He offers Declan the chance to buy out Mike's share and oversee Walt's distribution network, guaranteeing that they will make more money than if Declan produced meth on his own. To reinforce his point, Walt demands that Declan "say his name"; Declan resignedly acknowledges Walt as "Heisenberg".
Walt, with Jesse and Mike in tow, meets with Declan. Walt declares that they will not be selling their methylamine, and he instead offers Declan a 35% share of the profits from his blue meth in exchange for replacing Mike as his distribution network, more money than Declan could ever make from selling his own meth. ...
While Walt is trying to wake Jesse, he inadvertently and unknowingly knocks Jane onto her back; she starts to choke on her own vomit. Walt rushes to help, but after hesitating for a moment, lets her die, in order to protect Jesse from their eventual overdose, and for self-preservation since she threatened to expose him ...
The name of Walt's alter ego came from Werner Heisenberg, a German physicist known as a pioneer of quantum mechanics. As a chemist, Walt would be familiar with famous scientists; likely, he took Heisenberg as an inspiration.
Walt took up smoking when he was a young man overseas as a driver for the Red Cross in France. Like young men in the military when they were confronted by long periods of boredom broken by brief, unexpected moments of intense activity, Walt turned to cigarettes, especially since they were easily available.
After insisting for five full seasons that everything he did, he did for his family, Walt finally confesses that all of his actions were entirely self-motivated.
After lying to his son that his injuries were the result of a fight that came out of his "gambling addiction", Walt breaks down in tears.
“I've made a mistake. It's all my fault. I had it coming,” Walt confesses. Walt isn't just crying because he's ruined the only real relationship he had (both business and personal), but he's crying because he's realized the mess he's made of his life, and those around him.
Breaking Bad. In their first appearence, the Cousins plan on assassinating renowed meth cook Walter White - also known as Heisenberg - as retribution for betraying Tuco and causing his death.
Holly betrayed him, just like the rest of his family had. Walt grabbed the baby on his way out of the house to punish Skyler, of course, and to remind her how powerful he was.
Enraged, Walter Jr. blames Walt for Hank Schrader's death, and wishes Walt dead. Dejected, Walt calls the DEA to surrender and leaves the phone off the hook so they can trace his location.
Thank you, boss. Note: Character says this shortly before he is decapitated by Marco Salamanca.
Although it took some viewers (including this one) a while to catch on, most everyone agrees that Walt's call to Skyler was intended for the police he knew would be listening, that in casting her as a terrified woman under the thumb of a homicidally violent drug kingpin, he was trying to exonerate her, to absorb her ...
His symptoms got increasingly worse as the series progressed showing that now, he would need treatment for this clinical diagnosis if he hopes to return to any form of a normal life. It is no coincidence that Walt encompasses all nine characteristics of having a narcissistic personality disorder, as outlined in DSM-5.
It belonged to a man scared of Gus Fring, scared of Tuco Salamanca, scared of chemotherapy, scared of cholesterol. So, after taking a long look at his porkpie, he sells the car to the mechanic for fifty bucks — a dollar for each year of his previous life.
In the final scene, Hank figures out that Walt is Heisenberg while perusing Walt's copy of “Leaves of Grass” on the toilet. The book is inscribed: “To my other favorite W.W. It's an honor working with you.
Walt is bald because of chemotherapy. He shaved his head when he started losing patches of hair because it was going to happen anyway. Before the chemotherapy, and in the last couple of episodes of the series where he is no longer on it, he has hair.
Flies (Diptera) are common insects that appeared in Breaking Bad. It has been speculated that the fly represents guilt, contamination, irrational obsession, and the loss of control in Walter White's life. When a fly gets into the superlab, Walt embarks on an obsessive quest to destroy it ("Fly").
Dirty Water: Guilt and Contamination
And in Breaking Bad, the Whites' swimming pool is a mirror reflecting Walter's emotions at any given point. Most saliently, Walter's relationship with his pool visualizes his obsession with contamination which is a stand-in for his guilt over what he's done.
After the destruction of the Cartel and the collapse of Gus' Drug Empire, Walter decided to establish himself as the only major drug kingpin left in the Albuquerque area.
Walt was just unable to believe his situation, how things stacked up against him. First being diagnosed with cancer and other series of events, then with his last bit of stash gone, he just burst in laughter feeling the agony.
Walter White, the fictional chemistry teacher turned drug dealer on Breaking Bad, was infamous for utilizing his chemistry skills to create a 99.1% pure methamphetamine aptly named "Blue Sky."