Breaking Bad: Gus Fring - Man as Corporation - YouTube

Channel: The Take

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There’s something especially chilling about someone who approaches murder
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not as a moral problem, but as a logistical one.
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Here, Breaking Bad’s Gus Fring carefully and deliberately changes into a hazmat suit,
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brutally murders his most faithful associate and then just as calmly washes up.
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Gus’ motivations aren’t passionate, they're purely logical:
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Victor has to die because he was spotted at a crime scene
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and that might compromise Gus’ business interests.
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Gus needs to teach Walter and Jesse a lesson.
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Two birds with one boxcutter.
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[Well?
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Get back to work.]
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If Walt’s evil superpower is chemistry, then Gus’ superpowers are optimization
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and efficiency.
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[Now thank me, and shake my hand.]
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With Gus, Breaking Bad explores the questions, what would it be like if drug dealing
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was treated like any other business --
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and what happens when a person lives his entire life like he's a corporation?
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[Ahh es el businessman, Que bien, que bien.]
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The always professional Gus is the opposite of what we might expect
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when we think "drug dealer."
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So Gus becomes a foil to the other drug dealers we get to know
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in Breaking Bad --
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especially Tuco, Hector and even, Walter.
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[Animals.]
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Tuco Salamanca is driven by impulse.
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[I don't need your punk ass to vouch for me!]
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Every move Gus makes is calculated to pay off.
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[I investigate everyone with whom I do business.
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What careful man wouldn't?]
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Tuco controls his minions with fear and erratic rage.
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Gus reads people and manipulates them with just the right type
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of positive reinforcement.
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[3 million dollars for 3 months of your time.]
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His phrasing here gratifies Walt’s ego, by emphasizing how important he is,
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how valuable his time is.
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[What -- what was the offer, if I may ask?]
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[It’s, uh, 3 million, for three months of my time.]
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Hector Salamanca is an old-school drug dealer governed by rules like blood for blood
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and family before everything.
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[La familia es todo.]
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But Gus recognizes these kind of principles as ineffective.
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[This is what comes of blood for blood, Hector.
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Sangre por Sangre.]
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The only family Gus seems to care about are his employees,
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[Those men outside are my trusted employees.]
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and even then, still only up to the point that they help his businesses
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and aren’t a liability.
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Like Tuco, Hector solves problems by threatening his rivals.
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But Gus, even when baited, remains
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completely professional, composed
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[Adding more product will threaten the reliability of the entire operation.]
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and doesn’t reveal himself.
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Hector and Gus are set up as life-long foes in Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul
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because, in addition to their bad blood, they’re existential opposites --
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each seems offended by the other’s very nature
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and can’t abide his way of operating in the drug business.
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Walter, with his scientific and reasoned approach,
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is more similar to Gus, or so he’d like to think.
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[I was told that the man I would be meeting with
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is very careful.
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A cautious man.
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I believe we’re alike in that way.]
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But Gus knows better.
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[I don’t think we’re alike at all, Mr. White.]
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The key difference between Walt and Gus is ego.
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Walt secretly really wants people to see that he's finally rich and powerful.
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Gus never flaunts his wealth or power.
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[You are a wealthy man now.
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And one must learn to be rich.
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To be poor, anyone can manage.]
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And Gus sees the value in keeping up humble appearances.
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After all the idiots and maniacs we’ve seen,
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it’s refreshing when we meet Gus,
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[Can I help you, sir?]
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and witness his rejection of old-school thuggishness
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in favor of a more reasonable, corporate management style.
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After all, we the viewers are rooting for Walt and Jesse's hardy little start up,
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so it’s a relief to see it safe for a time under the wing of a capable parent company.
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[Your new lab.]
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In our American context, this feels like success.
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But over time, Gus’ character also leads us to question --
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how is drug dealing different from other businesses?
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And is a corporate mindset applied to crime actually scarier than the old-fashioned ways?
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[I need 200 pounds per week to make this economically viable.]
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In Gus's mind, meth is a commodity, no different
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from the chicken he sells.
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He discusses his operation only in the vocabulary of business.
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[How much product do you have on hand?]
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[I have always done business with certain local manufacturers.]
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[I don’t believe fear to be an effective motivator,
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I want investment.]
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Professor David Pierson examines the connection between Gus’ business tactics
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and neoliberalism.
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Neoliberalism prioritizes a free market --
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the idea is that the less involvement the government has in the market,
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the better it is for the economy and for the consumer.
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Pierson points out that for neoliberals, crime is an inevitable part of society
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and it can even be a totally rational choice.
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In neoliberal thought a criminal is, quote,
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“a rational economic actor who contemplates and calculates the risks of his actions.”
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And who embodies this rational criminal if not Gus,
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whose every action is dictated not by emotion, but by opportunity.
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Furthermore, Pierson points out that methamphetamine is just one drug
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among a class of “performance enhancer” substances,
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that “have become both the fuel
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and the product for the neoliberal fetish for productivity.”
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Most products in this class are legal, like caffeine, energy drinks, steroids,
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Viagra, and prescribed Adderall --
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which by the way is very close to meth chemically.
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But looking at this list, it's clear that meth
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is hardly the only product that's highly profitable and desired,
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while also being harmful to consumers.
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And if you think about it, how different is a typical large company
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from Gus’ drug empire in terms of the collateral damage it causes?
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Even if most major global corporations don’t trade drugs that directly kill people,
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many cut corners in ways that damage lives and the planet.
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[It's basic, simple money-laundering, and HSBC had its hand right in the middle
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of it.]
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[Drug cartels themselves, yeah, you know, in their own words,
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it is the place to bank.]
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Look at it this way: Gus sells two things --
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one is a popular consumer product that is targeted at low income populations
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and with long-term consumption can contribute to disease and death;
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the other is methamphetamine.
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[One taste and you'll know.]
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So, through Gus, the show communicates that, if the first priority is always profit,
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consumer well-being will always come second, and so will employee well-being
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for that matter.
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By showing us this fearsome drug dealer businessman,
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Breaking Bad points out that the ruthlessness,
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immorality and harm we associate with crime
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are less connected to the “drugs” part
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than to the “business” part of Gus’ operation.
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[Pollos Hermanos, where something delicious is always cooking.]
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So with Gus, Breaking Bad shows the dangers of the capitalist model,
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which does undeniably, like Gus, appear so attractive for a while.
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Some argue that Gus's inspiration for building his drug empire
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was to avenge the death of his partner Maximino.
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Gus certainly is fixated on torturing the person who killed his partner --
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Hector Salamanca.
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And Gus embodies the maxim that revenge is a dish best served cold --
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by waiting and crafting the perfect plan, he maximizes his enemies’ suffering.
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[Don Eladio, Don Paco, Cesar, Reynaldo, Ortuno, Cisco, and Luis.
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Escalara.
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All dead.]
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The cold, burning hatred deep inside Gus,
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this desire to settle scores that partially drives him,
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may be a commentary on what’s emotionally driving
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the ultra-ambitious leaders of corporations, too.
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This clip from the show Billions supports a similar idea.
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[Hate is nature's most perfect energy source.
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It's endlessly renewable.]
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Yet the show doesn’t fully resolve the mystery of whether this controlled,
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festering hate causes Gus’ need to succeed,
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or if he’s already programmed to seek corporate success,
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and the vengeance motive is simply extra fuel.
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Gus was set on selling meth before Maximino’s death,
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[This product is the drug of the future.]
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and if his only priority were vengeance
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he could have had that cold satisfaction a lot earlier.
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He poisons all of Don Eladio’s associates only when the timing is right --
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when can’t afford to work with them anymore because the cartel’s animosity toward him
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combined with Hank's suspicions might result in him being found out.
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Thus the primary motive in this takeover isn't revenge, but growth --
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the goal every corporation reaches for above all,
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no matter the cost.
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In a competition-based marketplace, a business is considered healthy
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only when it’s constantly growing, overcoming competitors
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and claiming new territories.
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[I have a very large investment in this.
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There's so much overhead
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that I can't afford to shut down.
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Not even for a week.]
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Clearly, more crystal meth is worse for society,
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so growth in Gus’ case is a negative for public health.
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But the same can be said of many corporations who are so set on growing
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that they have no concern for public health, for the environment,
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or for whether the world actually needs more of their product.
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With Gus’ growth mentality, Breaking Bad is subtly questioning the values
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underlying capitalism itself.
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Gus’ dual nature as a person is also a commentary
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on the split between the outward faces of corporations
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and their true inner operations and intentions.
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On the surface, Gus is a benevolent philanthropist
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and a model citizen.
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[Gus Fring is a pillar of our local business community.]
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He provides jobs and security for hundreds of people.
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[My friends, I promise you that together we will prosper.]
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But the bottom line with Gus is always what’s best for business,
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[I hide in plain sight, same as you.]
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and the show highlights the dissonance between his warm public persona
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and his cold private mind.
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[A DEA hero should never have to pay for a meal at Pollos Hermanos.]
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To convey this duality, Giancarlo Esposito plays Gus with small, disconcerting incongruities
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in his speech and physicality.
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Gus smiles often, but his smile doesn’t reach his eyes.
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[Do it.]
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Gus’ warm and cordial exterior reminds us of companies’ consumer-friendly
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speak
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in their advertising and PR campaigns,
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but that down-to-earth rhetoric is often at odds
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with their coldly profit-driven agendas.
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[Yes, the old ways are still best at Los Pollos Hermanos.]
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Ultimately, Gus’ two faces are capitalism’s two faces.
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At first, we’re fascinated by Gus and we see a lot of the positive face --
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there’s his focus on and achievement of success,
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his somewhat self-made nature,
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his discipline, his meticulous organization, and his amazing work ethic.
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But over time, we see more of the negative face,
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the lethal, cold, inhuman bottom line.
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[I will kill your wife.
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I will kill your son.
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I will kill your infant daughter.]
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By the end, Breaking Bad shows the ugly truths of the capitalist mentality
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through Gus’ character.
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It reveals the destructiveness of the “winner-take-all”
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growth-obsessed mindset -- a mindset that can be traced
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to many of our crises in recent decades -- the dot com bubble,
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the financial crashes of 2008, the Facebook data scandal.
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And when it comes to drugs, today’s opioid epidemic was largely brought
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on
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by the corporate pushing of oxycodone for huge profits --
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the founding of corporate drug empires that are somehow legal.
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In the moment of Gus’ death, his two faces become literal.
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And his final gesture is to straighten his tie,
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a detail which perfectly captures who he’s become.
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In his last moments on Earth, Gus isn’t thinking about loved ones
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or seeing his life flash before his eyes -- he's just correcting his outer presentation.
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There’s a hollowness in this final gesture that tells us the man inside him is gone.
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Only the capitalist is left, driven to the end by appearances
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and effectiveness --
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an empty husk of a man wearing an impeccable suit.
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[If you have a complaint, I suggest you submit it through our email
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