Breaking Bad Creator Asks Fans to Please Stop Terrorizing Elderly Couple

The problem with lending your home out for TV productions is someone still has to live there afterwards.

The problem with lending your home out for TV productions is someone still has to live there afterwards.

Bryan Cranston got to talking about the final episode of Breaking Bad today, and he has some good news: the story of Walter White is only done when he says it's done.
This past Saturday, a group of Breaking Bad rubberneckers turned up for a mock funeral that mourned the AMC series' protagonist, Walter White. Pitched as a fundraiser for the homeless, the ceremony was held at a real cemetery in Albuquerque, New Mexico, where inconsiderate shitbags loitered on grave markers of real…
Walter White's coordinates from Breaking Bad last Sunday are adorably meta. Maybe the show will end happily after all!
Vince Gilligan's exquisitely developed Breaking Bad is so unassailably good that even the show's promotional bonanza is terrific. The premiere is two-and-a-half weeks away and we've already seen a generally endearing Bryan Cranston GQ cover profile, an Aaron Paul late-night "bitch" tribute, and particularly excellent…
At yesterday's San Diego Comic-Con Breaking Bad panel, Bryan Cranston shocked fans when he revealed that the man who was walking around the convention center wearing a lifelike Walter White mask was actually Walter White.
Breaking Bad begins when a high school chemistry teacher finds out that he has a fatal form of cancer and decides to manufacture and sell high-grade meth in order to provide for his family after he passes away. It's about mortality, power, violence, and the insidious methamphetamine market. As it happens, all of these…
Another day, another real-life Walter White: A chemistry teacher from East Texas was busted by the police for selling home-cooked meth in the parking lot of his junior high school.
After his opponent, Summer Kennedy, got Giancarlo "Gus Fring" Esposito to endorse her for Associated Student Body president, Crossroads School for Arts & Sciences student Maxwell Ulin went out and convinced Walter White and Jesse Pinkman to side with him.