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  • The (Real) Alternative Storylines to Breaking Bad

    (Warning! The article has *SPOILERS*)


    Are you tired of hearing about it yet? Perhaps, alternatively, you’re craving every last morsel of its related content? There are no parodies here, no fan fiction or anything like that – just real alternative story lines that could have broken Breaking Bad, or, enhanced it.

    Did you know that Vince Gilligan had one of the most morbid and brutal alternative story lines for Season one that it would have changed everything we ever knew about Jesse and Walt Jr.?

    Below, you’ll find the interview that Gilligan did with Entertainment Weekly of how the writers ultimately stuck with what we saw last Sunday. In it, you’ll find that there were many influences and alternative outcomes – with even further closure on the fates of the characters.

    If you were in on the buzz with any Breaking Bad communities, you knew that many predictions were had that didn’t see the light of day, but were very much considered for the actual writers of the series. Gilligan and his writers were sweating bullets to come up with the perfect ending of what would conclude such a powerful series.

    If you’re intimidated by the size of such a large interview, The Wrap has a brief list of other alternative story lines that weren’t mentioned in the discussion below.

    On writing an ending where Walt has a hint of redemption before his death
    “We didn’t feel an absolute need for Walt to expire at the end of the show. Our gut told us it was right. As the writers and I worked through all these different possibilities, it felt right, but I don’t think it was a necessity for us. There was a version we kicked around where Walt is the only one who survives, and he’s standing among the wreckage and his whole family is destroyed. That would be a very powerful ending but very much a kick-in-the-teeth kind of ending for the viewers. We talked about a version where Jesse kills Walt. We talked about a version where Walt more or less gets away with it. There’s no right or wrong way to do this job — it’s just a matter of: You get as many smart people around you as possible in the writers room, and I was very lucky to have that. And when our gut told us we had it, we wrote it, and I guess our gut told us that it would feel satisfying for Walt to at least begin to make amends for his life and for all the sadness and misery wrought upon his family and his friends. Walt is never going to redeem himself. He’s just too far down the road to damnation. But at least he takes a few steps along that path. And I think more importantly for him than that is the fact that he accomplishes what he set out to accomplish way back in the first episode: He leaves his family just a ton of money.  Of course, Walt for years now has been looking through the wrong end of the telescope. … For years now, he thought if he makes his family financially sound — that’s really all he has to do as a man, as a provider, and as a father. They’re going to walk away with just shy of 10 million in cash, because of Walt’s machinations with Gretchen (Jessica Hecht) and Elliott (Adam Godley). But on the other hand, the family emotionally is scarred forever. So it’s a real mixed message at the end. Walt has failed on so many levels, but he has managed to do the one thing he set out to do, which is a victory. He has managed to make his family financially sound in his absence, and that was really the only thing he set out to do in that first episode. So, mission accomplished.”

    On the choice that Jesse lives and gets away
    “We found over the years that the way we can please the majority of the audience most of the time is to tune out as much extraneous factors as possible and please the eight of us in the writers room. If we can make ourselves happy day in and day out, we had a pretty good chance of making most viewers happy as well, and that’s what held us in good stead for six years. With that in mind, all [of us] in the writers room just loved Jesse (Aaron Paul) and we just figured he had gotten in way over his head. When you think of it, he didn’t really have a chance in the early days. Walt said, ‘You either help me cook meth and sell it, or else I’ll turn you in to the DEA.’ So this poor kid, based on a couple of really bad decisions he made early on, has been paying through the nose spiritually and physically and mentally and emotionally. In every which way, he’s just been paying the piper, and we just figured it felt right for him to get away. It would have been such a bummer for us, as the first fans of the show, for Jesse to have to pay with his life ultimately.”

    On Jesse’s current condition
    “We always felt like the viewers desired Jesse to get away. And it’s up to the individual viewer to decide what happens next for Jesse. Some people might think, ‘Well, he probably got two miles down the road before the cops nailed him.’ But I prefer to believe that he got away, and he’s got a long road to recovery ahead, in a sense of being held prisoner in a dungeon for the last six months and being beaten to within an inch of his life and watching Andrea be shot. All these terrible things he’s witnessed are going to scar him as well, but the romantic in me wants to believe that he gets away with it and moves to Alaska and has a peaceful life communing with nature.”

    On the version in which Jesse shoots Walter during their last dialogue together
    “We talked about Jesse taking Walt up on his offer to kill him or Walt turning around to find Jesse had a gun on him. We talked about every permutation we could conceive of, and we went the way we went ultimately because the bloodlust had been satiated prior to that moment by seeing Jesse throttle Todd (Jesse Plemons) to death. That’s what the writers wanted to see. Todd is actually in a weird way kind of likable, but he just had to go. Opie had to go. Ricky Hitler, as we like to call him. I think the whole world is better off without that group of characters. So having satisfied that, it felt to us like, ‘Jesse is not a killer.’ This poor guy has wound up having to kill over and over again. The first time he did it was to save Mr. White as well as himself, and it’s not a natural fit for him, and it’s something that’s stolen a big, important piece of his soul. And we thought to ourselves, ‘You know what? Let it end with Todd. Let that be the last person this kid ever kills. Let him go on from here to have a decent life.’ And also, he’s got reason enough to kill Walt. He’s got reason enough to be murderously angry at him. But he had said a long time ago, in a previous episode, ‘I’m never doing what you tell me to do ever again,’ so when he says no and drops the gun and says, ‘Do it yourself,’ to Mr. White, it’s as much a refusal to do what Walt tells him. He’s just not going to make Walt happy anymore. It’s not about, ‘I’m not still angry enough to murder you.’ Rather, it’s, ‘You want this, and therefore I’m not giving it to you.’”

    On why Walt saved Jesse, instead of following up with his original intention to kill him
    “A lot of astute viewers who know their film history are going to say, ‘It’s the ending to The Searchers.’ And indeed it is. The wonderful western The Searchers has John Wayne looking for Natalie Wood for the entire three-hour length of the movie. She’s been kidnapped by Indians and raised as one of their own, and throughout the whole movie, John Wayne says, ‘I need to put her out of her misery. As soon as I find her, I’m going to kill her.’ The whole movie Jeffrey Hunter is saying, ‘No, we’re not — she’s my blood kin, we’re saving her,’ and he says, ‘We’re killing her.’ And you’re like, ‘Oh my god, John Wayne is a monster and he’s going to do it. You know for the whole movie that this is the major drama between these two characters looking for Natalie Wood. And then at the end of the movie, on impulse, you think he’s riding toward her to shoot her, and instead he sweeps her up off her feet and he carries her away and he says, ‘Let’s go home.’ It just gets me every time — the ending of that movie just chokes you up, it’s wonderful. In the writers room, we said, ‘Hey, what about the Searchers ending?’ So, it’s always a matter of stealing from the best.”

     
    On whether Walt’s death means that he ultimately paid for his sins
    “It’s in the eye of the viewer. Dying is not necessarily paying for one’s sins. I certainly hope it’s not, because the nicest people that have ever lived are going to die eventually. So it could be argued instead that he did get away with it because he never got the cuffs put on him. [There was] the one time with Hank [Dean Norris, in ‘To’Hajiilee’]. But he’s expired before the cops show up. They’re rolling in with the sirens going and the lights flashing and he just doesn’t give a damn. He’s patting his Precious, in Lord of the Rings terms. He’s with the thing he seems to love the most in the world, which is his work and his meth lab and he just doesn’t care about being caught because he knows he’s on the way out. So it could be argued that he pays for his sins at the end or it could just as easily be argued that he gets away with it.”

     
    The decision for making Lydia the ricin target
    “The writers and I all subscribe to the dramatic philosophy of playwright Chekhov, who said that if you establish a gun in Act 1, you better have it get fired at somebody by Act 3. We knew that ricin was still out there and we knew it was hidden behind the wall outlet in the old White house bedroom. I guess we could have let it slide, but we thought to ourselves, ‘The audience has been real good to us, they’ve paid very close attention, [and] we want to reward them by not leaving any loose ends here.’ And also, honestly, the actress who plays Lydia (Laura Fraser) is a wonderful, warm, sweet person but the character of Lydia — we were all champing at the bit to see her get her just desserts much more than Todd even. Todd is so likable; you almost have these ambivalent feelings when he’s being choked to death. But Lydia? We were all of one mind when we were saying, ‘Oh man, she’s got to go.’ So we figured, ‘What’s the best way to do that?’ And we thought somehow she could be there when the M60 goes off, but then we thought, ‘She’d never be around for that kind of stuff.’ She’s just not that person. And then we thought, ‘Can we use the ricin?’ So we were very proud of ourselves when we figured out a way to hang it all together and have her get her just desserts as well. It was very hard-fought, trying to figure out how to plot all this stuff out so that everyone got theirs. Everyone had their final moment in the episode, and it caused a lot of headaches and a lot of stress trying to get all the stuff worked into the final hour of TV [laughs], but I feel real good about it that we did it.”

    The most challenging scene in the finale to pull off
    “Oddly enough, the revenge stuff at the end is — this is an odd way to put it because it’s so violent — but that’s sort of the cherry-on-top stuff, that’s the stuff that the audience needs to see for their own emotional contentment. At the end of the hour, the audience needs to see Walt get revenge against the guys who killed Hank. That’s sort of a necessity, and that stuff was a little more clear-cut. But the most important sequence in the episode for me probably was Walt succeeding at his 62-episode long task, which is leaving money to his family. The sequence with Gretchen and Elliott at their house was the hardest thing of all for the writers and I to figure out. In the previous episode, Saul Goodman (Bob Odenkirk) lays it out for Walt. He gives Walt all the reasons why it’s impossible to leave millions and millions of dollars to his family. He says, ‘You’ll never get it past the cops, and if somehow you manage to get to your family, the cops will find out about it and they’ll seize it because it’s drug money. And if miracle of miracles, you manage to get it past the cops, your family is not going to take it because it’s from you and they hate you. Especially your son, who is primarily the one you’re doing this for, so it’s an impossibility.’ We kept talking about that in the writers room saying, ‘Jesus, Saul’s right on the money, no pun intended. There’s no way for Walt to do this.’ The Gretchen and Elliott scheme is structurally the most important sequence in the episode, when Walt pulls that scam on Gretchen and Elliott and he intimidates them into giving his family money so that it’ll ride past the DEA without the DEA knowing it’s drug money and then it’ll be accepted by Skyler and Walt Jr. as largesse, as charity and not as money from their patriarch. As soon as we figured that out, we were like, ‘Oh my god, let’s go to lunch!’ That’s probably structurally the most important moment of the episode, and the toughest one to crack.”

     
    How he feels about ending the show in its highest peaks of popularity
    “Every story has its running time, and it’s just hard in television to know what that running length should amount to, and I feel very happy and satisfied by the fact that we’re wrapping up now. I can’t even believe that the ratings have increased with each episode — I just think it’s wonderful — and people have asked me, ‘Does it make you want to go on and do a bunch more episodes now?’ Just the opposite. It makes me think, through quite a bit of good luck being involved, we really did pick the right moment to exit the stage, and I feel even more confident of that now than I did before.”

    (Pictures via Breaking Bad’s Facebook Page)

  • Breaking Bad is Over, Here’s How to Cope

    Breaking Bad is Over, Here’s How to Cope

    (Unless you click the links, this article is *SPOILER FREE*)

    It’s over.

    After a long five years, it’s over.

    A series so impactful that it’s considered the best show on television according to the 2014 edition of the Guinness World Records.

    So what next? How do you console yourself after such a long run? After experiencing such a ground breaking series on television, knowing that there probably won’t be another show if its kind for a very long time?

    There are multiple ways to get your final fixes of Breaking Bad, from simplistic practical approaches to outright insane fandom. Below, you’ll see a compiled list of reliving the show by burning copious amounts of money.

    Ways to break the sadness after the Breaking Bad madness.

    Fan Level: Calm.

    • Rejoice in the fact for the spin-off series, Better Call Saul. It’s a prequel, and it’s happening.

    Fan Level: Adequate.

    Fan Level: Huge.

    • Have a lot of unanswered questions? Want to cover all the missed nooks and crannies? Buy the Breaking Bad Collector’s Edition on Blu-Ray on November 26th, 2013 and find out everything.

    • Hang out at Breaking Bad subreddit and discover endless amounts of user-made art and pictures with Aaron Paul. There’s also a ton of Ask Me Anything (AMA) posts made by the actual stars of the show. Check on the bottom right corner of /r/BreakingBad and you’ll see them.

    Fan Level: Die Hard.

         Fan Level: Gale.

    • Bid on the actual props from the show at ScreenBid. Seriously. You can buy the very same bell that Hector Salamanca used throughout the series. The current bid is at $17,500.

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    • When Twin Peaks ended, a lot of people started drinking their coffee “black as midnight on a moonless night”. They still do, even after the series ended back in 1991. Now, you can be part of the underground trend of drinking only chamomile tea with soymilk and Stevia, made popular by Lydia.
    • Watch this video over a million times to send a message:

     

    (Pictures via BetterCallSaul.com, Facebook (1), (2), (3), (4), (5), (6), (7), (8), (9), (10), (11), (12), (13), (14), (15), (16), ScreenBid.Com, CitizenBrick.comAmazon.com (2), TumblrCraigslist)

  • “Joking Bad” is Jimmy Fallon’s Breaking Bad Parody

    Overrated? Epidemic? No. It’s not like it was The Simpsons back in 1990 where 33.6 million viewers watched “Bart Gets an F“; it would probably be absurd by today’s standards to see Walt Jr. on the cover of TIME magazine. In fact, the most house hold viewers that Breaking Bad garnered were 2.58 million for the episode “Box Cutter”. Then again, two decades ago, we watched shows on a 50lb plastic box with our families in the living room. If you still watch television, Jimmy Fallon, host of The Tonight Show, caught up with the Breaking Bad trend (to which he’s so late) and made a 13-minute sketch parody called “Joking Bad”:

    In it, Fallon dresses as Walter White, the main character of Breaking Bad, and is given six months to come up with new material for The Tonight Show, or else he’s fired. He teams up with announcer Steve Higgens, who plays a bastardized version of Jesse Pinkman. The duo goes on a quest to cook up an underground joke manufacturing operation.

    Speaking as a Breaking Bad fan, I was hesitant, because in case you haven’t kept track, there’s been a Breaking Bad parody in every single form, including (but not limited to):

    But yet, much like the addictive qualities of some kind of drug, the parodies do have their charm, including Fallon’s. He actually does a pretty good job with the gestures and serious facial expressions that Bryan Cranston manifests when he’s in character as Walt. There are plenty of cameos from certain stars that I won’t ruin for you here, but their appearances and actions in the sketch were rather comical.

    If you’re not familiar with Breaking Bad, late night talk shows, or other pop cultural references and inside jokes from TV, the parody probably won’t make much sense. But if you’re a Breaking Bad fan that lives and breathes everything Breaking Bad and Breaking Bad related, you’re sure to love this Breaking Bad parody.

    (Picture courtesy of NBC)

     

  • Breaking Bad Unofficial Lego Set

    Breaking Bad Unofficial Lego Set

    You ever just want to relive the fantasy of being a kid even though you’re an adult? How about reenacting your favorite Breaking Bad scenes with this little number; a meth lab play set made with Lego pieces.

    (image) Citizen Brick, a company that specializes in custom Lego designs, created a 500-piece play set called the “SuperLab Playset” which is based off the Emmy-award winning TV show, Breaking Bad. The set is based off a meth lab that was often seen in season three of the show. It includes a three figure set of all your favorite characters like “Chemistry Enthusiast” (Walter White), “World’s Best Grandpa” (Mike Ehrmantraut), and “Chicken Enthusiast”(Gus Fring).  The odd names for the figures are given due to the potentiality of copyright issues; Citizen Brick is not affiliated with AMC or authorized by Lego.

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    Just look how Citizen Brick markets the set, never uttering any words or names that can land the company in hot water:

    “Bummed out that your favorite show is going off the air? Well soothe yourself with the Citizen Brick Superlab Playset. Who knows what fun you’ll cook up with this deluxe set, chock full of realistic details, and three exclusive minifigs! Over 500 parts! Please note: Due to the sheer awesomeness of this building set, please allow added time for delivery. Sets ship approximately 2-3 weeks after time of purchase. This set is a product of Citizen Brick, and is not sponsored, authorized or endorsed by the LEGO Group, owners of the registered LEGO(R) trademark.”

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    Joe Trupia, the founder of Citizen Brick, told ABC news that he wanted to pay homage to what many consider to be one of the greatest television series of all time. Trupia declined to state how many units were sold and said that he was unsure of whether or not he wanted to print more.

    “When an idea crosses our path that seems like a good one, we tend to do that. We think of it as an expression of fan-hood for the show. It’s accelerated fan art.” Trupia told ABC news.

    And with the announcement of the toy, came the diverse voices of Twitter:

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    The play set is currently sold out and sells for $250.

    With only three episodes left of Breaking Bad, how will we BB-fans ever relive the magic?

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    (Picture source: www.citizenbrick.com)