@@GGGyes4764 I don’t think Jesse came out the womb a criminal. But sure, I’ll bite. Jesse Pinkman grew up with two parents in a (seemingly) pretty decent household overall. At likely a young age, influenced by his peers, he’d come into the criminal underworld, starting with maybe just petty theft before eventually becoming the Jesse we see in the pilot. Throughout it all, he is very clearly against what directly (seriously) injures and kills people, and seems to at least value human life when it is infront of him. Walter White grew up in (likely) also a pretty decent(or atleast well off, poor families aren’t often able to get into any colleges, scholarship or not) and went through high school probably pretty normally. Sometime, in his youth, his father died infront of him- weak, barely able to function. He made Grestchen likely sometime during college, and the two would form a romantic relationship and together with a mutual friend form a company. Walt would leave her rather suddenly after meeting her family, not telling her why. The show(or the creators, I forgot which) confirms Walt left because he felt inadequate not being the breadwinner. He pulled out of the company, getting paid his share. He meets Skylar, and wins her affection(through, mind you, deceptive means..), eventually marrying. Throughout the show, Walt becomes obsessed with the adrenaline, the feeling, whatever- that comes with the criminal world. For his family, he tells himself. Jesse becomes further and further traumatized through it all, often resisting criminal temptation/working with Walt throughout the show(After Hank’s Assault, Jane, Being employed by Gus, Mike pulling out). Walt would only ever dive deeper, with the exception of a few episodes in the final season. Walter White, likely a narcissist(look into psychologists thoughts on Walt) was never truly a “Good Guy” throughout the show. Neither was Jesse, really. They are sympathetic characters, but they aren’t good people. If you follow Gale’s beliefs, you might not see that for a few episodes, but it absolutely should become obvious bare minimum by Season 2. Selling what they did ruins lives, it lives off of others addiction and suffering. Walt would never have had to kill anyone in first few episodes if he never valued money over his integrity. A good man wouldn’t lie to his partner to the magnitude he did. A good man wouldn’t watch Jane die, tearful or not. Walter was traumatized by the sight of his dying father, vowing to never let himself look so miserable. To compensate, he would become a kingpin. Ruining lives, murdering… there was no “Heisenberg” that took over, no evil influence that took over. The person whom he really was came out. “I have spent.. my whole life, scared.” Jesse? A fool, a manchild, one who never really grew up. Never had much of an opportunity to. He was stuck mentally as basically a teenager up until he had to shoot Gale, or perhaps when Jane died. He was enslaved, and eventually freed by the man who brought all of this to him. The man who ruined both their lives. In El Camino, we see Jesse, without empathy, kill another man (not even through some faux “honor system,” but rather deception) and takes his money so he alone can live the life he wants to. His actions directly and indirectly killed multiple people, not really someone you’d consider a good guy. To state either character were good guys, or born to be criminal, is a vast, vast vast oversimplification and misunderstanding of these characters. Do you have to be perfect to be a good guy? No, but from the start, we see Walt blackmail Jesse into cooking with him. What kind of good guy does that? No good man at all.
@@GGGyes4764 I don’t think Jesse came out the womb a criminal. But sure, I’ll bite. Jesse Pinkman grew up with two parents in a (seemingly) pretty decent household overall. At likely a young age, influenced by his peers, he’d come into the criminal underworld, starting with maybe just petty theft before eventually becoming the Jesse we see in the pilot. Throughout it all, he is very clearly against what directly (seriously) injures and kills people, and seems to at least value human life when it is infront of him. Walter White grew up in (likely) also a pretty decent(or atleast well off, poor families aren’t often able to get into any colleges, scholarship or not) and went through high school probably pretty normally. Sometime, in his youth, his father died infront of him- weak, barely able to function. He made Grestchen likely sometime during college, and the two would form a romantic relationship and together with a mutual friend form a company. Walt would leave her rather suddenly after meeting her family, not telling her why. The show(or the creators, I forgot which) confirms Walt left because he felt inadequate not being the breadwinner. He pulled out of the company, getting paid his share. He meets Skylar, and wins her affection(through, mind you, deceptive means..), eventually marrying.
@@GGGyes4764 this is not a comment i can properly and in depth respond to without RUclips filtering the comment. They both ruined lives through the trade they were involved in, and had no qualms about it. They also directly end lives, both of them having done it with no shred of empathy at least once. I would not classify either of them as good people, nor the criminal world being some “destiny” for them. Sympathetic? Sure, but that’s a very different can of worms.
Jesse really was just brought up as second favorite and because of it everything he had died due to an asshole Chemistry Teacher who was all pissy about shit he couldn't admit was his fault
He is a deeply unhappy character, and I can tell his parents were pretty much cause of it, the writers showed enough of them to realise this, but he was talented and he WAS passionate, just in the wrong direction. He had his moments too though, he was not an ultimate sadness incarnate. More like a "loser", with occasional luck. I honestly wanted him to have a better story though. If you bond with the show you just can't stand what is done to his character.
he honestly did not deserve all of what happened to him :(
He sell meth, sustain which ruine people and country in general
walter was a good guy born to be a criminal, jesse was a criminal born to be a good guy
Ehhhhh
@@Gamer-cb6ygno no he’s got a point. Walt lived a pretty good live, well, except his last 10-15 years. Jesse was a criminal with a good heart
@@GGGyes4764 I don’t think Jesse came out the womb a criminal. But sure, I’ll bite.
Jesse Pinkman grew up with two parents in a (seemingly) pretty decent household overall. At likely a young age, influenced by his peers, he’d come into the criminal underworld, starting with maybe just petty theft before eventually becoming the Jesse we see in the pilot. Throughout it all, he is very clearly against what directly (seriously) injures and kills people, and seems to at least value human life when it is infront of him.
Walter White grew up in (likely) also a pretty decent(or atleast well off, poor families aren’t often able to get into any colleges, scholarship or not) and went through high school probably pretty normally. Sometime, in his youth, his father died infront of him- weak, barely able to function. He made Grestchen likely sometime during college, and the two would form a romantic relationship and together with a mutual friend form a company. Walt would leave her rather suddenly after meeting her family, not telling her why. The show(or the creators, I forgot which) confirms Walt left because he felt inadequate not being the breadwinner. He pulled out of the company, getting paid his share. He meets Skylar, and wins her affection(through, mind you, deceptive means..), eventually marrying.
Throughout the show, Walt becomes obsessed with the adrenaline, the feeling, whatever- that comes with the criminal world. For his family, he tells himself. Jesse becomes further and further traumatized through it all, often resisting criminal temptation/working with Walt throughout the show(After Hank’s Assault, Jane, Being employed by Gus, Mike pulling out). Walt would only ever dive deeper, with the exception of a few episodes in the final season.
Walter White, likely a narcissist(look into psychologists thoughts on Walt) was never truly a “Good Guy” throughout the show. Neither was Jesse, really. They are sympathetic characters, but they aren’t good people. If you follow Gale’s beliefs, you might not see that for a few episodes, but it absolutely should become obvious bare minimum by Season 2. Selling what they did ruins lives, it lives off of others addiction and suffering. Walt would never have had to kill anyone in first few episodes if he never valued money over his integrity. A good man wouldn’t lie to his partner to the magnitude he did. A good man wouldn’t watch Jane die, tearful or not.
Walter was traumatized by the sight of his dying father, vowing to never let himself look so miserable. To compensate, he would become a kingpin. Ruining lives, murdering… there was no “Heisenberg” that took over, no evil influence that took over. The person whom he really was came out.
“I have spent.. my whole life, scared.”
Jesse? A fool, a manchild, one who never really grew up. Never had much of an opportunity to. He was stuck mentally as basically a teenager up until he had to shoot Gale, or perhaps when Jane died. He was enslaved, and eventually freed by the man who brought all of this to him. The man who ruined both their lives.
In El Camino, we see Jesse, without empathy, kill another man (not even through some faux “honor system,” but rather deception) and takes his money so he alone can live the life he wants to. His actions directly and indirectly killed multiple people, not really someone you’d consider a good guy.
To state either character were good guys, or born to be criminal, is a vast, vast vast oversimplification and misunderstanding of these characters. Do you have to be perfect to be a good guy? No, but from the start, we see Walt blackmail Jesse into cooking with him.
What kind of good guy does that? No good man at all.
@@GGGyes4764 I don’t think Jesse came out the womb a criminal. But sure, I’ll bite.
Jesse Pinkman grew up with two parents in a (seemingly) pretty decent household overall. At likely a young age, influenced by his peers, he’d come into the criminal underworld, starting with maybe just petty theft before eventually becoming the Jesse we see in the pilot. Throughout it all, he is very clearly against what directly (seriously) injures and kills people, and seems to at least value human life when it is infront of him.
Walter White grew up in (likely) also a pretty decent(or atleast well off, poor families aren’t often able to get into any colleges, scholarship or not) and went through high school probably pretty normally. Sometime, in his youth, his father died infront of him- weak, barely able to function. He made Grestchen likely sometime during college, and the two would form a romantic relationship and together with a mutual friend form a company. Walt would leave her rather suddenly after meeting her family, not telling her why. The show(or the creators, I forgot which) confirms Walt left because he felt inadequate not being the breadwinner. He pulled out of the company, getting paid his share. He meets Skylar, and wins her affection(through, mind you, deceptive means..), eventually marrying.
@@GGGyes4764 this is not a comment i can properly and in depth respond to without RUclips filtering the comment.
They both ruined lives through the trade they were involved in, and had no qualms about it. They also directly end lives, both of them having done it with no shred of empathy at least once. I would not classify either of them as good people, nor the criminal world being some “destiny” for them. Sympathetic? Sure, but that’s a very different can of worms.
he deserved none of what happened man.
I mean a little bit
@@ishowquickness5717yeah he did decide to sell meth
"i deserve whatever happens"
@@ishowquickness5717yeah a little bit. Dud has probably ruined some lives before Walter White got to him.
You NEED to make more videos like this
i'll try my best with consistent uploads lmao
This is toooo clean
Jesse really was just brought up as second favorite and because of it everything he had died due to an asshole Chemistry Teacher who was all pissy about shit he couldn't admit was his fault
he didnt die!?!?!? have you seen the breaking bad ending or el camino (the continuation of the felina episode) 2 hour film, jesse never died,
Probably on my 100th watch of this, so fuckin good oh my god
Thank you so much 🙏
@@benroller_ Np this is my like my 12thday watching this it goes so fucking hard bro
underrated asf man 160 views is shit reach for this its really cool.
Its all good. (man)
S’all good, man
oh jesy oh no
I loved this good work man
I appreciate it!
If only...
W edit
Aaron Paul is one hell of an actor!!!
Heck
Jesse got the worst of breaking bad
What is the music pleas ?
Think of me once in a while by take care
@@benroller_ Yes of cours 😅sorry...
Ur good man lmaoo
He is a deeply unhappy character, and I can tell his parents were pretty much cause of it, the writers showed enough of them to realise this, but he was talented and he WAS passionate, just in the wrong direction.
He had his moments too though, he was not an ultimate sadness incarnate. More like a "loser", with occasional luck.
I honestly wanted him to have a better story though. If you bond with the show you just can't stand what is done to his character.