You're basically doing high bar squats with the bar lower down your back. There is little evidence of strong hip drive, and your knees are still coming forward at the bottom, along with your weight and body shifting forward on many reps. Re-read the relevant sections of SS until it is really clear how to lower yourself in the squat and keep your knees still at the bottom, and use the TUBOW to drill the proper movement pattern.
Getting out of the hole is done by driving up your HIPS, not your chest. Your chest should
stay up while your hips
drive up. This is discussed extensively in the book as well.
Just one technical note regarding the part I bolded above: the term you're looking for is you try to extend your back as much as possible, not flex.
Here too, we can't see many of the important markers such as bar position over your foot or against your shins, toe angle, among other things. And you don't actually do a single rep, which is helpful to see, even when just discussing the set-up. What we can see, however, is that you move the bar about an inch backwards during the set-up, that your weight is a bit forward on your toes, and I'm not convinced you've squeezed your chest up as hard as you can. Each of those things, for their own reason, could lead to a more horizontal back angle than you'd otherwise have.
Post a set of 5,
including your entire set-up, according to the suggestions found
here. We'll have more useful feedback after seeing that.