@@SadSadSadSquishSquishSquish Be in touch with your truth desires and be proud of your goals/efforts/ way to be and say "this is who i deserve to be" . My logic is that in some degree you have build an identity to face society if one can build confidence the better, even thought ego(matrix) is more of a "social guilt" to exaggerate and hide the bad aspects of human nature . Also there is no need to be rigid but waste less energy on weakness, at least in the social atmosphere in your house you can cry like a baby while you hug a pillow
Gus and Mike never dealed with a pathetic highschool teacher who had been a law abiding citizen for 50 years. They underestimated him and that led to their downfalls.
@@IshbikesI mean it says more about the fact you’re this upset over something so little Maybe find ways to entertain your life better?…get a girlfriend? Buy a PlayStation?
Yeah he said he didn’t believe it was effective, not that he wasn’t open to it. :p (In all seriousness, I think this does show Gus’ desperation by this point. He’s willing to discard his usual rules with Walt because he now doesn’t know how else to deal with him except with brute force.)
Disposing of Gus is what eventually led to everyone's downfall, Walter's included. Walt could have just shut up and cooked and let Big Man Fring handle the business operations. Of course, doing the smart and sensible thing would make for a boring show.......
@@CheerfullyCynical829 That's the classic shortsighted view of the story. People like you forget the little details of Gus refusing to cooperate with Jesse's demands after coercing Walt into cooking for him (the whole "a man provides" speech). He was fully aware Walt and Jesse were a package deal. All he cared about was revenge and wanted his little pawns to be like cooperative robots. He insists that he's running a business but acts like a tyrant. He also planned to replace Walt with Gale. Walt figuring out Gale's address was clearly not enough for Gus to take him seriously. Gus brought everything on himself; what Hector did all those years ago shook him forever.
@@nahor88 If it wasn't for Jesse, Gus would have kept both Walt AND Gale on. Walt only got rid of Gale to keep Jesse happy so he wouldn't destroy Hank's life and livelihood for giving him a beat down that he richly deserved.
@@CheerfullyCynical829 Wrong, Gus always intended to replace Walt with Gale. He never really wanted Walt, he wanted his PRODUCT; he was under the impression Walt would die soon anyways. Gale's job was to learn Walt's formula. Gus never really understood how much better of a chemist Walt was despite Gale telling him over and over. "beatdown he richly deserved" is effing BIAS, not fact. The beatdown was unlawful. When you put it that way, Hank deserves some of the blame as well indirectly.
People point out how Gus is breaking one of his own rules here ('I don't believe fear to be an effective motivator') but I think at this point how exasperated and desperate he views Walter at this point. We've seen how much time, blood (poor Werner), and an almost ruinous amount of money ($8 million!) Gus has sunk into his superlab and criminal empire. And now some 50 year old high school chemistry teacher with a massive ego problem and who just doesn't know his place in the hierarchy is threatening to undo 20 years worth of work. No wonder Gus feels like he was pushed to this point.
“I can’t believe Gus would just threaten Walter for no reason at all! For a criminal mastermind this was a twisted move to threaten Walter for doing absolutely nothing in particular that could sabotage their entire operation!” -average heisenberg glazer
It actually makes no sense for Gus to volunteer information to Walter that he's decided to go after Hank. It's one of those rare(ish) cases in BB where the dialogue is kind of just trying to further the story, rather than reflect what the character would organically do.
Most viewers want to see Gus and Walter as the two most morally corrupt and evil people in the show, but frankly, given their doleful backstories, they are the most sympathetic characters in the show. It makes this scene all the more intense.
I suspect if Mike were present in this moment: his presence would've mentally held Gus back from threatening's Walt family. Back in Better Call Saul, he objected to Gus threatening Nacho's Dad when he used Nacho; in return, before Nacho died, he promised him that he would make sure he's safe and tha Gus or the Salamancas don't touch his dad.. And now with Mike back at Mexico, it gave Gus an opportunity unleash his rage and threats against Walt.
Don’t forget that Gus did weaponize children to be his gang’s shooters, and it’s heavily implied that Gus gave the order for the Tweedle Dee and Tweedle Dum to kill Tomas in the first place.
Crazy to think that all of this and all that follows could have been avoided if Walt had just kept his mouth shut and let Hank believe Gale was Heisenberg
Gus Fring is a good and intelligent distributor of the drugs, however for someone as intelligent and discreet as him, having worked and then ended up threatening Walter White or rather Heisenberg that he was going to kill Walt's family and not having killed Héctor Salamanca when he had all the possible opportunities were by far his most serious mistakes that he made in his entire life proving that, at the end of the day, he's still just a simple human nobody.
From the moment he was uncuffed, he was already thinking of a plan. And if that one failed, he probably has 2-3 uncooked plans to pick for his next move. Walt’s propensity for ingenuity knew no rest. 😆
I feel like Walt shouldn’t have killed Gus so soon because Walt had stability in the consistency of Gus’s operation that was well covered and run also the money that came no matter the cut
I don't remember where I heard this, but the point of no return for a villain is when they threaten to kill kids. Sure, they can kill kids, but as soon as they threaten to kill kids (be it to the protagonist or anyone else) they lost any sympathy/chance of being redeemed & are going to die. Even though he had killed multiple people including kids before this Episode, once Gus threatened to kill Walt's kids he was doomed to die.
Why would Gus want Jesse to cook exclusively? Jesse cooked the product to a 96 percent purity , unlike Walt’s 99 percent . So yeah , Walt is just being dramatic that Gus wanted to kill him . 🥱
It's funny how each of their egos cost them everything
@@apaaaaunless your bezos, musk, gates, or buffet. Then your ego takes you higher.
@@SadSadSadSquishSquishSquishJust have a healthy ego, not need to go extremes to success. But a big ego is essensial in bussiness
@@OscarPerdomo-v4z how would you define a healthy ego
@@SadSadSadSquishSquishSquish Be in touch with your truth desires and be proud of your goals/efforts/ way to be and say "this is who i deserve to be" . My logic is that in some degree you have build an identity to face society if one can build confidence the better, even thought ego(matrix) is more of a "social guilt" to exaggerate and hide the bad aspects of human nature . Also there is no need to be rigid but waste less energy on weakness, at least in the social atmosphere in your house you can cry like a baby while you hug a pillow
Gus: His vengeance on Hector
Walt: His ego fueled from work that was stolen from him
"I will sleep with your wife, I will cook breakfast for your son, I will raise your infant daughter"
Gus is such a nice guy!!!!
Now we know why Beneke had it rough. He didn't cook breakfast for Walter Jr. and didn't offer to raise Haley😅😭
wym he will sleep with his wife😭
Gus and Mike never dealed with a pathetic highschool teacher who had been a law abiding citizen for 50 years. They underestimated him and that led to their downfalls.
Mike never wanted to deal with Walter in the first place. It was Saul that got him into everything
@@alonnie1919 Mike warned Gus as well but he thought that manage the risks.
They never had to deal with a sociopathic egomaniac.
Look how he left the corporation he started and what he became
Dealt
@@CollectionLearning. you mean delts? The shoulder muscles?
That cloud was the best character in this scene. Shoulda won an Emmy tbh
Not tired of the bs jokes? It’s been almost a decade of the same bs jokes.
@@IshbikesI mean it says more about the fact you’re this upset over something so little
Maybe find ways to entertain your life better?…get a girlfriend? Buy a PlayStation?
Gus: "Do you think i would order to kill a child?"
Also Gus: "I will kill your infant daughter"
Gus: “I don’t believe fear to be an effective motivator.”
Also Gus:
same with nacho 😂😂😂😂 hypocrite
Yeah he said he didn’t believe it was effective, not that he wasn’t open to it. :p
(In all seriousness, I think this does show Gus’ desperation by this point. He’s willing to discard his usual rules with Walt because he now doesn’t know how else to deal with him except with brute force.)
He’s not looking to motivate lol
This is the moment Gus signed his death warrant.
Disposing of Gus is what eventually led to everyone's downfall, Walter's included. Walt could have just shut up and cooked and let Big Man Fring handle the business operations. Of course, doing the smart and sensible thing would make for a boring show.......
@@CheerfullyCynical829
Nice parroting of Mike, but if Walt had done that, Jesse would be dead.
@@CheerfullyCynical829 That's the classic shortsighted view of the story. People like you forget the little details of Gus refusing to cooperate with Jesse's demands after coercing Walt into cooking for him (the whole "a man provides" speech). He was fully aware Walt and Jesse were a package deal. All he cared about was revenge and wanted his little pawns to be like cooperative robots. He insists that he's running a business but acts like a tyrant.
He also planned to replace Walt with Gale. Walt figuring out Gale's address was clearly not enough for Gus to take him seriously. Gus brought everything on himself; what Hector did all those years ago shook him forever.
@@nahor88 If it wasn't for Jesse, Gus would have kept both Walt AND Gale on. Walt only got rid of Gale to keep Jesse happy so he wouldn't destroy Hank's life and livelihood for giving him a beat down that he richly deserved.
@@CheerfullyCynical829 Wrong, Gus always intended to replace Walt with Gale. He never really wanted Walt, he wanted his PRODUCT; he was under the impression Walt would die soon anyways. Gale's job was to learn Walt's formula. Gus never really understood how much better of a chemist Walt was despite Gale telling him over and over.
"beatdown he richly deserved" is effing BIAS, not fact. The beatdown was unlawful. When you put it that way, Hank deserves some of the blame as well indirectly.
1:47 This sounds like Mike's voice so much I thought it was him for a second
Ditto!😅😅😅
Finally someone else points it out. I thought I was going crazy.
I think he did the voice over for that one line. It was 100% his voice
You are Goddamn right!
How did that happen? 😂
People point out how Gus is breaking one of his own rules here ('I don't believe fear to be an effective motivator') but I think at this point how exasperated and desperate he views Walter at this point.
We've seen how much time, blood (poor Werner), and an almost ruinous amount of money ($8 million!) Gus has sunk into his superlab and criminal empire. And now some 50 year old high school chemistry teacher with a massive ego problem and who just doesn't know his place in the hierarchy is threatening to undo 20 years worth of work. No wonder Gus feels like he was pushed to this point.
Well, Gus made his empire fall by himself.
He could have avoided to have Tomas killed. But he didn't. He wanted Jesse out at all costs
The reason why Gus wants Walter dead is because Walt saved Jessies life from the two drug dealers.
Walts ego was hardly a factor in this
Gus is such a well written character top-tier villain
Fr
Giancarlo Esposito is so underrated.
0:55 When you turn auto brightness on
😐
Gus threatening Walt's family made Heisenberg make his plan that eventually destroyed Gus and his drug empire.
Lalo used his brutes while Walter used his mind. Both were menaces to Gus but one actually got the job done.
Tbh Lalo lost by a single shot be he had Gus beaten
this is the moment gus became... uh... uh... i forgot...
This is the moment Gus came.
Dementia moment
Gusenberg
It’s okay, he’s only half there
Two face from Batman Lol 😂
“I do not believe fear to be an effective motivator.”
Gus had to go. The MINUTE he threatened the family it was over for ol' boy
Surely Gus would have killed Marie, too. Since she's Hank's wife and another loose end.
“I can’t believe Gus would just threaten Walter for no reason at all! For a criminal mastermind this was a twisted move to threaten Walter for doing absolutely nothing in particular that could sabotage their entire operation!”
-average heisenberg glazer
Who said that? Are you talking to yourself.
Same Downfall as Lalo. Pride.
Pride? He knew Gus was up to something, & he was right. That’s not *pride.*
@Ishbikes he's saying Gus shouldn't have underestimated walter and kill him here.
I feel like a lot of people have forgotten that Jesse saved Walter's life, too.
I especially feel they forget that Jesse is still vouching for Walt the same way Walt vouched for Jesse in the Season 4 premiere.
Jesse wouldn't have to save his life if Walter didn't run over the dealers lol
this is the moment gus became you'll do what
Gus Threatening Walt reminded me of Tony Soprano threatening Christopher.
Walt just loves resting in the desert
It actually makes no sense for Gus to volunteer information to Walter that he's decided to go after Hank. It's one of those rare(ish) cases in BB where the dialogue is kind of just trying to further the story, rather than reflect what the character would organically do.
If only Hank knew what lengths Walt would go to protect him.
Most viewers want to see Gus and Walter as the two most morally corrupt and evil people in the show, but frankly, given their doleful backstories, they are the most sympathetic characters in the show. It makes this scene all the more intense.
They should have done more with that ant by Walt's head when he falls to the ground. That ant deserves a spin off.
I suspect if Mike were present in this moment: his presence would've mentally held Gus back from threatening's Walt family.
Back in Better Call Saul, he objected to Gus threatening Nacho's Dad when he used Nacho; in return, before Nacho died, he promised him that he would make sure he's safe and tha Gus or the Salamancas don't touch his dad..
And now with Mike back at Mexico, it gave Gus an opportunity unleash his rage and threats against Walt.
Poor Gus
Walter pushed him to a point he'd never go, threatening women and children.
Walt has that effect on everyone he meets
Don’t forget that Gus did weaponize children to be his gang’s shooters, and it’s heavily implied that Gus gave the order for the Tweedle Dee and Tweedle Dum to kill Tomas in the first place.
Gus was so astonished: 1:31
Lyle is buried somewhere in that desert legend saids.
Walter could have taken advantage to reveal himself as Jeffrey A. Steele of the FBI but he didn't do it
When the menacing villain shows up driving your mom’s Volvo you know that Vince wrote the scene
Gues was just firing a poor laundry assistant who mislabled the detergents, how sad.
walts so fvcking dramatic throwing himself on the ground like that lmao
And this scene was eventually leads to...
Ding!
Ding!
Ding!
Ding!
Ding!
HAAAAAAHHH!
💥
Crazy to think that all of this and all that follows could have been avoided if Walt had just kept his mouth shut and let Hank believe Gale was Heisenberg
The real if is one:
Jesse and Gus keeping the peace
Maybe if Jesse didn't try to killed those guys who killed combo, this wouldn't happened.
Gus 'Chicken Man' Fring(Season 2): "You can never trust a drug addict."
Gus 'I am different' Fring(Season 4): "sTaY aWaY fRoM p1nKmAn!!"
Intense scene
1:47 this was the moment Walt became Finger.
Waltuh
Gus threatens Walt family
Walt: so you've chosen death
Also u can say he "FACE" his death
Gus Fring is a good and intelligent distributor of the drugs, however for someone as intelligent and discreet as him, having worked and then ended up threatening Walter White or rather Heisenberg that he was going to kill Walt's family and not having killed Héctor Salamanca when he had all the possible opportunities were by far his most serious mistakes that he made in his entire life proving that, at the end of the day, he's still just a simple human nobody.
No, You.
All because Walter just can't say, 'Okay. You got it.'
1:02 Ubisoft execs when a dev has a good idea
Hey you. Heisenberg sticker. It doesn't mean run red lights, and pedestrians were on your test. Also, your hero cooks drugs you adolescent
From the moment he was uncuffed, he was already thinking of a plan. And if that one failed, he probably has 2-3 uncooked plans to pick for his next move. Walt’s propensity for ingenuity knew no rest. 😆
so much for "i am the danger"
If Gus chose to go back to the wine guy and be gay together instead of doing this, he would still have been alive.
I feel like Walt shouldn’t have killed Gus so soon because Walt had stability in the consistency of Gus’s operation that was well covered and run also the money that came no matter the cut
I don't remember where I heard this, but the point of no return for a villain is when they threaten to kill kids. Sure, they can kill kids, but as soon as they threaten to kill kids (be it to the protagonist or anyone else) they lost any sympathy/chance of being redeemed & are going to die. Even though he had killed multiple people including kids before this Episode, once Gus threatened to kill Walt's kids he was doomed to die.
The quality kinda sucks considering this is an official channel
Hey Gus ding , ding , ding , ding
This is what happen when you don't like Los Pollos Hermanos Curly Fries Spice Curls.
Walter will always be Malcoms Dad he's suck a wimp and he's always begging for his life like a lame
Was it a real or cgi cloud?
Wow
This is right before the moment Walt became Heisenberg
Why would Gus want Jesse to cook exclusively? Jesse cooked the product to a 96 percent purity , unlike Walt’s 99 percent .
So yeah , Walt is just being dramatic that Gus wanted to kill him . 🥱
96 is enough for Gus standard commercially talking, he says. Walter was a problem to Gus he wants to get rid of him because he always brought problems
0:55 when you turn auto brightness on