A person like this is a predator. You have to be a fellow predator for them to view you as an equal, otherwise you're prey. You have to convince him that dealing with you is less effort than just robbing you.
My grandfather loved this series, he would always talk about it to my grandmother who didnt really care about series but when he died in 2015 she discovered netflix a few years later and she watched the whole series again and again. Bless her and my grandfather, wherever he may be...
@@13_years_old_boy Yeah and even more rare since he was French, and the French arent the biggest fans of anything that speaks English lmao. He didnt understand all the hype surrounding the show so he decided to be the judge of it, he ended up loving every bit of it.
It's actually kinda cool how Better Call Saul retroactively emphasizes how much of a wild card Walt was in this type of setting. Scenes like this get enhanced when you put that into perspective.
Walt casually walks into the drug scene and just leaves a carnage and destruction in his wake. He disintegrated the cartel, the salamancas, Gus Fring's entire empire - then just offs himself.
@@DekuStickGamerthe inevitable change chained down by an intelligent man hiding and preventing himself from living. It was only when Walt had nothing left to lose did he break bad and bring about great change. Imagine if every powerful mind were encouraged to strive for more
Yeah, I always took the Salamancas as the 'respect is earned' kind of people. I think about that scene where Nacho jumps into a swat infested area to get some coke to make Lalo happy. He immediately got Lalo points there.
Major drug dealers have to respect having balls. Every single person they work with is someone who could bend and turn them in. They need people with an I-don't-give-a-fuck attitude to survive that business.
We thought Tuco Salamanca was a maniac. Then the twins showed up and we thought they were crazier than Tuco. Then Lalo Salamanca shows up and he makes the twins and Tuco look sane. What a family.
It's not just a rush of pulling it off that Walter felt at the end. It's the feeling of making that much all at once after decades of feeling like a failure and barely getting by. It finally feels like a "win". I'm only in my late 20s but I can definitely relate.
Bryan Cranston really is a masterclass actor. Went through 4 different emotions in the span of 5 minutes. Went from being stern, to regretful, then being happy while being scared through the whole process. Truely in a league of his own.
Walt doesn't even know how much respect he earned from Tuco after this confrontation. He walked into a drug compound, by himself, and got his money back from one of the toughest guys in the cartel. Probably the first person to ever to step to Tuco in his life.
@@iurifestuccia7423 Im sure he has a notion. But if he understood fully, he wouldnt fear Tuko as much as he did. he wouldnt be as nervous knowing the kind of respect Tuko had for him
Absolutely... I see people on Twitter and reddit all the time talking about how they don't understand how people like this show lol... So many people gave up on it a few episodes into season 1 and never let it develop, they missed out on one of the greatest series of all time
@@DirtNassty as much as I like Breaking Bad I feel like it can't touch Ozark on an emotional scale at all. Breaking Bad had cooler action scenes but Ozark was deeper imo
@@gin.gefilms nah...i love ozark too but it has nothing on BB... Ozark was alot slower too, alot more slow dragged out episodes. After you get into season 2 of BB the action and suspense never slows
@@DirtNassty hm I mean you're entitled to your opinion but I totally disagree. Ozark moves at a much faster pace to me. I think Breaking Bads first two seasons were it's best then the quality dipped. Ozark I feel is the other way around and gets better every season. Both shows have great acting and even better antagonists. But Ozark (even with its flawed characters) gave me people to root for. I found myself rooting for nobody besides Hank in Breaking Bad. I think they're on the same level of greatness. It just depends what you're looking for out of a show. Buddys death in Ozark was more emotional than any scene in Breaking Bad (for me.)
And that dose of adrenaline that Walt got at the end there paved the way for the rest of the series. It's where he stopped caring so much about the money but the rush he got from getting away with it.
@@ceus1001 I just rewatched this and said to myself when I saw the scene, this is where Heisenberg starts to become Heisenberg. “One pound won’t cut it. You have to take 2.” God I love it
@@johnsteele8073 I see it as being a mixture of intense emotions. Excitement at succeeding and being the badass he'd never been before, and also a minor freakout because he knew how close he was to being cut up into tiny pieces if Tuco hadn't called off Gonzo.
I love how Tuco's thought process went through the scene, especially when he went from shocked/cautious/slight fear to impressed and then even amused at the end like "like what the f.. this dude lol"
The acting from Bryan Cranston is so super here. You can tell that even though Walt is stone faced and fierce here, he's really scared shitless. Those little notches on his face and throat give it away.
Accurate! Funny thing, as you might expect, people point out that Raymond Cruz is nothing like this character. He pulled it off so well that he freaked his wife out, lol. I also remember him playing the sniper in the movie "Clear and present danger" back in the 90s.
0:27 in this particular moment seemed that the word “partner” triggered a flashback in Tuco’s mind. And it seems to happen again when he yells “you never trust the people that you love!”, later in the s2. That someone is indeed Nacho Varga; I believe BCS writers used that to build Nacho’s character.
To me this shows how Tuco’s morals works. After Walter made this he immediately recognizes some of himself, so he gives respect back. But don’t let that distract you for the fact that he’s a real beast.
The scream and smile at the end. The feeling of being scared shitless the whole time but actually pulling it off. Perhaps Vince Gilligan felt the same after the show ended. Brilliant writting and acting.
I think a part of the scream was also a feeling of immense validation, since this was the first time he managed to pull off a scheme like this. Walt spent his whole life knowing he had incredible intellect and chemistry skills, yet not once did anyone ever acknowledge him. He was just Mr.White, some lame chemistry teacher who would live and die an unremarkable life without ever accomplishing the things he knew deep down he was capable of. But finally being able to pull of a genius scheme like this, outsmarting dangerous criminals, getting to have control over them, and walking away with 50k was probably deeply satisfying and validating. He had finally proved to himself that he really WAS capable of incredible things all along. His addiction to that feeling of power is probably what led him down the path of constantly seeking more and more money
@@ctpp64 I think that was reflected on the laugh. He screamed because he was scared the whole time and then laughed because he got what he wanted, in a world that doesn't play by his rules.
As well as what the other comments above said, to me this scene(or, this episode, is also one of the last times Walt was just Walt. I know it’s a bit of a meme, but I feel like this scream is for me when Heisenberg really took over.
This is when he realised he did it because he likes it.. He was good at it.. Made him feel alive.. This was the moment that got him hooked on the life style..
@@tstone1874 T stone blood whyna go askin people how dey know thins man they jus know man like really know dem things bruh. Also,Vince Gilligan said it himself,in the DVD commentary.
Walt’s awesome when he’s overwhelmed with excitement. I love his celebration here and when he and Jesse calculate how much money their gonna make from their first big cook.
Man not to be mean or anything but for people like me who just got into s01, I just find that these types of comments ruins the experience for us. Please keep em comments with SPOILER ALERTS written in upper case thnx
Nazim Aknouche yeah stay away from RUclips until after. Even if you stay away from comments, breaking bad videos will be recommended and can be spoilers
@@naz3858 you're not being mean. But as the other commenters have said, if you come to breaking bad video comment sections and havent seen the whole show you're pretty much guranteed to get spoilers Just binge watch the show then come read the comments
oh shut up with that shit already everybody says THIS SCENE OR THAT SCENE is the birth of heisenberg. in reality Heisenberg was born many years before the events of breaking bad.
Me: so Verbalase, how much money did it take for you to be bankrupt just so you can have your self-insert goon to Charlie from Hazbin Hotel? Verbalase: 0:08
Believe it or not but the Character that plays Tuco hated doing this series because he's against violence he's actually a really quite well spoken person and very respectable
Then did he get hired automatically or did he do auditions for a role that his pr agent found?? Make it make sense, because if he didn't connect with the character then why take the role.
Tucco being calm in that moment makes so much sense. His wires all all crosses, he is high strung and intense when things are calm, and calm when in stressful situations.
I've never quite been able to accept that Walt could trigger an explosion of that size and not get hurt standing only feet away. It blew out three factory windows. Seems like some strong plot armor.
Walter getting back in his car is one of my favorite moments from the whole show. The satisfaction of getting his money back coupled with the shame of what his life is becoming
The thing I’ve always found so interesting about this interaction is that based on very little evidence walter figures out how to deal with tuco. He instantly realized that being tough and equally crazy would get him what he wants, so he threatens to blow up the whole building with everyone in it lol.
@Adler Anton Clearly you just proved that you don't speak Spanish since you don't know orale can be used to other than that shit you're talking about, go away clown
"ARE YOU FUCKIN NUTS?" "WANNA FIND OUT?" This is probably my favorite part about this scene. You know you've pulled something absolutely insane when someone as batshit insane as Tuco asks if you're crazy.
@@jaytaylor2971 Oh trust me I know. But this moment is special to me because of how early into his career it is and he wasn't NEARLY the menace he was later on just yet
@@jorts_master69 when Walt sends Jesse to the store to get containers so that they can decompose a body with chemicals only Jesse doesn't listen and just does it in the tub and then the chemical and half decomposed body parts eats its way through the tub and the floor for me that was a what the fuck moment
@@marufio Yes but it was an act to a degree. Walter was either leaving with the money or no one was leaving at all. Seeing how he ripped them off & beat the fck outta Jesse Walt lost it. But it was all planned Tuco didnt plan like that!!
That feeling after Walter gets back to his car is a dangerous thing, we are hard wired for that experience when we go for a fully committed "hail Mary pass" and pull it off, such calculated high risk survival behavior is something DNA treats as useful & admirable....... this was Walter's drug of choice and what changed him so dramatically. Many people have become addicted to that experience throughout human existence.
Robert Deskins I know this is sorta late, but you got any links that further explain this? Sounds really interesting, would like to do more research on it
@@QzFeeDz1 I don't have specific links but I can give examples- the experience is the same one Proximo is remembering when talking to Maximus Decimus Meridius in the movie Gladiator when he described the sound of the cheering crowds when he won his matches in the Coliseum, it's what makes UFC fighters climb on top the cage walls after a victory, it's also seen in touchdown dances &, the thrill people have while skydiving- it the sudden sharp spike in dopamine, adrenaline (epinephrine) & norepinephrine production. The way these chemicals increase awareness, strength, limit pain perception and prime the body for high performance can be incredibly intense under the right circumstances they are as powerful an inebriating experience as hardcore drugs like lsd or methamphetamines if not more so and being that they occur naturally rather than as the effect of intentional narcotic use they can have more psychological effect because inebriation by intentional narcotic use is something you expect to happen. I can attest from personal experience with lsd, psilocybin, mescaline, MDMA, opiods, cocaine &, methamphetamines that while these are all intense (in good & bad ways) none is as intense as the rush from winning a good fight or suddenly finding yourself alone with the right girl...... That rush is reinforcing to the ego because you did one of DNA's 2 objectives; 1) Survive/victory in direct violent conflicts, DNA wants to survive. It is self replicating and it don't want to die. 2) The other thing wants is to pass on its strength to a new generation and gain strength from others, it wants to procreate and survive beyond each of us. The ego reinforcement provide by dna, the intensity of the experience of being pumped up is easy to get addicted to and the pursuit of that experience can lead you like Alexander the great to pursue it to your death. Does that help?
@@QzFeeDz1 The behavior you see Walter White engaging is a mix high risk narcissistic ego reinforcement & adrenaline addiction, these to states combined with a natural talent like war or drug production give people a chance to that rush into an early grave- The simple fact of the law of diminishing returns will push things to far. Like Axl Rose said in the song mr. Brownstone "I used to do a little but then a little wouldn't do it so a little got more and more, just kept trying to get a little better said a little better than before" and thats just plain narcotic addiction a high risk seeking narcissist will end up in the grip of a profound adrenaline addiction. A less dangerous example of a plain but strong adrenaline addiction would be Evil Kenevil, that guy broke like every bone in his body over time jumping those Harleys over buses and shit but he just couldn't stop doing it.
I'm glad they play this scene all the way out. Everybody else cuts it before Walt leaves the building. This scene is only complete with Walt's reaction in the car. The noises he makes are so guttural and primal. It's the terror of the confrontation, adrenaline and the realization of victory coming together all at once. He at that instant feels more alive than he has ever felt. It provides the high that he needs to feel over and over again throughout the track of the rest of his life.
This episode was the most telling of the whole series. It illustrated Walters addiction to the danger of high stacks drug dealing. It also illustrated his super power in science and how he could use it in a fight. Yep this is an important moment.
@@ddbrock9675 people meme on it a lot but yeah, this probably really is the scene where Walt's love of the criminal life began. It's where he first found true pleasure in it
Walt's cancer was his advantage. He felt like he had nothing to lose, so he put it all on the table. You can see a taste of this when he gets in those bully's faces for making fun of his son.
@@blaze4metal well that's it - Tuco thinks that walking in there alone was suicide enough, little did he realise Walt was going to blow up the building, it's like overkill, but for having a stupidly dangerous idea that would most likely result in death
@@islamsatkanov2825 I think he meant a miniature BJJ fighter that lives in one's mouth that puts out hot cherries with armbars and various other grapples.
This will never stop being my favorite show. It's almost impossible to watch anything else after falling in love with this magic that they managed to produce.
@@ziweiyuan I thought the Wire was a little slow, but BB has a tendency to taint TV shows after it because of how exciting every episode was. It's good, but its not the same level. And season 2 is a dud. I couldn't even finish it tbh.
I love this scene because Tuco is so Chaotic Evil, that he doesn't respect people who aren't Chaotic Evil or at least Chaotic Neutral. You have to earn his respect, or you fall into his world of crazy. Jesse didn't pass the check, so he was robbed and beaten. Walt didn't give a s***. Tuco respected that, and also is an adrenaline junkie, so he was probably super stoked Walt was able to make him not feel completely numb to the entire world for just a moment. What an incredible show. 👏
That's pretty on the spot, especially Tuco being the kind of guy that needs this rush of adrenaline. I'm a psychiatrist and this scene is gives inside into a great phenomenom: Tuco is a heavy methamphetamine (and potentially other stimulants) user. Contrary to popular believe, Meth and other stimulants aren't addictive or effective for all people. People that have a high base-level of dopamine and noradrenaline will not find any pleasure in strong stimulants - in fact quite the opposite. They start feeling ill, irritated and nauseous and will develope an almost immidiate distain for any amphetamines, being very unlikely to take them again, and even less likely to ever become addicted. . Then there's the other type of person. People with an average-to-low dopamine and noradrenaline output, will find pleasure in amphetamines, as they make up for the lack of stimulation they usually suffer from. There's also the kind of person with a pathologically low dopamin output - p.e. people with ADD / ADHD - these people will find extreme comfort in the consumption of amphetamines and are at high risk to develope unhealthy consumption habits. Tuco is without a doubt someone whose Dopamine release is very low, hence why he finds extreme pleasure in taking methamphetamine. If he doesn't take it, he becomes numb; life becomes senseless and appears messy and boring. The phenomenom I refered to is regarding stimulant users (mostly dl-amphetamine, street-amphetamine [which is usually sold as "amphetamine" but is often actually a derivate of some phenylamine that has similar effects], high doses of Methylphenidat [often refered to as "Ritalin"] and methamphetamine). These are all people who suffer from low-stimulation, which is why they consume the stimulants and develope a significant urge to redose / take another hit once the effects wear of. The issue is, that while these substances create stimulation, they do not create "natural-stimulation", but an altered form of it which can lead to irratic or unusual behavior. This is most notable for methamphetamine, because the dopamin it causes to release is "altered", so to speak; it is least notable in Methylphenidat and DL-Amphetamine (pharmaceutical Amphetamine). When Tuco takes Meth he immidiately recieves stimulation, however Meth is known to bind to more receptors than other stimulants and therefore creates not only stimulation, but also decreases inhibitions and rational thinking. Now, when Tuco's place blows up right in front of him, his brain pumps out large amounts of Dopamine and Noradrenaline that are enitrely natural and unaltered. This means that Tuco, even if if it's only for a short while, receives completely natural stimulation that doesn't have an altering effect on him), which then allows him to be more reasonable. Three years ago I conducted an experiment / study on "Behaviour and personality of regular stimulant users during consumption and after complete elimination of the substance in vivo". We had 40 participants that were heavy Stimulant Users (Methylphenidat and Caffein were excluded) and that were described as "irratic and unpredictable while high" and "absent or rude" while sober. All 40 participants didn't consume for 48 hours at which point all 40 exclaimed the desire to consume again (avg. 100 points). 38 participants became less polite (decrease from 74 points to 32 points), more absent (increase from an avg. 9points to an avg. of 42 points) and less rational(decrease from an avg. 67 points to an avg. 57 points) during that time-frame. After the 48 hour period, 30 of the 40 participants were chosen to parttake in 'dangerous' activities spread over the next 48 hours, containing Bungee Jumping, Parachuting, Climbing and riding Roller Coasters. The other 10 simply stayed at the psychiatry. 10 hours into the 'dangerous' activities we observed this (avg. of the 30 participants): 1. Desire to consume again reduced from100 points to 87 points. 2. Politeness increased from 32 points to 56 points. 3. Absence decreased from 42 points to 28 points. 4. Rationality increased from 57 points to 69 points. After 30 hours into the 'dangerous' activities, the statistics looked like this: 1. Desire to consume again reduced from 87 points to 68 points. 2. Politeness increased from 56 points to 70 points. 3. Absence decreased from 28 points to 12 points. 4. Rationality increased from 69 points to 80 points. After 48 hours, once the 'dangerous' activities ended, the stats changed further: 1. Desire to consume again reduced from 68 points to 50 points. 2. Politeness increased from 56 points to 84 points. 3. Absence decreased from 12 points to 4 points. 4. Rationality increased from 80 points to 88 points. There's a lot more involved in this study but i'm running out of time and I doubt anyone will read this anyway so I'll make it really quick: People like Tuco, that lack sufficient dopamine output and consequently consume large amounts of Stimulants that often create a 'distorted' stimulation, leading to irratic and dangerous behavior; will regain composure, rationality and communication-skills when stimulated by survival instinct (meaning situations that our brain percieves as dangerous and consequently floods our brain with adrenaline, dopamine and noradrenaline). This situation (Walt bombing the room) creates this stimulation for Tuco which allows him to become more rational and focused in the moment as well as unconciously percieving Walt as a person that deserves respect.
@@creativeself7147 Very interesting!! I totally fall into the Tuco category, myself - with ADHD and low dopamine and risk-seeking behavior to feel "normal" and all that... but properly medicated and not abusing meth lol.
@@creativeself7147It's interesting that as people have engaged less often in physically risky behavior, you see more and more people abusing stimulants. Kind of matches what you're talking about here.
Man I was just as pumped as Walt the first time I saw this episode. Perfect don’t choice to end it too. What an amazing series, second only to Better Call Saul!
If u have ever felt what Walt is feeling at 3:58 it is amazing acting. That feeling of making money or winning something important to you is perfectly shown here
I won like 3k off a ridiculous parley one time, it all came down to Trae Young getting fouled and hitting two free throws in garbage time. I did pretty much exactly what Walt did here
This is where you're wrong... Heisenburg is actually the pseudonym of Walter (Walt) White, the shows main character. Walt was actually born on the 7th of september 1959. The show actually begins on his 50th birthday, so in reality, Hesienburg was born at least 50 years and a few months before this scene. Heisenburg was also the name of a scientist famous for coming up with the Heisenburg Uncertainty Principle, a principle that states that it is inpossible to know the exact position and velocity of a subatomic particle at the same time. However, this Heisenburg was born on the 5th of December 1901, meaning that he would be between 107 and 108 years old (if he was alive at the time of this scene). In short, Heisenburg was not born during this scene, u less you are reffering to a child who would be later named Heisenburg, whos parents decided that based on the outcome of this scene, they would abort or keep the baby. Alternatively a baby (later named Heisenburg) could have been co ceived by set members during the fining of this scene. In a case like that, Heisenburg would be born as a result of this scene, making your statement, "and thus Heisenburg was born" correct. Outside of those circumstances however, you are catagorically wrong.
This was the hookline of the show. You don't really know where the show is going but once Walter does this you know exactly what kind of person he's going to be in this world.
The scene at 4:01 shows how walt becomes heisenberg. He enjoyed every thing he did in that moment. At the time we were all happy seeing this, not thinking what he would become
I like how the cancer faded when Walter was living a dangerous life, and recurrenced when things settled down. Life seems to cling when you're in the face of death.
4:04 I really like how they added that part. Seriously adds to the story telling and all.. I could see them easily cutting that part out, but so glad they didn't
That was actually the most important part of the entire scene. It shows the moment that he went from Walter White to Heisenberg. That feeling he had right there, that I AM THE MOST POWERFUL THING ON THE PLANET feeling is more addictive than any drug in the world. We all have it. We have all tasted it. The home run you hit, that hot chick you got in bed, the fight you won....remember that FUCK YEAH feeling you had? That's chemicals being released into your body. It's the ultimate high. The addiction to the feeling is what made Heisenberg.
@@memyself898 Damn. After reading OP comment I wanted to write an answer beginning with „That was actually the most important part of the scene“. Then I saw you used these exact words. What a coincidence.
The part at the end, when he gets back in his car and just has to look at the money. My favorite out of the whole thing. Every man has felt that at least once in his life about something.
The first time I got physical with another guy and I smacked him several times while thinking he would fight back (he didn't). He was dating my ex gf and hit her and I went to his house and hit him. When he didn't fight back I had this similar reaction in my car after I left since I'd never really been in a fight before.
I love how Tuco was genuinely sorry like, "Oh, I didn't know I was dealing with a fellow psychopath. My apologies."
A person like this is a predator. You have to be a fellow predator for them to view you as an equal, otherwise you're prey. You have to convince him that dealing with you is less effort than just robbing you.
Tuco lowkey liked Walter cause of this
😂😂😂 That is WAAAAAY too funny!!!
😂😂😂
lol
That explosion made Tucos brain work properly for a short period of time. It made him nice, chill, respectable, and a very good business partner.
Dude basically had a reverse concussion
This was Heisenberg's first big meth deal.
@@concept5631 I can’t stop laughing at this comment 😂😂😂😂😂😂
@@debatingontheoreos8981 nice
Yup Walt walked out there looking ten feet tall.
My grandfather loved this series, he would always talk about it to my grandmother who didnt really care about series but when he died in 2015 she discovered netflix a few years later and she watched the whole series again and again. Bless her and my grandfather, wherever he may be...
Aww. Rest in peace.
RIP
Wait your grandfather watched breaking bad?! That's so rare
@@13_years_old_boy Yeah and even more rare since he was French, and the French arent the biggest fans of anything that speaks English lmao. He didnt understand all the hype surrounding the show so he decided to be the judge of it, he ended up loving every bit of it.
Earlier in this episode, Walter is actual lecturing on Fulminated Mercury and how it releases large amounts of energy to his school students.
Well yay its a common everyday product thats what we use in bullet primers
@@GabrielGGG123 Walter truly was a good man and fought for his family against all odds 💪🏼💪🏼👍🏻👍🏻
@@Kim.Ju-ae best man ever
Chekovs mercury.
That is called "payoff" and it is the result of excellent writing and directing
Imagine how awkward that would be if it didn't explode
It definitely would. Fulminated mercury is real, although the explosion would be like a firecracker!
@@ashishbhatt3033 he said "imagine if" , not that it could not have exploded
@@filazkeita2272 but it would..in any case
@@ashishbhatt3033 you are such an idiot
@@Elias-xh8xm your mum
Watching Tuco ask if someone else is nuts is definitely one of the high points of Breaking Bad.
No pun intended...I'm assuming
Hahahah
Good one
If Tuco asks you if you're nuts. You probably are nuts.
@@spacemann1425 Game recognises game.
It's actually kinda cool how Better Call Saul retroactively emphasizes how much of a wild card Walt was in this type of setting. Scenes like this get enhanced when you put that into perspective.
For Real..
Walt casually walks into the drug scene and just leaves a carnage and destruction in his wake. He disintegrated the cartel, the salamancas, Gus Fring's entire empire - then just offs himself.
@@DekuStickGamerthe inevitable change chained down by an intelligent man hiding and preventing himself from living. It was only when Walt had nothing left to lose did he break bad and bring about great change. Imagine if every powerful mind were encouraged to strive for more
He was a man who felt he had nothing to lose. He was dangerous.
Walt was the wildcard to end all wildcards. He brought down the Salamancas and Gus and the Welker gang.
0:08 The hazbin hotel animator talking to verbalase
The number 50,000 has been permanently ruined
hahahaha... HAHAHAHHAHAHAH 🫵😂
I like how Tuco gives in to Walt’s demands, not because he’s scared of him but because he respects him for having the balls to do what he did
Hector did the same thing to Mike in Better call Saul
Patrik Gajcevic was thinking the same thing
Tuco Scare of death
Yeah, I always took the Salamancas as the 'respect is earned' kind of people. I think about that scene where Nacho jumps into a swat infested area to get some coke to make Lalo happy. He immediately got Lalo points there.
Major drug dealers have to respect having balls. Every single person they work with is someone who could bend and turn them in. They need people with an I-don't-give-a-fuck attitude to survive that business.
This is propably the most sane convo tuco has done in the entire show
True
The most sane Tuco is when he is with his abuela.
@@MalakianM2S BIZNATch
@@Chuked Boss music intensifies.
All it took was a giant ass explosion going off
We thought Tuco Salamanca was a maniac. Then the twins showed up and we thought they were crazier than Tuco. Then Lalo Salamanca shows up and he makes the twins and Tuco look sane.
What a family.
Then y realize that sometimes people like walt sheep in wolfs clothing are the most dangerous
@@calebdixon784 Wolf in sheeps clothing is more like it. Then the clothing comes off in season 5
@@rover5058that’s exactly what I was thinking
You forgot the patriarch and perhaps the craziest Hector. Ring a bell?
Lalo is more dangerous but less crazy than Tuco. Lalo is sane, calculated evil. Tuco is just a nutter
It's not just a rush of pulling it off that Walter felt at the end. It's the feeling of making that much all at once after decades of feeling like a failure and barely getting by. It finally feels like a "win". I'm only in my late 20s but I can definitely relate.
So u robbed a man named Tuco?
I'm 52 and you're ABSOLUTELY correct!!! Damn straight!
"You think you can steal from us and just walk away?"
"Yeah.."
Joker shadowing
dark knight
dark knight
Brilliant comment
didnt give a like because you had 665 likes... fuuuuuuck thaaat! im out
Walt is a teacher at heart, teaching Tuco about chemistry, and he seems interested. Best teacher ever
Imagine that in a classroom... "So, today we'll be having experimental classes!" classroom: "Yaaaaay" *explodes*
@@Ceu.Noturno *Breaking news chemistry teacher commits terrorism*
Experiential learning is all the rage.
Imagine a breaking bad school edition, with jesse, tuco, and others as students. Walt as the teacher, mike as the janitor, and gus as the principal.
@@V1xtory u got a nice fantasy my brother
You know you're crazy when you hear Tuco say "Are you nuts?"
Bryan Cranston really is a masterclass actor. Went through 4 different emotions in the span of 5 minutes. Went from being stern, to regretful, then being happy while being scared through the whole process. Truely in a league of his own.
Walt doesn't even know how much respect he earned from Tuco after this confrontation. He walked into a drug compound, by himself, and got his money back from one of the toughest guys in the cartel. Probably the first person to ever to step to Tuco in his life.
Walk away alive with tuco's money 💀
@@offendedpi2030 elite
I think he fully understood what he got.
@@iurifestuccia7423 Im sure he has a notion. But if he understood fully, he wouldnt fear Tuko as much as he did. he wouldnt be as nervous knowing the kind of respect Tuko had for him
@@offendedpi2030 dont forget it was stolen money Walt only took back whats his but still impressive
Still blows my mind how insanely good this show was and still is.
It’s 10/10 very few shows are 10-/10. It’s perfect . Even the sopranos had flaws but not this
Absolutely... I see people on Twitter and reddit all the time talking about how they don't understand how people like this show lol... So many people gave up on it a few episodes into season 1 and never let it develop, they missed out on one of the greatest series of all time
@@DirtNassty as much as I like Breaking Bad I feel like it can't touch Ozark on an emotional scale at all. Breaking Bad had cooler action scenes but Ozark was deeper imo
@@gin.gefilms nah...i love ozark too but it has nothing on BB... Ozark was alot slower too, alot more slow dragged out episodes. After you get into season 2 of BB the action and suspense never slows
@@DirtNassty hm I mean you're entitled to your opinion but I totally disagree. Ozark moves at a much faster pace to me. I think Breaking Bads first two seasons were it's best then the quality dipped. Ozark I feel is the other way around and gets better every season. Both shows have great acting and even better antagonists. But Ozark (even with its flawed characters) gave me people to root for. I found myself rooting for nobody besides Hank in Breaking Bad. I think they're on the same level of greatness. It just depends what you're looking for out of a show. Buddys death in Ozark was more emotional than any scene in Breaking Bad (for me.)
“ARE YOU FUCKING NUTS??”
-Tuco Salamanca
That moment in the car when the realization of sheer badassery almost imploded his mind. I feel it.
That was probably the hardest scene for him as an actor.
And that dose of adrenaline that Walt got at the end there paved the way for the rest of the series. It's where he stopped caring so much about the money but the rush he got from getting away with it.
HE CAN'T KEEP GETTING AWAY WITH IT
Thx for explaining. I couldn't figure out what was going on at the end
It's cool to look back on this scene and experience how pivotal it proved.
@@ceus1001 I just rewatched this and said to myself when I saw the scene, this is where Heisenberg starts to become Heisenberg. “One pound won’t cut it. You have to take 2.” God I love it
@@johnsteele8073 I see it as being a mixture of intense emotions. Excitement at succeeding and being the badass he'd never been before, and also a minor freakout because he knew how close he was to being cut up into tiny pieces if Tuco hadn't called off Gonzo.
All I can remember thinking at this part was that it was a good thing Tuco didn’t snort that shit.
Also, good that he didn't smash the rock with the butt of his knife.
BOO YAH
Tuco's head wouldve exploded before he could say "Tight Tight Tight Tight"
Vikram Singh lol he would’ve gone boom boom boom
Would have saved a lot of trouble with the ricin. Then again Walt would’ve probably been killed on the spot if Tuco smashed that shit.
I love how Tuco's thought process went through the scene, especially when he went from shocked/cautious/slight fear to impressed and then even amused at the end like "like what the f.. this dude lol"
Walter spoke in a language he could understand
Imagine how terrifying Walter is that Tuco has to call for calm 😂
The acting from Bryan Cranston is so super here. You can tell that even though Walt is stone faced and fierce here, he's really scared shitless. Those little notches on his face and throat give it away.
Imo he was both, he was tough here but also scared of course, regardless walt's a badass.
Especially when Tuco burnt the cigar with his own tongue
that’s what happens when you’re the same voice actor for a hindu god
Scared of what?
His ego drove him more than his fear. T's awesome to know that his ego is walt's power and at the same time, his weakness
Tuco was one of the best characters in the whole show. Incredible acting!
when you actually hate the character - then the actor is doing a badass job
He wasnt acting
Accurate! Funny thing, as you might expect, people point out that Raymond Cruz is nothing like this character. He pulled it off so well that he freaked his wife out, lol.
I also remember him playing the sniper in the movie "Clear and present danger" back in the 90s.
He said the character was exhausting to play, and was glad he got killed off. Which is funny because he came back for Better Call Saul.
He was meant to be main protagonist but the actor had other commitments, so he was not able to continue the show and killed off!
0:27 in this particular moment seemed that the word “partner” triggered a flashback in Tuco’s mind. And it seems to happen again when he yells “you never trust the people that you love!”, later in the s2. That someone is indeed Nacho Varga; I believe BCS writers used that to build Nacho’s character.
To me this shows how Tuco’s morals works. After Walter made this he immediately recognizes some of himself, so he gives respect back. But don’t let that distract you for the fact that he’s a real beast.
The scream and smile at the end. The feeling of being scared shitless the whole time but actually pulling it off. Perhaps Vince Gilligan felt the same after the show ended. Brilliant writting and acting.
Bravo vince
I think a part of the scream was also a feeling of immense validation, since this was the first time he managed to pull off a scheme like this. Walt spent his whole life knowing he had incredible intellect and chemistry skills, yet not once did anyone ever acknowledge him. He was just Mr.White, some lame chemistry teacher who would live and die an unremarkable life without ever accomplishing the things he knew deep down he was capable of. But finally being able to pull of a genius scheme like this, outsmarting dangerous criminals, getting to have control over them, and walking away with 50k was probably deeply satisfying and validating. He had finally proved to himself that he really WAS capable of incredible things all along. His addiction to that feeling of power is probably what led him down the path of constantly seeking more and more money
@@ctpp64 I think that was reflected on the laugh. He screamed because he was scared the whole time and then laughed because he got what he wanted, in a world that doesn't play by his rules.
As well as what the other comments above said, to me this scene(or, this episode, is also one of the last times Walt was just Walt. I know it’s a bit of a meme, but I feel like this scream is for me when Heisenberg really took over.
Vince Gilligan’s reaction when BrBa and BCS started getting good reviews
Gonzo seems like a good guy, I’m sure he and Tuco will be friends for life.
Just remember who you're working for
@@blase1856 Tuco just needs to relaxes
@RUclips HatesMe Good one.
@RUclips HatesMe 😂😂😂
Tuco was so kind to his employees and what did Gonzo do? He snitched on that nice man :(....... Lol
0:07 Hey Verbalase, what have you been up to lately?
This is when he realised he did it because he likes it.. He was good at it.. Made him feel alive.. This was the moment that got him hooked on the life style..
"Hello, insurance? Do you cover fulminted mercury damages?"
mercury fulminate to be precise
We know a thing or two because we've seen a thing or two.
i shouldn't have laughed this hard...
Yes!? Tight tight tight!
"I better call Saul!"
The actor playing Tuco actually improvised the part where he burnt the cigarette on his tongue. Great acting.
XD
And you know that how?
@@tstone1874 Vince Gilligan said it himself in the DVD commentary.
@@tstone1874 T stone blood whyna go askin people how dey know thins man they jus know man like really know dem things bruh. Also,Vince Gilligan said it himself,in the DVD commentary.
@@EdwardNewgate58 ok,fair enough
Tuco says "órale", not "Oh, really?". He's essentially saying "Alright".
O RLY?
@@JonCombo YA RLY
Walt’s awesome when he’s overwhelmed with excitement. I love his celebration here and when he and Jesse calculate how much money their gonna make from their first big cook.
It's adrenaline, not really excitement lol.
When Walt says in the last episode "I was alive" this is the scene I was always think of
Man not to be mean or anything but for people like me who just got into s01, I just find that these types of comments ruins the experience for us. Please keep em comments with SPOILER ALERTS written in upper case thnx
@@naz3858 dude you should stay away from RUclips
Nazim Aknouche yeah stay away from RUclips until after. Even if you stay away from comments, breaking bad videos will be recommended and can be spoilers
@@naz3858 you're not being mean. But as the other commenters have said, if you come to breaking bad video comment sections and havent seen the whole show you're pretty much guranteed to get spoilers
Just binge watch the show then come read the comments
H
If you ask me. This is the scene where Walter truly becomes heisenberg
The birth of heisenberg.
Nobody:
Somebody: if you ask me..
oh shut up with that shit already everybody says THIS SCENE OR THAT SCENE is the birth of heisenberg.
in reality Heisenberg was born many years before the events of breaking bad.
@@gordongiobanni7543 Indeed. You have the flare or ya' don't. Just ask any used car salesman.
The Mercury could be his representation in this scene. Seemingly harmless, but if handled poorly becomes lethal.
I still love hearing Howard Dean @1:39 when that bystander moves away from the debris. Reminds me of the Dave Chappelle skit.
That yell is so damn memorable
Me: so Verbalase, how much money did it take for you to be bankrupt just so you can have your self-insert goon to Charlie from Hazbin Hotel?
Verbalase: 0:08
Context?
Believe it or not but the Character that plays Tuco hated doing this series because he's against violence he's actually a really quite well spoken person and very respectable
That makes his acting even better in my opinion
Then did he get hired automatically or did he do auditions for a role that his pr agent found?? Make it make sense, because if he didn't connect with the character then why take the role.
I can imagine it would’ve the exact same with the guy who played Silvio in the Sopranos.
One of my all time favorite is Blood in blood out he plays the role as Chewy “El Chewy he’s my carnal”
Well then I guess that proves ethics are soluble in cash. Just like Walt.
Tucco being calm in that moment makes so much sense. His wires all all crosses, he is high strung and intense when things are calm, and calm when in stressful situations.
0:57 this part is funny af
1:06
4:57 seconds and that felt like an entire Oscar winning film, incredible show.
I've never quite been able to accept that Walt could trigger an explosion of that size and not get hurt standing only feet away. It blew out three factory windows. Seems like some strong plot armor.
Mythbusters did an episode on this. That blast would have torn him apart in real life.
@@cryptaku3404 Good to know I wasn't alone in my skepticism. Thanks for the info!
@@mobiz711 No problem 👍🏿
More importantly, if the explosion was strong enough to blow out the Windowsit should have triggered the rest of the mercury to explode as well.
That's the Hollywood kicking in
The first scene of the show that made me know it was legendary.
One of the most important scenes of the show, right down to being the first appearance of Heisenberg.
exactly man
For me was when the melting body drop from the ceiling.
Also the pilot, one of the best one I’ve ever seen.
MTV | Pied Piper | Battle for Hearts and Minds ruclips.net/video/a71IvRm9Uiw/видео.html ?
vds gdsgdsa
Nah, the opening with pants in air already did it
Walter getting back in his car is one of my favorite moments from the whole show. The satisfaction of getting his money back coupled with the shame of what his life is becoming
The thing I’ve always found so interesting about this interaction is that based on very little evidence walter figures out how to deal with tuco. He instantly realized that being tough and equally crazy would get him what he wants, so he threatens to blow up the whole building with everyone in it lol.
Which is weird because Walter's so often bad at reading people.
2:59 when I take only one vitamin and my mom catches me.
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA GOOD ONE
LMAOO
🤣👊
3:06 Tuco doesn't says "oh, really?", Tuco says "órale", in spanish, he's agreeing with the 2 pounds deal.
Oh really, that's tight. Good job kid.
@Adler Anton Yes he is.
@Adler Anton yes he is, I'm spanish and that's literally what he says
@Adler Anton You're so dumb, he literally says órale, if you really can't hear him saying that, then stop calling yourself Spanish you clown
@Adler Anton Clearly you just proved that you don't speak Spanish since you don't know orale can be used to other than that shit you're talking about, go away clown
Tuco telling someone to calm down is the most ironic thing I’ve ever seen
Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul are hands-down up there with the very best TV and film dramas ever created. 🙌
"ARE YOU FUCKIN NUTS?"
"WANNA FIND OUT?"
This is probably my favorite part about this scene. You know you've pulled something absolutely insane when someone as batshit insane as Tuco asks if you're crazy.
I think you missed the big picture here: Walt doesn't think he was acting crazy yet.
Edit: It being better was my point, but whatevs.
@@Delightfully_Bitchy That just makes this scene even better
This ain't shit Walt gets better way better
@@jaytaylor2971 Oh trust me I know. But this moment is special to me because of how early into his career it is and he wasn't NEARLY the menace he was later on just yet
@@jorts_master69 when Walt sends Jesse to the store to get containers so that they can decompose a body with chemicals only Jesse doesn't listen and just does it in the tub and then the chemical and half decomposed body parts eats its way through the tub and the floor for me that was a what the fuck moment
This also shows how valuable being good in an academic field can be. Simply bring your product to the right market.
So your point is be a drug cook
@@nikolakaravida9670 😭😭
Tuco was not the right market
You dont do buisness with unstable pychos.
@@bazglsgw1208 one could say the same about Walt at this point he had essentially lost his mind
@@marufio Yes but it was an act to a degree. Walter was either leaving with the money or no one was leaving at all. Seeing how he ripped them off & beat the fck outta Jesse Walt lost it. But it was all planned Tuco didnt plan like that!!
Verbalase
Wow, no clickbait... that's actually how you break a bad Tuco
When Walt walks out of the room, the way he does it is just like the Joker from The Dark Knight when he threatens to blow of the gangs in Gotham.
Lucywon the funny thing is that both the Dark Knight and the first season of breaking bad were released the same year.
Blow off? My of my
Dark knight is crap
@@palomorales ok. lol.
You wanna see a magic trick?
*throws piece of fulminated mercury on the floor*
Tada!
That feeling after Walter gets back to his car is a dangerous thing, we are hard wired for that experience when we go for a fully committed "hail Mary pass" and pull it off, such calculated high risk survival behavior is something DNA treats as useful & admirable.......
this was Walter's drug of choice and what changed him so dramatically.
Many people have become addicted to that experience throughout human existence.
Robert Deskins I know this is sorta late, but you got any links that further explain this? Sounds really interesting, would like to do more research on it
@@QzFeeDz1
I don't have specific links but I can give examples- the experience is the same one Proximo is remembering when talking to Maximus Decimus Meridius in the movie Gladiator when he described the sound of the cheering crowds when he won his matches in the Coliseum,
it's what makes UFC fighters climb on top the cage walls after a victory,
it's also seen in touchdown dances &,
the thrill people have while skydiving- it the sudden sharp spike in dopamine, adrenaline (epinephrine) & norepinephrine production. The way these chemicals increase awareness, strength, limit pain perception and prime the body for high performance can be incredibly intense under the right circumstances they are as powerful an inebriating experience as hardcore drugs like lsd or methamphetamines if not more so and being that they occur naturally rather than as the effect of intentional narcotic use they can have more psychological effect because inebriation by intentional narcotic use is something you expect to happen.
I can attest from personal experience with lsd, psilocybin, mescaline, MDMA, opiods, cocaine &, methamphetamines that while these are all intense (in good & bad ways) none is as intense as the rush from winning a good fight or suddenly finding yourself alone with the right girl...... That rush is reinforcing to the ego because you did one of DNA's 2 objectives;
1) Survive/victory in direct violent conflicts, DNA wants to survive. It is self replicating and it don't want to die.
2) The other thing wants is to pass on its strength to a new generation and gain strength from others, it wants to procreate and survive beyond each of us.
The ego reinforcement provide by dna, the intensity of the experience of being pumped up is easy to get addicted to and the pursuit of that experience can lead you like Alexander the great to pursue it to your death.
Does that help?
Brilliant explanation, thank you :) , is there like a set name for this “phenomenon” (for lack of a better word)
@@QzFeeDz1
The behavior you see Walter White engaging is a mix high risk narcissistic ego reinforcement & adrenaline addiction, these to states combined with a natural talent like war or drug production give people a chance to that rush into an early grave-
The simple fact of the law of diminishing returns will push things to far. Like Axl Rose said in the song mr. Brownstone "I used to do a little but then a little wouldn't do it so a little got more and more,
just kept trying to get a little better said a little better than before" and thats just plain narcotic addiction
a high risk seeking narcissist will end up in the grip of a profound adrenaline addiction.
A less dangerous example of a plain but strong adrenaline addiction would be Evil Kenevil, that guy broke like every bone in his body over time jumping those Harleys over buses and shit but he just couldn't stop doing it.
@@robdeskrd great info man
Que série meus amigos! 9 anos depois e ainda está no hype!
0:09 “heisenberg how much money did verbalase drop on that animation?”
"And how much will this 3 minute animation cost?"
I'm glad they play this scene all the way out. Everybody else cuts it before Walt leaves the building. This scene is only complete with Walt's reaction in the car. The noises he makes are so guttural and primal. It's the terror of the confrontation, adrenaline and the realization of victory coming together all at once. He at that instant feels more alive than he has ever felt. It provides the high that he needs to feel over and over again throughout the track of the rest of his life.
It's like a werewolf transformation. Walt just changed into a heisenberg under a fulminated mercury (full moon).
He probably put that cash under his pillow that night. Walt is so awesome.
MTV | Pied Piper | Battle for Hearts and Minds ruclips.net/video/a71IvRm9Uiw/видео.html ?
vds af dsafdsa
And the song
@@jrcflaus what song ya jerk off
This episode was the most telling of the whole series. It illustrated Walters addiction to the danger of high stacks drug dealing. It also illustrated his super power in science and how he could use it in a fight. Yep this is an important moment.
The true birth of Heisenberg.
@@ddbrock9675 people meme on it a lot but yeah, this probably really is the scene where Walt's love of the criminal life began. It's where he first found true pleasure in it
@@ctpp64 I think so at least.
This is when Mr White turned into Heisenberg
He used science to kill Crazy 8s boy.
*3:22* Tuco: *"I like that guy!"* 😄
And how much are you willing to spend on this AMV?
Verbalase: 0:07
"...that's a brilliant plan, ese"
*Doesn't realise his actual plan is to nearly commit suicide*
Walt's cancer was his advantage. He felt like he had nothing to lose, so he put it all on the table. You can see a taste of this when he gets in those bully's faces for making fun of his son.
@@blaze4metal well that's it - Tuco thinks that walking in there alone was suicide enough, little did he realise Walt was going to blow up the building, it's like overkill, but for having a stupidly dangerous idea that would most likely result in death
1:40 I love that they added the Howard Dean “Byahh” soundbite in there 😂
Damn! Thought I was the first to hear it lol
Hahaha
Okay so I wasn’t just hearing anything Lmaoo
Yep, caught that too
Good ear wouldn't have caught that in a million years
When i heard verbalase spending 50k this is the scene that popped up in my mind 😂
0:08 Hazbin Hotel animators telling Verbalase the price of the animation
Dude the actor (Raymond Cruz) that plays Tuco is a badass. Dude put a cigarette out on his tongue without flinching.
You can do it too, it's nothing serious, just make a little hole in tongue and make sure saliva is there.
@@dasdae12d sliva?
@@islamsatkanov2825 I think he meant a miniature BJJ fighter that lives in one's mouth that puts out hot cherries with armbars and various other grapples.
yeah and Bryan Cranston really cocked meth and blow the fuck out of that room
man, this is a TV show, nothing you see is real
@@arulcuvox1503 "cocked" lmao
This will never stop being my favorite show. It's almost impossible to watch anything else after falling in love with this magic that they managed to produce.
Thanks God we have Better call Saul now. As close as it gets
it was good once, then it's slow af
Have you seen The Wire?
The Sopranos and The Wire are both on a similar level as BB depends on personal taste.
@@ziweiyuan I thought the Wire was a little slow, but BB has a tendency to taint TV shows after it because of how exciting every episode was. It's good, but its not the same level. And season 2 is a dud. I couldn't even finish it tbh.
Funny how in this scene, Tuco becomes a little sane and Walter makes a big step towards insanity.
Finally a video that includes the car scene at the end. Great performance by Bryan.
This scene is legendary, and 90% of his legend is backing on tuco’s acting, astonishing how good he is.
This scene made me fall in love with this show. It shows that even in the underworld, brains can outdo brawn.
Same
I love this scene because Tuco is so Chaotic Evil, that he doesn't respect people who aren't Chaotic Evil or at least Chaotic Neutral. You have to earn his respect, or you fall into his world of crazy. Jesse didn't pass the check, so he was robbed and beaten. Walt didn't give a s***. Tuco respected that, and also is an adrenaline junkie, so he was probably super stoked Walt was able to make him not feel completely numb to the entire world for just a moment. What an incredible show. 👏
That's pretty on the spot, especially Tuco being the kind of guy that needs this rush of adrenaline.
I'm a psychiatrist and this scene is gives inside into a great phenomenom:
Tuco is a heavy methamphetamine (and potentially other stimulants) user. Contrary to popular believe, Meth and other stimulants aren't addictive or effective for all people. People that have a high base-level of dopamine and noradrenaline will not find any pleasure in strong stimulants - in fact quite the opposite. They start feeling ill, irritated and nauseous and will develope an almost immidiate distain for any amphetamines, being very unlikely to take them again, and even less likely to ever become addicted. .
Then there's the other type of person. People with an average-to-low dopamine and noradrenaline output, will find pleasure in amphetamines, as they make up for the lack of stimulation they usually suffer from. There's also the kind of person with a pathologically low dopamin output - p.e. people with ADD / ADHD - these people will find extreme comfort in the consumption of amphetamines and are at high risk to develope unhealthy consumption habits.
Tuco is without a doubt someone whose Dopamine release is very low, hence why he finds extreme pleasure in taking methamphetamine. If he doesn't take it, he becomes numb; life becomes senseless and appears messy and boring.
The phenomenom I refered to is regarding stimulant users (mostly dl-amphetamine, street-amphetamine [which is usually sold as "amphetamine" but is often actually a derivate of some phenylamine that has similar effects], high doses of Methylphenidat [often refered to as "Ritalin"] and methamphetamine). These are all people who suffer from low-stimulation, which is why they consume the stimulants and develope a significant urge to redose / take another hit once the effects wear of. The issue is, that while these substances create stimulation, they do not create "natural-stimulation", but an altered form of it which can lead to irratic or unusual behavior. This is most notable for methamphetamine, because the dopamin it causes to release is "altered", so to speak; it is least notable in Methylphenidat and DL-Amphetamine (pharmaceutical Amphetamine). When Tuco takes Meth he immidiately recieves stimulation, however Meth is known to bind to more receptors than other stimulants and therefore creates not only stimulation, but also decreases inhibitions and rational thinking.
Now, when Tuco's place blows up right in front of him, his brain pumps out large amounts of Dopamine and Noradrenaline that are enitrely natural and unaltered. This means that Tuco, even if if it's only for a short while, receives completely natural stimulation that doesn't have an altering effect on him), which then allows him to be more reasonable.
Three years ago I conducted an experiment / study on "Behaviour and personality of regular stimulant users during consumption and after complete elimination of the substance in vivo". We had 40 participants that were heavy Stimulant Users (Methylphenidat and Caffein were excluded) and that were described as "irratic and unpredictable while high" and "absent or rude" while sober. All 40 participants didn't consume for 48 hours at which point all 40 exclaimed the desire to consume again (avg. 100 points). 38 participants became less polite (decrease from 74 points to 32 points), more absent (increase from an avg. 9points to an avg. of 42 points) and less rational(decrease from an avg. 67 points to an avg. 57 points) during that time-frame.
After the 48 hour period, 30 of the 40 participants were chosen to parttake in 'dangerous' activities spread over the next 48 hours, containing Bungee Jumping, Parachuting, Climbing and riding Roller Coasters. The other 10 simply stayed at the psychiatry.
10 hours into the 'dangerous' activities we observed this (avg. of the 30 participants): 1. Desire to consume again reduced from100 points to 87 points. 2. Politeness increased from 32 points to 56 points. 3. Absence decreased from 42 points to 28 points. 4. Rationality increased from 57 points to 69 points.
After 30 hours into the 'dangerous' activities, the statistics looked like this: 1. Desire to consume again reduced from 87 points to 68 points. 2. Politeness increased from 56 points to 70 points. 3. Absence decreased from 28 points to 12 points. 4. Rationality increased from 69 points to 80 points.
After 48 hours, once the 'dangerous' activities ended, the stats changed further: 1. Desire to consume again reduced from 68 points to 50 points. 2. Politeness increased from 56 points to 84 points. 3. Absence decreased from 12 points to 4 points. 4. Rationality increased from 80 points to 88 points.
There's a lot more involved in this study but i'm running out of time and I doubt anyone will read this anyway so I'll make it really quick:
People like Tuco, that lack sufficient dopamine output and consequently consume large amounts of Stimulants that often create a 'distorted' stimulation, leading to irratic and dangerous behavior; will regain composure, rationality and communication-skills when stimulated by survival instinct (meaning situations that our brain percieves as dangerous and consequently floods our brain with adrenaline, dopamine and noradrenaline). This situation (Walt bombing the room) creates this stimulation for Tuco which allows him to become more rational and focused in the moment as well as unconciously percieving Walt as a person that deserves respect.
@@creativeself7147 Whoa thanks for the insight, that's very interesting!
@@creativeself7147 Very interesting!! I totally fall into the Tuco category, myself - with ADHD and low dopamine and risk-seeking behavior to feel "normal" and all that... but properly medicated and not abusing meth lol.
@@creativeself7147It's interesting that as people have engaged less often in physically risky behavior, you see more and more people abusing stimulants. Kind of matches what you're talking about here.
@@creativeself7147A long ass comment that’s actually interesting. Thank you for this!!
Man I was just as pumped as Walt the first time I saw this episode. Perfect don’t choice to end it too. What an amazing series, second only to Better Call Saul!
Breaking Bad is much better than Better Call Saul.
1:53 ok, that shit was the scariest line in the show
If u have ever felt what Walt is feeling at 3:58 it is amazing acting. That feeling of making money or winning something important to you is perfectly shown here
I thought it was because playing this character was hard for him
Like you've ever done anything like this lol
That’s not Walt… that’s Hal 😉
It's not about the money. It's about the power.
I won like 3k off a ridiculous parley one time, it all came down to Trae Young getting fouled and hitting two free throws in garbage time. I did pretty much exactly what Walt did here
3 minutes of animation.
Can not imagine the toll it took on each actor to keep that so intense. Respect.
4:07 When you finally kill that roach that was flying around.
1:40 Howard Dean scream lmao
Mike Knight Oh I seen that bro. I love that sketch 😂
Oh my god it IS
That's amazin'
My second favourite. Just behind the Wilhelm scream
Van Morgan just noticed it bruiuuuh
Класний серіал.
Подивився з величезним
задоволенням.
Дякую за працю !
I really liked Tucos character... he was so badass....😎😆🤩
and thus Heisenberg is born.
Not yet
Say my name... Heisenberg? You god damn right!
Lol stupid
This is where you're wrong... Heisenburg is actually the pseudonym of Walter (Walt) White, the shows main character. Walt was actually born on the 7th of september 1959. The show actually begins on his 50th birthday, so in reality, Hesienburg was born at least 50 years and a few months before this scene.
Heisenburg was also the name of a scientist famous for coming up with the Heisenburg Uncertainty Principle, a principle that states that it is inpossible to know the exact position and velocity of a subatomic particle at the same time. However, this Heisenburg was born on the 5th of December 1901, meaning that he would be between 107 and 108 years old (if he was alive at the time of this scene).
In short, Heisenburg was not born during this scene, u less you are reffering to a child who would be later named Heisenburg, whos parents decided that based on the outcome of this scene, they would abort or keep the baby. Alternatively a baby (later named Heisenburg) could have been co ceived by set members during the fining of this scene. In a case like that, Heisenburg would be born as a result of this scene, making your statement, "and thus Heisenburg was born" correct. Outside of those circumstances however, you are catagorically wrong.
@@ceilingfanenthusiast6041 Dude, he's talking about the mentality of Walt lmfao. 🤦♂️😂
How did everyone in that room come out unscathed from an explosion with enough force to blow out windows and rip off an air conditioner?
They borrow some plot armor from
got season 8
@@mmm-jn8fr Oh shit, topical!
Walter got a nose bleed he was technicaly hurt
@@kevaunplays8951 I've always thought that he got a nose bleed because of stress
Because it was super easy, barely an inconvenience.
It's amazing that Tuco was only in 4 episodes in BB but is easily one of the most memorable characters.
One of the greatest scenes in television history.
My car during winter: 1:06
You wild for this one
Hank Hill: This is a medical disorder.
This was the hookline of the show. You don't really know where the show is going but once Walter does this you know exactly what kind of person he's going to be in this world.
The scene at 4:01 shows how walt becomes heisenberg. He enjoyed every thing he did in that moment. At the time we were all happy seeing this, not thinking what he would become
I like how the cancer faded when Walter was living a dangerous life, and recurrenced when things settled down. Life seems to cling when you're in the face of death.
4:04 I really like how they added that part. Seriously adds to the story telling and all.. I could see them easily cutting that part out, but so glad they didn't
That was actually the most important part of the entire scene. It shows the moment that he went from Walter White to Heisenberg. That feeling he had right there, that I AM THE MOST POWERFUL THING ON THE PLANET feeling is more addictive than any drug in the world. We all have it. We have all tasted it. The home run you hit, that hot chick you got in bed, the fight you won....remember that FUCK YEAH feeling you had? That's chemicals being released into your body. It's the ultimate high. The addiction to the feeling is what made Heisenberg.
me myself great explanation. There’s nothing better than feeling a badass 😎.
Power and adrenaline = best drug
@@memyself898 Damn. After reading OP comment I wanted to write an answer beginning with „That was actually the most important part of the scene“. Then I saw you used these exact words. What a coincidence.
MTV | Pied Piper | Battle for Hearts and Minds ruclips.net/video/a71IvRm9Uiw/видео.html ?
vds asd34asdfas
If i get this gig next week, Im gonna let off some firecrackers, get in my car and do this!
I love how Tuco just looks at him thinking "What a legend"
Tuco is definitely one of the most underrated villains!
cara...a dublagem ficou sensacional, melhor serie dublada que ja assisti
Nem se compara com a versão original
The part at the end, when he gets back in his car and just has to look at the money.
My favorite out of the whole thing.
Every man has felt that at least once in his life about something.
That's adrenaline
Not me yet. I am 37.
The first time I got physical with another guy and I smacked him several times while thinking he would fight back (he didn't). He was dating my ex gf and hit her and I went to his house and hit him. When he didn't fight back I had this similar reaction in my car after I left since I'd never really been in a fight before.
3:28 Tuco laugh like a psychopath who had find a psychopath like him, his new friend
He reminds me Dexter 😂
This brings back memories. You see all those movies like this, just imagine it. I love 1990s movies
You better not forget who you work for