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8. — Gliding Over All

: Whitman’s poem notes that the voyage is "not life alone," but also includes "death, many deaths I'll sing". This mirrors Walt's legacy: a fortune built entirely on a foundation of corpses. The Final Cliffhanger

: Like the ship in the poem, Walt is "advancing" through nature and space, feeling untouchable in his success. 8. Gliding Over All

The episode opens with the grim aftermath of Mike Ehrmantraut’s death. To secure his empire, Walt must eliminate the ten remaining witnesses in prison who were on Mike’s payroll. In a ruthless display of coordination, Walt hires Jack Welker’s neo-Nazi gang to carry out a series of brutal, simultaneous hits across three different prisons. This sequence, set to the upbeat "Pick Yourself Up," highlights the cold efficiency Walt has adopted as he moves from a desperate survivor to a calculated kingpin. The "Crystal Blue Persuasion" : Whitman’s poem notes that the voyage is

The visual climax of this wealth occurs in a storage unit, where Skyler shows Walt a massive, literal mountain of cash. She asks him a haunting question: "How much is enough?" and "How big does this pile have to be?". Realizing he has achieved more than he ever set out for, Walt finally tells Skyler, "I'm out". The Whitman Connection The episode opens with the grim aftermath of

Breaking Bad Recap, Season 5, Episode 8: “Gliding Over All”

With the witnesses gone and Lydia Rodarte-Quayle providing a global distribution network, Walt enters a period of unprecedented success. A famous montage set to "Crystal Blue Persuasion" depicts months of "gliding"—the meth business becomes a well-oiled machine, and the money pours in at a rate faster than Skyler can launder it.