Posts tagged "breaking bad"


It’s a piece of cake until you get to the top. You find you can’t stop playing the game the way you’ve always played it because it is part of you and you need it as much as an arm or leg … You continue to walk on the edge of the precipice because over the years you have become fascinated by how close to the edge you can walk without losing your balance.

—Richard M. Nixon

It’s a piece of cake until you get to the top. You find you can’t stop playing the game the way you’ve always played it because it is part of you and you need it as much as an arm or leg … You continue to walk on the edge of the precipice because over the years you have become fascinated by how close to the edge you can walk without losing your balance.

—Richard M. Nixon


Is New Zealand part of Australia?

Jesse Pinkman, “Breaking Bad” Ep. 02.12: Phoenix 

Yeah Mr. White! Yeah geography! (This quote = G.O.A.T.)


ABQ

Shows that do cities right.

The Great American Television Dramas of the 21st Century each took on the city in their own way. “The Wire,” most famously, pieced together a Baltimore characterized by multivalency, a blown out, concrete place where nothing is discrete: all the pieces matter. “The Sopranos” deliberately swerved away from the city like Tony does in the opening credits, relocating the mob drama from its inner Manhattan, Little Italy origins to the capillaries of calm suburbia spreading out beyond, permanently removed from, and economically reliant upon a thumping New York heart.

“Mad Men” is also a New York show, and at that a suburban one, but where the drama of The Sopranos occurred in the volatile outdoors — the parkways and Pine Barrens and parking lots, and the café tables outside Satriale’s — Mad Men’s world is an insular one; exterior shots are few and far between, and the characters seem to transition from home to office to restaurant to bar without needing to venture out in to the wider world. There are no shots of skyscrapers or city lights, downtown traffic jams or subway entrances. The entire thing exists in an artificially-lit, hermetically sealed otherworld, one fitting the hyper-reality of protagonist Don Draper’s advertising trade.

In “Breaking Bad,” Albuquerque is an oasis and a mirage. The show’s hero (of sorts), Walter White, lives in a small, flat, indistinct bungalow in a neat suburbia — but it’s a suburb distinguished not by the moneyed grandeur of Tony Soprano’s neighborhood, but in the modest ambition of the American 20th Century pioneer that even a high school teacher should be able to carve out his own free-standing, self-contained refuge from the hurley burley of city life. Walt’s partner-in-crime, Jesse Pinkman, at first lives even farther removed from the urban and the natural environments surrounding him; his neighborhood is characterized by verdant lawns and lush foliage, a pocket of every-America in a mountainous desert state.

The Western was about the arrival of civilization to the frontier, but Breaking Bad is a post-Western; it narrates the return of the savage. The brusque desert is never far from Walt and Jesse’s subdued suburbia; it’s where they cook the meth that makes them rich, in a dilapidated recreational vehicle parked in the flat, alien wasteland off I-40, the trail connecting Albuquerque to the wider Southwest. The scenes shot out here, far from the moderate residential regions, are blankly beautiful: flat yellow prairie, blue sky, and, every now and then, a stretch of red mountain in the distance; a furnace, a cauldron, a place to cook.

The crystal meth they produce out in that moonscape comes back to Albuquerque, and so does the desert. The city can’t keep it out. Walt’s home is decorated in warm earthtones: golds and browns, offset — like the sky above the desert — with brilliant blues. Walt’s brother-in-law Hank, the DEA agent, is even closer to the desert, just like he’s (as far as most people know) even closer to the drug trade: Hank lives in an adobe home, that Southwestern style patterned after the pueblo constructions of the region’s Native Americans. High on a mountain, he looks out over the city, and the desert in which it sits — and where Walt cooks.

The drugs Walt cooks are sold in small pockets of a city where everything is fractured. Albuquerque is a town of crystals — yes, pun intended. In The Wire, everything is linked to something; in Breaking Bad, everywhere is nowhere. A gas station, a seedy motel, a franchise of a fast food chicken chain, a vacant lot, a junkyard, a strip mall legal firm’s storefront, the wide empty streets connecting them: all united only in that all are dissociated. Even Albuquerque’s downtown is squat and modest; the most prominent scenes here take place in the anonymity of a federal government building.

In Breaking Bad, Albuquerque is a city whose triumph is its ordinariness, and its existential threat is the blank amorality of the desert creeping back into town.


I missed it. There was some perfect moment. Then it passed me right by.
Walter White, Breaking Bad, Ep. 03.10: “Fly”

So, serious dramas about straight white dudes are awesome.

You know, those super-critically acclaimed thoughtful ones about men who have a dramatically difficult time negotiating their individual desires with wider society? Those shows are great. Widely discussed for a reason.

Like, yo, I want to see acclaimed drama about folks who aren’t straight or white or men, or for overlooked existing dramas about those other kinds of people to also be acclaimed. But your Sopranosand your Mad Mens and your Breaking Bads are revered with good cause.

But, let’s say you’re a writer on one of these shows. Do you really think it’s a bold and unexpected twist to have, as the show progresses, your protagonist’s seemingly happy marriage dissolve into acrimony? Or is it just in the HBO contract that you have to deliver a divorce before the end of season four?


I truly believe there exists some combination of words — there must exist certain words in a certain specific order that would explain all of this, but with her, I just can’t ever seem to find them.

Walter White, Breaking Bad Ep. 03.10: ”Fly”

Walt conceives of language like a scientist; he thinks if he can figure out the right elements to plug into his formula, he’ll get the reaction he wants. Words aren’t like that though — they’re both more and less powerful — and that’s why I like them. Language is alchemy, not chemistry; if you can just use it right, it can make things happen, ideas unfold, that should never logically occur. But it can fizzle, as well. The right words can be so much less than they ought to be.


I love that Gale on Breaking Bad is a Ron Paul nut. I mean, we already knew he was a libertarian, and it’s hardly a surprise. But still a nice touch.

I love that Gale on Breaking Bad is a Ron Paul nut. I mean, we already knew he was a libertarian, and it’s hardly a surprise. But still a nice touch.


Because Walt is so smart, he’s often right in arguments, but he has this gift for being right in the most abrasive way possible.
Alan Sepinwall, “Review: ‘Breaking Bad’ - ‘Cornered’: I am the one who knocks!What’s Alan Watching? (August 21, 2011)