Celebrate the fan-favorite Breaking Bad by revisiting some of its most memorable scenes
A chemistry teacher diagnosed with inoperable lung cancer begins manufacturing and selling methamphetamine to a former student in order to secure his family’s future. Jesse Pinkman was originally scheduled to be written out of the series in episode 9. During a hiatus caused by the writers’ strike, creator Vince Gilligan, impressed with Aaron Paul’s portrayal of Jesse and the fact that everyone simply loved Paul, decided to bring the character back and give Jesse’s fate to another character in the season one finale. In the opening credits, the letters of the cast and crew’s names are highlighted in green to represent chemical element symbols. However, the “Ch” in Michael Slovis’ name was highlighted in several early episodes, even though Ch is not a chemical element symbol.
Who are you seeing?
In later episodes, only the letter “C” (for Carbon) is highlighted. Walter White: Who are you talking to now? Do you know how much I make a year? Even if I told you, you wouldn’t believe me. Do you know what would happen if I suddenly decided to stop going to work?
I AM in danger
A company big enough to be listed on the NASDAQ goes bankrupt. Disappears. It ceases to exist without me. No, you definitely don’t know who you’re talking to, so let me enlighten you. I’m not in danger, Skyler.
Some guy opens a door and gets shot, and that’s what you think of me?
NO! I’m knocking! The opening credits use chemical symbols from the periodic table as part of the titles: bromine (Br) and barium (Ba) in the title, none for creator Vince Gilligan (except when he gets a V for vanadium), one for the cast and crew. . All episodes were rerun on the cable channel on-demand in some areas without commercials, but with additional scenes that were not included on AMC.
I think I liked it
Edited CollegeHumor Originals: Breaking Bad/Walking Dead Mash-Up (2013). Dead fingers talking while working in a nuclear-free city. I’ve watched it on repeat 7 times and counting.