Better Call Saul is the latest creation from Vince Gilligan, the creator of the Golden Globe winning one-hour drama Breaking Bad. The new show will also be a one-hour drama and it will be a prequel to "Breaking Bad." The show will star comedian Bob Odenkirk in the title role. Saul is a corrupt son-of-a-gun lawyer who's motto Better Call Saul tells would-be criminals that's he's the man they need to get out of any jam.

So who will star alongside Odenkirk? It would be great if Giancarlo Esposito reprised his role as "Los Pollos Hermanos" proprietor and drug kingpin Gus Fring. If you've seen season 4 of Breaking Bad, you'll know that Fring met a fiery death in Face Off. Could we see the good old chemist again? Deftly played by Bryan Cranston, it's doubtful that Walter White/Heisenberg will make an appearance since Better Call Saul is a prequel.

It wouldn't take place prior to the events of season 1 of Breaking Bad -- it wouldn't make sense to see a high school chemistry teacher requesting the services of a criminal defense attorney. However, Aaron Paul, who played Jesse Pinkman during Breaking Bad's five season run, wants to appear in the prequel.

"Both Bryan and I want to be a part of that - if they'll have us," Paul told Details magazine.

Please, please, please, Vince Gilligan, make this happen. And as the world turns, a few cameo's just might be coming according to The Hollywood Reporter.

"We are plugging away on Better Call Saul -- in our fourth week in the writers' room on that -- and [executive producer] Peter Gould and I will be hitting up all these wonderful actors for cameos at some point," Gilligan said. "We have to figure out how to work that out, story-wise."

Gilligan went on to add that he was too attached to the Breaking Bad cast.

"Personally, I'd have a hard time resisting putting all these guys in for a cameo or two every now and then," he mentioned to The Hollywood Reporter back in October.

In addition to Better Call Saul, AMC has a very promising 2014 lineup. AMC brought us viewers Hell on Wheels, The Walking Dead, Mad Men, and Breaking Bad -- could you expect anything less?

"We are extremely excited about the 2014 lineup," AMC President and General Manager Charlie Collier said. "Both the returning and new series reflect our commitment to serving passionate audiences with compelling, character-driven storytelling."

Here's hoping that Better Call Saul brings back the celebrated breakfast scene traditions that made Breaking Bad so delicious to watch. Be sure to tune in this November.

Will you be tuning into AMC to watch Better Call Saul in 2014? Share your favorite Saul-isms below.