Contents
- 1 How did Walt get the poison to Brock?
- 2 Why did Walt poison Brock on Breaking Bad?
- 3 Does Walter regret poisoning Brock?
- 4 Why is Brock quiet around Walt?
- 5 What happened to Jesse’s ricin?
- 6 Why did Walt use Lily of the Valley instead of ricin?
- 7 Why did Walter White become so evil?
- 8 Does Walter get cured?
- 9 How did Walt get the ricin cigarette?
- 10 How did Walt put the ricin?
- 11 What happened to Brock after Andrea died?
How did Walt get the poison to Brock?
Walt’s poisoning of Brock is considered his most heinous act, as it exemplifies his descent into pure villainy and his willingness to harm a child. Walt planted the poison in Brock’s juice box at school, ensuring that only Brock would come into contact with it.
Despite the devastating act, Brock ultimately survived and made a full recovery, but the guilt and turmoil it caused had lasting effects on Walt, Jesse, and their relationship. How did Walt poison Brock in Breaking Bad ? The incident took place in season 4 of the AMC hit series but the truth didn’t come out until the following year.
The character Brock Cantillo ( Ian Posada ) was the six-year-old son of Jesse Pinkman’s girlfriend, Andrea ( Emily Rios ). Brock greatly admired Jesse and the two would often hang out and bond over video games. After Jesse and Andrea broke up, he continued to send them money through Saul Goodman.
8/22/2023by Colin McCormick, Kara Hedash ScreenRant.com
Why did Walt poison Brock on Breaking Bad?
Poisoning Brock allowed him to drive drive Jesse away from Gus (as he suggested that Gus was behind the poisoning), and with Jesse blaming Gus it was easy to get him to help in his attempt to kill Gus. In ‘Breaking Bad’, did Skyler have an affair to make Walt leave the house?
Did Brock know Walt poisoned him?
How did Brock get poisoned? | Fandom 1 I’m guessing Walt pulled the whole “hey kid want some candy?” trick, for a few reasons.1. Brock obviously recognized and was scared of him when he went to Andrea’s house in the last season, but based on his actual reaction to Walt, I don’t think Brock knew for certain that Walt had been the one who poisoned him.
- Otherwise he would have reacted much more violently to Walt’s presence in his home.
- Ids aren’t great at masking emotions, after all.2.
- I seriously doubt Walt had the stomach to openly threaten a child with harm if he spoke about what he knew, which tells me that he would have used a the candy method with a controlled dose as a way to ensure that even Brock didn’t know for certain that he was responsible.
As in, Brock might have been able to put two and two together (A strange man gives him candy and then he becomes violently ill) but there was no way he could ever prove it or be certain. Just my opinion though.2 0 At SDCC, Vince shared off-screen details about how Walt carried out the poisoning, he claimed They claim Walt poisoned Brock’s juice box at school.
- I don’t know how true this is but i’m just going off by memory and what i’ve heard.1 Well there’s no way to poison Brock’s juice box in a cafeteria full of kids, they would see you.
- I imagine he would’ve paid one of the cafeteria ladies to do it 0 Yeah i meant it as in perhaps Walt asked Saul to tell a cafeteria lady to do it or maybe he asked himself, i didn’t mean it literal to the point where we went up to Brock and did it himself.
Thanks for all the responses.you guys are the best. I’ll have to go back and watch it again. I remember there being dialogue in one of the episodes where Jesse states the doctors said the poison wasn’t ricin based, but akin to the poison in the berries of lily of the valley plant.
Then at that episode end the camera pans out to Walt’s patio where they do a close up on one such plant sitting in a pot by the swimming pool. Then in one of the final episodes of the series, when Walt is trying to get everybody packed up to leave the house for good.Walt runs back into the house and retrieves the same lily of the valley plant from the patio.and he throws it into the trunk of his car.
This is done very deliberately, as if Walt doesn’t want the plant to be found. So can we surmise that somehow Brock was poisoned by the plant and not by ricin? I just don’t recall a scene wherein Walt has a chance to administer the poison to Brock by means of the plant.
But why else would Walt make sure to take the plant with him??? 0 At the beginning of the episode, I think its the last or second last episode of season 4, when Walt was sitting bereft in his backyard spinning his revolver around and trying to come up with a plan, it pointed at the lily of the valley plant that was sitting in his garden.
You see the gears turning in his head as he starts to formulate a plan. The slow pan showing the label on the plant is meant to show us that, like Jesse said, it was indeed those lily berries that had been the source of brocks poisoning. (edited by Lyndonmaman) 0 He got rid of the plant so nobody would be able to ever connect the dots.
- Covering all his bases, as it were.
- And while the actual poisoning was never shown on screen, I think the show runners were going for an M.
- Night shyamalan style twist that made the audience say “oooooooh snap!” (edited by Lyndonmaman) 0 I’ll admit this theory of mine may not be prefect, but in the same way Walt manipulated Saul into doing it by stating that he was “saving” Jesse, maybe he did the same thing with Brock whose just a little kid who doesn’t really understand.
That could explain why he would tell his mother that Walt poisoned him. : How did Brock get poisoned? | Fandom
Does Walter regret poisoning Brock?
Brock’s Poisoning Hinted At What Was To Come In Breaking Bad Season 5 – In season 4’s “End Times,” it was revealed Brock was in the hospital with a serious flu-like illness. As the child was the son of Jesse’s girlfriend, Jesse assumed Brock was intentionally poisoned with the ricin intended for his business associate, Gus Fring (Giancarlo Esposito).
In reality, Walt poisoned Brock with a lily of the valley plant to manipulate Jesse against Gus. Gilligan explained the extent of Brock’s poisoning, but the significance remained unchanged. The fact that Walt willingly put a child in the hospital for his own personal gain proved how far gone his morals were following the Heisenberg transformation.
Targeting an enemy or fellow member in the drug trade was one thing, but poisoning an innocent kid was the point of no return for Breaking Bad ‘s protagonist. Though Brock later recovered from the event, Jesse would go on to learn the truth. He understandably saw Walt in a new light, realizing his former business partner fell into full villain mode.
By then, it was too late for Jesse and the rest of Walt’s former allies, including his family. Walt’s actions in poisoning Brock hinted at what was to come in season 5. He may have felt remorse for some of his decision-making, but Walt admitted in the Breaking Bad series finale that he did it all for himself.
Building his empire had dangerous consequences, but he felt alive during the entire journey, even when it meant poisoning a child. More: Breaking Bad: Every Alternate Ending Considered
Why is Brock quiet around Walt?
The reason Brock is odd around Walt is that he’s only seen him twice and doesn’t know him at all. I remember that when the first time Brock has seen Jesse, he was very quiet around him too. But Brock definitely knew something about poison, when Walt tries to make small talk, Brock doesn’t seem to be too enthusiastic about interacting with him. peggy peggy 29 3 bronze badges
How did Gus survive the poison?
” ” Salud (TV Episode 2011) – Trivia – IMDb The pills Gustavo Fring takes are “activated charcoal” tablets that apparently can soak up poison and help delay the actions of it. Jesse’s cook results in a purity of 96.2%, lower than Walter’s standard of 99% or more but marginally higher than what Gus was willing to accept from Gale. Remember, too, the poor sanitary condition of the Mexican cartel lab and that ingredients like Phenylacetic Acid had to be synthesized there first. Under these conditions, 96.2% might be considerably better than expected. Don Eladio also points out this is better than the cartel’s chemists can produce. Jesse fires at least 17 shots (maybe more) from that pistol. “Salud” means health in Spanish but is also what Mexicans say when toasting. In this context, it means “Cheers!” 20 years before this show, (Mike Ehrmantraut) and (Don Eladio) starred together as an FBI controller and undercover agent, respectively, in the fourth season of, Suggest an edit or add missing content What is the Spanish language plot outline for Salud (2011)? You have no recently viewed pages : ” ” Salud (TV Episode 2011) – Trivia – IMDb
Did Jesse forgive Walt for poisoning Brock?
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.
What happened to Jesse’s ricin?
This morning in Breaking Bad Land there seems to be much flat-out confusion about what happened at the end of last night’s episode 511.Which is totally understandable. Because much of the crucial action of the back story concerning Jesse’s revelation about Walter poisoning Brock takes place off camera at the end of season four.
Jesse is fidgeting, and suddenly begins frantically searching all his pockets. He’s looking for the bag of weed that Saul had tried, unsuccessfully, to grab from him in Saul’s office. The weed is missing. Jesse finds his cigarettes instead. Looking at the cigarette pack and thinking about the missing weed, Jesse has an epiphany. Jesse thinks back to the action of Episode 412 and 413, when he thought that his girlfriend Andrea’s young son Brock was poisoned by the Ricin cigarette that Walt had made and gave Jesse to poison Gus Fring. Jesse now realizes that he didn’t just misplace the weed. Jesse figures out that Saul’s very large bodyguard, Huell had pickpocketed it from him. Just as he had lifted the pack containing the Ricin cigarette in Season 4. (You can actually see Huell lift the weed from Jesse just before Jesse leaves the office, and Huell says “Excuse me.” Jesse now realizes that Walter White had actually poisoned Brock, returns to Saul’s office, and generally raises hell.
Huh? The chunk of backstory you’d need to make this leap of logic can be found in Episode 412 and 413. This off-camera action was discussed at great length’s on Breaking Bad discussion groups, but not fully explained within the show itself. At the 27:00 mark of Episode 412, Jesse comes over to Walt’s house and confronts him, accusing him of poisoning Brock.
- At gunpoint.
- You can see a bit of that confrontation starting at 2:03 in the video below.
- Crucially, Jesse, while pointing a gun at Walt, lays out the complicated scenario.
- Walt: “You said it yourself.
- You had this morning.
- When could I have possibly.?” Jesse: “You had Saul do it.
- I went to his office.
- He called me and just had to see me today.
His big Man Mountain body guard patted me down and that’s when he must have stole it off of me, right? Was that the plan?” Yes, that was the plan. Jesse had it perfectly right down to the last detail, but Walt convinces him-and us-that he couldn’t have done it.
Walt is sitting in his yard with the gun, waiting for Gus’s men to kill him. He sees the Lily of the Valley plant on the patio. (5:30 into Episode 412) Off camera, Walt crushes up some of the poison from the Lily of the Valley plant and injects it into a juice box. Also off camera, Walt delivers the juice box to Brock’s school. (Having seen Brock the day before at Jesse and Andrea’s place.) Walt puts the juice box in Brock’s lunch. (Again off camera) Walt calls Saul, and has Huell lift the pack of cigarettes from Jesse. (More off camera) Huell, Saul’s bodyguard, lifts the pack with the Ricin cig from Jesse, and replaces it with a clean pack with one cigarette missing. (This can be seen in Episode 412 if you know what you’re looking for) Walt lies to Jesse about all this in Episode 412 about this and Jesse believes him and is now willing to help him kill Gus. (For his part, Bryan Cranston hadn’t read the Episode 413 script so he, too, believed that Walt was telling the truth, making it easier to give a convincing performance.)
“The way we worked it out, had just enough time to do it but it would have been very tricky indeed. It was improbable perhaps, but not impossible,” said Gilligan about the missing backstory. “But he was a very motivated individual at that point.” (Reader Andrea Ball reminded me of this scene below from Epside 502.
- In the aftermath of Brock’s near poisoning, Jesse is freaking out, wondering what happened to the ricin cigarette, worrying that someone else will get poisoned with it.
- Walt comes over to “help Jesse look.” But before arriving at Jesse’s, Walt makes a dummy ricin capsule out of salt, stashes the real ricin behind the switchplate-where it stays until the flash forward scene in the beginning of episode 509.
Walt “finds” the Ricin in the Roomba and helps Jesse dispose of it, easing his mind, while further manipulating him.) Random Notes:
What next? It was pretty clear that the writers wouldn’t find it dramatically satisfying to put Jesse on a bus to Alaska. Which sets up the inevitable climactic confrontation with Walt. At the end of 511, we see Jesse splash gasoline all over the White household, but the flash forward in Episode 509 reveals no fire damage to the house. Who stops Jesse? The smart money seems to be on Walt, Jr, in a face off between Walt’s real son and his surrogate son that reveals to Flynn just what Mom and Dad have been up to this last year. Does rampaging Jesse give Hank the actual evidence he needs to go after Walt? Let’s not forget about Todd and Uncle Jack moving the meth operation from Arizona to New Mexico. If you’re interested in hearing more about Breaking Bad from the people who made it, check out Kelley Dixon’s awesome Breaking Bad Insider Podcast which features showrunner Vince Gilligan as well as writers, producers, and actors. Five more episodes, and a lot of action in store.
What’s your take? Add your comments about this week’s episode and all things Breaking Bad below. Please follow me on Twitter (avincent52), friend me on Facebook (allen.stjohn), or follow me on Forbes,
Did Walter know Brock would survive?
Could Walt have really known Brock wouldn’t have died? I know Walt tried to justify poisoning Brock by saying he didn’t give him enough and measured it out, but do you think he really knew whether or not it would have killed the kid? I mean whether someone dies from poison depends on their immunity system, not just how much they’re given. Walt, a professional chemist, would have known that. I mean, there’s also the possibility that he wasn’t thinking straight and just assumed Brock would live, but the boy was on life support, meaning he was close to death. He still risked the kid’s life. Plus, i don’t know if i’m the only one, but when Jesse tells Walt Brock lived, he looked somewhat surprised. What do you guys think? Was it by dumb luck that Brock survived? Was Walt really being honest when he said he planned for Brock to be alive, or just saying whatever he could to keep Jesse from burning his money? Plus, the song Walt whistles after hearing Drew Sharp’s disappearance on the news is Lily of the Valley. Clearly I feel like this is meant to show that Walt has stooped so low to Heisenberg that he sees children (besides his own) as expendable. But what do you guys think? (edited by BeholderofStuff) From my point of view, Walter was in a rather desperate situation. In desperate situation, desperate measure. I think Walter actually chose and measured the poison so that Brock did not die. But he also knew that the risk of Brock dying was real, especially if he was not diagnosed in time. Moreover, it is Jesse who immediately directs the doctors towards a poisoning. Perhaps without this, the diagnosis would have been too late. > I mean whether someone dies from poison depends on their immunity system, not just how much they’re given. According to my research, including the ( emergency.cdc.gov/agent/ricin/qa.asp ) and the ( ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/14579547/?i=3&from=/8119491/related ) it doesn’t seem to me that ricin is at all affected by the immune system, other than a very rare natural immunity some people have. So a chemist with half of Walt’s experience (hell one with half a college education) would be able to calculate a non-lethal dose likely just with the weight of the patient. More importantly, it’s pretty intuitive that Brock ate the poison as opposed to other methods of ingestion. This quote is pulled from this breaking bad fandom page for ricin: “Ingesting ricin is much less lethal, requiring on the order of 30-40 mg per kilogram. By ingestion, the pathology of ricin is largely restricted to the gastrointestinal tract where it may cause mucosal injuries; with appropriate treatment, most patients will make a full recovery.” This info is extremely helpful because it’s clear that a non-lethal oral dose of ricin could easily be calculated with a LOT of room for error. However, I may be remembering incorrectly but it wasn’t clear whether Lily of The Valley or ricin was the poison of choice in this situation. While a non-lethal dose of concentrated ricin in this situation may be easy for a chemist to calculate, botanicals complicate things. There are ~40 unique toxins in LotV, and each plant is going to vary in concentration and possibly presence of each of these toxins (think like cbd and thc in weed). Unless Walt did some real work on extracting, identifying and quantifying the toxins in his specific sample of LotV, proper non-lethal dosage calculations would be purely educated guesswork. So if Walt used ricin to poison Brock, there is absolutely no reason to expect Walt to not dose him ‘properly’. Anything else would be sloppy chemistry which is one thing Heisenberg doesn’t do. However if he went for the LotV, it would be very very difficult or maybe impossible for Walt to dose correctly without tons of behind the scenes chemistry going on. IMO it could go either way; if he used LotV then I agree with the sentiment that at that point he saw Brock (thus basically all other children/people other than his loved ones) as expendable consciously. However, if he opted for the ricin, I think that’s more of the same theme of “I’m the greatest chemist of all time I can do anything” so more speaking to his ego as opposed to anything else My say on this is that he knew it was a RELATIVELY common thing to happen to children for eating Lilly of the Valley, a rather bad disease that can be easily treated. He was probably careful enough and (almost) everything went according to plan.
How did Brock eat Lily of the Valley?
Walt ‘snuck’ it into Brock’s juicebox while he was at school, or something of the sort. Gilligan himself stated that it was left up to the imagination of the viewer.
Why did Walt use Lily of the Valley instead of ricin?
His aim is not to kill Brock but to use Jesse’s emotion towards Brock in his favor. Ricin is riskier than Lily of the valley. So he used Lily of the valley and removed the Ricin just to put suspicion on Gus.
Why does Walter sell his car for $50?
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. ‘Dad, are you crazy?’ Walter Jr.
Why did Walter White become so evil?
As much as Breaking Bad tried to say Walter White took a sinister turn due to cancer, his dark journey actually began after an act of kindness. In Breaking Bad, it’s explained that Walter White (Bryan Cranston) began cooking and selling meth and became Heisenberg because of his cancer diagnosis. He needed money so that when he died, he’d leave his wife, Skyler, and their kids with enough to pay for college and continue to live comfortably. But Walt was no murderer, not yet anyway, and he wrestled with his conscience when Krazy came to in the basement, restrained by Jesse’s bike lock around his neck. Jesse made it clear before he left that Walt had to do this because it’s what the business entailed – getting your hands dirty, removing evidence and pushing back against competitors,
Walt bonded with Krazy over the idea of families struggling to earn money, however, even going as far as to feed and share beers with him. In truth, Walt’s empathy kicked in, and he started thinking Krazy was just misguided and deserved a second chance. Sadly, after a sick, coughing Walt passed out and dropped a plate, shattering it to pieces, things took a dark turn.
When he put it back together after trying to throw it in the trash, he realized a shard was missing. He knew Krazy took it, and despite wanting to let the gangster go, he knew he couldn’t trust him anymore. When Walt approached Krazy to open the lock, he called him out right before he planned to strike, which led to a struggle that ended with Walt strangling Krazy to death. This was a huge turning point because, as Walt cried, he was hurt from the fact his kindness spat on. Not only did he take care of Krazy, but he was also going to free him. Had the events played out that way, Walt may never have followed the meth path and become Heisenberg,
Or, even if he did, seeing as Krazy was actually a DEA informant for Hank and Gomez, his empire might have been crushed before it ever took off. Ultimately, killing Krazy and realizing his humanity was a weakness is what played on Walt’s mind. He also saw that Albuquerque deserved a better brand of criminal in the narcotics trade, which had millions ripe for the taking.
The Ending Of Breaking Bad Finally Explained
And so, unafraid of getting caught or the repercussions, Walt did what he needed to do, becoming a criminal and monster to ensure his family would be left rich. KEEP READING: Breaking Bad Already Did F9’s Super-Magnet Stunt – Only MUCH Better
Does Walter get cured?
Lung cancer is a type of cancer caused by abnormal and harmful cell growth in tissues of the lung. The main types of lung cancer are small-cell lung carcinoma (SCLC), also called oat cell cancer, and non-small-cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC). The most common symptoms of lung cancer include coughing, coughing up blood, weight loss, and shortness of breath.
Common treatments include surgery, chemotherapy, and radiotherapy. NSCLC is sometimes treated with surgery, whereas SCLC usually responds better to chemotherapy and radiotherapy. In the premise of Breaking Bad, the protagonist, Walter White, finds out that he is diagnosed with lung cancer, thus culminating the events of him deciding to cook methamphetamine in order to secure his family’s future before he dies.
The cancer also symbolizes Walt’s decaying loss in his life, and contributing to his re-birth from Walter White to Heisenberg. Jesse Pinkman ‘s aunt Ginny also contracted lung cancer and she passed away a few years before the events of Breaking Bad, Due to his experiences with the treatments, Jesse recognizes Walter is undergoing radiation therapy.
After season 2, Walt’s cancer goes into remission for several months, but it returns approximately around the time of season 5’s ” Gliding Over All ” and is confirmed to be back in ” Blood Money ” which takes place over a year after Walt first got diagnosed. While in hiding for six months, Walt’s condition visibly deteriorates despite receiving makeshift chemotherapy from Ed Galbraith,
Walt, who was given two years at best to live, dies almost exactly two years after his diagnosis, albeit of a gunshot wound, not the cancer.
Did Jesse hate Walt at the end?
In the final scenes, Jesse refuses to kill Walter when handed a gun, and being fully aware that Walt was responsible for Jane’s death, he parts ways with him; forgiveness is ambiguous.
Did Jesse forgive Walt at the end?
Nobody can be that forgiving. Walt not killed Jane, poisoned Brock, made Jesse kill Gale, exposed Jesse to the White Supremacist Group and demanded his death (Andrea would never have died if not for this), but also manipulated and lied to him all along, bossing him around, while Jesse cried and said sorry for pointing
Why did Gus scream before he died?
Why did Gus scream when he died? – Who is Gustavo Fring? Gustavo “Gus” Fring, also known as the Chicken Man and the Chilean, is a powerful Chilean-American restaurant entrepreneur and major narcotics distributor who is the main antagonist of the Breaking Bad franchise.
- He runs a drug empire based in Albuquerque, New Mexico and hides his criminal activities behind his businesses.
- What did Gus say before he died? Before he died, Gus said to Don Eladio and the Salamancas, “Before he dies, he will know I buried every one of you”, as well as to Mike, “A bullet to the head would have been far too humane”.
He also warned Don Eladio and the Salamancas, “Agree with me and leave in peace, or fight me and die!”. Gustavo Fring was in love with his business and romantic partner Max Arciniega, whom he co-founded the Los Pollos Hermanos franchise with. The two had been together since Gus’ early years in Chile.
- They ran a drug dealing empire alongside each other and their relationship was often referred to as ‘GusMax’ by fans.
- Gus Fring yelled before he died because he had been poisoned by Hector Salamanca and was trying to prevent himself from dying too quickly.
- He wanted to make sure that no one would think he was still alive.
Earlier, Gus had prevented Mike’s assassination attempt against Hector, so Gus did not want Hector to die yet.
- Walt White had planted a pipe bomb under Hector’s wheelchair, which caused the explosion that left Gus with damaged body parts.
- Walt then reassured Jesse that Gus needed to die regardless.
- Before leaving, Gus revealed that the reason he stopped Mike from killing Hector was because “a bullet to the head would have been far too humane”.
Jesse soon realized that the reason for Walt’s meth cooking was to financially provide for his family after he dies. As Gus was being treated for the poisoning, he yelled in an attempt to slow down the effects. Why doesn t Hector look at Gus? Don Hector “Tio” Salamanca refuses to look at Gus in Breaking Bad because of his long-held grudge against him.
- This feud is further demonstrated when Gus confronts Hector in a room, berating him for supposedly ratting him out to the DEA, and attempting to gloat by demanding that Hector look at him, which Hector refuses to do.
- The motive behind Hector’s refusal is shown to be a mixture of resentment and loyalty towards Eladio, as he had previously stated that Eladio should have killed Gus.
Hector continues to refuse to look at Gus.
Who actually killed Gus?
Breaking Bad’s Gus Fring was able to (briefly) walk away after an explosion in Breaking Bad – but how realistic was Gus’ death scene? The Gus Fring death in Breaking Bad season 4 was via a pipe bomb explosion in the episode, “Face Off.” It resulted in one of the show’s most shocking and memorable moments. What’s strange about Breaking Bad ‘s Gus Fring death scene is how the character briefly walked away after the explosion, though it reflects his tenacity.
Gus was a thorn in Walter White’s side from the start. He was a drug kingpin who controlled the distribution in the Southwestern portion of the country, using his businesses, primarily Los Pollos Hermanos, as fronts for his illegal endeavors. Walt aligned with Gus, producing meth for him at the suggestion of Saul Goodman.
Gus cared more about Walt’s skill and quickly arranged to replace him — something Walt eventually caught wind of. Walt had no choice but to kill Gus, so he cooked up a plan using his rival’s enemy, Hector Salamanca. In Gus’ Breaking Bad callbacks in Better Call Saul, much more is revealed about Gus and Hector’s strained relationship, further contextualizing the last moments shared by the two villains.
Why did Gus hate Hector?
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Don Hector “Tio” Salamanca is one of the two overarching antagonists (alongside Don Eladio ) of the crime drama series Breaking Bad and one of the two secondary antagonists (alongside Howard Hamlin ) of its prequel series Better Call Saul, He is a ruthless, elderly drug lord who serves as the Don of the Salamanca Family and a high-ranking member of The Cartel, serving this role alongside Juan Bolsa under the command of Don Eladio.
An utterly sadistic and depraved crime lord who deeply values his family, Hector would relentlessly abuse and groom many of his nephews into becoming successors for his criminal leadership, moulding them into ruthless killers and cartel distributors whilst also teaching them that family is everything.
In 2003, Hector would end up paralyzed and unable to speak following a stroke caused by poison pills to amplify his medical issue as part of a plan orchestrated by his former subordinate Nacho Varga, Although he would end up wheelchair-bound and unable to verbally communicate for the remainder of his life, Hector would continue to carry a feared reputation and have the family business continued by his equally evil nephews, including Lalo Salamanca.
How did Walt get the ricin cigarette?
UPDATE AUGUST 26: After last night’s episode, there are a lot of questions about Jesse’s desert revelation and how it all fits together, so I updated this post to include that toward the end, to keep it chronological. You can skip to that part here, I’ve noticed that a lot of people come across my blog from googling something like, “How did Walter White poison Brock?” or “What happened to the ricin cigarette?” or “what happened berries Walter Brock” or something similar.
- On the Breaking Bad message boards, questions about these topics still rage.
- While watching the latest episode on Sunday night, some friends were asking the the same questions.
- This storyline definitely has to be one of the most complex–maybe even convoluted–plotlines on the show.
- Some of it is more left to assumption than explicitly shown.
So I thought I’d try to elucidate with my understanding of what happened, start to finish. In episode 407 “Problem Dog,” Walt makes some ricin in the superlab. He gives it to Jesse, who puts it in a “lucky cigarette” that he keeps upside down in his cigarette pack. Walt, his revolver and lily of the valley In episode 412 “End Times,” Walt is despondent and doesn’t know what to do. Gus has just threatened his wife, son, infant daughter and brother-in-law. Walt knows that Gus could be close to turning Jesse against him and that Jesse’s flagging loyalty is the only thing keeping Gus from killing him.
- Since Skyler gave a big chunk of Walt’s drug money to the IRS for the Ted thing, Walt doesn’t have the money to get himself and his family out of town through Saul’s disappeaerer “vacuum guy.” He sits out back behind his house and spins a revolver.
- The first two times, it points at him.
- The third time though, it points to a potted plant, which (we will later come to see) is a lily of the valley plant.
Here is where Walter White gets his idea. A few things to keep in mind from previous scenes and eps: First, Walt saw Brock and Andrea at Jesse’s apartment. He knows to some extent who they are and that Jesse cares about them. Second, Jesse has been carrying around a vial of ricin inside a cigarette for awhile now to (maybe) use on Gus.
- Lastly, Gus has used children before.
- His meth empire used kids like Andrea’s little brother Tomas, and when Jesse gets upset about this, Gus’s people kill Tomas (episode 312 “Half-Measure”).
- So Gus has hurt kids in Andrea’s family before.
- So here’s (my assumption of) Walter’s plan.
- He has Saul deliver the lily of the valley berries to Brock in some way.
This is never shown exactly but probably Walt did something with the berries like made them up into some candy (chemistry skills) or something and had Saul deliver it to the boy. This wouldn’t have been too weird because earlier in Season 4, before Jesse and Andrea got back together, Saul used to deliver money from Jesse to Andrea and had seen and talked to Brock in the past.
- UPDATE: At the 2013 Comic-Con Vince Gilligan explained exactly how he and the writers imagined Walt got the poison to Brock, and it wasn’t, as I had thought, through Saul.
- Instead they pictured Walt as the “Evil Juice Box Man” going into Brock’s school and giving him a juice box that had juice from the poison berries.
And if you’ll look closely at episode 413 “Face Off” (thanks to Greg below for pointing this out), when Walt busts into Saul’s office, Francesca is shredding school schedules. It’s a big spreadsheet of classes and times but there are notes on the side that seem to be one student’s personal schedule, most likely Brock’s. Huell switches it up Then, Walt has Saul, through his bodyguard Huell, remove Jesse’s ricin cigarette by switching out the packs. He removes Jesse’s pack with the cigarette containing the ricin vial and puts in a pack without it. This happens when Huell gives Jesse a pat down after Saul calls him to the office.
Recall that Jesse got many, many urgent messages from Saul demanding that he come in to the office–this was done to get him there so Huell could do the cigarette pack switcharoo–then Saul kinda blows off Huell, as if he knows nothing about it (Saul’s good like that) and tells Jesse that these are “the end times, kid.” Walt has to make sure Jesse’s ricin cigarette is removed so he can convince Jesse that Gus or Tyrus stole the ricin cig to poison Brock.
So then, Jesse gets the call that Brock is in the hospital. He hears Brock has flu-like symptoms that aren’t getting better, which is exactly what Walt told Jesse back in the Tuco days is what would happen to someone with ricin poisoning. Jesse figures out EXACTLY what happened–that Walt poisoned Brock (likely through Saul) and then had Huell remove the ricin cigarette from him. Jesse accuses Walt But then Walt turns it around and convinces Jesse that Gus has done it as an attempt to frame Walt and get Jesse to finally give his consent to kill Walt or to kill Walt himself. Jesse’s refusal to give the okay to kill Walt was the thorn in Gus’s side.
Gus has used children before, he argues, and he swears that he himself would never do such a thing to a child. He convinces Jesse that Gus knew about the ricin cigarette because Gus had cameras on them all the time. Jesse, who on some level loves Walt and thinks of him as a father figure, decides to believe Walt rather than shoot him, and helps Walt to kill Gus.
Afterward, Jesse finds out that Brock wasn’t poisoned with ricin after all, but lily of the valley. He thinks it’s all a coincidence and Walt assures him they still did the right thing in killing Gus. All seems well as Walt relaxes out back behind his house, in a much different state of mind then he was in before.
- In the last frames of Season 4, the camera focuses in on the same plant that Walt’s revolver pointed at in the earlier scene, and its tag, which says “Lily of the Valley.” This is supposed to let us as the audience know that yes, Walt poisoned Brock.
- So why did Walt go to the trouble of doing it with lily of the valley instead of just using ricin? Well, as evil as Walt has become, he doesn’t actually want to murder a kid.
The implication is that if he had actually used ricin, it would have killed Brock but with lily of the valley, it was “touch and go” but Brock pulled through. Also, I think that Walt, true to character, isn’t even thinking far enough ahead to think of what a weird coincidence it could look like.
- All he’s thinking about is survival, about getting Jesse to think Gus poisoned Brock with ricin so Jesse will get back on his side.
- That’s it.
- In season 5, some loose ends still need to be cleaned up.
- The first is that Walt throws out his lily of the valley plant, destroying the evidence.
- Then, in his meeting with Saul, Saul hands the ricin cigarette that Huell lifted from Jesse back to Walt.
Saul also says that he had no idea that Brock would end up in the hospital. It’s never explicitly spelled out but this conversation is what reveals that it probably was somehow through Saul that Brock got the poison, and that Saul didn’t really know what he was actually doing. Walt makes the decoy Then in episode 502 “Madrigal,” we have more loose ends to tie up. One is that Jesse still doesn’t know what happened to his ricin cigarette. He doesn’t have it, he doesn’t know Walt has it and he no longer believes Gus had it, so in his mind it’s MIA.
- Walt tries to convince Jesse that he must’ve lost it in the superlab before they torched it but Jesse doesn’t think so.
- Jesse’s making himself crazy worrying that some innocent person will come across it wherever he lost it and get sick and die because of it.
- Walt says he’ll come over and help Jesse toss the house and find it.
So Walt makes up a dummy ricin cigarette, using salt instead of ricin. He hides the real vial of ricin behind an electrical socket in his bedroom. He then plants the fake cig in Jesse’s Roomba as they are tearing the place apart. We don’t see him do this, but when he offers to help Jesse find it while making a fake one, we assume he’s going to plant it somewhere. Jesse finds the decoy Then Walt pretends not to know what a Roomba is (“What the hell is that thing?”) and convinces Jesse to look inside it. Jesse does and lo and behold there is his “ricin” cigarette. Jesse now believes he made a huge, huge mistake, originally thinking Walt was behind it.
- He almost killed Walt, and now thinks that Walt, or should I say “Mr.
- White” was completely innocent.
- Jesse feels awful and can’t figure out what’s wrong with himself that he would make such a huge “mistake.” It is genius on Walt’s part.
- He has gotten Jesse back to his side.
- He has Jesse doubting his own instincts about what’s going on, feeling like he is instead stupid.
Then Walt comes in as the comforting father figure and talks to him about moving forward, so he gets Jesse on board with cooking meth again. And then in 503 “Hazard Pay,” Walt completes this long con of Jesse by manipulating him into ending things with Andrea, and hence Brock.
How did Walt put the ricin?
We indeed didn’t see him slipping the ricin in. It’s not hard though. All he needed to do was to open a little hole on the Stevia packet, put the ricin in, close the hole back with a little plaster of same color or glue.
How did Gus know there was a bomb under his car?
In Breaking Bad Season 4, Gus was aware that something might be wrong with his car because Walter had told him that he would bomb the car. This was a result of Jesse’s loose lips.
What happened to Brock after Andrea died?
Story highlights – EW imagines the future of ‘Breaking Bad’ characters a decade from now Brock is big into soccer and a straight-A student They envision Skyler in remission after having battled lung cancer EW.com — Believe it or not, some people actually made it out of the Breaking Bad series finale alive.
And even though we won’t get to see their lives unfold, those survivors still have a (potentially) drug-free lifetime ahead of them. So what comes next? If chapter one of their stories involved Heisenberg, lots of desert, and even more drugs, what is chapter two (or three) all about? Here’s how we see the show’s biggest survivors 10 years from now: Badger and Skinny Pete: After burning through almost all of the money that Walt gave them for correctly using laser pointers, Badger and Skinny Pete decided that their drug days were behind them.
Plus, the blue stuff was no longer on the market, so everything else kind of sucked in comparison. After getting clean, Badger took his crazy ideas to Hollywood, where producers thought he was insane, but he found a small comedy team that hired him as a writer.
- He thinks they’re a drama group, but what he doesn’t know won’t hurt him.
- Skinny Pete, after getting clean, replaced drugs with food and now weighs more than 300 lbs but his friends still call him Skinny Pete.
- He moved to Hollywood with Badger and currently works as a bartender at the Hard Rock Cafe.
- He and Badger (and their girlfriends of the moment) share a duplex.
They play video games and order pizza every night. But they now have to order two pizzas because, well, Skinny Pete eats a lot. EW: See full coverage of ‘Breaking Bad’ Brock and Jesse: After Jesse escaped the Nazis, he drove straight to the police station.
- He reported everything, gave the DEA his full cooperation and walked away without ever seeing the inside of a prison cell (blame his puppy eyes).
- And while he was at the police station, he got Badger and Skinny Pete to move his money to a safe location.
- After that was all tied up, he went to see Brock.
Turns out, Andrea’s mom had recently died of a heart attack, so Jesse formally adopted Brock. The duo now lives in Phoenix, where Jesse has his own carpentry business. He spends his days making perfect boxes and so much more. He also sells his drawings on the side.
Brock, meanwhile, is big into soccer and a straight-A student who only ever gets in trouble at school for his over-use of the word “bitch.” His favorite breakfast meal is a Grand Slam. Skyler and Marie : Skyler just recently went into remission after having battled lung cancer. She blames the stress of being married to Walt for her smoking, much like Marie blames her recent shop-lifting adventures on how she still misses Hank.
But all in all, the sisters are doing well. They live together in a beautiful California home. Skyler has taken to swimming in the morning to start off her day, and she spends the rest of it writing (and still drinking a little too much). She’s currently writing her second book, a follow-up to the story of a chemistry teacher who started cooking meth to make money for his family.
- The first one ended with the main characters getting involved with a drug lord, and the second one picks up with a flash-forward to a plane crash.
- She calls the series Breaking Bad.
- It’s growing more popular with each book.
- Meanwhile, Marie is still a nurse.
- She’s finally back to wearing purple, but Skyler has limited the amount of purple in the home to Marie’s individual room.
And hidden in the corner of Marie’s purple room is her very own rock mineral collection. EW: ‘Breaking Bad’ – 10 questions we’ll never see resolved Walt Jr. and Saul: Now living on his own after college (he inherited a ton of money on his 18th birthday), Flynn has taken up residence with his girlfriend in Nebraska, where he works as a lawyer.
- His mentor? Some guy who looks a lot like Saul Goodman.
- Holly : Living in California with mom and Marie, Holly is (not surprisingly) a science prodigy.
- They suspect she’ll go to college on a full-ride by the time she’s 16.
- But whether she’ll use that knowledge for good or bad is yet to be seen.
- Let’s just hope she doesn’t unknowingly buy out of a billion-dollar company for $5,000 and spend the rest of her life regretting it.
After all, everyone keeps talking about how much she reminds them of Walt. She even asks Skyler to cut the crust off of all her sandwiches. Double flash-forward: Holly and Brock team up to create a drug empire! Too much? Huell and Kuby: Kuby finally rescued Huell from the hotel room where he filled him in on a little secret: He had been following the Nazis and knew where all of Walt’s money was stashed.
- So with a few barrels worth of cash in the bank, Huell and Kuby moved to a small island somewhere off the coast of South America.
- They now spend their days doing absolutely nothing.
- And yes, they occasionally take naps on large piles of money.
- Gretchen and Elliott: They gave Walt’s money to Flynn, and now, they keep busy doing what they do best — being rich and therefore throwing elaborate birthday celebrations.
And let’s not forget that Kaylee Ehrmantraut is now an official bada** in training. She wants to be a cop at least to start. See the original story at EW.com.