Trivia. While Jesse Pinkman eventually relapses on drugs following the murder of Tomas Cantillo, he never does heroin again, having permanently gotten clean of it after being sent to rehab by Walter White.
Jesse's parents hated him because of his addiction to drugs and his criminal ways. At a young age, he was kicked out of the house and forced to live with his aunt until she died of cancer. His aunt's wife was taken away from him too after it was revealed that he was cooking meth in it.
Later, Jesse and Jane inject heroin in his apartment. As he passes out, Jesse complains about Walt holding out on him, telling Jane that he is owed $480,000.
After "dueling" with a criminal named Neil over a share of Todd's money, Jesse was able to pay for the service and begins a new life in Alaska. He left a letter for his former girlfriend's son, Brock, one of Breaking Bad's most victimized characters, but otherwise didn't say goodbye to anyone.
Seeing as El Camino picked up moments after Breaking Bad's final episode, Jesse was still 25. In fact, the character's actions to acquire a new identity occurred while he was on the brink of turning 26 years old.
Jesse, however, was left with $5 million that Walt gave him out of guilt.
The finale did give Jesse a happy ending of sorts when Walt, finally showing something like remorse for what he'd done to his former student, set him free. But our final image of Jesse was behind the wheel, screaming, gunning it down backroads to make his escape. It's an ending, but it's hardly closure.
Hysteria. He was beaten and tortured, forced into slave labor stinking like a rotten pig. He thought he would never get out and resigned himself to his fate. So when he realizes he is free, it is an insane euphoric feeling, full blown mania.
Ed provides Jesse with a new identity with the surname "Driscoll" and smuggles him to Haines, Alaska. Jesse hands Ed a letter for Brock and says there is no one else he wants to say goodbye to. As Jesse drives off, he has a flashback to his time with Jane.
Many thoughts of grief may have flooded Walt's mind after Hank was killed in Breaking Bad, but the reason why Walt tells Jesse the truth about Jane's death is indicative of his true nature. Walt's evolution to becoming Heisenberg was created out of a series of events of desperation and tragedy.
Did Jesse forgive and still love Walt at the end? Nope. Walt absolutely destroyed Jesse's life. He did unforgivable things to Jesse, such as letting his girlfriend die and poisoning his other girlfriend's son just to manipulate Jesse.
The reason Walt confessed to Jesse about Jane's death ties into this steady downfall of Walt's morals and motivations.
Trivia. While Jesse Pinkman eventually relapses on drugs following the murder of Tomas Cantillo, he never does heroin again, having permanently gotten clean of it after being sent to rehab by Walter White.
In the series, Jesse is the typical meth addict who little by little loses control of his life and the support of his parents due to his addiction.
Jesse Pinkman (Aaron Paul) is primarily an ally to Walter White in Breaking Bad, but there are a few times he double-crosses, cheats, or attempts to get trip up Walter. Jesse isn't evil as much as he is like the prodigal son, who has been led astray and seduced by greed and quick money.
Because he was competing for Jesse with that upstart, Gus. Walt knew that if he didn't lock Jesse down as his, that he would lose him. Walt realized two things about his relationship with Gus. That Gus didn't like him, and that two people could possibly replace him.
I understand the second time Walt ordered Jack to kill Jesse (in the desert after Hank died): Walt felt betrayed by the seemingly only person he held a soft spot for (other than his family). Jesse did something Walt never dreamed he would do, which was spill to the DEA.
Walter explains that he has been wandering all day (often way into the country) and drinking all night (at a bar with a jazz duo that he loves). He says that he feels depressed, despondent, and useless as the man of the family. He feels that his job is no better than a slave's job.
In the season 5 episode Confessions Jesse realises that Saul and Huell took his ricin cigerette on the orders of Walt (Jesse finds this out by threatening them with a gun) which causes him to also realise that Walter was behind the whole false story of Gus poisoning Brock when it had been him all along.
The two Emmy winners reprised their roles for the first time on the “Breaking Bad” prequel, just a few years after they shared the screen briefly in “El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie.” After fans theorized about when Walt and Jesse would show up, they were introduced during a flashback to “Breaking Bad” Season 2 Episode ...
26) The Nazis fail to produce drugs of Jesse and Walt quality, so their international distributor Lydia (Laura Fraser) has been freaking out. Which is very bad news for Jesse: After they let Walt go, they literally cage Jesse up for months and force him to make Heisenberg-level meth.
Season 3. Gus is pleased with the quality of Walt's blue meth and offers him $3 million for three months of his time to cook more in a high-tech "superlab" hidden under an industrial laundry that Gus owns. Walt initially refuses, but Gus eventually convinces Walt that he should cook for his family's financial security.
At one point in the film, Jesse is back at Todd's apartment because he remembers that he was stashing a lot of his money there in a secret hiding place. He literally tears the whole apartment apart searching for his stash of cash.
Assuming his previous product (which was less pure) netted him about $70 million every three months, he'd still be making $280 million a year even before working with Walt. Note that meth wasn't Fring's only source of income.