@@marcelohenriquedasilvafons781 Black Jack = Jack Black. Amazing reference to Kung Fu Panda 3 with Jack Black and Bryan Cranston. Vince! You've done it again!
@@alexanderlattreuter5196 I guess it wasn’t the absolute worst, cause it was suited spades but against 4 hearts and a club on the table. Not to mention Hank had Trip Aces lmao
Are you telling me that a man just happens to go all in like that? No! He orchestrated it! Waltie! And I folded! And I shouldn't have. What was I thinking? Couldn't keep his hands out of bluffing! But not our Waltie! Couldn't be precious Waltie! Fooling us blind! And he gets to be a gambler!? What a sick joke! I should've called him when I had the chance! And you - you have to call him! You-
yooo you missed a line, right? Between 'and I shouldn't have' and 'what was I thinking' I think there is 'took him into my own firm' which in this context is 'took him into my own casino'. Correct me if I'm wrong.
It’s actually the other way around, this is what I would call backshadowing. Hank uses poker during the intervention pillow moment for instance but at that point the cover story doesn’t exist yet. It’s kinda like Better Call Saul smartly using BB to built its own story up. Honestly, the real kicker is that we are now thinking that it is foreshadowing because it’s so well integrated in the later seasons.
I mean, I guess? It just looks like a fun night of poker to everyone else. It only feels personally antagonist to Walt because of his double life. His brother-in-law is too much, I will say that. Glad he was taken down a notch, here.
Idk about you but I wouldn’t call a modest life with a family that loves you and would do anything for you “miserable”. It’s only miserable to Walt because of his pride and ego, he could never, ever be satisfied.
@@seth8580 It is a soul crushing existence when your wife treats you like her subordinate, your brother-in-law is constantly making "you're not a real man" comments out the side of his face, your first born is a cripple, and you know you could have been so much more but you end up something lowly like a highschool chemistry teacher. To a man...this is a constant all day shame fest that just doesn't end. It's completely relatable why Walt "broke bad". However, he went so far during the series that it took him from relatable and understandable to many...to being a complete villain that everyone hated. That's part of the beauty of the show, it doesn't glorify or praise...it just understands.
Errors in turn order aside, breaking down this play: Walter's bluff would've been way more impressive if Hank had, say, a pair of 9s including the 9 of hearts. But Hank didn't have any hearts, so he was totally reasonable for folding. He had three aces, but with four hearts on the table, and an 86% chance that somebody had a heart, he knew he was unlikely to have the best hand. It was a pretty easy bluff for Walt considering that Junior, Skyler, and Marie had all folded. All he needed to do was pretend he had a heart. Hey, I wonder if there was any deeper meaning there.
@@onemanwanders not even. they have a point. the reason hank never suspected walt was because hank saw walt as a harmless and docile school teacher who could never do the things heisenberg did
@@NyxxyNightstar How does that support the OP? You think a female detective wouldn't have seen him that way? It's not like Marie or other female background characters were any more suspicious.
Breaking Bad Season 5: The crew goes to the trouble of planning and creating a pile of $80 million. Breaking Bad Season 1: Nobody on set even bothers to learn the rules of poker.
@@cherkovision Ha, no, I mean that Walt's hand is almost as bad as one could imagine but he bluffs and gets away with it, while Hank's hand is solid but looks better than it actually is.
@@xCorvus7x right, but at the stage of the hand when Walt actually needs to bluff (after all five cards on the table are up), it doesn't matter whether his own cards are terrible or great. He only needs to convince Hank that he has at least one heart. An ace-king (which Hank has) may be fairly strong pre-flop, but with four hearts on the table, it's not much stronger than a 7-2.
@@cherkovision Yeah, which resembles the course of the series: in the end it all comes down to Walt vs. Hank. I don't know poker, I just look at the scene in the context of the series.
Three people folding on the river before a bet is made…. Hank folding trip aces and Walt staying in the entire round while having *almost* the worst hand in poker (the 7,2 were suited)…. It’s like they looked at the Wiki for Hold’Em for 3 minutes before writing this scene
Idk, I think Walter shoving with 7,2 while hank has trip aces but getting him to fold is a little symbolic of the situation between them at this point... it's not about realistic poker, it's about the overarching story.
You do realize the scene was about the consequences of Walter's actions Re: Hugo, and some superb character development.... and not about poker, right?
Skylar complains about the school not checking people's prior records LMAO, the show also gave a poetic ending to that. Her record is a Blacklist after the events of Breaking Bad, thanks to her husband, She'd be screwed if her records are checked like she suggested here lol......I mean, she was disdainful about poor Hugo, she's going to get the same treatment by those like herself as she has a record.
Damn never looked at it that way. Would she still be blacklist even after Walt gives her the coordinates of Hank and Steve's bodies, because that gives her an edge to prove the court she wasn't involved (even though she was) with Walt and his Empire.
For me this is such an incredibly poignant scene - just highlights Walter’s intelligence and his innate risk appetite which he only discovers later on in life (unfortunately for him)
Don’t space the badass way hank foreshadowed becoming the DEA legend he became. He had an opportunity to teach a young boy he loves that even unexpected people around him can hide drugs too, and he laughed because he got credit for something.
1:28 *People ask "how could Hank not know the whole time it was Walt? It was obvious. How was he so stupid."* It was arrogance. Hank was overconfident in himself and he underestimated Walt. Hank blinded himself with his own pride and condescending attitude toward his brother-in-law.
I like how you see the finer details in this from the standpoint of a watch enthusiast. If my eyes serve me right, Walter White was wearing a cheap Casio CA-53W-1Z Black in this episode. But in the later episodes when the time he hired people to kill those inmates, Heisenberg was wearing a 10k USD Tag Heuer Monaco Chronograph to time their deaths~
They kinda forgot this scene when they were failing to teach walt how to be good at cards later in the show but they already have shown him being great at it back then
The part where Walt says "I am the dealer!" gives clues about how he will eventually become Heisenberg, shame Hank couldn't pick up on it. Brilliant Foreshadowing!
Why do Walt Jr and Skyler fold when no one had placed any bet? If you don't have **** you don't fold, you check. There's no reason to fold without a bet forcing you to match it.
So much foreshadowing in this scene:
- Walt's poker cover story
- Walt's criminality
- Hank's underestimating of Walt
"Looks like it's just you and me buddy"
🤓☝🏼 the cover story was actually BlackJack
bravo Vince!
@@marcelohenriquedasilvafons781 Black Jack = Jack Black. Amazing reference to Kung Fu Panda 3 with Jack Black and Bryan Cranston. Vince! You've done it again!
@@marcelohenriquedasilvafons781it’s a big difference, tho. You don’t need to be smart to win at poker.
Imagine if Tuco was there playing poker with them. He would be doing his lie detector test.
You punking me?
tight tight
Just don’t call his abuelita biz natch
We all know Tuco has “two pair!”
I never thought ı needed it
7-2 is actually considered the worst hand in poker
Nah it was suited
@@alexanderlattreuter5196
I guess it wasn’t the absolute worst, cause it was suited spades but against 4 hearts and a club on the table. Not to mention Hank had Trip Aces lmao
@@Stapeezy Yeah i know his hand was weak im just saying thats it is not the worst one.
Though an A-K is known as an Anna Kournikova, because it looks better than it plays.
The worst hand in poker is the second best hand.
"you threw it all away for a handful of nothing" ik its not foreshadowing but really gets you after finishing the series.
Tbh sounds like foreshadowing to me
Are you telling me that a man just happens to go all in like that? No! He orchestrated it! Waltie! And I folded! And I shouldn't have. What was I thinking? Couldn't keep his hands out of bluffing! But not our Waltie! Couldn't be precious Waltie! Fooling us blind! And he gets to be a gambler!? What a sick joke! I should've called him when I had the chance! And you - you have to call him! You-
Couldn't be precious waltie lmao
chuckenburg
yooo you missed a line, right? Between 'and I shouldn't have' and 'what was I thinking' I think there is 'took him into my own firm' which in this context is 'took him into my own casino'. Correct me if I'm wrong.
@@aggold6757 I think it would be funnier if it was something like "And I shouldn't have. Took me into his own house. What was I thinking?"
*LFMAO*
This must be foreshadowing Skyler's gambling cover story.
You can't foreshadow something when you don't even know if the network is gonna renew the show for a second season, let alone a third
@@zekeiwa5837 Unless you're galaxy-brain Vince, Bravo!!!
@@TheBfutgregDon’t insult him. If he saw this coming and planned for it, he’s at least a universe-brain.
@@zekeiwa5837 not all foreshadowing has to be intentional
It’s actually the other way around, this is what I would call backshadowing. Hank uses poker during the intervention pillow moment for instance but at that point the cover story doesn’t exist yet. It’s kinda like Better Call Saul smartly using BB to built its own story up. Honestly, the real kicker is that we are now thinking that it is foreshadowing because it’s so well integrated in the later seasons.
Gus would be PERFECT at poker
He would be acceptable
He would be up
To Pollos standards
"I'm bluffing... or am I?"
@@yushayasad3676 Gus staring intensifies
@@Montogoronto *in a game with Hector*
"Look at me, Hector."
They did such a good job of portraying a miserable soul destroying life for Walt
Then people and the creators are shocked when people can relate to him and dislike the people around him.
I mean, I guess? It just looks like a fun night of poker to everyone else. It only feels personally antagonist to Walt because of his double life.
His brother-in-law is too much, I will say that. Glad he was taken down a notch, here.
Idk about you but I wouldn’t call a modest life with a family that loves you and would do anything for you “miserable”.
It’s only miserable to Walt because of his pride and ego, he could never, ever be satisfied.
@@seth8580exactly, he brought the misery on himself
@@seth8580 It is a soul crushing existence when your wife treats you like her subordinate, your brother-in-law is constantly making "you're not a real man" comments out the side of his face, your first born is a cripple, and you know you could have been so much more but you end up something lowly like a highschool chemistry teacher.
To a man...this is a constant all day shame fest that just doesn't end. It's completely relatable why Walt "broke bad". However, he went so far during the series that it took him from relatable and understandable to many...to being a complete villain that everyone hated. That's part of the beauty of the show, it doesn't glorify or praise...it just understands.
Errors in turn order aside, breaking down this play:
Walter's bluff would've been way more impressive if Hank had, say, a pair of 9s including the 9 of hearts. But Hank didn't have any hearts, so he was totally reasonable for folding. He had three aces, but with four hearts on the table, and an 86% chance that somebody had a heart, he knew he was unlikely to have the best hand. It was a pretty easy bluff for Walt considering that Junior, Skyler, and Marie had all folded. All he needed to do was pretend he had a heart. Hey, I wonder if there was any deeper meaning there.
you truly cooked 🔥🔥
I'm not folding on 3 aces
HOLY
@@7stiano123well, you aren't good at poker then.
@@7stiano123Then you should come to our poker night tomorrow lol
Hank's masculinity has caused him to overlook Walt since the start. How ironic.
Ehhhh. Not really
Exactly
@@onemanwanders thank you you're so kind
@@onemanwanders not even. they have a point. the reason hank never suspected walt was because hank saw walt as a harmless and docile school teacher who could never do the things heisenberg did
@@NyxxyNightstar How does that support the OP? You think a female detective wouldn't have seen him that way? It's not like Marie or other female background characters were any more suspicious.
Breaking Bad Season 5: The crew goes to the trouble of planning and creating a pile of $80 million.
Breaking Bad Season 1: Nobody on set even bothers to learn the rules of poker.
It seems they did look up the meanings of certain hands suitable for the characters.
@@xCorvus7xwhat do you mean? Hank thinks Walt has a heart, when he's just pretending?
@@cherkovision Ha, no, I mean that Walt's hand is almost as bad as one could imagine but he bluffs and gets away with it, while Hank's hand is solid but looks better than it actually is.
@@xCorvus7x right, but at the stage of the hand when Walt actually needs to bluff (after all five cards on the table are up), it doesn't matter whether his own cards are terrible or great. He only needs to convince Hank that he has at least one heart. An ace-king (which Hank has) may be fairly strong pre-flop, but with four hearts on the table, it's not much stronger than a 7-2.
@@cherkovision Yeah, which resembles the course of the series: in the end it all comes down to Walt vs. Hank.
I don't know poker, I just look at the scene in the context of the series.
2:34 Hank flexing
look at me waltuh
Poor Hugo ☹️ I wonder if he ever got released
Hugo is currently serving 17 consecutive life sentences for the one doob they found in his truck
@@bobkerr2755exactly, and not just prison either, but county jail. That place is the worst of the worst
Probably I mean it was only a couple of months
Didn't Hugo get killed by the guy who robbed the atm
@@doflamingo1360 that was a different guy, there's a theory that Hugo was the guy who fist bumped Jimmy McGill in prison at the last episode though.
“I am the one who bluffs.”
I always loved that Walt was angry for Hugo, I wish they did a callback to Hugo 😭 was the only guy who was ever nice to Walt in early seasons
Three people folding on the river before a bet is made…. Hank folding trip aces and Walt staying in the entire round while having *almost* the worst hand in poker (the 7,2 were suited)…. It’s like they looked at the Wiki for Hold’Em for 3 minutes before writing this scene
Idk, I think Walter shoving with 7,2 while hank has trip aces but getting him to fold is a little symbolic of the situation between them at this point... it's not about realistic poker, it's about the overarching story.
Don't forget walt jr and skylar still being in the hand on the river after seemingly not calling the turn bet
You do realize the scene was about the consequences of Walter's actions Re: Hugo, and some superb character development.... and not about poker, right?
@@infernocanuck wait…. This is a Breaking Bad clip??? I thought I was watching WSOP!
@@infernocanuckIt wasn’t really the consequence of Walt’s actions. Hank chose to arrest him and search his house over a doob.
They will post the entire series on yt 😂
with breaking bad being taken off netflix in 2025 i sure hope they do 😭
Skylar complains about the school not checking people's prior records LMAO, the show also gave a poetic ending to that. Her record is a Blacklist after the events of Breaking Bad, thanks to her husband, She'd be screwed if her records are checked like she suggested here lol......I mean, she was disdainful about poor Hugo, she's going to get the same treatment by those like herself as she has a record.
leopards eating faces etc
@@AhrkFinTey You defecated threw a sunroof? Are you Slipping Jimmy? Lol
Damn never looked at it that way. Would she still be blacklist even after Walt gives her the coordinates of Hank and Steve's bodies, because that gives her an edge to prove the court she wasn't involved (even though she was) with Walt and his Empire.
@@AhrkFinTeywhat does that mean exactly?
This was before she was coerced and then trapped into supporting a drug manufacturer
hanks three of a kind of Ace's perfectly forshadows who he becomes later in the serise. Ace sack Schrader.
I’d be furious if she showed my cards to everyone. Gotta buy that privilege!
folding out of turn
theres no bet either lol
finger
Waltuh
For me this is such an incredibly poignant scene - just highlights Walter’s intelligence and his innate risk appetite which he only discovers later on in life (unfortunately for him)
The amount of irony in this scene is amazing
Imagine playing poker with Saul, he'll probably convince the whole table he have a flush
because he believes it!
I can't believe it! I played poker with Kevin Costner!
Don’t space the badass way hank foreshadowed becoming the DEA legend he became. He had an opportunity to teach a young boy he loves that even unexpected people around him can hide drugs too, and he laughed because he got credit for something.
I love how poorly Marie played her hand, putting aside her accidental overbet.
The wineglass behaves weird
The insta fold by the 1st 3 with action makes no sense. They can just check it and if there isnt a raise play the hand out
1:29 is ironic because Walt is the criminal Hank is describing and he couldn’t tell either 🤣
foreshadowing is insane
1:28 *People ask "how could Hank not know the whole time it was Walt? It was obvious. How was he so stupid."*
It was arrogance. Hank was overconfident in himself and he underestimated Walt. Hank blinded himself with his own pride and condescending attitude toward his brother-in-law.
God I hate season 1 Hank
By Season 3 he's one of my favs
yeah don't really like season 1 hank. Started to like him a bit more in season 2 after the whole tuco thing and even more in season 3 though
@@epicfan1598 pretty much all the characters had a glow up after s1 s2
2:33 Hank 😅
This is the essence Breaking Bad condensed in a 4 minute scene
I like how you see the finer details in this from the standpoint of a watch enthusiast. If my eyes serve me right, Walter White was wearing a cheap Casio CA-53W-1Z Black in this episode. But in the later episodes when the time he hired people to kill those inmates, Heisenberg was wearing a 10k USD Tag Heuer Monaco Chronograph to time their deaths~
They kinda forgot this scene when they were failing to teach walt how to be good at cards later in the show but they already have shown him being great at it back then
Skyler said he developed a "system" for Blackjack. This game was a regular poker game and he won it by bluffing unintentionally.
The part where Walt says "I am the dealer!" gives clues about how he will eventually become Heisenberg, shame Hank couldn't pick up on it. Brilliant Foreshadowing!
Why do they all just muck instead of just checking?😂😂
I’d lose it if someone revealed my cards
This is where Walt realized he couldn’t lie to Hank. “500,000 in cash” was better than a lie
Nah walt played it to his advantage plus he didnt really have nothing to lose anymore
Saul
And the actual criminal was right in front of Hank…
Walt feels terrible about a guy losing his job, but within a year he'll happily arrange for ten people to be killed in prison simultaneously
ever since, hank was known as locos ases.
Someone knows what’s the name of the song playing in the background??
nobody can find it. There is also a discussion on reddit... seems like nobody knows
@@shogun9032 that’s crazy! Song sounds amazing and of course it was probably made just for the episode.
I think it may be Sandstorm by Darude.
Darude - Sandstorm
Why do Walt Jr and Skyler fold when no one had placed any bet? If you don't have **** you don't fold, you check. There's no reason to fold without a bet forcing you to match it.
this was on last night on plutoTV!
They have Breaking Bad on Pluto?
@@HeyLookPropane and better call Saul!
No:0
A handful of nothing ....
7-2 is the worst hand... Saul Goodman would know because he is "Nobody"...
Marie’s sisters came out to play in this scene
"Walt...you sussy baka"
I want a poker night 3, but with only breaking bad characters and BCS characters.
Id kill to see Gus, Lalo, walt and Tuco in a poker match LOL
Tuco would die immediately
Actually Tuco would die immediately in any competition against those three other than a fist fight
Is this background song public yet
Song?
Im trying to find it as well
What was Walt doing in there with 72😂
Strictly pokerwise this is very dumb actually
I'm not sure about that, maybe Walt just understands Hank really well
You hiding something?
JAJAJ no entendía esta escena hace un par de años
walt
Great
Уолтер забил ГООООООООООООООЛ
if nothing else this scene very well demonstrates the fascist tendencies of the middle class
Is literally everything fascist?
You don't even know what fascist is
@@TobyMcguarro refer to my reply to bfutgreg. you don't have to be a fascist to have fascist tendencies
back to posting low quality audio i see
I am all in😎👍
😂😅