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The episode opens with Jesse getting dressed. The intense focus on mundane routine could indicate that Jesse is focussing on routine to distract himself, which is a common stress reaction.

After the intro, we see Gale asking why Walt has rejected him. Gale points out that Walt used to have respect for him, and Walt is making the excuse that they have different rhythms, which Gale seems willing to accept, until Jesse shows up and proves himself to be obviously very distinct from Walt. Mostly, I just like Walt's bullshit biting him in the ass.

Jesse reveals Hank's condition to Walt. Given that Jesse was glad to see Hank in critical condition, and Jesse's still remaining issues with Walt, it seems like he's enjoying getting to reveal this to Walt, and to hurt him.

And that's where Walt realizes this is his fault, on some level. Marie blames him, which is interesting, because she has the wrong reasons (blaming Hank for knowing who Jesse is because Walt allegedly bought marijuana from him once) but she's still hit on the truth. I wonder if that's why Walt isn't as defensive as he usually gets, even about things that are his fault.

The timelapse of the hospital parking lot gives a good sense of time passing without anything changing. Walt's obsession over the wobbly table in the waiting room very accurately captures the sort of stupid, inconsequential things people focus on in stressful situations.

This breakfast, although a family breakfast, is held in the clinical, impersonal hospital cafeteria setting. It's more of an unsuccessful attempt to be a family, rather than an actual family bond.

When Gus is talking to the cartel boss, he says he didn't order the Cousins to attack a DEA agent, and he has no idea why they would do that, which is technically true. Gus likes to operate at removes, so he has plausible deniability. This contrasts him with Walt, who always gets too personal.

There's a really good bit of show-making when Walt and the remaining Cousin see each other at the hospital. As he recognizes Walt, he pushes himself up, and while his face remains impassive, the heart monitor is going faster and faster until he disconnects it and starts crawling towards Walt.

I just really like the scene of Jesse playing in the lab.

Walt Jr: Everybody knows who Pablo Escobar is, but noon knows who brought him down.
This is when Walt starts thinking about fame again, I think. Also sort of a hilarious metatext in the "good guys don;t get ink like the bad guys do" when Breaking BAd is laregly focussed on the bad guys.

Gus uses the guise of supporting the DEA and Hank's family to come keep an eye on Walt, showing how complete his veneer of respectability is. He also offers a ten thousand dollar reward for information, which he's safe doing, since everyone with info is him or in his pocket.

This episode doesn't really end, it just fades to black over Marie holding hanks hand, and there's a long time where the credits just have hospital noises, and no music. That captures the uncertainty and lack of closure having a family member in the hospital/in a coma entails, and establishes that the remaining Cousin dying didn't really change anything.
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