Mike Ehrmantraut rides in the back of a Los Pollos Hermanos refrigerator truck on a meth delivery run.
Jesse is adamant nothing can connect him to Gale's murder, but when he is asked if he picked up the shell casing from the gun (which could have his fingerprints on it), it is revealed he did not.
When he is further questioned about the murder, Jesse starts to panic due to the memory of it and pays two druggies to kick Walter out of the house.
Walter later laments to Saul Goodman that the meth business is falling apart because no one is acting professionally, and rejects an offer to go into hiding.
[1] During the cold open scene, one of Gus' drug-smuggling trucks is attacked by members of a Mexican drug cartel.
The scene in "Bullet Points" is the first reference to this storyline since the third-season finale "Full Measure", when Mike killed several cartel henchmen who had taken over one of Gus' chemical supply warehouses.
[3] For the scene with Mike waiting inside the refrigeration truck, series creator Vince Gilligan wanted audiences to be able to see his breath so they would know how cold it was.
The idea was that Gale participated in a karaoke booth in Thailand and kept the DVD as a souvenir; Breaking Bad music supervisor Thomas Golubic specifically found someone who could translate the song lyrics into Thai for the video.
[11] It was difficult to shoot because the actors had to display these emotions without overtly expressing them, and the scene had to be reshot a second time as a result.
[12] Jeremy Howard made a guest appearance in "Bullet Points" as Sketchy, a drug addict who speaks non-stop during scenes at Jesse's parties.
[13] Howard was originally only slated to play Sketchy in the Breaking Bad episode "Open House", but Gilligan liked him so much he brought the character back for "Bullet Points".
[14] During one scene, Sketchy walks off-screen and accidentally knocks over several beer bottles, making a loud noise.
[16] Jesse also has his head buzzed, which was actor Aaron Paul's idea because he felt it was appropriate for the inner turmoil his character was experiencing.
[17] Seth Amitin of IGN awarded the episode an 8 out of 10 calling it "a solid building block for future story lines".