breaking-bad

Breaking Bad Stars Arrived To Last Night's Premiere in an RV

Camille Dodero · 07/25/13 01:00PM

Vince Gilligan's exquisitely developed Breaking Bad is so unassailably good that even the show's promotional bonanza is terrific. The premiere is two-and-a-half weeks away and we've already seen a generally endearing Bryan Cranston GQ cover profile, an Aaron Paul late-night "bitch" tribute, and particularly excellent Comic-Con stunt in which Bryan Cranston went incognito in a silicon mask of his own face.

Gabrielle Bluestone · 07/07/13 03:32PM

BETTER. CALL. SAUL. According to Breaking Bad creator Vince Gilligan, a Saul Goodman-centric spinoff is going "full speed ahead." No half-measures, Gilligan, okay?

Just Like Walter White: All the Breaking Bad Copycats

Maggie Lange · 07/05/13 10:04AM

Breaking Bad begins when a high school chemistry teacher finds out that he has a fatal form of cancer and decides to manufacture and sell high-grade meth in order to provide for his family after he passes away. It's about mortality, power, violence, and the insidious methamphetamine market. As it happens, all of these themes are actual real-life themes in actual real-life America.

Tutor with Cancer Busted for Meth Is Like a Real-Life Walter White

Cord Jefferson · 05/23/13 11:20AM

Can't wait until August for the new—and, sadly, final—episodes of Breaking Bad? Then follow the pitfalls of Stephen Doran, a 57-year-old middle school tutor with stage III cancer who was busted this week for allegedly trafficking meth.

Breaking Bad Script Stolen From Bryan Cranston's Car

Taylor Berman · 03/25/13 10:56PM

Depending on how you feel about spoilers, this could be bad news or good: Last December, someone broke into Breaking Bad star Bryan Cranston's car in Albuquerque, where the show is filmed, stealing the actor's bag containing an iPad and a copy of a Breaking Bad script from one of the show's final episodes.

Breaking Bad: Over the Top and Loving It

Rich Juzwiak · 09/03/12 06:15PM

During this season of Breaking Bad, the first half of the show's fifth and final, Walter and Skyler White asked her sister Marie and her DEA agent husband Hank to accept increasingly outlandish (and fraudulent) behavior wholesale. Walter had a fake breakdown in Hank's office so that he could plant a microphone in it. Skyler, meanwhile, freaked out at Marie (in the instantly meme-worthy, "Shut up!" outburst) and then went seemingly catatonic in a pool during Walter's 51st birthday dinner. A cover-up so ridiculous hasn't been devised since Walter's Season 2 "fugue state" nonsense. All these lies have been in service of making the couple appear to be socially acceptable messes, and not the outlaw messes that they actually are.