February 25, 2017 | Carl Wyndham

Cripplingly Addictive Facts About Breaking Bad


31. The White House

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The White family home is an actual home in New Mexico. A woman named Fran has lived there since 1973, and she doesn’t mind the hundreds of cars that slow down in front of her house every month to take pictures. She does, however, take issue with the full pizzas thrown onto her roof because, seriously, what an unoriginal waste of pizza!

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Walter White's house

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30. It’s the Journey, Not the Destination

Charles Baker, who played Skinny Pete, practiced piano three hours a day for a month so he could pull off a virtuoso performance of Bach’s Solfeggietto in the music shop at the beginning of season five. Unfortunately, only the intro made the cut.

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29. Still Not Healthy

Julia Minesci, the actress who very convincingly played Wendy, the addicted hooker, has actually run the Hawaii Ironman six times, the Germany Ironman once, and countless marathons.

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28. Four out of Five Dentists Agree

One of Gilligan’s big regrets is that Aaron Paul’s teeth were way too perfect for them to be in Jesse Pinkman’s mouth. This is a character who took tons of beatings as well as smoked crystal, both of which are dental no-nos. However, nothing was done about it because, according to Gilligan, “removing real teeth from actors is a real non-starter.”

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27. Despite His Nice Teeth

Jesse Pinkman was originally supposed to be gone by the ninth episode, but Aaron Paul’s portrayal was so impressive that Vince Gilligan spent the hiatus caused by the writer’s strike retooling the show to keep the character on.

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26. Bait and Switch

The GPS coordinates that Walt hid in plain sight on a Lotto ticket don’t actually point towards $80M in cash. In reality, they point to Q Studios in Albuquerque, where Breaking Bad is shot, which is probably less of a legal issue than sending fans into the middle of the New Mexico desert to die.

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25. Not As Prestigious as the Rhodes

An Albuquerque addiction clinic leveraged the popularity of the show to help get New Mexicans off of drugs. They even offer patients the chance to win a “Breaking Addiction” scholarship that entitles them to 12 weeks of free rehab worth thousands of dollars.

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24. You Got the Wong Guys

Bryan Cranston and his brother once worked at a Florida restaurant run by a tyrannical chef named Peter Wong. When the chef was found murdered, the police visited the restaurant looking for suspects with motive, only to get the reply that, “Everybody talked about killing Peter Wong. That’s all we talked about.” Unfortunately, it just so happened that Cranston and his brother had recently quit and set off across America on their motorcycles, which looked rather suspicious. So for a brief moment in time, Bryan Cranston was wanted for murder.

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23. Bad Hombres

Daniel and Luis Moncado, the brothers who play the mute assassin cousins, have both been in gangs and served prison time. Luis actually has the letters “F” and “U” tattooed on his eyelids. He described the horrifying process of acquiring these tats. “Your eyelid is so thin the needle will go through and puncture your eye. You gotta put a spoon.” Yes. A friggin’ spoon. UNDER THE EYELID. Fork me.

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22. X-Phile

Vince Gilligan got his start as a writer and producer on the sci-fi series, The X-Files. A huge fan of the series, he sent a script to Fox, which became the season 2 episode, “Soft Light.” He went on to write 29 more episodes and produce 44 others.

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21. The Need for Speed

Gilligan and Bryan Cranston crossed paths for the first time while Gilligan was still with The X-Files. Cranston played a racist roofer who had to drive due west at breakneck speed to prevent his head from exploding. Gilligan said he needed someone who could play “a guy who could be scary and kind of loathsome but at the same time had a deep, resounding humanity.” Now who does that sound like?

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20. In the End We Go Back to the Beginning

The last scene to be filmed in Breaking Bad was Walt and Jesse’s cooking flashback in the episode Ozymandias.

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19. Clear Improvement

Because of the popularity of Breaking Bad, crystal producers in the US started putting blue food dye into their product and charging higher prices, telling their customers that the blue stuff is stronger. However, the discerning addict would know that pure stuff is colorless.

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18. Form after Function

Heisenberg’s signature hat became a part of Cranston’s costume primarily to keep his shaved head from burning.

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17. Don’t Stop Belizing

When Saul suggested that Walt send Hank “on a trip to Belize,” it was an obvious euphemism that had nothing to do with Belize. However, the Belize Tourism Board extended an open invitation to the cast and crew to take an all-expenses-paid trip to see that a trip to Belize was, in fact, not as ominous as Saul made it sound.

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16. Tuco-To-Go

Tuco, one of Walt and Jesse’s first enemies, was supposed to be a thorn in the duo’s side all the way through season two. Unfortunately, Raymond Cruz, the actor who played Tuco, became a regular on “The Closer” and could no longer appear on Breaking Bad.

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15. Boom!

Gilligan got the idea to use mercury fulminate from “Mister Roberts,” the Henry Fonda movie in which Jack Lemmon’s character was “always blowing up nothings on this old navy ship with mercury fulminate.” When Gilligan found out that mercury fulminate looked a bit like crystal, one of the more iconic Heisenberg moments was born.

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14. Walter White is No Martha Stewart

Methylamine, the chemical that spurred Walt and his gang to rob a train, is actually not that difficult to make. Some chemists have suggested that, with the right ingredients, it could be synthesized in a kitchen sink. Of course, an episode featuring Walt standing in his kitchen for a few hours wouldn’t have nearly the same suspense.

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13. What’s the Deal with All this blue stuff?

Many of Breaking Bad’s cast members also showed up on Seinfeld (the 90s sitcom, not the man himself). Bryan Cranston played Tom Whatley, a stingy dentist who helped push the term “regifting” into the popular lexicon. Anna Gunn played Jerry’s supposedly unfaithful girlfriend. And Bob Odenkirk had a role as Elaine’s sexually-frustrated boyfriend.

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12. Midlife madness.

Walter White was originally written to be a man in his 40s, but AMC felt that 40 was too early for a midlife crisis and suggested they change the age to 50. In actuality, the average life expectancy of a man in America is 76.4 years so the correct age for a midlife crisis is 38.2.

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11. It’s Morphin’ Time

Bryan Cranston won three consecutive Emmys for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Dramatic series for his role in Breaking Bad but fans of the Mighty Morphin’ Power Rangers might remember him as the voice of Twin Man, a singular monster made of reflective mirrors. It makes perfect sense that, after this, Cranston turned to a life of drugs.

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10. Will the Real Blue Ranger Please Stand Up

Incidentally, the real name of the Blue Power Ranger is Billy Cranston. No relation.

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9. Educational Television

When Walt used live electrical wires to burn through plastic restraints that had kept him attached to a radiator, he didn’t realize that he was also teaching Australian convicts an alternative methodology for lighting cigarettes. This resulted in the breakage of 425 television sets across a number of Queensland prisons.

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8. Two Ships in the Night

Throughout the entire series, Jesse and Walt Jr. are the only two regular characters who never meet each other.

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7. It’s Not His Fault

Due to his slight resemblance to Matt Damon, Jesse Plemons (who played Todd Alquist) was referred to by the nickname “Meth Damon."

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6. Pick Your Poison

Laura Fraser, who played the squeamish drug-runner Lydia Rodarte-Quayle, also played Jessica Brody, wife of suspected terrorist Nicholas Brody, in the original pilot for Homeland. When she was replaced by Morena Baccarin, she moved on to Breaking Bad.

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5. Bad Investment

Billionaire investor and self-confessed Breaking Bad fan Warren Buffet said that Walter was a “good businessman” and went on to say that the kingpin “would be my guy if I ever have to go toe-to-toe with anyone.” Of course, one assumes that an actual “good businessman” wouldn’t have to murder two dozen men, poison a small child, or get shot.

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4. It’s Elementary

The series ran for 62 episodes. Samarium is the 62nd element on the period table. An isotope of samarium can be to treat various forms of cancer. Including lung cancer. Coincidence? Probably.

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3. Cashing In

Originally set to shoot in California, Breaking Bad moved to New Mexico much to the delight of local businesses which have taken advantage of the show’s popularity with such products as locally brewed Heisenberg “dark” beer and Heisenberg Pez dispensers.

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2. Redacted

Because the DEA didn’t want Breaking Bad to become a step-by-step guide to cooking drugs, they advised Gilligan and his team of writers on what science to include and what to leave out. “If you simply followed the one synthesis as it’s presented,” says science advisor Donna Nelson, “you wouldn’t come out with methamphetamine.” Aspiring cooks who followed the recipe have reported that following the recipe simply doesn’t work.

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1. Tiny Tat

When filming of Breaking Bad ended, Cranston got drunk with the crew and, much to the disgust of his wife, wound up with a tattoo of the show’s logo on his finger. At least it wasn’t on his lower back.

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