardina |first=Henry |date=July 19, 2022 |title=Gus Fring is Officially Gay, as of Last Night |url=https://www.intomore.com/tv/gus-fring-officially-gay-last-night/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220724062436/https://www.intomore.com/tv/gus-fring-officially-gay-last-night/ |archive-date=July 24, 2022 |access-date=July 23, 2022 |website=INTO |language=en-US |quote=As villain origin stories go, it's a pretty great one, and enormously sympathetic. And}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=July 21, 2022 |title=Better Call Saul: Why Gus's Sexuality Matters |url=https://www.denofgeek.com/tv/better-call-saul-why-gus-sexuality-matters/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220724085527/https://www.denofgeek.com/tv/better-call-saul-why-gus-sexuality-matters/ |archive-date=July 24, 2022 |access-date=July 23, 2022 |website=Den of Geek |language=en-US |quote=What's ironic is that Gus's sexuality is what drives his entire character arc. His motivations in the drug game are all to honor Max. He hates everyone in this messy business because of what happened to his love.}}</ref>

Although the character of Gus Fring and Esposito's performance has been praised by critics, some native ] speakers have criticized the actor's stilted and unnatural ] when speaking Spanish. A 2014 ] article focusing on representations of Spanish and ] in American television singled out the character of Gus, with one fan saying he was "so painful to listen to" and that it made them angry that "such a pivotal and fantastic character would have such a giant, noticeable, nails-on-a-chalkboard flaw."<ref>{{Cite web |last=Garsd |first=Jasmine |date=October 4, 2014 |title=Does Television Spanglish Need a Rewrite? |url=https://www.npr.org/sections/codeswitch/2014/10/04/353516402/does-television-spanglish-need-a-rewrite |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180629102331/https://www.npr.org/sections/codeswitch/2014/10/04/353516402/does-television-spanglish-need-a-rewrite |archive-date=June 29, 2018 |access-date=June 28, 2018 |website=]}}</ref>

== ''Los Pollos Hermanos Employee Training with Gus Fring'' ==
AMC released a series of ten short videos on YouTube and their social media accounts during season three of ''Better Call Saul'' as ''Los Pollos Hermanos Employee Training with Gus Fring'', combining live-action shots featuring Esposito as Gus along with animated segments, presented as employee training videos for Gus's ] restaurant workers.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Surrey |first=Miles |date=March 18, 2020 |title=The Surreal, Comforting Pleasures of the 'Better Call Saul' YouTube Videos |url=https://www.theringer.com/tv/2020/3/18/21184448/better-call-saul-youtube-videos |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200424072918/https://www.theringer.com/tv/2020/3/18/21184448/better-call-saul-youtube-videos |archive-date=April 24, 2020 |access-date=April 26, 2020 |website=]}}</ref> The series won the ] in 2017.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Canfield |first=David |date=September 11, 2017 |title=Carpool Karaoke, Melissa McCarthy, and Ava DuVernay's 13th Among the Big Winners of the 2017 Creative Arts Emmy Awards |url=https://www.vulture.com/2017/09/creative-arts-emmy-awards-2017-full-list-of-winners.html |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200306153859/https://www.vulture.com/2017/09/creative-arts-emmy-awards-2017-full-list-of-winners.html |archive-date=March 6, 2020 |access-date=April 27, 2020 |website=]}}</ref>

== References ==
{{reflist}} {{reflist}}


==External links== == External links ==
* at AMC.com * at ]
* {{IMDb character|0185302|Gustavo Fring}} * on ]

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Latest revision as of 22:22, 10 December 2024

Fictional character in the Breaking Bad franchise

Fictional character
Gus Fring
Breaking Bad character
Giancarlo Esposito as Gus Fring in Better Call Saul
First appearance
Last appearance
Created byVince Gilligan
George Mastras
Portrayed byGiancarlo Esposito
In-universe information
Full nameGustavo Fring
AliasChicken Man
NicknameGus
Occupation
Significant otherMaximino "Max" Arciniega (deceased)
OriginChile
NationalityChilean American
Date of birthc. 1958
Republic of Chile
Date of deathJuly 15, 2009
(aged 50-51)

Gustavo Fring is a fictional character portrayed by Giancarlo Esposito in the Breaking Bad franchise, serving as one of the main antagonists in the crime drama series Breaking Bad and a major character in its prequel Better Call Saul. He is a Chilean-American businessman and major narcotics distributor in the Southwestern United States who uses several legitimate businesses, including a chain of successful fast food restaurants called Los Pollos Hermanos (The Chicken Brothers) and an industrial laundry facility called Lavandería Brillante (Bright Laundry), as fronts used to launder money for a vast drug operation.

Though outwardly he works with the Mexican cartel to distribute cocaine, he secretly plots revenge against its members over the death of his business associate and romantic partner Maximino "Max" Arciniega at the hands of his sworn archenemy Hector Salamanca, the patriarch of the cartel-backed drug trade in the Southwest. To become independent of the cartel's meth, he constructs a secret lab under his industrial laundry to manufacture methamphetamine.

Fring was created as a character to replace that of Tuco Salamanca (played by departing actor Raymond Cruz) during the second season of Breaking Bad. Gus, as a stoic businessman, was created to be opposite to the chaotic Tuco and act as a foil to protagonist Walter White. The character has received high acclaim, with critics hailing Gus as one of the best villains in television; as such, Esposito's performance in the role has earned him several nominations and awards.

Character development

Giancarlo Esposito portrays Gus Fring in both Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul

Gustavo Fring is named after the former German international footballer Torsten Frings.

When Raymond Cruz was unable to continue as Tuco Salamanca in Breaking Bad's second season due to his commitment to appear in The Closer, the Breaking Bad writers wrote Tuco out of the series and created the character of Gus to be his opposite. While Tuco was a meth user and "a screaming lunatic", Gus would be "a bit of a buttoned-down, cold-blooded, soft-spoken businessman".

Initially, Giancarlo Esposito was offered a character that was described to him as "very admirable, very polite", and he decided to play that character as if he had "some kind of a secret". Without knowing what that secret was, Esposito understood the potential Gus had as a growing character, therefore rejecting offers for guest appearances as originally intended for the character and insisting on becoming a series regular. To achieve Gus's trademark calmness, Esposito used yoga techniques, which allowed him to convey the character as being "a very good listener".

The humanity of Gus's personality played an integral role in his development. The loss of Max, his partner, contributed to Gus's evolution into a ruthless criminal; he stops at nothing to avenge Max's death, including the gradual killing of Hector's entire family. The loss of Max also cultivated Gus's desire to create a new "family" by empowering his meth empire, as well as the chicken restaurants. Moments before dying, Gus manages to calmly adjust his tie even after having half his face blown off. Esposito saw it as an important gesture of "when a person goes to what they've always done ... to be complete in his leaving this world".

Gus's popularity, as well as his importance to the series' development, made room for possible "flashback" type appearances in future episodes, but that idea did not come to fruition until 2017 when Gus was brought back for the third season of Better Call Saul. When conceiving the story for El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie, Gilligan considered including Gus in the story, but ultimately desisted from the idea due to his feelings that the film should focus only on the most important characters in Jesse Pinkman's life, which Gus was not.

Character overview

Gus has a mysterious background; his name is likely an alias, since neither the DEA nor his own enforcer Mike Ehrmantraut could find any record of him prior to his arrival in Mexico. He is supposedly a native of Chile, and is sometimes referred to by cartel members as "The Chilean". In the Better Call Saul episode "Piñata", he tells a comatose Hector a story about a coati that ate the fruit from a lúcuma tree which he tended during his childhood in Chile. In the Better Call Saul episode "Magic Man", Lalo Salamanca refers to a mysterious incident involving Gus which took place in Santiago.

Gus emigrated to Mexico in the 1980s during the Chilean dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet. In a flashback during the Breaking Bad episode "One Minute", Hector mockingly refers to him as "Big Generalissimo", implying that Gus had a connection to the Pinochet regime. As mentioned in the Better Call Saul episode "JMM", Gus and Peter Schuler had a shared experience in Santiago, which Gus mentions to Peter to calm him down when he panics over Lalo's attacks on Gus's business. In "Hermanos", Eladio says that when he ordered Max killed, he spared Gus because of his unstated but apparently powerful connection to Chile. Vince Gilligan has stated that he purposely left Gus's origins ambiguous, comparing them to the briefcase in Pulp Fiction.

Gus runs at least two legitimate businesses: a chain of successful fried chicken restaurants called Los Pollos Hermanos (The Chicken Brothers) and an industrial laundry facility called Lavandería Brillante (Bright Laundry) in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Gus's restaurants are located across the southwestern United States, with his flagship restaurant in Albuquerque, and the firm's chicken farm and distribution center on the outskirts of the city. The company is a subsidiary of Madrigal Electromotive GmbH, a multinational company based in Germany that has ownership stakes in multiple subsidiaries.

While his restaurant chain is a legitimate business, it serves as a front for Gus to distribute cocaine for a Mexican cartel and later develop his own methamphetamine production and distribution business. Gus operates in partnership with two Madrigal executives: Peter Schuler, a German who serves as the company president, and Lydia Rodarte-Quayle, the company's Houston-based vice president of global logistics.

Gus maintains a positive public image: he is a booster for Albuquerque civic causes, including the local Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) office. In addition to befriending the special agent in charge, Gus makes large donations to the office's charitable events. Underneath this outwardly pleasant front, he is ruthlessly cruel and Machiavellian in managing his vast drug empire. He employs a number of enforcers and has personally killed both rivals and allies.

Sexuality

Much of Gus's motives are driven by revenge for the death of his partner Maximino "Max" Arciniega by the Mexican cartel. Gus and Max's relationship was long implied to be more than business before their confirmation as lovers by showrunner Peter Gould in 2022. In the Better Call Saul episode "Sabrosito", Hector suggests that a better name for Los Pollos Hermanos might be "Los Culos Hermanos" (The Butt Brothers), insinuating that Gus and Max were gay. In "Magic Man", Lalo discusses Gus with Bolsa and refers to Max as Gus's boyfriend. As shown in the Better Call Saul episode "Dedicado a Max", after arriving in Albuquerque, Gus acquired a small villa on the Mexican side of the Mexico–U.S. border. The villa serves as the residence for Dr. Barry Goodman, and contains a fountain which is dedicated to Max.

Gus's homosexuality is touched on in the episode "Fun and Games", in which he relaxes after having eliminated Lalo as a threat to his plans by visiting a wine bar and conversing with David, his favorite sommelier. Gus drops hints of his interest in David before deciding to cut the visit short and depart. In 2020, Gilligan stated that "I personally think Max was more than just a friend to Gus. I think they probably were lovers." Gould later confirmed that Gus and Max were lovers on the Ringer podcast The Watch.

Character biography

Background

The Breaking Bad episode "Hermanos" shows that Gus and his long-time business partner and boyfriend Max Arciniega started Los Pollos Hermanos as a front to sell methamphetamine that Max "cooked". They approached Don Eladio Vuente, the leader of the Juárez cartel, with an offer to expand their drug trade with cartel help. Eladio declined, as the cartel preferred to continue distributing cocaine. Instead, Eladio had Hector Salamanca kill Max for selling meth in cartel territory without permission. Eladio spared Gus, but forced him to co-operate with the cartel on Eladio's terms.

For the next 20 years, Gus remains outwardly loyal to the cartel but nurses a grudge against Eladio, Juan Bolsa, and particularly Hector, waiting for his chance at revenge. After establishing himself in Albuquerque, Gus secretly looks to end his dependency on cartel cocaine by producing and distributing meth in the United States. Because the Salamanca family drug business controlled by Hector also includes Albuquerque, Gus is forced to deal with him but seeks to undermine the Salamancas.

Better Call Saul

Season 3

See also: Better Call Saul (season 3)

Nacho Varga pays Mike to help remove Tuco Salamanca, Hector's nephew, from the day-to-day activities of the Salamanca family drug business. Instead of killing Tuco, Mike arranges for Tuco to assault him in view of the police, leading to Tuco's arrest. Mike fears Hector will learn that he arranged for Tuco's imprisonment and is concerned that Hector will retaliate against Stacey and Kaylee. Mike acts preemptively by preparing to assassinate Hector, but is interrupted at the last moment. Mike tracks this interruption to Gus, who explains that he wants to be the one to determine when Hector will die. However, Gus encourages Mike to continue to disrupt the trucks Hector uses to bring ice cream store supplies and drugs from Mexico and send cash back to the cartel.

After Mike disrupts two shipments without revealing his identity, Hector demands that Gus temporarily use his Los Pollos Hermanos trucks to ship both Hector's and Gus's drugs. Gus, who had wanted this result from the start, appears to reluctantly agree. He later attempts to pay Mike, but Mike refuses the money. Instead, he asks for assistance laundering the $250,000 he stole from one of Hector's trucks, which Gus provides by arranging for Madrigal Electromotive to hire Mike as a contracted security expert and pay him monthly consulting fees.

With the new transport agreement in place, Nacho and Arturo Colon arrive at the Los Pollos Hermanos warehouse and farm to pick up a drug shipment, and Nacho attempts to strong-arm his way into taking six kilos instead of the agreed-upon five. When Gus's subordinate Tyrus Kitt calls Gus for guidance, Gus recognizes an opportunity to infiltrate the Salamanca organization and tells Tyrus to give Nacho the extra kilo. Nacho fears that Hector will learn of his role in Tuco's imprisonment and is concerned about Hector's intent to take over Nacho's father's upholstery store for use as a front business.

He secretly swaps Hector's angina medication for a placebo, hoping to induce a fatal heart attack. At a meeting between Juan Bolsa, Gus, Hector and Nacho, Bolsa informs them that the use of Gus's trucks to move the drugs and cash for both organizations will be a permanent arrangement. Hector's angry outburst leads to a stroke, and Gus calls for an ambulance while administering first aid that saves Hector's life, though he is comatose. Nacho follows Mike's previous advice to switch the placebos for Hector's real medication so that foul play will not be suspected. Gus appears to notice Nacho's actions, but says nothing.

Season 4

See also: Better Call Saul (season 4)

Hector is rushed to the hospital, while Gus, Nacho, and Arturo are summoned to a meeting with Bolsa at the Los Pollos distribution plant, where Bolsa declares that until further notice, the Salamanca operation will continue with Nacho and Arturo in charge.

Leonel and Marco Salamanca (the Cousins) arrive to watch over Hector. Gus hires a doctor to oversee Hector's recovery. While reviewing Hector's medical records, Gus realizes there is no nitroglycerin in Hector's system, meaning Nacho tried to kill him. When Nacho and Arturo arrive at the chicken farm to pick up their next shipment, Gus suffocates and kills Arturo, tells Nacho that he knows what Nacho did, and unless Nacho follows his orders, he will inform the Salamancas. Tyrus and Victor make Arturo's death and a violent attack on Nacho look like the work of the Espinosas, while Victor sells the drugs from Nacho's car to them. Nacho falsely identifies the Espinosas to the Cousins, who massacre the Espinosas to recover the "stolen" drugs before returning to Mexico to avoid the authorities. Gus orders Hector's treatment halted after he has regained movement in his right index finger, leaving his recovered mind trapped in his unhealed body.

Gus works with Mike to plan the construction of an underground meth "superlab" under Lavandería Brillante, an industrial laundry he owns, using a design provided by chemist Gale Boetticher. Mike escorts engineers through the laundry and questions them about their ability to construct the lab as Gus secretly listens in. Gus offers the job to Werner Ziegler after being impressed by Werner's forthright description of the difficulty and risk. Gus provides long-term housing and amenities for Werner's crew, while Mike provides security and transportation designed to keep their presence a secret. Werner inadvertently provides details of underground concrete construction to patrons during an outing at a bar and Mike ends the conversation. The next day, Mike makes a veiled warning to Werner that Gus will have him killed if he makes the same mistake again, and Werner acknowledges that he understands.

Lalo Salamanca arrives to oversee the Salamanca drug business. He is immediately suspicious of Gus and surveils his restaurant and chicken farm. With construction behind schedule, Werner misses his wife and effects an escape to rendezvous with her. Mike convinces Gus to let Mike find Werner and bring him back instead of killing him. Mike tracks Werner to a money wire store and then to a nearby resort. Lalo follows Mike, kills Fred the money wire clerk to obtain the information Mike discovered, then calls resorts until he finds Werner. By pretending to work for Gus, Lalo discovers from Werner some of the details of the lab's construction before Mike arrives and ends the call. Knowing that Lalo can track Werner's actions back to Gus, Gus says Werner must be killed. Gus offers to send men to do it, but Mike accepts responsibility because Werner escaped on his watch, so he reluctantly kills Werner himself.

Season 5

See also: Better Call Saul (season 5)

Gus arranges for Nacho to take cocaine of inferior quality when picking up the Salamancas' drugs at Los Pollos Hermanos. Rumors of the "stepped on" product reach Nacho and Domingo Molina, who report them to Lalo. Lalo confirms the impurity of the cocaine during a visit to Salamanca street dealers. In a meeting with Lalo and Juan Bolsa, Gus falsely claims that Werner Ziegler was working under Mike's supervision to construct a chilling system for Gus's chicken farm and that Werner fled after stealing cocaine. Gus goes on to claim that in an effort to hide the loss, he replaced the stolen cocaine with locally produced methamphetamine. The story explains events of which Lalo is aware, including Werner's departure from Albuquerque, pursuit by Mike, and subsequent death. Lalo accepts Gus's cover story and apology but remains suspicious. Juan reminds Lalo that Gus enjoys the trust of Don Eladio, and indicates that Lalo should let the matter drop. Because Lalo remains suspicious, Gus shuts down construction of the underground meth lab and has Mike send Werner's workers home. Gus offers to continue paying Mike during the delay, but Mike declines out of frustration over Gus's seeming lack of compassion for Werner.

Gus coerces Nacho into providing inside information on the Salamancas. Nacho gains Lalo's trust, and after Domingo is arrested, Nacho and Lalo use Jimmy McGill/Saul Goodman to secure Domingo's release from jail in exchange for the location of several of Gus's dead drops. Nacho reports the plan to Gus, who plans to cancel the drops, but Nacho advises that this will reveal a mole within the Salamanca organization. Gus agrees and on the night of the transfer he tensely waits as Victor and Diego make sure that the DEA and local police seize nearly a million dollars but find no leads to Gus.

Mike spends several weeks feeling depressed over Werner's death and drinks to excess. After he is injured by a local gang, Gus has him taken to a pueblo Gus owns just inside the Mexican border, which includes a fountain dedicated to Max. Dr. Barry Goodman tends to Mike's wounds and Mike stays to heal. Gus visits and asks Mike to join his organization, saying that he wants Mike with him because Mike understands his need for revenge.

Gus arranges for Nacho to report to Mike about his activities to undermine the Salamanca organization. Mike works under an assumed name to secretly point the police toward Lalo for the murder of Fred the money wire store clerk. Lalo is surrounded by police and arrested. In jail under an assumed name, Lalo contacts Nacho and says he wants Nacho to burn down one of Gus's Los Pollos Hermanos restaurants. Gus and other subsidiary owners provide status reports to Peter Schuler, Madrigal's CEO. Afterward, Gus briefs Peter and Lydia on the status of the meth lab, and Gus assures Peter he will get the plan back on track. When Gus returns home, he and Nacho preserve Nacho's role as the mole in the Salamanca organization by destroying the restaurant. Gus wants Lalo released, so he has Mike provide Jimmy with the details of his investigation into Lalo. Jimmy uses the information to accuse police of witness tampering, enabling him to win a motion to release Lalo on bail.

Jimmy drives to a remote desert location to pick up the bail money from The Cousins. As he starts his return trip, he is cut off by several gunmen who take the money and prepare to kill him. The gunmen are suddenly attacked by an unknown shooter. All but one are killed, and the survivor gets away in the only attacker's vehicle that is still drivable. The unseen shooter was Mike, who was tracking Jimmy for Gus. Mike's truck was also damaged, so Jimmy and he recover the money and begin the drive back to Albuquerque in Jimmy's car. When the car breaks down, Jimmy and Mike take the money and walk cross-country to avoid the surviving gunman. After a night in the desert, Mike kills the surviving gunman and they resume walking.

Jimmy and Mike eventually make their way to a truck stop, where Tyrus and Victor pick them up. Mike and Jimmy agree on a cover story for Jimmy to tell Lalo after Jimmy posts his bail. Jimmy tells Lalo he was alone and walked after his car broke down so that he would not put the money at risk. Lalo says he intends to return to Mexico in order to avoid the scrutiny of police and prosecutors. Mike briefs Gus on the events in the desert, and Gus realizes the attack was ordered by Juan Bolsa to protect Gus's business. Mike tells Gus that Nacho wants to end his work as an informant on the Salamancas, but Gus refuses to part with a valuable asset.

As Gus oversees the cleanup and rebuilding of the Los Pollos Hermanos restaurant that was burned down, Mike informs him that Lalo has returned to his home in Chihuahua, and that Nacho is with him. Gus says he has sent gunmen to kill Lalo, and that Nacho may be able to help. Nacho receives a call instructing him to leave Lalo's back gate open at 3 a.m. Nacho asks for Lalo's family to be spared. Lalo is awake at 3 a.m. so Nacho sets a kitchen fire as a distraction. When Lalo goes to investigate, Nacho opens the gate and flees. The gunmen enter, kill Lalo's family, and wound Lalo. Lalo escapes the house through a hidden tunnel, then sneaks back in and kills all but one gunman. He then forces the survivor to call the middleman who arranged the killing and report that Lalo is dead.

Season 6

See also: Better Call Saul (season 6)

In the aftermath of the firefight at Lalo's home, Lalo kills a local farmer to use as a body double and the Cousins report that Lalo is dead. Gus is skeptical, wondering how all the hitmen died, but succeeded in killing Lalo. Gus arranges for Nacho to hide at a motel while he awaits transport to the U.S. Gus and Juan Bolsa meet with Hector Salamanca to offer condolences and promise revenge, but Hector's demeanor convinces Gus that Lalo is still alive. Mike and Gus's men break into Nacho's safe and remove his cash and the fake Canadian IDs he had made for himself and his father. Victor delivers a duplicate safe, into which Mike places the cash, Nacho's fake ID, and an envelope. Juan Bolsa and his men break into the duplicate safe and find the envelope containing the motel's phone number and details of an offshore bank account. Nacho believes he is being observed, confronts the watcher, and confirms he is working for Gus. Nacho realizes Gus has betrayed him to the cartel and prepares to flee, but the Cousins arrive to search for him.

Nacho escapes the ambush and hides from the Cousins. After making a farewell call to his father, he calls Mike and asks to speak to Gus. Nacho offers to give himself up as long as his father is protected. Gus arranges to smuggle Nacho into the U.S., and Mike and Nacho review Gus's plan for Nacho to absolve Gus of blame for Lalo's death. Nacho will say he was working for a rival drug family, then attempt to flee. Victor will then kill him, ensuring that he is not tortured by the Salamancas. As Mike takes up a firing position with his rifle, Gus, Victor, and Tyrus hand Nacho over to Juan Bolsa, Hector Salamanca, and the Cousins. Nacho claims he was working for the rival Alvarez family when he killed Lalo, and backs up his story by revealing that he attempted to kill Hector, but that Gus saved him. Rather than attempt to flee so Victor can kill him, Nacho uses a piece of broken glass to free himself from his restraints, seize Juan's gun, and kill himself.

Convinced that Lalo is alive, Gus takes precautions including wearing a bulletproof vest under his clothes and carrying a gun. While a body double takes his place in his home, Gus uses a tunnel system to enter a nearby house, which is revealed to be an operations center from which he oversees vast surveillance activities that scour Albuquerque for signs of Lalo. His belief that Lalo is alive causes Gus sleeplessness and distractions while working at his restaurant. Gus visits the construction site of his planned meth lab and inspects it carefully before hiding a handgun in the track of an excavator.

Lalo kills Howard Hamlin at the apartment of Jimmy McGill and Kim Wexler, then provides Jimmy the address and description of a man he wants Jimmy to shoot. Jimmy convinces Lalo to send Kim instead. Mike apprehends her at the front door of Gus's house, and she points out Gus's body double as the man Lalo wanted killed. Mike and his men leave for Jimmy and Kim's apartment, but when Kim tells Gus that Lalo agreed to send her instead of Jimmy, Gus recognizes the shooting is a distraction. He drives to Lavandería Brillante, where Lalo ambushes him and kills his bodyguards. Lalo is using a video camera to obtain evidence of Gus's planned meth lab for Don Eladio, which will prove Gus's disloyalty to the cartel. Lalo forces Gus at gunpoint to lead him to the site. Gus then insults Eladio and the Salamancas as Lalo videotapes him, but Gus's speech is a diversion that enables him to cause a power outage which turns off the lights. In the darkness, he reaches the handgun he had hid previously and fires at Lalo. After turning the lights back on, he finds that he is wounded, but that he has fatally wounded Lalo. As Gus is treated at home, Mike supervises the burial of Lalo and Howard beneath the meth lab.

Hector contacts Don Eladio with information about Lalo's survival and subsequent disappearance, and claims Gus killed Lalo. Eladio meets with Juan Bolsa, Gus, Hector, Marco, and Leonel. Gus refuses to respond to Hector's allegations and, since there is no proof that Lalo survived, Eladio accepts that he was killed in the first assassination attempt. To keep peace between Hector and Gus, Eladio divides between them the drug territory around Albuquerque. After returning to the U.S., Gus tells Mike to immediately re-start work on the planned meth lab. Gus later patronizes a restaurant where he converses pleasantly with David, his favorite sommelier. When David leaves to retrieve a rare bottle to show Gus, Gus cuts his visit short and leaves the restaurant.

Breaking Bad

Season 2

See also: Breaking Bad (season 2)

When Walter White seeks a buyer for his high-quality meth, Saul Goodman arranges a meeting with the unknown purchaser. Walt and his partner, Jesse Pinkman, arrive at a Los Pollos Hermanos restaurant in the South Valley, but the buyer seemingly never shows up, with Jesse and Walt unaware that Gus, the restaurant manager, had been silently watching them. Walt realizes this later and arranges a second meeting with only himself and Gus. Gus tells him that he is not interested in conducting business since Jesse was late and high for the first meeting, and is thus potentially unreliable. Walt persuades Gus to reconsider his decision, promising that he will never have to deal with Jesse and that their product will earn him enormous returns. Gus eventually agrees to purchase 38 pounds of Walt's meth for $1.2 million but only if it can be delivered within a limited time at a remote location. With Jesse unconscious after using heroin with his girlfriend Jane Margolis, Walt is forced to miss the birth of his daughter Holly to make the delivery. Shortly afterward, Gus is given a tour of the DEA's Albuquerque field office, along with other local boosters. While there, he discovers that Walt has lung cancer and that his brother-in-law, Hank Schrader, is a DEA agent.

Season 3

See also: Breaking Bad (season 3)

Gus is pleased with the quality of Walt's blue meth and offers him $3 million for three months of his time to cook more in a high-tech "superlab" hidden under an industrial laundry that Gus owns. Walt initially refuses, but Gus eventually convinces Walt that he should cook for his family's financial security. Gus provides him with Gale Boetticher, the talented chemist who set up the superlab, to help cook, but Walt needs to placate Jesse after Hank assaults him, so he convinces Gus to bring Jesse back as his assistant. Gus informs the cartel that once Walt is done with his three months, they will be free to kill him. Leonel and Marco Salamanca are impatient and travel from Mexico to the US to carry out the murder, but Gus intervenes and points them to Hank, who actually killed Tuco. Gus anonymously warns Hank about the pending attack, enabling Hank to kill Marco and critically injure Leonel, despite becoming nearly paralyzed from the waist down. Gus uses his influence with the police to distract them at the hospital so Mike can fatally inject Leonel.

The attempt on Hank's life leads to a large-scale crackdown on the cartel, and Juan Bolsa is killed. Realizing his own life was at stake, Walt agrees to continue cooking in the superlab for an extended period for $15 million with Jesse aiding him, but Gus is still concerned about Jesse's loyalties. Jesse learns that drug dealers who work for Gus were responsible for the death of Tomás, the young brother of Jesse's girlfriend Andrea. Before Jesse can kill them himself, Walt runs them over with his car and tells Jesse to flee. Walt explains to Gus that this was just a "hiccup" in their agreement. Gus agrees to overlook the matter but reinstates Gale as Walt's assistant, and privately tells Gale to learn all of Walt's methods so that he can take over from Walt. Walt realizes that Gus is trying to groom Gale as his replacement, meaning his life is at risk, so he secretly meets with Jesse and asks him to find out where Gale lives. Once Jesse finds Gale's apartment, Walt sets out to kill him, but Victor stops him and brings him to the lab, where Mike is waiting. Walt asks Mike to let him call Jesse and convince him to come to the lab, but instead, Walt tells Jesse to kill Gale. Victor rushes to Gale's apartment, but Jesse arrives first and murders Gale.

Season 4

See also: Breaking Bad (season 4)

Furious upon learning of Gale's murder, Gus arrives at the lab, where Walt and Jesse have been secured by Victor and Mike. Knowing he was recognized at Gale's apartment, Victor fears for his life and attempts to show his usefulness to Gus by beginning to cook meth, which he learned how to do while guarding Walt and Jesse. Walt begs for Gus to spare them, but they are shocked when Gus slices open Victor's neck and lets him bleed to death in front of them. Gus calmly tells Walt and Jesse to get back to work and increases oversight in the lab by installing security cameras and having Mike and Tyrus watch them while they work. Mike suggests to Gus that they may be able to drive a wedge between Walt and Jesse. Mike takes Jesse out of the lab to help pick up dead drops and carry out other tasks and arranges for Jesse to foil a planned attack on him, which boosts Jesse's confidence and increases his sense of loyalty to Mike and Gus. Gus is impressed by Jesse's mettle and has Mike involve him in more work outside the lab. Worried about their safety, Walt gives Jesse a cigarette with a capsule of ricin hidden inside and tells him to poison Gus when he gets the chance, but Jesse does not follow through.

Gus arranges to meet with Don Eladio and the other cartel leaders to work out the differences that have caused the cartel to disrupt Gus's business and he brings Mike and Jesse with him. Jesse cooks a superior batch of meth and Gus offers to have him stay in Mexico and work for the cartel. Jesse is apprehensive but the offer is a ruse. During the party at Eladio's house to celebrate their rapprochement, Gus tricks Eladio and most of the other cartel leaders into drinking from a poisoned bottle of tequila. Gus takes the first drink to alleviate suspicion but forces himself to vomit afterwards. During the fight that ensues after cartel leaders begin dying, Jesse helps the ill Gus and wounded Mike escape, killing Hector's last known living grandson, Joaquin Salamanca, in the process. He brings them to Dr. Goodman at a makeshift hospital Gus had arranged at his villa. After recovering, Gus returns to Albuquerque and taunts Hector, telling him the cartel leaders are all dead, and that because of Joaquin's death, the Salamanca family line ends with Hector. Jesse is no longer loyal to Walt and refuses to serve as his protector. With the DEA beginning to connect Gale's death to Gus, Gus fires Walt and threatens to kill Walt's family if he retaliates or informs.

After failing to enlist Jesse's help in killing Gus, Walt poisons Andrea's son Brock and convinces Jesse that Gus is responsible. Jesse agrees to help Walt, who tries to kill Gus with a pipe bomb attached to his car; Gus senses something amiss and walks away. Walt recovers the bomb and Jesse tells him about Gus's routine, including visits to Hector at the nursing home. Persuaded by Walt's promise of final revenge against Gus, Hector pretends to be a DEA informant. Gus visits Hector and prepares to kill him with a lethal injection, but Hector begins ringing the bell on his wheelchair, which activates the pipe bomb. Gus tries to flee but the bomb explodes, killing Hector and Tyrus; Gus appears unharmed at first, but the camera pans to reveal that the blast blew off the right side of his face. He reflexively adjusts his tie before collapsing to the floor, dead.

Season 5

See also: Breaking Bad (season 5)

Gus's death has numerous consequences. The investigation into his death reaches his restaurant business and the destroyed superlab, which Walt and Jesse burned after Gus died. Knowing that the security camera recordings stored on Gus's laptop can incriminate them, Walt, Jesse, and Mike use an electromagnet outside the police station to destroy the computer and its hard drive while it is in the police evidence room. The police recover the account numbers and access codes for the offshore accounts Gus previously set up to pay his employees for their silence and seize the accounts. Mike, Walt, and Jesse partner in a new meth business, with Mike continuing to pay Gus's former employees out of his share of the profits in order to assure their continued silence. When police successfully interdict these payments, Walt fears his identity will be exposed and attempts to obtain the employees' names from Mike so he can have them killed. When Mike refuses, Walt kills him. Walt then obtains the names from Lydia Rodarte-Quayle and has Gus's former employees killed in prison before they can reveal Walt's identity, effectively bringing an end to Gus's drug distribution empire.

Reception

For his portrayal of Gus, Esposito won the Critics' Choice Television Award for Best Supporting Actor in a Drama Series at the 3rd Critics' Choice Television Awards and received three nominations for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series. Paste ranked Gus number 3 in its list of the 20 Best Characters of 2011. TV Guide named him No. 3 in their 2013 list of The 60 Nastiest Villains of All Time, and in 2016, Rolling Stone ranked him No. 7 of their "40 Greatest TV Villains of All Time". Gus's depiction as a gay man has received praise as an example of a compelling antagonist driven by his sexuality.

Although the character of Gus Fring and Esposito's performance has been praised by critics, some native Spanish speakers have criticized the actor's stilted and unnatural accent when speaking Spanish. A 2014 NPR article focusing on representations of Spanish and Spanglish in American television singled out the character of Gus, with one fan saying he was "so painful to listen to" and that it made them angry that "such a pivotal and fantastic character would have such a giant, noticeable, nails-on-a-chalkboard flaw."

Los Pollos Hermanos Employee Training with Gus Fring

AMC released a series of ten short videos on YouTube and their social media accounts during season three of Better Call Saul as Los Pollos Hermanos Employee Training with Gus Fring, combining live-action shots featuring Esposito as Gus along with animated segments, presented as employee training videos for Gus's Los Pollos Hermanos restaurant workers. The series won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Short Form Comedy or Drama Series in 2017.

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