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Skyler White is worried about Walter White, suspecting that he is in danger due to the death of Gale Boetticher. Walt reacts angrily, ranting about his importance in the drug trade and implying that he killed Gale, prompting Skyler to take Holly White and flee the house.
Walter White settles into his new surroundings and takes a liking to his new lab assistant Gale Boetticher. Jesse Pinkman shows his meth to Badger and Skinny Pete , and enlists them to enter the drug trade alongside him again, promising that they will not make the same mistakes which got Combo killed.
The songs playing throughout the episode were "Black" by Danger Mouse and Daniele Luppi featuring Norah Jones, "Goodbye" by Apparat, and "Freestyle" by Taalbi Brothers. [4] The use of all three songs was praised as among the series' greatest musical choices by Uproxx , [ 4 ] while Complex specifically named "Black" on a similar list.
"Live Free or Die" is the fifth season premiere episode of the American television drama series Breaking Bad, the first episode of the first part of the season and the 47th overall episode of the series. Written by series creator Vince Gilligan and directed by Michael Slovis, it originally aired on AMC in the U
Walter "Walt" White, suffering from insomnia, stares up at his smoke detector's red flashing status light while trying to get back to sleep. Later, he arrives with Jesse Pinkman at the meth lab, where they begin making another batch of meth. At the end of the day, Walt calculates that their yield, while above what they are required to produce ...
Gus, in a phone call to Jesse, implies the police attention is Walter's fault, and Walter must be killed to protect the operation, but Jesse again refuses to cook if Walter is killed. Saul later hands Jesse's entire share of the meth profits to Jesse, since Saul is planning to temporarily flee Albuquerque until the feud between Walter and Gus ...
Douglass delivered the speech in the midst of the battle over civil rights for Black people, addressing the threat posed to the nation by a racist President who refused to give them the full ...
The scene when Walter looks through Gale's notebook at Hank's behest features a montage of quick cuts between the notebook pages and Walter's face as he read. The montage was conceived by Gilligan, who wanted to express Walter's stress over reading the notebook to the viewers without overtly showing those emotions on Walter's face and arousing ...