Season 1: Walt really shouldn’t be hanging around a bad influence like Jesse Season 5: Jesse really shouldn’t be hanging around a bad influence like Walt
This shows that Jesse was a bad influence on Walt and how deep Walt went with that bad influence. His insanity made Jesse’s “bad influence” look like a mere atom.
@@matheustrevisan2268 no?... The 10 men that Walt murdered were more like a cover and workers in the business of Gus, the owner of the laundry, the chinese who administrated the storage in Pollos, people that worked and laundry the money or just moved the product. People that were criminals, but there didn't kill or hasnt with anything serious like Victor or Tyrus.
Me too. I like that detail. He’s just so shocked that someone thinks so little of him that it’s all he has in life. It was a dick thing for Walt to say, albeit accurate (“and how soon will you start using again?”) because he was proven correct when it showed Jesse did in fact revert to drugs when he had nothing to occupy his time.
The only reason Walter even knows about the go-carts is because Jesse asked him if he wanted to go once, and Walter shot him down, now he uses this to diss him. It makes Jesse's quiet, "Mr. Wh-..." all the more sad. Walt just collects and uses what he has as a tool to hurt and manipulate those around him for his own gain.
Yeah, and the part where Jesse asked him if he wanted to was just an innocent moment of, "Hey this is all insane, but let's just forget about it for a bit". It's sad that he saw Walt as a father figure, and Walt just shunned and manipulated him the entire time. I genuinely believe he was expecting Walt to understand right here and respect his decision, even offer to visit him often out of care, but it was all thrown right back at him. Man their dynamic in this show is amazing.
@@flopstops it goes back to that idea of Walt absorbing the personalities of the people he’s killed. The same way that Gus used Walt’s love for his family (mentioned to him briefly a scene earlier) as a tool to persuade Walt not to quit cooking in season 3.
@@anyoneelsebutme5757 I've met people like that in real life. Anything you tell them in confidence, even once, they collect in the back of their mind to potentially use it against you in a manipulative argument anytime they get upset, called out or want to control you. It's pretty messed up.
It's especially heart-breaking that Walt is throwing go-karting in his face in this scene because the only time Jesse has ever mentioned go-karting was when he was trying to pitch an activity that they could do together (one of the only times he proactively tried to establish a more personal relationship with Walt) and Walt turned him down.
some manipulation tactic to belittle you and make you seem childish. it’s kinda crazy how some people are wired like that & it’s very real bc i had a experience just like that, must be a narc thing
Agree. Walter fires back whatever Jesse told him previously. That indicates how Walter White personality had developed away from humanity and more into revenge and using facts to defend his situation.
What’s sad is that even when Jesse did the right thing and left the meth business without the money he was still forcibly dragged back into a darker hole
Walt said to Jesse that both of them were already pretty much in Hell, because of the things they did. But unlike Jesse, Walt had no desire to quit the meth business. Especially considering how Jesse reacted to Todd killing Drew Sharp and Walter just being indifferent about the whole thing.
@@yotornadoyo "stupid enough" you say that with so much contempt like Jesse or any normal person shouldn't have feelings of anger towards someone who poisoned their loved one. Like, are you telling me you wouldn't get angry and go after Walt in a rage for that?
This has always been a show about change How a push over goodie 2 shoes HS Chem teacher slowly transitions into a villain. Not many shows can pull that off so well. A man who's been told no his whole life was given an opportunity but in the worst way Great SHOW. Walt IS the bad guy, destroyed SO MANY LIVES for his ambitions and yet there are people who believe he did nothing wrong. Yea I'm sure his kids will agree with you lol I love all the characters, Walt included, but let's not pretend he's this Saint, can't stand when other fans do that
I never really thought about that. I always thought jesse just wanted to distract himself but I think he really did find comfort from mr white when they did things outside of the meth business
He cares about Jesse. Deep inside, he really does. Otherwise, why would he need him? Gale was a great substitute for Jesse, yet Walt still chose him over Gale. The kid, not so much anymore. He's moved on from it and isn't traumatized.
Dabonzo Walt basically went from an ordinary family man into a drug dealing, sociopathic monster that commits atrocities without a care in the world about the consequences. Which is pretty evident in this scene. In Season 1, he broke down in tears after killing Krazy-8. But after what he did to Brock in Season 4, and throughout the rest of this season, it’s very clear just how much he’s changed as the show went on.
Can you people shut the fuck up with these WaLt iS nOw hEiSeNbErG comments; they're getting increasingly retarded and show a shocking lack of insight into how people work.
From the book “Wanna Cook?” A great read for die hard Breaking Bad fans: “Walt tells Jesse that he is the best, and that there is far more than $5 million to be made. When Jesse refuses to take the bait, Walt shifts gears, berating him, reminding him that he has no other skills, no opportunities, that he’s nothing but a junkie. When that still doesn’t get Walt his desired outcome, he finally refuses to buy Jesse out, sure that the money will finally win the argument in his favor. What happens next may be the most important moment in Jesse’s life, because he walks away. Without the money, without any relationship with the man who has become a twisted father figure to him, and without regret, Jesse says “no” once and for all. It is a truly central moment, because Jesse has done what Walt no longer can-he has turned back before he is utterly consumed by the darkness. He has refused to participate further in a business that by its very nature kills men, women, and children; rots the souls of those who practice it; and corrodes the conscience of those who are caught up in its web. Jesse has done some terrible things, but at this moment, he walks away a free man. That’s no mean feat.”
Looking back Jesse was so close, just so close to being able to walk away from it all and still he got punished for the choices Walter essentially just made for him. Unbelievable bad luck
Is Walt fault that he started bitching about the kid and tries to burn down Walt's house and like a coward runned to Hank and ratted everyone? He got what he deserved
@@matheustrevisan2268 He reacted rationally to the kid thing by attempting to burn down Walt’s house. Where he fucked up was turning into a rat, even Hector never did that. As Gus said “ What kind of man talks to the DEA? No man. No man at all”
I love this scene cuz Walt tries every form of manipulation he tries playing to his ego saying he is just a good as a cook as him then is mean bringing up his weaknesses then brings up their bad stuff then anger it’s amazing
The way he says Jesse has nothing and no one is so infuriating- Walt is the reason for that. He's the reason Jane is gone, he convinced Jesse to leave Andrea and Brock, he ignored Jesse's warning about expanding territory and got Combo killed, he killed Mike- it's like Jesse said. "Ever since I met you, everything I ever cared about is gone! Ruined, turned to shit, dead, ever since I hooked up with the great Heisenberg!"
Stop victimizing Jesse. He's a dirty, hypocritical criminal. Jesse decided to become a drug dealer long before he met Walter White again. Drug dealers always have shitty endings, regardless of whom they meet. He'd have been brutally tortured by Krazy 8 and Emilio from the beginning even if he did not meet Walt.
That's exactly what Walt thinks of Jesse. Basically, he sees Jesse as his pet. Whenever Jesse does something that pleases him, then Walt shows him kindness and compassion. But whenever Jesse demonstrates independence, then Walt does everything that he can to run him down into the ground.
0:22 Walt realizes he hit a sore spot with Jesse so then tries to empathize with him 0:39 immediately acts like a victim, and grasping at straws claiming he's a father so he's allowed to be more affected by it 0:47 Mocks Jesse again, calling him weak for crying and locking himself away to get high 1:17 "Gale and the rest" he only names the one person that Jesse killed whilst lumping everyone else under "the rest", attempting to minimize the murders that Walt himself committed 2:18 Tries to make Jesse feel guilty about taking the money he owns, and manipulate him into cooking as if that makes it any better, then claim he can make 20x more money which clearly isn't important to Jesse 3:16 Throws a tantrum because his manipulation tactics didn't work Man, Walt really was a piece of garbage
Walt definitely gaslighted Jesse throughout numerous points in the series, but this is just standard manipulation with a dash of narcissism at the end.
Jesse has always been the best empath in the show compared to everyone else. Sure hes a lost person whos addicted to meth, but imo, hes a better person than most of the characters that seem like decent adults. His moral compass is the best in the show and that is why all the bullshit that happened to him really almost broke him
@@barnacleboi2595 you understood my point, thank you. It's not like he was naive to Walters behavior in the prior seasons, he COULD see it, but both of them were making dollars, having each others back, so he keep going. As the time goes by, shit got darker and darker, he couldn't take it anymore, and that's why we like him more. Walter's moral compass was destroyed after so many evil deeds, while Jesse's were developed.
In my opinion, this was Walter at his worst. The manipulative, arrogant, selfish being that Walter was finally revealing himself to be. I hated Walter the most in this moment. Killing Mike is second to me.
This scene right here proves what Jesse said to Walter back a while ago: “You need me more than I need you, Walt” Jesse was actually right, Walter is trying to manipulate Jesse and give him reasons to keep cooking but Jesse just wants out so much to a point where he doesn’t care if he gets his half of the money or not. He just doesn’t want to be involved anymore.
@@ok472then why did Walt perform this whole exercise on Jesse in the video? Why didn’t he just allow Jesse to leave without manipulating him or getting angry when he didn’t get his way?
@@ledzep1023 Because he viewed Jesse as a surrogate son, in a twisted sort of way, and wanted him to be his protege. Walt ultimately replaced Jesse with Todd easily. The only reason Walt wanted Jesse was for purely emotional reasons.
@@lilshib7646 he’s incorrect. Walt pretty much ordered Gale to be killed, and also Walt has killed far more than Jesse. He was talking about people killed in their mutual wake. His head motion here isn’t anything important just drawing attention to it.
@@judeak2442 But Jesse was the one who killed him, and Walt knows how much it affected him. He's bringing it up, along with other things, to make Jesse feel worse and worse and manipulate him into staying snd keep cooking with him. Also the fact that he mentions "Gale" and "the rest".
no. people make that gesture when they recall something while speaking. he of course fakes it, as if gale randomly came to mind. like other commenters said he said gale to get to jesses head, taking advantage of his emotional side.
00:12 I think this is a subtle dig for when Jesse asked Walter to go Go-Karting with him. That was a vulnerable moment for Jesse and Walter knowing this uses it to hurt/diminish him.
Im going to weigh in from a christian perspective. God calls all people to adopt a better life. Regardless of the sin you have committed in life, if you accept God into your heart and try to do right by your fellow man, you can still go to heaven. This is corroborated by Jesus predominantly reaching out to the lowest in society during his time on earth. People who were regarded as sinful So walt is incorrect with his biblical reference
@@Animaja001 I don't think he was being manipulative when he mentioned Gale. Gale was the most "innocent" person they killed, and his death was still pretty recent when this scene took place, so it made sense to mention him.
“If you believe that there’s a hell…but if there is, we’re already pretty much going there, right? But I’m not gonna lie down until I get there.” Who else gets chills from this line?
@@artursfilipovs4923 seriously? Yes, Jesse did screw that one thing up with the drug dealers. But everything with Walter refusing to sell the methylamine for 5 millions caused far more people to die. Walter screwed everything up in the end.
@@mlgamings6110 him refusing to sell only killed mike, thats it, he after that made 80 milion, payed jessie hes 5 million and let him go on hes way buy no jessie just had to become a snitch
@@artursfilipovs4923 I used to have the exact same opinion as you. But then I thought about what he's gone through. He woke up next to his girlfriend Jane, who was lying there dead, her mouth a fountain of vomit. His other girlfriend's brother was killed by two of Gus' drug dealers. Those same drug dealers got Jesse's best friend, Combo, murdered. His parents hate him, Walt kills Mike, who was sort of a father figure to him. Todd murders a child and Walt is fine with it. Finally, he finds out Walt poisoned his girlfriend's son which is the final blow. All of these things and more are why Jesse wanted out. He's been manipulated by so many people. After this all happens, he's even tortured by neo-nazis and kept as a slave to cook meth. I feel sorry for him.
When Walt tells Jesse he has "nothing, nobody" in his life, he's really talking about himself. At this point, his wife is counting down the days for his cancer to come back, he's alienated his kids and Walt says himself a couple of episodes earlier "this business is all I have left". He's just putting Jesse down to feel better about himself. Pretty standard bullying behaviour.
Amazing how Walt in the beginning was so pure and innocent and not about that life at all, and by the final season is practically running the drug world....
I love how triggered Walt gets when Jesse finally tells him that he doesn’t care about receiving his cut and just leaves. Walt was one egotistical, defeated man by the end
I just realized that Walt yelling "you get nothing!" in the end was maybe a callback to season 3 when Jessie cried Iin front of him in the hospital about how he has "nothing! no one!". Walt literally tried to use everything he knew about Jessie against him.
I find this scene very underrated when it comes to listing the worst things Walter White has done. It only shows how extremely toxic and fucked up Walt and Jesse's relationship is. He is desperately looking for any attempt he can use to get Jesse to stay in the meth business. Going from not acknowledging or respecting Jesse's decision to leave, acting like he's still sticking around, praising him to criticizing his life style, and acting like a victim. Walt has always been an asshole, but this scene and episode brought it to a whole other level.
Fr. When i watched the show for the first time years ago i sympathized with him but after re-watching it now i see walt as the evil manipulator that he is. It’s crazy that we just brushed over how many people he killed and lives he ruined
Nah he's sympathetic at the beginning. The point is to show how an ordinary chemistry teacher morals decrease till to the point he's a ruthless drug kingpin
When you watch these out of order on youtube, it's almost shocking how different Walt is in these ending episodes. I know that was the point, but it's such a slow and natural character progression that it almost sneaks up on you when you're watching. There is probably a part of you still rooting for him right at the very end, but then you watch something like this out of the context of the rest of the show and you realise just how far off the handle he flew. Best character progression ever.
That really would get so boring and tiresome after a while. Everyone needs some constructive intellectual stimulation or they just waste away. That's how I wasted all my 20s and I deeply regret it. Drinking, eating, playing video games, watching movies. Didn't travel, didn't focus on my career, didn't really gain any valuable life experience. Wish I had a time machine.
This was the scene that showed just how far these characters have come since the beginning. Walt is no longer that weak man, too scared to take a life, or cross any moral lines. And Jesse has finally matured into the man he's been fighting against his whole life.
This was the turning point in the show when i couldnt side with Walt anymore, Especially after he killed mike. he became even a bigger monster then before lol
You all are insane for lasting that long. Walt made the conscious decision to let Jane choke on her own vomit. That is where any rational person would draw the line. Even without that incident, his ego-driven tantrums (getting pepper sprayed by the cop) and insistence on doing things "his way" should have killed any likability for this fuckhead.
The first time Jesse was on heroin and Walt was right to hold it back, and he used that moment for the rest of the show to manipulate him out of his share.
3:02 i love the way jesse just confidently licks his lips and grins whilst he leaves, it makes me so happy seeing Walt brought down from his sky high ego to who he really is
I love how Walt can say "we're not done" to Saul and he backs down because he's a coward but when Walt uses it on Jesse it fails miserably. He just resortsto screaming
I honestly love 2:57 onwards. Walter is completely transparent here, and I think this is the 1st time in the show where Jesse sees Walt for what he truly is which is an abusive, manipulative, control freak. You can literally see Jesse almost look into Walt as opposed to just looking at him. Walt's agitation that he can't control or manipulative Jesse anymore is like every abusive relationship ever lol.
I actually believe that Walt was upset about Drew dying, no one wanted that. But it was very sneaky of him to say "Gale, and the rest", just to make Jesse feel like he was just as responsible as Walt for all the people he killed. (Even if it was for the good of them both)
Bro walt literally didn’t feel upset about drew. He was whistling while finishing a badg, literally moments after dissolving drew. He also never showed any hard feelings about drew or brock.
Somewhere out in the middle of the New Mexico desert little drew sharpe and his mangled dirt bike are dismembered and stuffed inside a plastic drum and buried.
When Heisenberg talks about hell was really powerful. I mean, if Hell does exist, it must be the worst feeling ever to know that you are definitely going there. So, when Walts says it, he somehow demonstrates he has achieved a point where nothing else really matter for him but his "legacy".
@@davedarius7346 I don’t see any evidence that he believed in a god. He’s a very practical, scientific man. So many times in the show we see him in desperate situations and never once do we see him praying, never once do we see him asking a god for forgiveness for anything he’s done.
@@criert135 Yes and No! Atheist? Nope! Religious? Nope! Agnostic? Most likely..He's certainly not a complete atheist, more like agnostic! He tells Skylar 'I will swear on a Bible that I didn't have an affair', and tells Hank, 'Right Hand to God, I am a dying man who runs a car wash and that's all that I am', he writes on the paper while contemplating Crazy 8's fate, 'It's what is right to do by Judeo-Christian values' and he tells Jesse here about the possibility of an afterlife realm! He is obviously not a devout but he seemed to be agnostic for the most part but atheistic? Just nope! He would not even have mentioned religion nor consider religion into Question if Walter Whitey was completely religious!! For all we know, even Jesse told White in the first episode when he came to his house, 'Mr White, If you're gonna tell me to read the Bible and find Jesus, then that's not going to work'... Implying Walt was into Christianity from what Jesse knew even before BB! If anything, I'd say Skylar is the one who's atheistic, and maybe Gretchen and Elliot too lol..... Even Hank has seemed to show signs of being a Christian!
Bryan Cranston is so fantastic at playing "lying". We can ALWAYS tell he is into "bullshit" mode. He is an actor and everything he says is fake so conveing the distinction between this is "real" and this is a "lie" is just incredible.
''The people we have killed, Gale and the others.'' He only mentions Gale's name to manipulate Jesse's emotions since he was the one who killed him and at the same time he distances himself by not mentioning any other names of the ones he killed.
The minute Jesse should've walked away from Walt was after he got bruised and battered by Hank, all because of Walt. Mike saw what Walt was, and what Jesse was at heart, and that's why he said, when Jesse asked him what Walt saw in him: "I think, to put it in a word: "Loyalty." Only maybe you got it for the wrong guy." And later, Mike again, indirectly, tried to counsel/warn Jesse about Walt: "You, (Walt), are trouble. I'm sorry the kid here, (Jesse), doesn't see it, but I sure as hell do."
Season 1: Walt really shouldn’t be hanging around a bad influence like Jesse
Season 5: Jesse really shouldn’t be hanging around a bad influence like Walt
Another reason as to why this show is one of the greatest tv pieces ever made.
This shows that Jesse was a bad influence on Walt and how deep Walt went with that bad influence. His insanity made Jesse’s “bad influence” look like a mere atom.
@@justtheguy27 i disagree to your statement about jesse influencing walt but im too lazy to explain why so bye
@@RandomPerson-ui3xv Lame
Walt was always the one bringing Jesse down. Jesse would've given back all the millions just to have a clean conscience and he actually tried to.
"Gale....and the rest"
I like how the one casualty that Walt mentions by name is the one guy that Jesse killed.
Classic manipulation
Feel bad for Jessie bros getting put in a corner manipulations horrible
Especially given that it was Walt who sent Jessie to kill Gale.
Lol I know right ??
Walt Season 4: You have done the only thing you could, I hope you understand that.
list of people walt and jesse killed:
1. gale
2. the rest
So Holdo
perc nowitzki bruh
RIP the rest!
kalaba kibwe he is good at manipulating
FBI we got em indeed
Walt: “No one else is going to die because of us”
Also Walt: *Orders the murder of ten men a few days later*
Don't forget Mike in the very same episode.
Ohhh you mean the murders and criminals that worked for Gus?
@@matheustrevisan2268 no?...
The 10 men that Walt murdered were more like a cover and workers in the business of Gus, the owner of the laundry, the chinese who administrated the storage in Pollos, people that worked and laundry the money or just moved the product. People that were criminals, but there didn't kill or hasnt with anything serious like Victor or Tyrus.
@@kalash9467 grave?
Well, mike was the one who caused that, saul told him not to hire that fat lawyer.
Mike was happy for Jesse when he said he wanted out, Walt was furious. That speaks volumes about who cared about him.
walt did care about him though
@@ok472 To an extent, and in a VERY twisted way...
@@snnnaaaaaakeeeee4470 but you cant deny he did care about him
@@snnnaaaaaakeeeee4470 to an extent? Walt loved him like a son lol
He still saved him from gangbangers in Season 3.
The way jesse quietly says "mr whi-" when walt says videogames and go karts really hits me for some reason
Yea he tried to appeal to that teacher-student bond one last time but then realized that moment is long gone.
Me too. I like that detail. He’s just so shocked that someone thinks so little of him that it’s all he has in life. It was a dick thing for Walt to say, albeit accurate (“and how soon will you start using again?”) because he was proven correct when it showed Jesse did in fact revert to drugs when he had nothing to occupy his time.
@@snitox yea
Ilias he says "mr whi-"? I always thought he said "so?"
even rewatching that part just to hear it again, I still hear "so?"
It sounds like "so" but it's clearly a bad overdub.
“I mean, you’re so pure, you have such emotional depth” sounds like if Walt actually watched Breaking Bad
@A Dinosaur with a Flamethrower Yeah that part always made me laugh, it’s almost meta.
Jessie's done bad.
That line had me laughing. Heisenberg is such a dick.
The only reason Walter even knows about the go-carts is because Jesse asked him if he wanted to go once, and Walter shot him down, now he uses this to diss him. It makes Jesse's quiet, "Mr. Wh-..." all the more sad. Walt just collects and uses what he has as a tool to hurt and manipulate those around him for his own gain.
Yeah, and the part where Jesse asked him if he wanted to was just an innocent moment of, "Hey this is all insane, but let's just forget about it for a bit". It's sad that he saw Walt as a father figure, and Walt just shunned and manipulated him the entire time. I genuinely believe he was expecting Walt to understand right here and respect his decision, even offer to visit him often out of care, but it was all thrown right back at him. Man their dynamic in this show is amazing.
Sad thing is, that is what a lot of toxic people are like in real life.
@@flopstops it goes back to that idea of Walt absorbing the personalities of the people he’s killed. The same way that Gus used Walt’s love for his family (mentioned to him briefly a scene earlier) as a tool to persuade Walt not to quit cooking in season 3.
Walt became the bad guy somewhere around season 4. Hermanos is the episode where I officially said Walt was worse than Gus.
@@anyoneelsebutme5757 I've met people like that in real life. Anything you tell them in confidence, even once, they collect in the back of their mind to potentially use it against you in a manipulative argument anytime they get upset, called out or want to control you. It's pretty messed up.
It's especially heart-breaking that Walt is throwing go-karting in his face in this scene because the only time Jesse has ever mentioned go-karting was when he was trying to pitch an activity that they could do together (one of the only times he proactively tried to establish a more personal relationship with Walt) and Walt turned him down.
Also, him only mentioning Gale (the only person Jessie had killed). Great writing.
some manipulation tactic to belittle you and make you seem childish. it’s kinda crazy how some people are wired like that & it’s very real bc i had a experience just like that, must be a narc thing
Agree. Walter fires back whatever Jesse told him previously. That indicates how Walter White personality had developed away from humanity and more into revenge and using facts to defend his situation.
What’s sad is that even when Jesse did the right thing and left the meth business without the money he was still forcibly dragged back into a darker hole
Cause he was stupid enough to try to get revenge on Walt.
Yeah poisoning someone's innocent son might spark some revenge feelings lol
Walt said to Jesse that both of them were already pretty much in Hell, because of the things they did. But unlike Jesse, Walt had no desire to quit the meth business. Especially considering how Jesse reacted to Todd killing Drew Sharp and Walter just being indifferent about the whole thing.
@@yotornadoyo "stupid enough" you say that with so much contempt like Jesse or any normal person shouldn't have feelings of anger towards someone who poisoned their loved one. Like, are you telling me you wouldn't get angry and go after Walt in a rage for that?
@@Nimbus3690 Yeah I wouldn't.
Jessie: How many more people are going to die because of us?
Walt: Billions. With a B.
Your comment literally just made me laugh out loud. If only seen by a bunch of people this would have over a thousand likes
🅱️ I L L I O N S
Well it comes from a very old "breaking bad comics" meme, I could not find it, it came out while the show was airing.
Hes in the murdering business
@@ItsEdboy W I T H A 🅱️
The way he tries to manipulate jesse. Sounds like the devil himself
Vilhax he’s not wrong
Vilhax who ruffled your feathers? 😂
@Vilhax lmao a heisenburg stan
@Vilhax Walt is an insecure egomaniac who only saw Jesse as a possession.
You right. "It's not wrong to want it."
Walter is such a good manipulator that he convinced half the audience he was the innocent, good guy of the show.
Underrated comment
Still i belive that Walter is a good man
i feel sorry for him what is wrong with me
He is not
I never really believed that while watching
This has always been a show about change
How a push over goodie 2 shoes HS Chem teacher slowly transitions into a villain. Not many shows can pull that off so well.
A man who's been told no his whole life was given an opportunity but in the worst way
Great SHOW. Walt IS the bad guy, destroyed SO MANY LIVES for his ambitions and yet there are people who believe he did nothing wrong. Yea I'm sure his kids will agree with you lol
I love all the characters, Walt included, but let's not pretend he's this Saint, can't stand when other fans do that
when walter brought up go karts especially when Jesse asked if he wanted to go kart before like a father son relationship it hurted
I never really thought about that. I always thought jesse just wanted to distract himself but I think he really did find comfort from mr white when they did things outside of the meth business
It hurt*
@@elizabetharguello5004 hurted
Plenty of fathers treat their sons like Walt treats Jesse. Manipulating, controlling and verbally abusive.
He’s such a master manipulator he went from demeaning him to trying to reach him by pretending he just cares about him and that kid
He cares about Jesse. Deep inside, he really does. Otherwise, why would he need him? Gale was a great substitute for Jesse, yet Walt still chose him over Gale.
The kid, not so much anymore. He's moved on from it and isn't traumatized.
Walt had no choice, cause Jesse "blackmailed" him after they almost got caught with the RV.
KAzik10001
He still could’ve arranged to have Jesse killed after he was released from the hospital via Saul’s suggestion.
Dabonzo if Walt was cartel, Jesse would’ve been in a shallow grave in a matter of minutes.
Think about that for a second.
Dabonzo Walt basically went from an ordinary family man into a drug dealing, sociopathic monster that commits atrocities without a care in the world about the consequences. Which is pretty evident in this scene. In Season 1, he broke down in tears after killing Krazy-8. But after what he did to Brock in Season 4, and throughout the rest of this season, it’s very clear just how much he’s changed as the show went on.
Alternate title: "How to leave a narcissistic relationship"
I love the: "Whatever, that's on YOU!" dismissal. It's So satisfying!!
Agreed!
Spot on!
Walt ain't that. Stop using words you don't know the meaning. Jesus
@@watcheronly71 You don't think Walt is a massive narcissist?
He used to be Walter White pretending to be Heisenberg but then it became Heisenberg pretending to be Walter White
Can you people shut the fuck up with these WaLt iS nOw hEiSeNbErG comments; they're getting increasingly retarded and show a shocking lack of insight into how people work.
@@Beaver_Monday it's the jehkel and hyde reference
@@peterchavez7687 Nah
@@Beaver_Monday Yeah like this is some super hero movie. NPC's parroting the same shit over and over again.
this is the moment jesse became saul goodman
From the book “Wanna Cook?” A great read for die hard Breaking Bad fans:
“Walt tells Jesse that he is the best, and that there is far more than $5 million to be made. When Jesse refuses to take the bait, Walt shifts gears, berating him, reminding him that he has no other skills, no opportunities, that he’s nothing but a junkie. When that still doesn’t get Walt his desired outcome, he finally refuses to buy Jesse out, sure that the money will finally win the argument in his favor.
What happens next may be the most important moment in Jesse’s life, because he walks away. Without the money, without any relationship with the man who has become a twisted father figure to him, and without regret, Jesse says “no” once and for all. It is a truly central moment, because Jesse has done what Walt no longer can-he has turned back before he is utterly consumed by the darkness. He has refused to participate further in a business that by its very nature kills men, women, and children; rots the souls of those who practice it; and corrodes the conscience of those who are caught up in its web. Jesse has done some terrible things, but at this moment, he walks away a free man. That’s no mean feat.”
There is a book about BB?
@@ulisesdemostenes7074 you get the same deeper meaning by paying attention to the show...
Everything you stated in this comment I literally got from watching the 3:36 video above lmao.
No mean feat reading all of your comment
“Wanna Cook?” is not an official book though, Vince Gilligan had nothing to do with it
Looking back Jesse was so close, just so close to being able to walk away from it all and still he got punished for the choices Walter essentially just made for him. Unbelievable bad luck
That's what happens when you're blindsided by money.
If Jesse just left to go with Robert Forster, he would've been gone a long time ago.
This is before that scene. Mike was still alive aswell.
Is Walt fault that he started bitching about the kid and tries to burn down Walt's house and like a coward runned to Hank and ratted everyone? He got what he deserved
@@matheustrevisan2268 He reacted rationally to the kid thing by attempting to burn down Walt’s house. Where he fucked up was turning into a rat, even Hector never did that. As Gus said “ What kind of man talks to the DEA? No man. No man at all”
I love this scene cuz Walt tries every form of manipulation he tries playing to his ego saying he is just a good as a cook as him then is mean bringing up his weaknesses then brings up their bad stuff then anger it’s amazing
And worst of all, he brings up the go karts. Such evil
The way he says Jesse has nothing and no one is so infuriating- Walt is the reason for that. He's the reason Jane is gone, he convinced Jesse to leave Andrea and Brock, he ignored Jesse's warning about expanding territory and got Combo killed, he killed Mike- it's like Jesse said. "Ever since I met you, everything I ever cared about is gone! Ruined, turned to shit, dead, ever since I hooked up with the great Heisenberg!"
And that was way before everything actually was gone.
Jesse was in charge of distribution so it was more Jesse's fault
@@clayton7993 yeah but Walt ignored that and told Combo to expand territory, even though Jesse explicitly said it was dangerous
Stop victimizing Jesse. He's a dirty, hypocritical criminal. Jesse decided to become a drug dealer long before he met Walter White again. Drug dealers always have shitty endings, regardless of whom they meet. He'd have been brutally tortured by Krazy 8 and Emilio from the beginning even if he did not meet Walt.
Jane was going to eventually get Jesse killed through ODing. 2 junkies with 500k dollars in their possession. That could have ended only one way.
I love how he barks Jesse like hes yelling at his dog
That's exactly what Walt thinks of Jesse. Basically, he sees Jesse as his pet. Whenever Jesse does something that pleases him, then Walt shows him kindness and compassion. But whenever Jesse demonstrates independence, then Walt does everything that he can to run him down into the ground.
@@samcostello2861 That's not entirely true
Dawg 🤣😭 at 2:07 the way his lip is when he says “ok” had me weak 😂😂😂😭
The way his jaw moves when he yells JESSE! …so good!
Woof
“You want it just as much as I want it. And it's not wrong to want it.”
Man he was the devil.
Jesse was right. “Mr. White is the Devil”.
We’re just guys. He is smarter than us. He is luckier than us.
I like how when Walt says "All the people we've killed" he only mentions the one Jesse killed
0:22 Walt realizes he hit a sore spot with Jesse so then tries to empathize with him
0:39 immediately acts like a victim, and grasping at straws claiming he's a father so he's allowed to be more affected by it
0:47 Mocks Jesse again, calling him weak for crying and locking himself away to get high
1:17 "Gale and the rest" he only names the one person that Jesse killed whilst lumping everyone else under "the rest", attempting to minimize the murders that Walt himself committed
2:18 Tries to make Jesse feel guilty about taking the money he owns, and manipulate him into cooking as if that makes it any better, then claim he can make 20x more money which clearly isn't important to Jesse
3:16 Throws a tantrum because his manipulation tactics didn't work
Man, Walt really was a piece of garbage
He was a narcissist and a monster. The worst part of it was that he had - still has - millions of people unironically admiring and/or rooting for him.
@@JimmySteller thats because he's the main protagonist.
I was rooting for Walt until part way through Season 3. Season 4's finale was the final nail in the coffin.
No. Jesse was the bad one. He was a hypocrite throughout most of the show.
If I was a psychology teacher and I had to explain the concept of gaslighting, this is legit the video I'd play in class
That is manipulation not gaslighting
@@LuzgoishzreGaslighting is a form of manipulation.
@@MultiSuperguy101 yes but this isn't gaslighting.
Walt definitely gaslighted Jesse throughout numerous points in the series, but this is just standard manipulation with a dash of narcissism at the end.
Walt gaslit Jesse over Brock’s poisoning, S4E12 etc. Probably the peak evil moment of Walt’s sociopathic genius.
"Are you? Really?!"
Jesse's ability to see through people's bullshit is amazing, specially in Walt's case.
Not that amazing it took him almost 5 seasons to be savvy to Walt's bs.
Also he heard him whistling after putting the kid in the barrel.
Jesse has always been the best empath in the show compared to everyone else. Sure hes a lost person whos addicted to meth, but imo, hes a better person than most of the characters that seem like decent adults. His moral compass is the best in the show and that is why all the bullshit that happened to him really almost broke him
@@barnacleboi2595 you understood my point, thank you. It's not like he was naive to Walters behavior in the prior seasons, he COULD see it, but both of them were making dollars, having each others back, so he keep going. As the time goes by, shit got darker and darker, he couldn't take it anymore, and that's why we like him more. Walter's moral compass was destroyed after so many evil deeds, while Jesse's were developed.
Tf are you talking about he's terrible, took him this long to figure it out, and the reason here is he heard him whistling
In my opinion, this was Walter at his worst. The manipulative, arrogant, selfish being that Walter was finally revealing himself to be. I hated Walter the most in this moment.
Killing Mike is second to me.
For real. He is totally evil here.
That's some good acting
The whole series is impeccable writing and acting.
This scene right here proves what Jesse said to Walter back a while ago: “You need me more than I need you, Walt” Jesse was actually right, Walter is trying to manipulate Jesse and give him reasons to keep cooking but Jesse just wants out so much to a point where he doesn’t care if he gets his half of the money or not. He just doesn’t want to be involved anymore.
walt didnt need jesse. there were so many times walt could have let him die
@@ok472 He CLEARLY needed him at this point
@@ok472 if Walt never needed Jesse he wouldn’t have blackmailed him to show him the business
@@ok472then why did Walt perform this whole exercise on Jesse in the video? Why didn’t he just allow Jesse to leave without manipulating him or getting angry when he didn’t get his way?
@@ledzep1023 Because he viewed Jesse as a surrogate son, in a twisted sort of way, and wanted him to be his protege. Walt ultimately replaced Jesse with Todd easily. The only reason Walt wanted Jesse was for purely emotional reasons.
Jessie: How many more people are going to die because of us?
Walt: No one. None.
Are you sure about that...
Jesse should've made a beeline for Alaska right after this scene. He really did have nothing, and things only got worse from here.
nahor88
He didn’t have the money yet. He had some but Walt hadn’t delivered his $5 million yet.
@@thedarkknight9153 Bruh, he only needed $125K... he definitely had that.
i reckon he said that about 8 times during the series
The Dark Knight he had the money after episode 9
1:17 I like how he points with his head towards Jesse to make sure he knows it was him who killed Gale. It's sooo manipulative 😂
no youre wrong
@@person92906 wdym
@@lilshib7646 he’s incorrect. Walt pretty much ordered Gale to be killed, and also Walt has killed far more than Jesse. He was talking about people killed in their mutual wake. His head motion here isn’t anything important just drawing attention to it.
@@judeak2442 But Jesse was the one who killed him, and Walt knows how much it affected him. He's bringing it up, along with other things, to make Jesse feel worse and worse and manipulate him into staying snd keep cooking with him.
Also the fact that he mentions "Gale" and "the rest".
no. people make that gesture when they recall something while speaking. he of course fakes it, as if gale randomly came to mind.
like other commenters said he said gale to get to jesses head, taking advantage of his emotional side.
I absolutely love how Jesse just walks away.
Feels great I don’t like Walt
@@kevyn3279 I'm pretty sure no one likes Walt after they've watched up until this part.
@@giogio4222🤓
@@person92906 Dies of cringe
@Gio Gio ngl it was hard for me to hate him until he killed finger
00:12
I think this is a subtle dig for when Jesse asked Walter to go Go-Karting with him. That was a vulnerable moment for Jesse and Walter knowing this uses it to hurt/diminish him.
"If you believe there's a hell ... we are already pretty much going there, right?
But I'm not gonna lie down until I get there."
Wow.
SoSo i mean i get his point, and the" am i suppose to lay down and die with him? It’s done!!”
FBI we got em You’re right, but it’s just so crazy to see how aware he is of how bad he is but instead of trying to change is life he just keeps going
SoSo you’re absolutely right, he just doesn’t feel that much empathy anymore as long as it’s not jesse or his family that is hurt
Im going to weigh in from a christian perspective. God calls all people to adopt a better life. Regardless of the sin you have committed in life, if you accept God into your heart and try to do right by your fellow man, you can still go to heaven. This is corroborated by Jesus predominantly reaching out to the lowest in society during his time on earth. People who were regarded as sinful
So walt is incorrect with his biblical reference
so badass
Notice he mention Gale first and only
@@Animaja001 I don't think he was being manipulative when he mentioned Gale. Gale was the most "innocent" person they killed, and his death was still pretty recent when this scene took place, so it made sense to mention him.
@@Animaja001 Wrong. I just explained to you why Walt mentioned Gale and it had nothing to do with manipulating anyone
That last look on walts face is the realization that he is all alone. The last person he cared for walked out, this show is awesome
“If you believe that there’s a hell…but if there is, we’re already pretty much going there, right? But I’m not gonna lie down until I get there.” Who else gets chills from this line?
Love that damn line so much, it's just perfect for Walt!
Me. True words of Hesienberg
1:38 Jesse says what we're all thinking
Because jesse kept screwing everything up
@@artursfilipovs4923 seriously? Yes, Jesse did screw that one thing up with the drug dealers. But everything with Walter refusing to sell the methylamine for 5 millions caused far more people to die.
Walter screwed everything up in the end.
@@mlgamings6110 him refusing to sell only killed mike, thats it, he after that made 80 milion, payed jessie hes 5 million and let him go on hes way buy no jessie just had to become a snitch
@@artursfilipovs4923 I used to have the exact same opinion as you. But then I thought about what he's gone through. He woke up next to his girlfriend Jane, who was lying there dead, her mouth a fountain of vomit. His other girlfriend's brother was killed by two of Gus' drug dealers. Those same drug dealers got Jesse's best friend, Combo, murdered. His parents hate him, Walt kills Mike, who was sort of a father figure to him. Todd murders a child and Walt is fine with it. Finally, he finds out Walt poisoned his girlfriend's son which is the final blow. All of these things and more are why Jesse wanted out.
He's been manipulated by so many people. After this all happens, he's even tortured by neo-nazis and kept as a slave to cook meth. I feel sorry for him.
The one moment when Walt could not manipulate Jesse, no matter which angle he tried.
The one thing Walt was trying to mimic from Gus was his charismatic words to pull whoever back in. “A man provides even when he is not wanted.”
Funny how Walt utterly failed at that lol
He also picks up Gus’s friendly business man attitude with the car wash
0:39 Walt reacts to Jesse, in the same way that Gus reacted to Walt "Are you asking me if I ordered the murder of a child"
Heisenberg is the scuffed version of Fring.
When Walt tells Jesse he has "nothing, nobody" in his life, he's really talking about himself. At this point, his wife is counting down the days for his cancer to come back, he's alienated his kids and Walt says himself a couple of episodes earlier "this business is all I have left". He's just putting Jesse down to feel better about himself. Pretty standard bullying behaviour.
when he whispers "mr white" in confusion as walt starts to tear him to pieces by attacking his vulnerabilities :(
RIGHT WHY IS NO ONE TALKING ABOUT THAT
Amazing how Walt in the beginning was so pure and innocent and not about that life at all, and by the final season is practically running the drug world....
He was always an awful person
Yeah, the drug business corrupts
@@cuccamunga How? What evil did he do that we know of before the pilot?
@@kartmartsupport3712 He blackmailed Jesse into working with him. Before that, he had a huge ego that led him in the situation shown on this pilot.
@@rithikdhakshnamoorthy2974 I said before the pilot
I love how triggered Walt gets when Jesse finally tells him that he doesn’t care about receiving his cut and just leaves. Walt was one egotistical, defeated man by the end
Croatia tries to leave Yugoslavia; cca. 1991 (colorized)
Underrated comment.
Omg 😂😂
Не
@@УгљешаГрбић da
I just realized that Walt yelling "you get nothing!" in the end was maybe a callback to season 3 when Jessie cried Iin front of him in the hospital about how he has "nothing! no one!".
Walt literally tried to use everything he knew about Jessie against him.
I find this scene very underrated when it comes to listing the worst things Walter White has done. It only shows how extremely toxic and fucked up Walt and Jesse's relationship is.
He is desperately looking for any attempt he can use to get Jesse to stay in the meth business. Going from not acknowledging or respecting Jesse's decision to leave, acting like he's still sticking around, praising him to criticizing his life style, and acting like a victim.
Walt has always been an asshole, but this scene and episode brought it to a whole other level.
walter was such an unbelievably monstrous character, it blows my mind that i ever sympathized with him at any point
Guess that's a lesson for all of us
Fr. When i watched the show for the first time years ago i sympathized with him but after re-watching it now i see walt as the evil manipulator that he is. It’s crazy that we just brushed over how many people he killed and lives he ruined
Ikr? That’s what makes him such a fantastic character. He’s completely unlikable in S5 but you just can’t stop watching him 😁
If you understand why he acts this way you can still sympathize with him.
Nah he's sympathetic at the beginning. The point is to show how an ordinary chemistry teacher morals decrease till to the point he's a ruthless drug kingpin
This was some heartbreaking scene.
Nah, it was a very satisfying scene for how Jesse stands up to Walt
When you watch these out of order on youtube, it's almost shocking how different Walt is in these ending episodes.
I know that was the point, but it's such a slow and natural character progression that it almost sneaks up on you when you're watching. There is probably a part of you still rooting for him right at the very end, but then you watch something like this out of the context of the rest of the show and you realise just how far off the handle he flew.
Best character progression ever.
"Go karts and video-games." Honestly sounds like a good life.
That really would get so boring and tiresome after a while. Everyone needs some constructive intellectual stimulation or they just waste away. That's how I wasted all my 20s and I deeply regret it. Drinking, eating, playing video games, watching movies. Didn't travel, didn't focus on my career, didn't really gain any valuable life experience. Wish I had a time machine.
@@SelectiveApathy82 your not Saul…
@@Pwilliams4000 I don't know what you mean.
@@SelectiveApathy82 did you not watch Better Call Saul?
@@Pwilliams4000 Just a few eps. What does it have to do with this?
This was the scene that showed just how far these characters have come since the beginning. Walt is no longer that weak man, too scared to take a life, or cross any moral lines. And Jesse has finally matured into the man he's been fighting against his whole life.
Jesse: “How many people are gonna die because of us?”
Walt: “None. No one.”
Walt literally the next episode: *has 10 people murdered in jail
Not to mention, Mike, Hank, Andrea, Jacks gang(including jack and todd) and Walt all dying after he said this
Walt was so freaking good at gaslighting Jessie.
Not only did Walt gaslight Jesse, he gaslit the entire audience.
3:16 He shouting his name out like he his dad. 😂😂😂Well he basically is though.
lmaoo
JESSE🤬
The less Jesse argues back, the more heartbreaking it is
This was the turning point in the show when i couldnt side with Walt anymore, Especially after he killed mike. he became even a bigger monster then before lol
Joe Scaletta He’s no better than Gus. Or Tuco.
@@lazlovader9943 oh come on Tuco's a psychopathic piece of shit.....Walt is just a cruel and manipulative bastard
The lily of the valley reveal did it for me. Started hating Walt after that. Then of course, it got worse and worse and worse
@@pardharam3167 Walt is a psychopath as well
You all are insane for lasting that long. Walt made the conscious decision to let Jane choke on her own vomit. That is where any rational person would draw the line.
Even without that incident, his ego-driven tantrums (getting pepper sprayed by the cop) and insistence on doing things "his way" should have killed any likability for this fuckhead.
No one else has to die, Jesse. Except Mike, 10 inmates, Hank, Steve, Todd, Jack, Jack's crew, Lydia and Andrea. But that is it.
They all died exactly because Jesse walked away here and became a rat.
@@portalmanHUNDidn't Mike die before Jesse snitched?
@@johnhoney5089 and his 10 crewmembers
@@portalmanHUN A Crybaby rat!
@@portalmanHUN I don't think the crybaby rat was the cause of 11 deaths (mike and his menl
Perfect example of a person in control losing control of the situation.
2:32 - 2:41 Another "close your eyes and visualize" scene
Fuck you LMAO
Bro FUCK U LMFAO😂😂
How many times has Jesse had to ask for his half of the money lol
The first time Jesse was on heroin and Walt was right to hold it back, and he used that moment for the rest of the show to manipulate him out of his share.
Walt will never understand that real gamers never get bored of video games.
3:04 crazy how Jesse calls his bluff and Walt immediately melts down. Jesse has wayyyyy more power over Walt than than thinks he does.
Jesse definitely does not have more power than walter
3:02 i love the way jesse just confidently licks his lips and grins whilst he leaves, it makes me so happy seeing Walt brought down from his sky high ego to who he really is
That final "JESSE!" Cracks me up every time
I love how Walt can say "we're not done" to Saul and he backs down because he's a coward but when Walt uses it on Jesse it fails miserably. He just resortsto screaming
I honestly love 2:57 onwards. Walter is completely transparent here, and I think this is the 1st time in the show where Jesse sees Walt for what he truly is which is an abusive, manipulative, control freak. You can literally see Jesse almost look into Walt as opposed to just looking at him. Walt's agitation that he can't control or manipulative Jesse anymore is like every abusive relationship ever lol.
I don’t know why but for some reason when Walter screamed “JESSE” he sounded like a dad.
0:12 Jesse was like *"Mr. White what are you doing? Like why are you saying that"*
00:42 As if being a father is proof of anything 😂
“Do I have to lock myself in a room and GET HIGH to prove it you ? “ idk why this line always get me 🤣🤣
It's the way he says high 😂
Inspite everything Walter has done to Jesse and him remainig loyal, when he said he'll get tired of videogames he really crossed the line
0:04 my mom walking into my room and roasting me for no reason:
Clear display of signs of narcissistic personality disorder here. So well acted too.
2:32 when bro accidentally touches your hand
Walt talking about how torn up he is about the kid sounds shockingly like way too many politicians these days...
i love how walt immediately regretted the “how long until you start using again?” line with jesse
like even he knew it was a low blow lol
Yeah, and mike was the person who helped Jesse to get out of drugs
@@laryssalima4808It was more so Walter, indirectly, as seeing Jane die of an overdose made him reconsider.
I feel like he was going to accidentally mention Jane in this scene.
"accidentally"
I watched Jane die... I could’ve saved her...
but I didn’t
He did apologize for jane in the episode fly. He really meant it.
@@midget420 Too bad Jesse took it as a “sorry for your loss” instead of “sorry for watching and doing nothing”.
Walter is too smart for that. What would mentioning her death do for him?
Gale, and the rest
Haha! Just basically using the ONE guy Jesse killed in order to manipulate him.
I actually believe that Walt was upset about Drew dying, no one wanted that. But it was very sneaky of him to say "Gale, and the rest", just to make Jesse feel like he was just as responsible as Walt for all the people he killed. (Even if it was for the good of them both)
Bro walt literally didn’t feel upset about drew. He was whistling while finishing a badg, literally moments after dissolving drew. He also never showed any hard feelings about drew or brock.
@@midget420He did feel upset about Drew he had a whole Meeting about what to do with Todd after he did such a thing
@@KJGETThaBread He was shocked in the moment but he quickly got over it and rationalized it away.
"all the people WE'VE killed, Gale and the rest" - goes to show how Walt wanted to guilt trip Jesse into his manipulation
"What do you have?"
Andrea
Brock
Carpentry
That's 2 things Walt didn't have.
Don't forget Badger and Pete. Say what you will about them, but very few people have friends as loyal as them.
Walt really was the main villain
1:21 -- Actually no. There's always repentance, which is why Jesse is such a noble character.
Exactly, but narcissists are incapable.
And how did that nobility work out for him lol?
Somewhere out in the middle of the New Mexico desert little drew sharpe and his mangled dirt bike are dismembered and stuffed inside a plastic drum and buried.
A kid who had nothing to do with anything. Todd is a piece of shit. I wish Walter killed him
He got his in the end!
@@Nimbus3690 Jesse killing him was much more satisfying than it would have been if Walt had done so
@@zanebeyer3017 I agree. But what I meant is I wish Walter killed him right after this child murder.
@@Nimbus3690 he would’ve had to say to Jack “umm... the kid on the dirtbike shot Todd. So I shot him back”
That last scream was the only genuine thing that he said in this scene
When Heisenberg talks about hell was really powerful.
I mean, if Hell does exist, it must be the worst feeling ever to know that you are definitely going there.
So, when Walts says it, he somehow demonstrates he has achieved a point where nothing else really matter for him but his "legacy".
I don’t think he really believes in that crap
@@criert135 yeah
I notice
But the point is still the same
He does not care about a fucking thing, but his legacy
@@criert135 He does believe tho!
@@davedarius7346 I don’t see any evidence that he believed in a god. He’s a very practical, scientific man. So many times in the show we see him in desperate situations and never once do we see him praying, never once do we see him asking a god for forgiveness for anything he’s done.
@@criert135 Yes and No! Atheist? Nope! Religious? Nope! Agnostic? Most likely..He's certainly not a complete atheist, more like agnostic! He tells Skylar 'I will swear on a Bible that I didn't have an affair', and tells Hank, 'Right Hand to God, I am a dying man who runs a car wash and that's all that I am', he writes on the paper while contemplating Crazy 8's fate, 'It's what is right to do by Judeo-Christian values' and he tells Jesse here about the possibility of an afterlife realm! He is obviously not a devout but he seemed to be agnostic for the most part but atheistic? Just nope! He would not even have mentioned religion nor consider religion into Question if Walter Whitey was completely religious!! For all we know, even Jesse told White in the first episode when he came to his house, 'Mr White, If you're gonna tell me to read the Bible and find Jesus, then that's not going to work'... Implying Walt was into Christianity from what Jesse knew even before BB! If anything, I'd say Skylar is the one who's atheistic, and maybe Gretchen and Elliot too lol..... Even Hank has seemed to show signs of being a Christian!
Walt: *poisons a child*
Walt: “dang that sucks”
Bryan Cranston is so fantastic at playing "lying". We can ALWAYS tell he is into "bullshit" mode. He is an actor and everything he says is fake so conveing the distinction between this is "real" and this is a "lie" is just incredible.
List of people Walt and Jesse killed:
1) Gale
2) The rest
When you tell your therapist you are getting past the need for therapy.
This scene is one of the more real moments between them. Walter doesnt hold back on saying he wants the money even with the blood on it.
''The people we have killed, Gale and the others.'' He only mentions Gale's name to manipulate Jesse's emotions since he was the one who killed him and at the same time he distances himself by not mentioning any other names of the ones he killed.
It’s crazy how important Jesse became to Walt, even tough Walt was doing a lot of harm to him, he was always the only one he could trust
The minute Jesse should've walked away from Walt was after he got bruised and battered by Hank, all because of Walt.
Mike saw what Walt was, and what Jesse was at heart, and that's why he said, when Jesse asked him what Walt saw in him: "I think, to put it in a word: "Loyalty." Only maybe you got it for the wrong guy."
And later, Mike again, indirectly, tried to counsel/warn Jesse about Walt: "You, (Walt), are trouble. I'm sorry the kid here, (Jesse), doesn't see it, but I sure as hell do."
It shocked Jesse so much when he talked about go karts, like really? I asked you once when I was depressed and you are using it to berate me
0:52 that's the worst feeling. When someone reminds you of your past only as an insult.
Aaron Paul's emotional intensity is amazing to watch