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  • EADD Moderators: Pissed_and_messed | Shinji Ikari

What's Good On European And African TV v. Baking Bread

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You know we have spoiler tags, right?

Pssshhfft.
 
wtf, no dont do that hex. just wait and be patient because his downfall is coming, so youll get the pleasure of seeing that soon
 
I hope the final episode of Breaking Bad leads into the first episode of Malcolm In The Middle.



Before ending up as a Preparation H commercial.
 
Hahaha.

Tbh I'm surprised walt hasn't tried to bribe hank.
All that money. I'd bribe the shit out of everyone.

I'm surprised he hasn't tried too, but I think he knows Hanks far too self righteous for it to work.
 
Oooh BB just stepped up a notch. The secret is almost well and truly out
 
I once tried to bribe someone in the UK and it went v badly. Bribed a cab driver in Ukraine and some dicks at customs in Morocco but it's de rigueur in both those places.

Anyway, no, I can't see Hank taking a bribe ever. He's completely one-track about it.
 
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Ah well this was an enraged tube train driver and he'd just seen me drawing a big picture on his train. In the circumstances I don't think he was going to radio his control room and tell them he'd just been kidding when he asked for police at the next station in exchange for £20. All I had. :(
 
Vince Gilligan revealed a grim storyline that was dropped, how they invented Mike and the secret of the show's awesome cinematography​

Warning: contains moderate Breaking Bad spoilers; don't read on if you aren't up to speed with last weeks episode 5/10
NSFW:
In one of the busiest sessions of this year's Edinburgh TV festival, Breaking Bad showrunner Vince Gilligan was interviewed by the Guardian's Charlie Brooker on stage, with Laura Fraser, who plays Lydia in the final season, part of an enthusiastic audience. Gilligan is notoriously tight-lipped on spoilers and gave nothing away about how Walter White's journey will end, nor did he reveal much more about the mooted Saul Goodman spin-off, other than to say, "Knock on wood, I have a good feeling about it." Gilligan did, however, reveal a number of BB anecdotes that were tastier than a Los Pollos Hermanos bargain bucket.

1. Jane's story could have been even darker
Brooker showed the clip of Walt watching Jesse's girlfriend Jane choke to death in season two, explaining that it was the point at which he lost all sympathy for the lead character. Gilligan elaborated that it was the only time the network got in touch to express concern about the show's content. "That was the moment AMC and Sony called me up and said, this one makes us nervous. We had a big phone discussion about it." He went on to reveal that his original idea for the storyline had Walt administering a second dose of heroin: "he kills her on purpose". But this version never made it to the script stage - Gilligan was voted down by his writers. "It's that old story, if enough people tell you you're drunk, you need to sit down. I trust my six writers very much. They told me I was drunk at that point."

2. Mike was a hasty add-on
Jane's death was supposed to be covered up by Saul Goodman, but actor Bob Odenkirk was unavailable to film those scenes due to prior commitments: "So very quickly we came up with the character of Mike the cleaner. It was one of those happy accidents."

3. Breaking Bad looks the way it does because TVs are bigger now
The show's distinctive style is inspired by, among others, Sergio Leone, westerns and Akira Kurosawa, but there's a more prosaic reason that it looks the way it does, with those gorgeous wide shots of Albuquerque. "I realised we had the facility to do that with these big TVs we watch now, as opposed to the little tube TVs we had years ago," he said.

4. Hank was 'an asshole jock' until the writers got to know Dean Norris
Gilligan discussed how much Hank has changed since the early episodes. "[Hank] was by design everything that Walt was not, kind of an asshole jock. Once I got to know Dean Norris, I started to realise how complex he is, and some of those facets made their way into the character. He became less of a jerk and more of a well-rounded character."

5. Vince Gilligan is Walter White
Gilligan started to work on the idea for the show after a two-year period of unemployment. "Breaking Bad came out of some issues I was having at the time," he said. "Walter White and I, unfortunately for me, share a lot of similarities. Pre-meth-cooking," he clarified. "Not Heisenberg." But Gilligan is not very good at science. "I never actually took a chemistry course in my life," he said.
Video - Vince Gilligan discusses the risks and challenges of creating a character as dark and difficult as Walter White. He talks of the nervousness of Sony and AMC executives about a scene in which Walt watches a character choke to death without offering assistance, why he is able to accept when his script choices are wrong and why television tends to attract control freaks just like him

This was news to me. Least it will help with withdrawal symptoms:
Is Breaking Bad's Saul Goodman spinoff a good call?Saul Goodman from Breaking Bad may be about to get his own series, but TV spinoffs are notoriously unpredictable. We take a look at the best and worst
 
Still yet to see a single episode of breaking bad.

Top boy tonight :)
I'll stick to English drama series I can relate to but finally the hype of breaking bad is making me curious.
 
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