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Breaking Bad on AMC (1 Viewer)

An 8 episode season seems weird.
Walking Dead was only 6 episodes the first season
And first season of Breaking Bad was only 7.
And the last half of the sixth and final season of The Sopranos was only 9 episodes.(They should have stopped after season 5.)
I hope we don't say the same thing for Breaking Bad after next season. I just can't see next season coming close to being as intriguing as this season. I just can't see myself enjoying the show as much without Gus. I know there are a couple of loose ends to tie up, but I have a feeling season 5 is going to feel forced. Had they finished up a couple more story lines they could have tied a nice bow on season 4 and gone out as the greatest series of all time. Hope I am wrong.
Gus will be back next year in flashbacks, similar to Gale
Yes I figured as much but it just won't be the same. Do you see the possiblity of a huge fail with a season 5 or do you have faith in Gilligan and his team? I guess I should have more faith.
I would be surprised if the show took a huge fall. Anything's possible but I would bet against it. This isn't like Sopranos where the show just got worse and worse and they mailed it in. In fact I would think the show will get even better since it seems like Gilligan wants to go out on a bang instead of the mistake he learned with X files.Also said they have no idea how AMC is going to run the last 16, could be all together or split up into two 8 blocks with end of 8th episode a cliff hanger episode.Believe it starts back up Summer 2012
 
An 8 episode season seems weird.
Walking Dead was only 6 episodes the first season
And first season of Breaking Bad was only 7.
And the last half of the sixth and final season of The Sopranos was only 9 episodes.(They should have stopped after season 5.)
I hope we don't say the same thing for Breaking Bad after next season. I just can't see next season coming close to being as intriguing as this season. I just can't see myself enjoying the show as much without Gus. I know there are a couple of loose ends to tie up, but I have a feeling season 5 is going to feel forced. Had they finished up a couple more story lines they could have tied a nice bow on season 4 and gone out as the greatest series of all time. Hope I am wrong.
Gus will be back next year in flashbacks, similar to Gale
...after The Wire. as great as BB is, and as much as I love it... The Wire is still the Holy Grail. IMO.
Different shows so tough to rate one over the other but I would say BB will go down as a better overall show. I rank it higher than Wire and I loved the Wire.
 
An 8 episode season seems weird.
Walking Dead was only 6 episodes the first season
And first season of Breaking Bad was only 7.
And the last half of the sixth and final season of The Sopranos was only 9 episodes.(They should have stopped after season 5.)
I hope we don't say the same thing for Breaking Bad after next season. I just can't see next season coming close to being as intriguing as this season. I just can't see myself enjoying the show as much without Gus. I know there are a couple of loose ends to tie up, but I have a feeling season 5 is going to feel forced. Had they finished up a couple more story lines they could have tied a nice bow on season 4 and gone out as the greatest series of all time. Hope I am wrong.
Gus will be back next year in flashbacks, similar to Gale
...after The Wire. as great as BB is, and as much as I love it... The Wire is still the Holy Grail. IMO.
Different shows so tough to rate one over the other but I would say BB will go down as a better overall show. I rank it higher than Wire and I loved the Wire.
there is a case to be made... But the Wire (imo) No flaws... drama at it's finest.

 
An 8 episode season seems weird.
Walking Dead was only 6 episodes the first season
And first season of Breaking Bad was only 7.
And the last half of the sixth and final season of The Sopranos was only 9 episodes.(They should have stopped after season 5.)
I hope we don't say the same thing for Breaking Bad after next season. I just can't see next season coming close to being as intriguing as this season. I just can't see myself enjoying the show as much without Gus. I know there are a couple of loose ends to tie up, but I have a feeling season 5 is going to feel forced. Had they finished up a couple more story lines they could have tied a nice bow on season 4 and gone out as the greatest series of all time. Hope I am wrong.
Gus will be back next year in flashbacks, similar to Gale
...after The Wire. as great as BB is, and as much as I love it... The Wire is still the Holy Grail. IMO.
Different shows so tough to rate one over the other but I would say BB will go down as a better overall show. I rank it higher than Wire and I loved the Wire.
there is a case to be made... But the Wire (imo) No flaws... drama at it's finest.
I view the Wire as different shows each year (education, drug war, newspaper,), they stand on their own and see them as different shows (McNulty wasn't even in one season I believe) whereas BB is a show that you need to watch from start to finish. Not knocking Wire at all.
 
On a sidenote, how does Cranston compare with other actors who had a lead role in a hit comedy and then went on to a lead role in a hit drama?

Cranston (Malcolm In The Middle/Breaking Bad)

Buddy Ebsen: (Beverley Hillbillies/Barnaby Jones)

Larry Hagman: (I Dream Of Jeannie/Dallas).

I didn't count Andy Griffith or Carroll O'Connor because they seemed to be playing dramatic versions of their previous characters.

Cranston and Hagman are close, I think.

 
Has anyone compared Breaking Bad to The Wire yet?
Think the consensus was The Wire and BB were very close up until this past season of BB. There was a five week run where BB challenged anything ever filmed. Season four of The Wire is marvelous but this past season of BB surpassed it. IMO this past season of BB is tops with season four of The Wire the second best season of television ever. Overall BB the best ever with The Wire a close second.
 
Has anyone compared Breaking Bad to The Wire yet?
Think the consensus was The Wire and BB were very close up until this past season of BB. There was a five week run where BB challenged anything ever filmed. Season four of The Wire is marvelous but this past season of BB surpassed it. IMO this past season of BB is tops with season four of The Wire the second best season of television ever. Overall BB the best ever with The Wire a close second.
The Wire is superior in almost every way. Much better character development, you get to know several characters over several seasons and there is a lot of people to root for and against. Breaking Bad was one main character, a couple of secondary characters and then a lot of characters who never really broke through. Gus was probably the most intriguing character but Mike was a guy that we probably could have known better while Skylar is someone we really knew too much about. The writing and story telling in the Wire is unmatched, it was synthesized to the degree that you felt compelled to be involved in the story. The Wire is also a lot less far-fetched, in fact it was almost never far fetched. The Wire's only real reach was the serial killer angle which failed badly but Breaking Bad had the airplane and the body parts in the pool, Walt running the drug dealers down out of no where, Gus sensing a bomb on his car and brainless Gus adjusting his tie. Breaking Bad has more imagination but it also lacked realism at times but that is what 2011 television does best I guess. Yeah it was great, yeah it is the best show on TV right now and yes it is as well shot as any show ever...but it lags behind the Wire IMO. Better than the Sopranos? That might be a better conversation. Related more to whitey? Sure, a lot of people still miss some of the nuances in the Wire which hurt its mainstream appeal and also made the critics pass it over when it should have swept everything at the awards shows. This last season though can definitely compete with anything, ever, as far as being just brilliant TV. Had every season been that complete I think there might be an argument for it being as good or better than the Wire. But the Wire resonates like Breaking Bad never will, the social and economic implications alone make it as well-thought and presented as any information in any medium. Like Shakespeare maybe, something profound and complex to the degree it is a living thing onto itself.
 
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Has anyone compared Breaking Bad to The Wire yet?
Think the consensus was The Wire and BB were very close up until this past season of BB. There was a five week run where BB challenged anything ever filmed. Season four of The Wire is marvelous but this past season of BB surpassed it. IMO this past season of BB is tops with season four of The Wire the second best season of television ever. Overall BB the best ever with The Wire a close second.
The Wire is superior in almost every way. Much better character development, you get to know several characters over several seasons and there is a lot of people to root for and against. Breaking Bad was one main character, a couple of secondary characters and then a lot of characters who never really broke through. Gus was probably the most intriguing character but Mike was a guy that we probably could have known better while Skylar is someone we really knew too much about. The writing and story telling in the Wire is unmatched, it was synthesized to the degree that you felt compelled to be involved in the story. The Wire is also a lot less far-fetched, in fact it was almost never far fetched. The Wire's only real reach was the serial killer angle which failed badly but Breaking Bad had the airplane and the body parts in the pool, Walt running the drug dealers down out of no where, Gus sensing a bomb on his car and brainless Gus adjusting his tie. Breaking Bad has more imagination but it also lacked realism at times but that is what 2011 television does best I guess. Yeah it was great, yeah it is the best show on TV right now and yes it is as well shot as any show ever...but it lags behind the Wire IMO. Better than the Sopranos? That might be a better conversation. Related more to whitey? Sure, a lot of people still miss some of the nuances in the Wire which hurt its mainstream appeal and also made the critics pass it over when it should have swept everything at the awards shows. This last season though can definitely compete with anything, ever, as far as being just brilliant TV. Had every season been that complete I think there might be an argument for it being as good or better than the Wire. But the Wire resonates like Breaking Bad never will, the social and economic implications alone make it as well-thought and presented as any information in any medium. Like Shakespeare maybe, something profound and complex to the degree it is a living thing onto itself.
I love The Wire. Amazing in a PC age that show did not clean up. It's very close which one is my fav. If The Wire was the best show ever we would have a 20 page thread saying so. We don't. We have a 20 page thread saying BB is the tops. The Wire is tremendous but BB is much more accesible and therefore since it's so close between the two it's actually not close. BB is the best show ever.
 
I love The Wire. Amazing in a PC age that show did not clean up. It's very close which one is my fav. If The Wire was the best show ever we would have a 20 page thread saying so. We don't. We have a 20 page thread saying BB is the tops. The Wire is tremendous but BB is much more accesible and therefore since it's so close between the two it's actually not close. BB is the best show ever.
For a show that ended 4+ years ago (and began a decade ago) its thread still gets plenty of heat.ETA: If we're going by FFA post count, though, that puts the Sopranos as the best show of all-time.

 
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I would be surprised if the show took a huge fall. Anything's possible but I would bet against it. This isn't like Sopranos where the show just got worse and worse and they mailed it in. In fact I would think the show will get even better since it seems like Gilligan wants to go out on a bang instead of the mistake he learned with X files.
I never watched the X Files. What was the mistake?
 
What's great about Breaking Bad being on Sunday nights is that I usually have a full day's beer in me after watching football so I watch it Sunday night, love it, then wake up not remembering half of it. Watch it again sober on Tuesday and love it again.

 
Has anyone compared Breaking Bad to The Wire yet?
Think the consensus was The Wire and BB were very close up until this past season of BB. There was a five week run where BB challenged anything ever filmed. Season four of The Wire is marvelous but this past season of BB surpassed it. IMO this past season of BB is tops with season four of The Wire the second best season of television ever. Overall BB the best ever with The Wire a close second.
The Wire is superior in almost every way. Much better character development, you get to know several characters over several seasons and there is a lot of people to root for and against. Breaking Bad was one main character, a couple of secondary characters and then a lot of characters who never really broke through. Gus was probably the most intriguing character but Mike was a guy that we probably could have known better while Skylar is someone we really knew too much about. The writing and story telling in the Wire is unmatched, it was synthesized to the degree that you felt compelled to be involved in the story. The Wire is also a lot less far-fetched, in fact it was almost never far fetched. The Wire's only real reach was the serial killer angle which failed badly but Breaking Bad had the airplane and the body parts in the pool, Walt running the drug dealers down out of no where, Gus sensing a bomb on his car and brainless Gus adjusting his tie. Breaking Bad has more imagination but it also lacked realism at times but that is what 2011 television does best I guess. Yeah it was great, yeah it is the best show on TV right now and yes it is as well shot as any show ever...but it lags behind the Wire IMO. Better than the Sopranos? That might be a better conversation. Related more to whitey? Sure, a lot of people still miss some of the nuances in the Wire which hurt its mainstream appeal and also made the critics pass it over when it should have swept everything at the awards shows.

This last season though can definitely compete with anything, ever, as far as being just brilliant TV. Had every season been that complete I think there might be an argument for it being as good or better than the Wire. But the Wire resonates like Breaking Bad never will, the social and economic implications alone make it as well-thought and presented as any information in any medium. Like Shakespeare maybe, something profound and complex to the degree it is a living thing onto itself.
I love The Wire. Amazing in a PC age that show did not clean up. It's very close which one is my fav. If The Wire was the best show ever we would have a 20 page thread saying so. We don't. We have a 20 page thread saying BB is the tops. The Wire is tremendous but BB is much more accessible and therefore since it's so close between the two it's actually not close. BB is the best show ever.
1. I contribute to this 20 page thread quite a bit, I love Breaking Bad, and I think Cranston's performance is easily one of the more amazing acting performances I've ever seen. And I think The Wire is the better show overall and it's not close.2. Accessibility is a silly criteria. I assume that's self-evident.

And most importantly ...

3. Regarding the bolded, you are absolutely correct. We don't have a 20 page thread about it. We have a 45 page thread.

But other than that, great argument.

 
I would be surprised if the show took a huge fall. Anything's possible but I would bet against it. This isn't like Sopranos where the show just got worse and worse and they mailed it in. In fact I would think the show will get even better since it seems like Gilligan wants to go out on a bang instead of the mistake he learned with X files.
I never watched the X Files. What was the mistake?
The first seasons of x-files were really good - then it got dumb. The central theme for the x-files was Mulder trying to find out what happened to his sister Samantha who was abducted by aliens and how much the government knew.
 
On a sidenote, how does Cranston compare with other actors who had a lead role in a hit comedy and then went on to a lead role in a hit drama?Cranston (Malcolm In The Middle/Breaking Bad)Buddy Ebsen: (Beverley Hillbillies/Barnaby Jones)Larry Hagman: (I Dream Of Jeannie/Dallas).I didn't count Andy Griffith or Carroll O'Connor because they seemed to be playing dramatic versions of their previous characters.Cranston and Hagman are close, I think.
Was The Commish a slight comedy? I can't remember but in terms of an actor in a hit show who was completely different I would have to say Michael Chiklis as Vic Mackey in The Shield should be on the list.
 
I would be surprised if the show took a huge fall. Anything's possible but I would bet against it. This isn't like Sopranos where the show just got worse and worse and they mailed it in. In fact I would think the show will get even better since it seems like Gilligan wants to go out on a bang instead of the mistake he learned with X files.
I never watched the X Files. What was the mistake?
Gilligan said it went too many years.
 
Has anyone compared Breaking Bad to The Wire yet?
Think the consensus was The Wire and BB were very close up until this past season of BB. There was a five week run where BB challenged anything ever filmed. Season four of The Wire is marvelous but this past season of BB surpassed it. IMO this past season of BB is tops with season four of The Wire the second best season of television ever. Overall BB the best ever with The Wire a close second.
The Wire is superior in almost every way. Much better character development, you get to know several characters over several seasons and there is a lot of people to root for and against. Breaking Bad was one main character, a couple of secondary characters and then a lot of characters who never really broke through. Gus was probably the most intriguing character but Mike was a guy that we probably could have known better while Skylar is someone we really knew too much about. The writing and story telling in the Wire is unmatched, it was synthesized to the degree that you felt compelled to be involved in the story. The Wire is also a lot less far-fetched, in fact it was almost never far fetched. The Wire's only real reach was the serial killer angle which failed badly but Breaking Bad had the airplane and the body parts in the pool, Walt running the drug dealers down out of no where, Gus sensing a bomb on his car and brainless Gus adjusting his tie. Breaking Bad has more imagination but it also lacked realism at times but that is what 2011 television does best I guess. Yeah it was great, yeah it is the best show on TV right now and yes it is as well shot as any show ever...but it lags behind the Wire IMO. Better than the Sopranos? That might be a better conversation. Related more to whitey? Sure, a lot of people still miss some of the nuances in the Wire which hurt its mainstream appeal and also made the critics pass it over when it should have swept everything at the awards shows.

This last season though can definitely compete with anything, ever, as far as being just brilliant TV. Had every season been that complete I think there might be an argument for it being as good or better than the Wire. But the Wire resonates like Breaking Bad never will, the social and economic implications alone make it as well-thought and presented as any information in any medium. Like Shakespeare maybe, something profound and complex to the degree it is a living thing onto itself.
I love The Wire. Amazing in a PC age that show did not clean up. It's very close which one is my fav. If The Wire was the best show ever we would have a 20 page thread saying so. We don't. We have a 20 page thread saying BB is the tops. The Wire is tremendous but BB is much more accessible and therefore since it's so close between the two it's actually not close. BB is the best show ever.
1. I contribute to this 20 page thread quite a bit, I love Breaking Bad, and I think Cranston's performance is easily one of the more amazing acting performances I've ever seen. And I think The Wire is the better show overall and it's not close.2. Accessibility is a silly criteria. I assume that's self-evident.

And most importantly ...

3. Regarding the bolded, you are absolutely correct. We don't have a 20 page thread about it. We have a 45 page thread.

But other than that, great argument.
The wire thread was only 25 pages when the series ended, this thread is at 69 and still has another full season left - I think that says a lot.
 
Has anyone compared Breaking Bad to The Wire yet?
Think the consensus was The Wire and BB were very close up until this past season of BB. There was a five week run where BB challenged anything ever filmed. Season four of The Wire is marvelous but this past season of BB surpassed it. IMO this past season of BB is tops with season four of The Wire the second best season of television ever. Overall BB the best ever with The Wire a close second.
The Wire is superior in almost every way. Much better character development, you get to know several characters over several seasons and there is a lot of people to root for and against. Breaking Bad was one main character, a couple of secondary characters and then a lot of characters who never really broke through. Gus was probably the most intriguing character but Mike was a guy that we probably could have known better while Skylar is someone we really knew too much about. The writing and story telling in the Wire is unmatched, it was synthesized to the degree that you felt compelled to be involved in the story. The Wire is also a lot less far-fetched, in fact it was almost never far fetched. The Wire's only real reach was the serial killer angle which failed badly but Breaking Bad had the airplane and the body parts in the pool, Walt running the drug dealers down out of no where, Gus sensing a bomb on his car and brainless Gus adjusting his tie. Breaking Bad has more imagination but it also lacked realism at times but that is what 2011 television does best I guess. Yeah it was great, yeah it is the best show on TV right now and yes it is as well shot as any show ever...but it lags behind the Wire IMO. Better than the Sopranos? That might be a better conversation. Related more to whitey? Sure, a lot of people still miss some of the nuances in the Wire which hurt its mainstream appeal and also made the critics pass it over when it should have swept everything at the awards shows.

This last season though can definitely compete with anything, ever, as far as being just brilliant TV. Had every season been that complete I think there might be an argument for it being as good or better than the Wire. But the Wire resonates like Breaking Bad never will, the social and economic implications alone make it as well-thought and presented as any information in any medium. Like Shakespeare maybe, something profound and complex to the degree it is a living thing onto itself.
I love The Wire. Amazing in a PC age that show did not clean up. It's very close which one is my fav. If The Wire was the best show ever we would have a 20 page thread saying so. We don't. We have a 20 page thread saying BB is the tops. The Wire is tremendous but BB is much more accessible and therefore since it's so close between the two it's actually not close. BB is the best show ever.
1. I contribute to this 20 page thread quite a bit, I love Breaking Bad, and I think Cranston's performance is easily one of the more amazing acting performances I've ever seen. And I think The Wire is the better show overall and it's not close.2. Accessibility is a silly criteria. I assume that's self-evident.

And most importantly ...

3. Regarding the bolded, you are absolutely correct. We don't have a 20 page thread about it. We have a 45 page thread.

But other than that, great argument.
Here's an idea:How about you Wire dorks post about it in the 45 page thread then, and quit junking up this one?

 
lol @ comparing thread size as an indicator of which show is better. A garbage show like American Idol probably has a thread that blows both out of the water.

BB is definitely a more suspenseful show, which keeps the same people coming back to this thread to speculate on what is going to happen or analyze what they saw in the previous episode.

They are both great shows. I agree that this season was right up there with the best of The Wire and I think the show LOOKS better visually than anything other show I've seen on tv. But saying one is better because it's fans post more about it on this message board is really one of the most ridiculous things I've read.

 
lol @ comparing thread size as an indicator of which show is better. A garbage show like American Idol probably has a thread that blows both out of the water.BB is definitely a more suspenseful show, which keeps the same people coming back to this thread to speculate on what is going to happen or analyze what they saw in the previous episode.They are both great shows. I agree that this season was right up there with the best of The Wire and I think the show LOOKS better visually than anything other show I've seen on tv. But saying one is better because it's fans post more about it on this message board is really one of the most ridiculous things I've read.
The point I was making was to refute that since it was 45 pages long it must be a great show, half of those pages came after the series ended, which can mean something. Give BB 3 years after it ends and see where it ends up, Apples to Oranges, talk to me in 2016.There may be a lot of nonsense posted about AI, but I doubt it will get any traction years after the show ends.
 
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The Wire is also a lot less far-fetched, in fact it was almost never far fetched.
Hamsterdam wasn't far-fetched? Or McNulty just happening to be the guy who discovered the body in the bay? Or Herc's camera? Loved The Wire, but there was plenty of far-fetched stuff.
 
The Wire is also a lot less far-fetched, in fact it was almost never far fetched.
Hamsterdam wasn't far-fetched? Or McNulty just happening to be the guy who discovered the body in the bay? Or Herc's camera? Loved The Wire, but there was plenty of far-fetched stuff.
There was a study done at Dartmouth some years ago looking at the possibility of drug free zones in the U.S. And such things occur overseas, it is hardly far-fetched conceptually.McNulty finding the body is a coincidence in story telling. He was on the boat patrol, he had opportunity and capability to find a floater.
 
Has anyone compared Breaking Bad to The Wire yet?
Think the consensus was The Wire and BB were very close up until this past season of BB. There was a five week run where BB challenged anything ever filmed. Season four of The Wire is marvelous but this past season of BB surpassed it. IMO this past season of BB is tops with season four of The Wire the second best season of television ever. Overall BB the best ever with The Wire a close second.
The Wire is superior in almost every way. Much better character development, you get to know several characters over several seasons and there is a lot of people to root for and against. Breaking Bad was one main character, a couple of secondary characters and then a lot of characters who never really broke through. Gus was probably the most intriguing character but Mike was a guy that we probably could have known better while Skylar is someone we really knew too much about. The writing and story telling in the Wire is unmatched, it was synthesized to the degree that you felt compelled to be involved in the story. The Wire is also a lot less far-fetched, in fact it was almost never far fetched. The Wire's only real reach was the serial killer angle which failed badly but Breaking Bad had the airplane and the body parts in the pool, Walt running the drug dealers down out of no where, Gus sensing a bomb on his car and brainless Gus adjusting his tie. Breaking Bad has more imagination but it also lacked realism at times but that is what 2011 television does best I guess. Yeah it was great, yeah it is the best show on TV right now and yes it is as well shot as any show ever...but it lags behind the Wire IMO. Better than the Sopranos? That might be a better conversation. Related more to whitey? Sure, a lot of people still miss some of the nuances in the Wire which hurt its mainstream appeal and also made the critics pass it over when it should have swept everything at the awards shows.

This last season though can definitely compete with anything, ever, as far as being just brilliant TV. Had every season been that complete I think there might be an argument for it being as good or better than the Wire. But the Wire resonates like Breaking Bad never will, the social and economic implications alone make it as well-thought and presented as any information in any medium. Like Shakespeare maybe, something profound and complex to the degree it is a living thing onto itself.
I love The Wire. Amazing in a PC age that show did not clean up. It's very close which one is my fav. If The Wire was the best show ever we would have a 20 page thread saying so. We don't. We have a 20 page thread saying BB is the tops. The Wire is tremendous but BB is much more accessible and therefore since it's so close between the two it's actually not close. BB is the best show ever.
1. I contribute to this 20 page thread quite a bit, I love Breaking Bad, and I think Cranston's performance is easily one of the more amazing acting performances I've ever seen. And I think The Wire is the better show overall and it's not close.2. Accessibility is a silly criteria. I assume that's self-evident.

And most importantly ...

3. Regarding the bolded, you are absolutely correct. We don't have a 20 page thread about it. We have a 45 page thread.

But other than that, great argument.
Here's an idea:How about you Wire dorks post about it in the 45 page thread then, and quit junking up this one?
Easy now Tuco.
 
The Wire is also a lot less far-fetched, in fact it was almost never far fetched.
Hamsterdam wasn't far-fetched? Or McNulty just happening to be the guy who discovered the body in the bay? Or Herc's camera? Loved The Wire, but there was plenty of far-fetched stuff.
There was a study done at Dartmouth some years ago looking at the possibility of drug free zones in the U.S. And such things occur overseas, it is hardly far-fetched conceptually.McNulty finding the body is a coincidence in story telling. He was on the boat patrol, he had opportunity and capability to find a floater.
Quit screwing up threads. Go post in Wire thread. ;)
 
The Wire is also a lot less far-fetched, in fact it was almost never far fetched.
Hamsterdam wasn't far-fetched? Or McNulty just happening to be the guy who discovered the body in the bay? Or Herc's camera? Loved The Wire, but there was plenty of far-fetched stuff.
There was a study done at Dartmouth some years ago looking at the possibility of drug free zones in the U.S. And such things occur overseas, it is hardly far-fetched conceptually.McNulty finding the body is a coincidence in story telling. He was on the boat patrol, he had opportunity and capability to find a floater.
Did they study the possibility of setting up a drug free zone in the middle of an inner city and keeping it a secret for any length of time?And I would say debris landing in Walt's pool was just as much a coincidence of story-telling as McNulty finding this floater that just happened to tie into all this other stuff.

I think you're seeing what you want to see.

 
The Wire is also a lot less far-fetched, in fact it was almost never far fetched.
Hamsterdam wasn't far-fetched? Or McNulty just happening to be the guy who discovered the body in the bay? Or Herc's camera? Loved The Wire, but there was plenty of far-fetched stuff.
There was a study done at Dartmouth some years ago looking at the possibility of drug free zones in the U.S. And such things occur overseas, it is hardly far-fetched conceptually.McNulty finding the body is a coincidence in story telling. He was on the boat patrol, he had opportunity and capability to find a floater.
Did they study the possibility of setting up a drug free zone in the middle of an inner city and keeping it a secret for any length of time?And I would say debris landing in Walt's pool was just as much a coincidence of story-telling as McNulty finding this floater that just happened to tie into all this other stuff.

I think you're seeing what you want to see.
Pretty sure that is what the arts are all about guy.
 
Interview Vince Gilligan walks us through Breaking Bad’s fourth season (Part 4 of 4)

http://origin.avclub.com/articles/vince-gilligan-walks-us-through-breaking-bads-four,63288/

Breaking Bad creator Vince Gilligan recently talked to The A.V. Club about the show’s fourth season, episode by episode. This section of his interview covers the final three episodes of the season, beginning with “Crawl Space” and concluding with “Face Off.” Part one can be found here, part two can be found here, and part three can be found here.

“End Times” and “Face Off” (Oct. 2, 2011 and Oct. 9, 2011)

Walter’s showdown with Gustavo Fring comes to an end as he launches a complicated plan to kill Gus with a bomb.

AVC: These episodes have an apocalyptic feel, and you directed both of them. Were you considering that this might be the end of the run for the show, and you wanted to make things feel like you could end here if you had to?

VG: Well, we always want to end every season with a bang, not always literally, but figuratively. We always want to end with a big dollop of showmanship and give the audience a reason to tune in to the following season if there is one. This is before our current deal [for a fifth season] was worked out. While I always felt like there would be a further season of Breaking Bad, there was the possibility that this would be it. Being cognizant of that fact, my writers and I were thinking, “Why not end this in a big way? Drama never hurts, and if there’s some off-chance of this being the last season, let’s end it in as satisfying a manner as possible.” So yeah, we probably were thinking along those lines.

AVC: When did you decide to have Walter poison Brock, and how did you justify it?

VG: We had that probably a good three or four months before I worked on the last one. That was one of those big ideas that took a bit of selling in the room. We went back and forth on that idea, because it is a big idea, and it is a very dark idea, and it’s ultimately a very pragmatic idea and immoral idea. It’s evil, what Walt does to this poor boy. But there is a very sound, pragmatic idea behind it, which is that Walt needs Jesse squarely back on his side. And if he does not have Jesse on his side, he is indeed a dead man. He’s got no chance at all to beat Gus. But, unfortunately for him, he and Jesse are on the outs; they’re as far apart as they have ever been after their big fistfight. So Walt needs to do something extraordinary to get Jesse back on his side. He needs Jesse to believe that Gus has done this terrible thing, poisoning this child with the ricin. It’s one of those grand gestures. It’s one of those big actions. It’s not anything you can justify on a moral level, but you kind of have to take your hat off to the guy. He’s bold. He’s willing to go the distance to save himself and his family.

And the gamble he’s taking is obviously that Jesse could walk into his house and shoot him in the head because Jesse is so angry when he initially thinks that Walt did this thing. But I think from Walt’s point of view, he’s a dead man no matter what, so might as well be Jesse who shoots him rather than letting Gus have the satisfaction. And the best-case scenario is that Jesse doesn’t pull that trigger and instead hears Walt out and becomes convinced that this crazy terrible thing that happened was not Walt’s work but Gus’. Of course, we find out at the very end that everything Jesse says is correct: that it was Walt and he did it pretty much the way that Jesse said he did it. The only thing Jesse gets wrong is the reason Walt’s doing it. It’s not for revenge against Jesse, it’s for a very cold-blooded, pragmatic reason, which is saving his own life and the life of his family.

AVC: All season long you’ve been building up Walt and Gus as mirror images of each other, but with Gus 10 steps ahead of Walt. Yet in these last two episodes, Walt hatches a long-scale plan that pays off. Is this an attempt to bring him more into Gus’ territory?

VG: Well, I think you’re right about what you just said. Walt and Gus, in many ways, seem to be mirror images of each other. In some ways, they’re so similar they don’t work well together. I think Walt finally wises up to the fact that he really has to stretch here and play a far deeper and darker game than he’s been capable of to defeat his nemesis. So Walt finally learns all the lessons of Gustavo Fring and the way he does business, and Walt incorporates those and out-Frings Fring, if you will.

AVC: The structure of these last two episodes is interesting. You essentially get the ensemble cast in Hank and Marie’s house, and you have Walter and Jesse and Gus out on the edges of things. What was it like shooting much of the cast in one location?

VG: It’s tricky, shooting inside the Schrader house. It’s a beautiful house, but it was not designed to have an entire film crew inside it. It gets a little tricky, because there are only so many angles you can photograph, because you want some light behind you. Therefore, in that living room, there’s only one perfect angle for doing that, and it’s been shot a bunch of times already. It’s tricky working with a lot of actors at once; I’m not particularly good at it. I’m still a newbie and learning on the job, but luckily I’ve got really, really good actors who are very enthusiastic about being there. They help me through it, help me figure out how to stage these scenes and how to block them out in a way that works for the story and works for the reality of the characters. It was a tricky setup, story-wise, in a sense that everybody is removed from one another, physically. Walt and Gus primarily, they can’t be in each other’s presence in any kind of safe fashion, so they have to play their chess game from afar. Both episodes were a lot of fun to direct. Very satisfying and very challenging.

AVC: Were you ever tempted in the writers’ room by the thought of keeping Gus alive for another season, even though it seemed there was no way he could survive this one?

VG: Definitely. We felt really bad about killing Gus Fring. We talked for hours about all the possibilities. “What if he lives? Is there any way he and Walt can team up? Is there some greater enemy so powerful that they need to work as a team? Can they find some sort of grudging respect for each other?” We went through all those permutations. I would’ve loved to keep Giancarlo [Esposito], ’cause he’s money in the bank. He’s just a wonderful actor to work with, and he plays such a wonderful character in Gus Fring. There’s always that feeling that you’re cutting off your own right hand when you make moves such as killing off a character this memorable. At the end of it, we all came to the realization that this was the proper and satisfying ending for this character. Sometimes it’s better to go off with a bang than keep on living with a whimper. I’m not saying that would’ve been the case. This just felt dramatically satisfying, and it felt like the right way to go.

AVC: When did you decide to have Walter’s revenge dovetail with Tio’s revenge? And was the decision to have Gus live after the explosion for a very short while a way to give him a bigger sendoff, rather than just being blown to bits?

VG: I’ll start with the last question first. I always had the image in my mind of this explosion, and once we came up with the idea of Tio being part of Walt’s revenge, once we had that image in mind of the bell ding-ding-ding-dinging and then the explosion coming, I just had this image in my head of Gus stumbling out of the wreckage and giving the audience that extra bit of shock and surprise of, “Oh my God! He’s like Superman! How did he survive this?” And then the camera coming around and revealing that half his head was gone. That was just this image I saw in my imagination, and luckily our special effects, makeup folks, and visual-effects producer brought it to fruition.

From a practical standpoint—and I learned this from previous experience and previous seasons of Breaking Bad—it seemed to me that I’d better make this death as concrete as possible for the audience. Otherwise, there would be a large portion who couldn’t get their minds around it, who wouldn’t quite believe it if they didn’t see it with their own eyes. In other words, even if you saw the explosion and then you saw some pile of unrecognizable bodies afterward, there’d be folks who would never believe that Gus had been there, that he escaped at the last second and he’d be back next season. I kinda wanted to take that off the table. I’m tickled by that desire on the part of the audience to not believe what they see, because I think it comes from a very good place. I think it comes, in this case, from a desire that Gus Fring stay a part of the show. If, in other words, folks said, “We didn’t see him get blown up, so maybe he’s going to come back next year,” I think that’s a very positive desire or fantasy or wishful thinking on the part of the viewer, because they love the character so much. Having said that, I wanted to make it crystal clear that he had not survived.

AVC: Will Hank see the strange death of Gus Fring as vindication of his theories?

VG: I think it’s very possible. He called it all long. He said that Gus Fring was a closet meth kingpin, and his true self was a very different person from his public image. It seems to me, without having scoped out the next season, like the very fact that Gus Fring has been blown up along with a known cartel associate does not bode well for his public memory in the future. It’s gonna lead to a lot of investigation. It seems to me, at this point, Hank is in a very good spot as the one man who warned everybody about this outcome.

I should finish the other thing you asked about Tio. We had thought of the whole idea of Tio being involved in Gus’ demise months before we wrote that last episode. It came from the fact that we loved Mark Margolis the actor just as much as we love Giancarlo Esposito. He’s this wonderful guy who’s just so much fun to be around. He plays this character who I never would have thought, back in season two when we introduced him, he would get as much mileage out of this role that he’s gotten. But it’s in large part because the actor who plays him is such a pleasure to be around and is such a fun guy and does such a great job with Tio. This miserable old ******* who’s confined to a wheelchair who can’t even speak is hard to shake and is hard to forget about. You read so much in Tio’s expressions when he’s there, silent, in his wheelchair. He’s just a great character to have around, so we wanted him to be front and center in the big denouement in episode 13 here. We wanted him to have his revenge.

AVC: In this season, was there an episode you thought worked particularly well, where you thought everything was cracking along? Was there one you thought didn’t quite work as well as you’d hoped?

VG: No. We’ve been blessed on this show. I don’t think we have a clunker in the bunch, and I’m proud to say that. I can’t think of any that I’m less than satisfied with. In terms of ones that worked better than average, God there’s so many of them. I love episode 10, the one where Gus gets his revenge on Don Eladio, played by Steven Bauer. That’s a favorite of mine, ’cause I thought that worked on so many levels. It had quieter, emotional scenes, primarily the one between Walt and his son. It had the wider scope of the hacienda down in Mexico where Gus gets his final revenge. It had scope to it and it had range to it and it worked on a lot of levels. I’m really proud of that one, but I’m really proud of all of them. They’re all sort of my children, as it were. I feel that way. It’s a group effort creating these things, but I have a proprietary feeling about all of them.

AVC: Have you started to think about how you’re going to end this whole series?

VG: I am not thinking about it as hard as I should be, perhaps, right now. And later on in the season when we’re fighting for time and trying to meet our deadlines, I’m probably going to look back at this time here in early October and wish I had worked harder. Right now, I’m kinda taking it easy. But the writers’ room will open up in mid-November, and at that point, my six writers and myself will sit down together and get to work and figure out where we’re going from here.
 
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The Wire is also a lot less far-fetched, in fact it was almost never far fetched.
Hamsterdam wasn't far-fetched? Or McNulty just happening to be the guy who discovered the body in the bay? Or Herc's camera? Loved The Wire, but there was plenty of far-fetched stuff.
There was a study done at Dartmouth some years ago looking at the possibility of drug free zones in the U.S. And such things occur overseas, it is hardly far-fetched conceptually.McNulty finding the body is a coincidence in story telling. He was on the boat patrol, he had opportunity and capability to find a floater.
Did they study the possibility of setting up a drug free zone in the middle of an inner city and keeping it a secret for any length of time?And I would say debris landing in Walt's pool was just as much a coincidence of story-telling as McNulty finding this floater that just happened to tie into all this other stuff.

I think you're seeing what you want to see.
Pretty sure that is what the arts are all about guy.
Not when you're critiquing said arts, guy.
 
The Wire is also a lot less far-fetched, in fact it was almost never far fetched.
Hamsterdam wasn't far-fetched? Or McNulty just happening to be the guy who discovered the body in the bay? Or Herc's camera? Loved The Wire, but there was plenty of far-fetched stuff.
There was a study done at Dartmouth some years ago looking at the possibility of drug free zones in the U.S. And such things occur overseas, it is hardly far-fetched conceptually.McNulty finding the body is a coincidence in story telling. He was on the boat patrol, he had opportunity and capability to find a floater.
Did they study the possibility of setting up a drug free zone in the middle of an inner city and keeping it a secret for any length of time?And I would say debris landing in Walt's pool was just as much a coincidence of story-telling as McNulty finding this floater that just happened to tie into all this other stuff.

I think you're seeing what you want to see.
Pretty sure that is what the arts are all about guy.
Not when you're critiquing said arts, guy.
Serious Business
 
'TexanFan02 said:
Has anyone compared Breaking Bad to The Wire yet?
Think the consensus was The Wire and BB were very close up until this past season of BB. There was a five week run where BB challenged anything ever filmed. Season four of The Wire is marvelous but this past season of BB surpassed it. IMO this past season of BB is tops with season four of The Wire the second best season of television ever. Overall BB the best ever with The Wire a close second.
The Wire is superior in almost every way. Much better character development, you get to know several characters over several seasons and there is a lot of people to root for and against. Breaking Bad was one main character, a couple of secondary characters and then a lot of characters who never really broke through. Gus was probably the most intriguing character but Mike was a guy that we probably could have known better while Skylar is someone we really knew too much about. The writing and story telling in the Wire is unmatched, it was synthesized to the degree that you felt compelled to be involved in the story. The Wire is also a lot less far-fetched, in fact it was almost never far fetched. The Wire's only real reach was the serial killer angle which failed badly but Breaking Bad had the airplane and the body parts in the pool, Walt running the drug dealers down out of no where, Gus sensing a bomb on his car and brainless Gus adjusting his tie. Breaking Bad has more imagination but it also lacked realism at times but that is what 2011 television does best I guess. Yeah it was great, yeah it is the best show on TV right now and yes it is as well shot as any show ever...but it lags behind the Wire IMO. Better than the Sopranos? That might be a better conversation. Related more to whitey? Sure, a lot of people still miss some of the nuances in the Wire which hurt its mainstream appeal and also made the critics pass it over when it should have swept everything at the awards shows.

This last season though can definitely compete with anything, ever, as far as being just brilliant TV. Had every season been that complete I think there might be an argument for it being as good or better than the Wire. But the Wire resonates like Breaking Bad never will, the social and economic implications alone make it as well-thought and presented as any information in any medium. Like Shakespeare maybe, something profound and complex to the degree it is a living thing onto itself.
I love The Wire. Amazing in a PC age that show did not clean up. It's very close which one is my fav. If The Wire was the best show ever we would have a 20 page thread saying so. We don't. We have a 20 page thread saying BB is the tops. The Wire is tremendous but BB is much more accessible and therefore since it's so close between the two it's actually not close. BB is the best show ever.
1. I contribute to this 20 page thread quite a bit, I love Breaking Bad, and I think Cranston's performance is easily one of the more amazing acting performances I've ever seen. And I think The Wire is the better show overall and it's not close.2. Accessibility is a silly criteria. I assume that's self-evident.

And most importantly ...

3. Regarding the bolded, you are absolutely correct. We don't have a 20 page thread about it. We have a 45 page thread.

But other than that, great argument.
Here's an idea:How about you Wire dorks post about it in the 45 page thread then, and quit junking up this one?
:goodposting: :goodposting: :goodposting:
:goodposting: :goodposting: :goodposting: :goodposting: :goodposting: :goodposting:
 
The Wire is also a lot less far-fetched, in fact it was almost never far fetched.
Hamsterdam wasn't far-fetched? Or McNulty just happening to be the guy who discovered the body in the bay? Or Herc's camera? Loved The Wire, but there was plenty of far-fetched stuff.
There was a study done at Dartmouth some years ago looking at the possibility of drug free zones in the U.S. And such things occur overseas, it is hardly far-fetched conceptually.McNulty finding the body is a coincidence in story telling. He was on the boat patrol, he had opportunity and capability to find a floater.
Did they study the possibility of setting up a drug free zone in the middle of an inner city and keeping it a secret for any length of time?And I would say debris landing in Walt's pool was just as much a coincidence of story-telling as McNulty finding this floater that just happened to tie into all this other stuff.

I think you're seeing what you want to see.
Pretty sure that is what the arts are all about guy.
Not when you're critiquing said arts, guy.
Serious Business
:lmao: copying Otis shtick
 
The Wire is also a lot less far-fetched, in fact it was almost never far fetched.
Hamsterdam wasn't far-fetched? Or McNulty just happening to be the guy who discovered the body in the bay? Or Herc's camera? Loved The Wire, but there was plenty of far-fetched stuff.
There was a study done at Dartmouth some years ago looking at the possibility of drug free zones in the U.S. And such things occur overseas, it is hardly far-fetched conceptually.McNulty finding the body is a coincidence in story telling. He was on the boat patrol, he had opportunity and capability to find a floater.
Did they study the possibility of setting up a drug free zone in the middle of an inner city and keeping it a secret for any length of time?And I would say debris landing in Walt's pool was just as much a coincidence of story-telling as McNulty finding this floater that just happened to tie into all this other stuff.

I think you're seeing what you want to see.
Pretty sure that is what the arts are all about guy.
Not when you're critiquing said arts, guy.
Serious Business
Not sure what you're saying here; you roll in say things like "The Wire is superior in almost every way..." and then start listing those ways, and then get pissy because someone questions if you are being completely fair? Get over yourself,guy. :rolleyes:
 
The Wire is also a lot less far-fetched, in fact it was almost never far fetched.
Hamsterdam wasn't far-fetched? Or McNulty just happening to be the guy who discovered the body in the bay? Or Herc's camera? Loved The Wire, but there was plenty of far-fetched stuff.
There was a study done at Dartmouth some years ago looking at the possibility of drug free zones in the U.S. And such things occur overseas, it is hardly far-fetched conceptually.McNulty finding the body is a coincidence in story telling. He was on the boat patrol, he had opportunity and capability to find a floater.
Did they study the possibility of setting up a drug free zone in the middle of an inner city and keeping it a secret for any length of time?And I would say debris landing in Walt's pool was just as much a coincidence of story-telling as McNulty finding this floater that just happened to tie into all this other stuff.

I think you're seeing what you want to see.
Pretty sure that is what the arts are all about guy.
Not when you're critiquing said arts, guy.
Serious Business
Not sure what you're saying here; you roll in say things like "The Wire is superior in almost every way..." and then start listing those ways, and then get pissy because someone questions if you are being completely fair? Get over yourself,guy. :rolleyes:
New here?
 
The Wire is also a lot less far-fetched, in fact it was almost never far fetched. The Wire's only real reach was the serial killer angle which failed badly but Breaking Bad had the airplane and the body parts in the pool, Walt running the drug dealers down out of no where, Gus sensing a bomb on his car and brainless Gus adjusting his tie. Breaking Bad has more imagination but it also lacked realism at times but that is what 2011 television does best I guess.
Gus turned around because he knew something was up when Jesse told him that Brock was poisoned. Not far-fetched.Walt didn't come from nohwere, he put two and two together and knew what was about to go down. We don't know how long he waited to launch his surprise attack.Brainless Gus has been covered, but there are many documented cases of Brain injury victims performimg motor actions and then collapsing.
 
The Wire is also a lot less far-fetched, in fact it was almost never far fetched.
Hamsterdam wasn't far-fetched? Or McNulty just happening to be the guy who discovered the body in the bay? Or Herc's camera? Loved The Wire, but there was plenty of far-fetched stuff.
There was a study done at Dartmouth some years ago looking at the possibility of drug free zones in the U.S. And such things occur overseas, it is hardly far-fetched conceptually.McNulty finding the body is a coincidence in story telling. He was on the boat patrol, he had opportunity and capability to find a floater.
Did they study the possibility of setting up a drug free zone in the middle of an inner city and keeping it a secret for any length of time?And I would say debris landing in Walt's pool was just as much a coincidence of story-telling as McNulty finding this floater that just happened to tie into all this other stuff.

I think you're seeing what you want to see.
Pretty sure that is what the arts are all about guy.
Not when you're critiquing said arts, guy.
Serious Business
Not sure what you're saying here; you roll in say things like "The Wire is superior in almost every way..." and then start listing those ways, and then get pissy because someone questions if you are being completely fair? Get over yourself,guy. :rolleyes:
New here?
New enough I guess. :yes:
 
The Wire is also a lot less far-fetched, in fact it was almost never far fetched.
Hamsterdam wasn't far-fetched? Or McNulty just happening to be the guy who discovered the body in the bay? Or Herc's camera? Loved The Wire, but there was plenty of far-fetched stuff.
There was a study done at Dartmouth some years ago looking at the possibility of drug free zones in the U.S. And such things occur overseas, it is hardly far-fetched conceptually.McNulty finding the body is a coincidence in story telling. He was on the boat patrol, he had opportunity and capability to find a floater.
Did they study the possibility of setting up a drug free zone in the middle of an inner city and keeping it a secret for any length of time?And I would say debris landing in Walt's pool was just as much a coincidence of story-telling as McNulty finding this floater that just happened to tie into all this other stuff.

I think you're seeing what you want to see.
Pretty sure that is what the arts are all about guy.
Not when you're critiquing said arts, guy.
Serious Business
Not sure what you're saying here; you roll in say things like "The Wire is superior in almost every way..." and then start listing those ways, and then get pissy because someone questions if you are being completely fair? Get over yourself,guy. :rolleyes:
I actually explained myself quite well in answering your initial volley. You seem to really be wrapped up in grading things that are subjective in nature. If you like Breaking bad better, I'm fine with it. Really I am. Goggins>any chance you stop :stalking: me any time soon? You've taken the word dooshbagery to a whole new level lately, not really surprising.

 
Has anyone compared Breaking Bad to The Wire yet?
Think the consensus was The Wire and BB were very close up until this past season of BB. There was a five week run where BB challenged anything ever filmed. Season four of The Wire is marvelous but this past season of BB surpassed it. IMO this past season of BB is tops with season four of The Wire the second best season of television ever. Overall BB the best ever with The Wire a close second.
The Wire is superior in almost every way. Much better character development, you get to know several characters over several seasons and there is a lot of people to root for and against. Breaking Bad was one main character, a couple of secondary characters and then a lot of characters who never really broke through. Gus was probably the most intriguing character but Mike was a guy that we probably could have known better while Skylar is someone we really knew too much about. The writing and story telling in the Wire is unmatched, it was synthesized to the degree that you felt compelled to be involved in the story. The Wire is also a lot less far-fetched, in fact it was almost never far fetched. The Wire's only real reach was the serial killer angle which failed badly but Breaking Bad had the airplane and the body parts in the pool, Walt running the drug dealers down out of no where, Gus sensing a bomb on his car and brainless Gus adjusting his tie. Breaking Bad has more imagination but it also lacked realism at times but that is what 2011 television does best I guess. Yeah it was great, yeah it is the best show on TV right now and yes it is as well shot as any show ever...but it lags behind the Wire IMO. Better than the Sopranos? That might be a better conversation. Related more to whitey? Sure, a lot of people still miss some of the nuances in the Wire which hurt its mainstream appeal and also made the critics pass it over when it should have swept everything at the awards shows.

This last season though can definitely compete with anything, ever, as far as being just brilliant TV. Had every season been that complete I think there might be an argument for it being as good or better than the Wire. But the Wire resonates like Breaking Bad never will, the social and economic implications alone make it as well-thought and presented as any information in any medium. Like Shakespeare maybe, something profound and complex to the degree it is a living thing onto itself.
I love The Wire. Amazing in a PC age that show did not clean up. It's very close which one is my fav. If The Wire was the best show ever we would have a 20 page thread saying so. We don't. We have a 20 page thread saying BB is the tops. The Wire is tremendous but BB is much more accessible and therefore since it's so close between the two it's actually not close. BB is the best show ever.
1. I contribute to this 20 page thread quite a bit, I love Breaking Bad, and I think Cranston's performance is easily one of the more amazing acting performances I've ever seen. And I think The Wire is the better show overall and it's not close.2. Accessibility is a silly criteria. I assume that's self-evident.

And most importantly ...

3. Regarding the bolded, you are absolutely correct. We don't have a 20 page thread about it. We have a 45 page thread.

But other than that, great argument.
Here's an idea:How about you Wire dorks post about it in the 45 page thread then, and quit junking up this one?
Here's an idea:How about you let people have whatever discussions they choose that happen to stem naturally from the main thread topic, and just scroll past posts if they don't interest you instead of whining about them?

 
The Wire is also a lot less far-fetched, in fact it was almost never far fetched. The Wire's only real reach was the serial killer angle which failed badly but Breaking Bad had the airplane and the body parts in the pool, Walt running the drug dealers down out of no where, Gus sensing a bomb on his car and brainless Gus adjusting his tie. Breaking Bad has more imagination but it also lacked realism at times but that is what 2011 television does best I guess.
Gus turned around because he knew something was up when Jesse told him that Brock was poisoned. Not far-fetched.Walt didn't come from nohwere, he put two and two together and knew what was about to go down. We don't know how long he waited to launch his surprise attack.Brainless Gus has been covered, but there are many documented cases of Brain injury victims performimg motor actions and then collapsing.
I'm going to concede to the first two points and call it a difference of opinion. Can you point me to the third, that is, it being covered? I think I missed that. I avoid this thread because I'm usually behind in watching the show as I tend to watch them three and four at a time. TIA.
 
Has anyone compared Breaking Bad to The Wire yet?
Think the consensus was The Wire and BB were very close up until this past season of BB. There was a five week run where BB challenged anything ever filmed. Season four of The Wire is marvelous but this past season of BB surpassed it. IMO this past season of BB is tops with season four of The Wire the second best season of television ever. Overall BB the best ever with The Wire a close second.
The Wire is superior in almost every way. Much better character development, you get to know several characters over several seasons and there is a lot of people to root for and against. Breaking Bad was one main character, a couple of secondary characters and then a lot of characters who never really broke through. Gus was probably the most intriguing character but Mike was a guy that we probably could have known better while Skylar is someone we really knew too much about. The writing and story telling in the Wire is unmatched, it was synthesized to the degree that you felt compelled to be involved in the story. The Wire is also a lot less far-fetched, in fact it was almost never far fetched. The Wire's only real reach was the serial killer angle which failed badly but Breaking Bad had the airplane and the body parts in the pool, Walt running the drug dealers down out of no where, Gus sensing a bomb on his car and brainless Gus adjusting his tie. Breaking Bad has more imagination but it also lacked realism at times but that is what 2011 television does best I guess. Yeah it was great, yeah it is the best show on TV right now and yes it is as well shot as any show ever...but it lags behind the Wire IMO. Better than the Sopranos? That might be a better conversation. Related more to whitey? Sure, a lot of people still miss some of the nuances in the Wire which hurt its mainstream appeal and also made the critics pass it over when it should have swept everything at the awards shows.

This last season though can definitely compete with anything, ever, as far as being just brilliant TV. Had every season been that complete I think there might be an argument for it being as good or better than the Wire. But the Wire resonates like Breaking Bad never will, the social and economic implications alone make it as well-thought and presented as any information in any medium. Like Shakespeare maybe, something profound and complex to the degree it is a living thing onto itself.
I love The Wire. Amazing in a PC age that show did not clean up. It's very close which one is my fav. If The Wire was the best show ever we would have a 20 page thread saying so. We don't. We have a 20 page thread saying BB is the tops. The Wire is tremendous but BB is much more accessible and therefore since it's so close between the two it's actually not close. BB is the best show ever.
1. I contribute to this 20 page thread quite a bit, I love Breaking Bad, and I think Cranston's performance is easily one of the more amazing acting performances I've ever seen. And I think The Wire is the better show overall and it's not close.2. Accessibility is a silly criteria. I assume that's self-evident.

And most importantly ...

3. Regarding the bolded, you are absolutely correct. We don't have a 20 page thread about it. We have a 45 page thread.

But other than that, great argument.
Here's an idea:How about you Wire dorks post about it in the 45 page thread then, and quit junking up this one?
Here's an idea:How about you let people have whatever discussions they choose that happen to stem naturally from the main thread topic, and just scroll past posts if they don't interest you instead of whining about them?
:goodposting:
 
i forgot, how did walt find out that pollo guy was going to take him out?
It's been awhile. Didn't Jesse kill Gus's dealers or something?
oh yeah, but wasn't it walt that ran them over with his car?
Yes, it was Walt (it was very helpful to watch the last 2 eps of last season prior to the season premiere). Gus was certainly not happy about Walt's seeming power play against him and thought Walt was too ambitious or reckless or both. The killing brought unnecessary attention to their affairs (or potentially should/could have) and Gus makes his severe displeasure known in their meeting in the desert.Walt realized how many questions Gale was asking about the cooking process and that as soon as Gale had the method down, that Gus wouldn't need him any more. Then of course Victor comes to pick him up out of nowhere and Mike is there at the lab.
I'm only through ep 3 right now, but clearly Gus had Walt's death planned from the moment he decided to hire him. The only thing he didn't foresee is him, or rather Jesse, killing Gale.
 
A few things..

Enjoyed the episode, it did not let me down. Even though it was a little predictable who Gus was gonna kill, and I even called out what Gus was gonna say verbatim at the top of the stairs before he got there. Still, enjoyed it.

I think Jesse is gonna start being a bad ###, as he now seems dead inside.

Skyler's sister is now hotter than Skyler. Did not see that coming.

Skyler was Maura on Seinfeld, George's gf who would not let George breakup with her.

Saul is comedy! :lmao:

First time I have ever seen Mike look scared. :thumbup:
You predicted he would kill Victor? I thought that came out of left field. I thought the dropped the whole "did anyone see you " angle for a plot line later in the season.
The thought crossed my mind when Mike said that to Victor. But I was almost convinced when Victor started to cook. From what we know of Gus, Victor completely lost his mind to try and cook. He became a liability on multiple fronts.
In retrospect you have to think that Victor felt his life was in danger for being seen at the crime, he decided to cook to "prove his worth" and show he provided value, but it back-fired.
I don't think him choosing to cook had anything to do with it. Victor was dead from the moment he was spotted and the fact that he didn't understand the science behind cooking ensured that Gus would kill him.
 
The Wire is also a lot less far-fetched, in fact it was almost never far fetched.
Hamsterdam wasn't far-fetched? Or McNulty just happening to be the guy who discovered the body in the bay? Or Herc's camera? Loved The Wire, but there was plenty of far-fetched stuff.
There was a study done at Dartmouth some years ago looking at the possibility of drug free zones in the U.S. And such things occur overseas, it is hardly far-fetched conceptually.McNulty finding the body is a coincidence in story telling. He was on the boat patrol, he had opportunity and capability to find a floater.
Did they study the possibility of setting up a drug free zone in the middle of an inner city and keeping it a secret for any length of time?And I would say debris landing in Walt's pool was just as much a coincidence of story-telling as McNulty finding this floater that just happened to tie into all this other stuff.

I think you're seeing what you want to see.
Pretty sure that is what the arts are all about guy.
Not when you're critiquing said arts, guy.
Serious Business
Not sure what you're saying here; you roll in say things like "The Wire is superior in almost every way..." and then start listing those ways, and then get pissy because someone questions if you are being completely fair? Get over yourself,guy. :rolleyes:
I actually explained myself quite well in answering your initial volley. You seem to really be wrapped up in grading things that are subjective in nature. If you like Breaking bad better, I'm fine with it. Really I am. Goggins>any chance you stop :stalking: me any time soon? You've taken the word dooshbagery to a whole new level lately, not really surprising.
Yeah I'm really caught up in grading things that are subjective in nature, that's why I posted "The Wire is superior in almost every way." Oh wait... that wasn't me, that was you.
 
I hope that passport stuff doesn't mean Saul is going to be out of the picture.Totally agree that watching Marie getting Hank equipped with a bedpan was not must-see TV. Watching Hank suffer might help set up the inevitable show down between Hank and Walt, but it is boring.
Does anyone who watches this show like Hank?
Love Hank. He's about the only character on the show worth rooting for.
Hank treats everybody like crap and puts his family's life at risk with no consideration at all. If he dies I'll be :shrug:
 

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