Hank Discovers Gus's Meth Operation | Breaking Bad (Dean Norris)

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Published 2024-08-11
Hank (Dean Norris) explains to Steven Gomez (Steven Michael Quezada) and ASAC George Merkert that Gus (Giancarlo Esposito) leads a meth operation, revealing Gus's fingerprints from Los Pollos Hermanos match those found in Gale's apartment.

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From Season 4, Episode 07: "Problem Dog"

Breaking Bad follows protagonist Walter White (Bryan Cranston), a chemistry teacher who lives in New Mexico with his wife (Anna Gunn) and teenage son (RJ Mitte) who has cerebral palsy. White is diagnosed with Stage III cancer and given a prognosis of two years left to live. With a new sense of fearlessness based on his medical prognosis, and a desire to secure his family's financial security, White chooses to enter a dangerous world of drugs and crime and ascends to power in the world. The series explores how a fatal diagnosis such as White's releases a typical man from the daily concerns and constraints of normal society and follows his transformation from mild family man to a kingpin of the drug trade.

#BreakingBad #BryanCranston #CrimeCity #WalterWhite #AaronPaul #JessePinkman #JonathanBanks

All Comments (21)
  • @rafaelyuro378
    You gotta admit, this is where Hank shines. His character development took him from just a headstrong agent to an observant and detailed detective.
  • @fascinatedhomie
    Hank connecting dots like a genius is the reason why walt was such a sussy baka
  • @DaScorpionSting
    In an alternate timeline, Walt meets Colonel Sanders himself at a KFC who runs a meth operation.
  • @jessetorres8738
    It's fun rewatching both Breaking Bad & Better Call Saul, but trying to see the series through the point of view of Gus or Hank. Gus spent decades building up the perfect meth empire that was ruined in a little over a year by Walt who got him killed, & Hank worked his way up the DEA trying to bring down a meth empire that ended up being ran by his brother in law Walt who also got him killed.
  • @McLovin0018
    Hank was 100% right the entire time and no one believed him
  • @moixmoix4798
    Do these clips cut the end of the scene on purpose? Isn't there a shot of Hank giving a coy smile after the two dudes raise their eyebrows at the fingerprint evidence?
  • @user-st6en5ts1h
    Of ALL the bad guys , from psycho killers to pistolero tweakers and enforcers who were in Walt’s orbit , nobody was even as remotely as dangerous to him as his brother in law , the cop Hank , was .
  • @ethericdata
    Hank's theory all started from a parts number written on a Los Pollos Hermanos napkin. If the air filtration system was shipped 6 months before, why would Gale still keep that napkin around? If Gale was that much of a hoarder, surely there would be more evidence lying about.
  • @Kwaj
    Little did Gus know that the extra 3% purity wouldn't be worth the headache.
  • @Sciolist
    I smile when I think how far Hank would have gone today with bit of Googlefu. Mercifully he didn't have much hair to pull.
  • @megasean3000
    Hank has the same genius as Walter when it comes to drug enforcement as he does chemistry. They’d have been unstoppable if they worked together.
  • @devileyez78
    One of the best scenes in Breaking Bad. What a show that was
  • @dairebeare7839
    Hank went back for one more thing like columbo at the end
  • @Dio_Corleone
    The fact that the case would've went cold if Walt could've jus kept his goddamned ego in check at family dinner with his in-laws🤣🤣🤣🤣
  • @thesfactor2544
    On first watch I was literally shouting at the screen: “You’re GODDAMN right Hank!!” A bit mistaken on the Gus = Heisenberg part because he didn’t know Walt’s involvement, but overall, only an idiot would not look into his findings.