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Hector Salamanca pays Nacho Varga's father, Manuel, for use of Manuel's upholstery shop as a front for Hector's drug business. Manuel reluctantly takes the money to avoid retaliation. Nacho plans to ambush Hector but is pulled into a meeting between Hector, Gus Fring, and Juan Bolsa. Juan says Gus' organization will permanently handle cross ...
Breaking Bad episode: Episode no. Season 2 Episode 2: Directed by: Charles Haid: Written by: George Mastras: Featured music "Red Moon" by The Walkmen: Cinematography by: Michael Slovis: Editing by: Skip Macdonald: Original air date: March 15, 2009 () Running time: 48 minutes: Guest appearances; Raymond Cruz as Tuco Salamanca; Tess Harper as ...
Tuco takes Walt and Jesse at gunpoint to a remote desert hideout, where he takes care of his sick uncle Hector Salamanca, a former drug kingpin who is now incapacitated due to a stroke and can only communicate with a bell. Tuco explains that Hank and the DEA have rolled his entire organization.
Margolis was nominated for an Emmy in 2012 for outstanding guest actor in “Breaking Bad” as Hector “Tio” Salamanca, the murderous elderly don who was unable to speak following a stroke.
Juan informs Hector that cartel leader Don Eladio has decreed that the cartel will make the transport of Hector's drugs via Gus's trucks a permanent arrangement. An outraged Hector has a stroke and falls to the ground unconscious. Gus performs first aid while awaiting an ambulance, and succeeds in saving Hector's life, though he remains comatose.
He first appeared as Hector “Tio” Salamanca on Vince Gilligan’s Breaking Bad in March 2009 on the second episode of the second season of the hit AMC drama.
Nacho's attempted murder of Hector Salamanca causes Hector's stroke and disability, and affects the operations of Don Eladio's drug cartel and Gus Fring's plot to take it over. [ 18 ] Gilligan said in January 2018 that Better Call Saul "gets darker this season," [ 19 ] and Odenkirk said that the fourth season would go to "another level."
On AMC's "Breaking Bad," shocking deaths are a byproduct of heading a criminal enterprise. The deaths of murderous characters, like Jack Welker and Tuco Salamanca, came as a relief to some.