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'Mythbusters' built a real rotating machine gun to test out the epic final scene in 'Breaking Bad' — here's how it fared

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mythbusters breaking bad 3 final

In the final episode of “Breaking Bad,” Walt (Bryan Cranston) gets Jesse (Aaron Paul) out of the clutches of the bad guys by creating an automatic swaying machine gun in the trunk of his car that blows them all away while he and Jesse lay protected on the floor.

In case you don’t remember, this is how it looked

breaking bad gunWell, Jamie Hyneman and Adam Savage of "Mythbusters" decided to put Walt’s final showdown to the test.

The duo built the M60 machine gun featured in the scene with the same equipment used on the show. They also used the same material for the wall used in the show to shoot at (with some wooden cutouts behind it representing Walt and the bad guys) to see if the bullets from the gun would actually go through the car, the wall, and hit the cutouts.

"Breaking Bad" creator Vince Gilligan was there to keep the setting authentic.

myhtbusters breaking bad 4 finalThough he commented “you might be one Nazi shy,” referring the cutouts, he gave the setting his blessing.

With the M60 loaded with 200 live rounds of ammunition, the experiment began.

breaking bad gun 3

breaking bad gun 2Once the final shot was fired Hyneman and Savage looked over their handiwork and found that the cutouts were hit with bullets.

breaking bad gun 4And the cutout on the ground (Walt) was unharmed.

mythbusters breaking bad finalLooks like what went down in the scene was plausible.

Check it out for yourself:

 

SEE ALSO: 4 murderers tried to dispose of a body using a method they learned on the TV show "Breaking Bad"

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: The first trailer for the new 'Walking Dead' season just dropped and looks as terrifying as ever


Netflix says this is the episode of ‘Breaking Bad’ that got you addicted to the show

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walt jesse breaking bad cooking

Netflix thinks it knows what episode of "Breaking Bad" got you addicted to the hit AMC series.

The streaming site released a study Wednesday, claiming it knows when viewers got hooked on a variety of the shows it streams.  

How did they pinpoint that episode?

According to a release, Netflix analyzed global streaming data from the first seasons of a number of TV shows. 

Netflix defines a "hooked episode" as one where 70% of viewers who watched one episode carried on to stream the rest of the season.

So what episode of "Breaking Bad" got people hooked?

Netflix says it was season 1, episode 2, "Cat's in the Bag," which premiered January 2008.

If your memory's a little fuzzy, the episode contains one of the series' most memorable, and gross, scenes.

Before their partnership into the meth-making business really begins, the two need to dispose of a body. The plan is to dissolve it in hydrofluoric acid inside a specific plastic bin. Jesse ignores Walt's instructions and disposes of the body in a porcelain tub. 

breaking bad jesse

Big mistake. 

The acid eats through the second-floor tub, and everything comes crashing through the ceiling. 

breaking bad bathtubaaron paul bryan cranston breaking bad

At last year's Tribeca Film Festival, Cranston told a packed crowd it was the grossest scene he ever did on the five-season show.

You can check out the scene, here:

But this metric only looks at Season 1 of a series, and that might not paint a perfect picture.

While memorable, this episode is no fan favorite. Check out this chart from graph.tv, which breaks down shows according to IMDB ratings.

Episode 2 is clearly one of the least liked episodes of the season by fan reception:

breaking bad graph tv

So while Netflix says it may be the episode that got people on the "Breaking Bad" train, the reality is that could be a little skewed if it wasn't in season 1.

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: The 15 Best Quotes From 'Breaking Bad'

Netflix says this is the episode of ‘Breaking Bad’ that got you addicted to the show

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walt jesse breaking bad cooking

Netflix thinks it knows what episode of "Breaking Bad" got you addicted to the hit AMC series.

The streaming site released a study Wednesday, claiming it knows when viewers got hooked on a variety of the shows it streams.  

How did they pinpoint that episode?

According to a release, Netflix analyzed global streaming data from the first seasons of a number of TV shows. 

Netflix defines a "hooked episode" as one where 70% of viewers who watched one episode carried on to stream the rest of the season.

So what episode of "Breaking Bad" got people hooked?

Netflix says it was season 1, episode 2, "Cat's in the Bag," which premiered January 2008.

If your memory's a little fuzzy, the episode contains one of the series' most memorable, and gross, scenes.

Before their partnership into the meth-making business really begins, the two need to dispose of a body. The plan is to dissolve it in hydrofluoric acid inside a specific plastic bin. Jesse ignores Walt's instructions and disposes of the body in a porcelain tub. 

breaking bad jesse

Big mistake. 

The acid eats through the second-floor tub, and everything comes crashing through the ceiling. 

breaking bad bathtubaaron paul bryan cranston breaking bad

At last year's Tribeca Film Festival, Cranston told a packed crowd it was the grossest scene he ever did on the five-season show.

You can check out the scene, here:

But this metric only looks at Season 1 of a series, and that might not paint a perfect picture.

While memorable, this episode is no fan favorite. Check out this chart from graph.tv, which breaks down shows according to IMDB ratings.

Episode 2 is clearly one of the least liked episodes of the season by fan reception:

breaking bad graph tv

So while Netflix says it may be the episode that got people on the "Breaking Bad" train, the reality is that could be a little skewed if it wasn't in season 1.

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: The 15 Best Quotes From 'Breaking Bad'

The most popular TV show set in every state

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breaking bad walt phone

With TV bigger and more widespread than ever before, it looks like every state in the union is getting its due.

We decided to make our own list of the most popular TV show from every state.

We left out reality shows unless we couldn't find a popular-enough series. Selections were based on each show's longevity, critical acclaim, awards, and lasting cultural impact.

Did we get your state right? Let us know in the comments if you have another suggestion.

ALABAMA: "Any Day Now" (1998-2002)

Network: Lifetime
Seasons: 4

The hour-long drama followed the friendship between two girls of different races during the civil-rights movement of the 1960s.

The series flashed back and forth between the two women, Mary Elizabeth O'Brien Sims (Annie Potts) and Rene Jackson (Lorraine Toussaint), during childhood and as adults.



ALASKA: "Northern Exposure" (1990-1995)

Network: CBS
Seasons: 6

What started out as an eight-episode summer series, gradually turned into a popular staple on the network.

The two-time Golden Globe winner followed Dr. Joel Fleischman (Rob Morrow) as he's forced to move his practice from New York to Cicely, Alaska, to complete scholarship requirements from college.

Buy the series here »



ARIZONA: "Medium" (2005-2011)

Networks: NBC/CBS
Seasons: 7

Patricia Arquette plays a medium who uses her powers to speak with the dead and see future and past events to help solve police investigations.

The show aired its first five seasons on NBC before airing two final seasons on CBS. Arquette won a Primetime Emmy for her role in 2005.

Buy the series here »



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Google was fooled by a hoax announcing 'Breaking Bad' season 6

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Breaking Bad Bryan Cranston

"Breaking Bad" is done and not coming back. But that didn't stop Google from mistakenly picking up a hoax touting a new season of the AMC drama and promoting it as news.

false story from the site nbc.com.co pretends to offer details about "Breaking Bad" creator Vince Gilligan's return to the show following season five and the death of Walter White. As Re/code reported yesterday, that story became the top hit in Google News for searches of "breaking bad season 6," and was even credited to NBC. (As of this writing, that's no longer true. We've reached out to Google for comment.)

The slip may be due to a change in Google's algorithm. A "very large fraction" of total Google searches are now being handled by an artificial intelligence system known as RankBrain. The system learns from users' searches and is supposed to improve results. But Google clearly missed the red flags in the "Breaking Bad" hoax.

The fake article also fooled a number of people on Twitter, where the hunger for more "Breaking Bad" is deep. For now at least, fans will still have to settle for that other Vince Gilligan show, "Better Call Saul," instead.

SEE ALSO: Netflix says this is the 'Breaking Bad' episode that got you addicted

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NOW WATCH: A Google employee lives in a truck in the parking lot to save money

How Amazon saved 'Breaking Bad' star Bryan Cranston's new show

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sneaky pete Giovanni Ribisi

Amazon has yet to save a series after it's been canceled – like other streaming services Hulu, Yahoo, and Netflix – but it's now taking rescuing to a new level. It's going forward on a show that didn't even get past the pilot stage at CBS.

"Sneaky Pete," which is executive produced by "Breaking Bad" star Bryan Cranston, has been greenlit to series by Amazon, according to a company press release.

Previously, CBS developed the series and produced the pilot, which stars Giovanni Ribisi. In the end, the network decided to pass.

According to Vulture, Sony Pictures Television, the studio behind "Sneaky Pete," refused to give up on the series after CBS dumped it. Sony found a possible new home at Amazon, but the pilot would need some reworking.

AdWeek reported that the changes were as minimal as two pivotal new scenes and a few re-shot scenes that transformed the show from a good procedural (a show that has a story of the week) to a much deeper, darker series.

On "Sneaky Pete," Ribisi stars as Marius, a con man who, after leaving prison, takes cover from his past by assuming the identity of his cell mate, Pete. He moves in with Pete’s unsuspecting family and is roped into the family’s bail bond business and becomes a skip tracer (someone who finds a fugitive).

Marin Ireland ("Side Effects"), Margo Martindale ("The Millers"), Peter Gerety ("Prime Suspect"), Libe Barer ("Parenthood"), and Shane McRae ("Still Alice") also star on "Sneaky Pete." Plus, Cranston makes a special appearance.

David Shore ("House"), Erin Gunn ("Battle Creek"), and James Degus ("All the Way") also serve as executive producers alongside Cranston.

The "Sneaky Pete" pilot is available to view now on Amazon. The series will premiere in 2016.

Watch the trailer below:

 

SEE ALSO: Here's why Amazon didn't save NBC's 'Hannibal'

MORE: 7 TV shows you're not watching that you really should be

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NOW WATCH: Here's how much you have to buy to make Amazon Prime worth it

7 'Breaking Bad' references hidden in 'Better Call Saul'

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saul goodman better call saul

It's not easy to follow up one of the most critically acclaimed shows in history. But "Better Call Saul" is more than just a follow-up.

Set before the events of "Breaking Bad,""Better Call Saul" follows Walt's lawyer Saul Goodman as he tries to set up a law firm in New Mexico. While fans wonder if we may see Walt, Jesse, or Skyler again, AMC released a video showing the much more subtle ways the two shows are connected. 

"We try to callback to 'Breaking Bad' every now and then, on 'Better Call Saul' and that can mean anything from the appearance of a prop...or characters [from] Breaking Bad," said creator Vince Gilligan. 

Some of the references are minor, while others are much more obvious. Although Walter and Jesse haven't appeared on the show yet, other characters have returned, showing their relationship to Saul before the events of "Breaking Bad."

Keep reading to see seven "Breaking Bad" references in "Better Call Saul." 

Saul predicts his future job of working at a Cinnabon.

In Saul's final scene of "Breaking Bad," once Walt's drug dealing and money laundering have bankrupted him, Saul tells Walt, "I'm lucky - months from now. Best case scenario, I'm managing a Cinnabon in Omaha."

In the first moments of "Better Call Saul," we found out that's exactly what happens to him. It was one of the most satisfying, yet sad, references to "Breaking Bad" to see Goodman fall so far.



In "Breaking Bad," Saul told Walt he once convinced a woman that he was actually Kevin Costner.

In "Better Call Saul," we see what actually happened. After a night together, the woman wakes up and angrily tells him "You are not Kevin Costner!" before storming off. Fans were delighted to see this callback in the "Better Call Saul" season finale, with the Huffington Post calling it the "best""Breaking Bad" reference all season.



In "Breaking Bad," Saul suggests Walt and Skyler buy a nail salon to use as a money laundering front.

In "Better Call Saul," it turns out Saul's original law office was in the back of a nail salon. He's desperate to move to a better location, but as "Breaking Bad" viewers know, he never leaves the strip mall where he became partners with Jesse and Walt. 



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Kids' movie ‘Zootopia’ throws parents a bone with an awesome ‘Breaking Bad’ homage

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zootopia

A kids' movie is maybe the last place you would expect to find a "Breaking Bad" homage. Alas, Disney's "Zootopia" delivers in all its yellow hazmat-suited glory.

Spoilers ahead! 

The movie follows a rookie cop, a bunny named Judy Hopps, and her partner-in-crime-fighting, a fox called Nick Wilde, as they investigate a missing mammals case.

Late in the film, there's a scene where Judy and Nick find themselves in an abandoned public transportation terminal. Inside, they find an unused, beat up train car. Its decrepit exterior is reminiscent of the van where Walter White and Jesse Pinkman operate a meth lab in the first season of "Breaking Bad."

Cue the parody.

breaking bad walt

A sheep wearing a yellow hazmat suit and an oxygen mask handles a blue substance inside the car. In "Breaking Bad," Walt and Jesse's brand of meth is famously blue.

The sheep toils with vials and lab equipment, preparing the specimen.

Blue Meth Breaking Bad

When I saw the movie over the weekend, some parents in the audience may have been putting two and two together, but the homage still seemed too coincidental — or just too absurd for a Disney-Pixar animation.

Finally, the sheep says into the phone, "Walter and Jesse are back." Nearly every parent and chaperone there erupted in laughter. The kids didn't seem to catch on.

"Zooptia" is one of those movies that has something for everyone.

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: The level of detail that went into Disney's new movie 'Zootopia' is unreal


Aaron Paul is determined to make you forget about Jesse from 'Breaking Bad'

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aaron paul

It's been over two years since we saw Jesse Pinkman race off into the night while both laughing and crying on the finale of "Breaking Bad." And in that time, the actor behind everyone's favorite drug pusher, Aaron Paul, has been busy trying to escape the shadow of Pinkman.

From starring in the adaptation of the video-game series "Need for Speed," to taking a supporting role in the Netflix animated comedy "BoJack Horseman," versatility hasn't been a problem for Paul. But none of his more commercial projects has caught fire like "Breaking Bad"— yet.

This weekend, he stars as a conflicted drone pilot in the indie film "Eye in the Sky." Starring opposite Helen Mirren as a colonel determined to kill a terrorist, he comes to a disagreement with her on how to engage when a young girl enters the kill zone, leading to a powerful commentary on modern warfare.

"Eye in the Sky" won't get the kind of attention to make us stop thinking of Paul as Jesse Pinkman, but that hasn't deterred him. He recently starred in the heist movie "Triple 9," and he's about to star in an intriguing new TV show from Hulu "The Path." And if you follow him on Twitter, you know he's campaigning hard to star as drug addict Eddie Dean in the screen adaptation of Stephen King's classic book series "The Dark Tower," which was greenlit with Matthew McConaughey and Idris Elba attached.

Business Insider talked to Paul at the Waldorf Astoria in New York City about the challenges of making "Eye in the Sky," box-office failures, "The Dark Tower" rumors, The Rock's nickname, and shaking Pinkman. 

EITS_01595_R3Business Insider: So what can you tell us about the "Dark Tower" rumors.

Aaron Paul: Rumors are a funny thing. These rumors about "The Dark Tower" have come up a handful of times over the last couple of years. There's always a big part of me that thinks, "What don't I know?" Just wishful thinking. I'm a huge fan of that book series for many years and the idea of them turning it into a franchise is very exciting to me. As a fan.

BI: Are your people talking to the studio?

Paul: I have no idea what's going on. It was funny [tweeting] out to Stephen King last night. That's the wonder of the internet. It's the power of numbers: get enough people to retweet something, someone might see it.

BI: You're being coy with me right now. It sounds like you might know something, but there's nothing to say.

Paul: There's nothing to say.

BI: Well, let's dive into "Eye in the Sky." What did you know about the subject of drones before taking on the project?

Paul: A very scary weapon being flown over a country that the pilot of that weapon is not in. Being in the safety and comfort of their own bunker. Signing on and doing more research into this world, it's not the safety and comfort of a bunker — it's a very scary, terrifying situation that these pilots are in. Ninety-nine percent of the time, they are just the eye, surveillance. Making sure everyone is safe. Checking out where the bad people are going. Is that a bad thing? No. Dropping payloads on buildings and killing innocent civilians, is that a bad thing? It's a touchy subject.

BI: Did you talk to drone pilots for the movie?

Paul: Yes. I talked to this guy Chris, who had been flying drones for many years. He used to fly jets, him and his brother, and then he started flying drones. And not just one drone at a time. Sometimes he's flying four at once. Which is crazy. Again, because most of the time you're just the eye.

BI: How was it performing in a movie like this? Because I would assume you're just on set and someone is feeding you lines off-camera. Helen Mirren isn't giving them to you.

Paul: Right. We had someone reading the script for us off-camera and then for the things that we had to see on the monitor, [director] Gavin [Hood] would explain it off-camera. He would bark out orders to us, or he would explain what we're seeing, he would be like "Now you're seeing she's leaving her property, she's walking along the side of the building. Oh no, she's setting up bread, she has six loaves of bread, she has to sell those six loaves of bread!" It's an interesting way to work. I had never worked like that before.

BI: You've done great choosing indie roles, but the studio movies haven't gone so well. Do you have any regrets about some of the roles you've taken since "Breaking Bad"?

Paul: I did a big studio film straight from "Breaking Bad," it was really a business move —

BI: "Need for Speed."

Paul: Yeah. And it wasn't just a business move. I love cars, I have two classic cars of my own. Just the idea of how to really learn to drive a car like what we did in the film was a dream come true.

aaron paul need for speed
BI: But if it takes off, you get a franchise.

Paul: Yeah, it's great. And of course we wanted it to become a franchise. The fact that it didn't perform so well in the States is a bummer. But it performed well elsewhere. I had a blast doing it. No regrets. Now I'm just focusing on material — it has to be on the page.

BI: Are you surprised "Triple 9" didn't do well?

Paul: Shocked.

BI: I thought with that cast and the director, John Hillcoat, it would take off. On paper, you're thinking home run.

Paul: Easy. And I talked to John Hilcoat about this the other day. It feels like the universe is against the man. He's a brilliant filmmaker, but no one sees his films. It's so bizarre. The fact that we did $6 million in the opening weekend, well, "Deadpool" is a monster. It was the third week that movie is out, but it still did a killing.

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BI: Were there specific goals you wanted to accomplish after "Breaking Bad"?

Paul: That show opened up so many doors for everyone involved. Before the show, I constantly had to bang on everyone's doors, do the hustle. And I'm all about the hustle still, I don't take anything for granted, but it's a point of the career now that you can be picky. My end goal is just to do projects at the end of the day that I'm proud of.

BI: Is one of those goals to have people think of you less as Jesse Pinkman?

Paul: Oh, absolutely. And I know jumping on "Triple 9," there were similarities. I mean, my character was holding a pipe in his hand. When it got to that part of the story, it got me thinking a little bit about Jesse, because I have said no to so many drug roles since "Breaking Bad" ended.

BI: And if "The Dark Tower" happens for you, the character you're interested in playing, Eddie Dean, is an addict.

Paul: Yeah, but, c'mon, that's "Dark Tower," that's fine. That is why people think I would make a great Eddie Dean, the smartass drug addict. But it's a completely different character, it's not Jesse Pinkman. And I love that.

walt jesse breaking bad
BI: But would you go as far as, say, taking on a romantic comedy, just to flip it on people and do something incredibly different?

Paul: I don't really seem to gravitate to romantic comedies.

BI: I would pay money.

Paul: Would you?

BI: I'd put down cold hard cash to see you in a romantic comedy. I think it would be fun.

Paul: Well, who knows. But I do tend to gravitate to the more dramatic side of things. I love feeling intense emotions when I'm acting. I just love characters and stories with conflict. I love stories that put you on the edge of your seat and make you feel something. But I do have a comedy coming out.

BI: With The Rock and Kevin Hart.

Paul: Yeah, "Central Intelligence." I play DJ's CIA partner.

BI: DJ?

Paul: Dwayne Johnson.

BI: Oh, you must be good pals to get away with calling him DJ.

Paul: Yeah, DJ's a good guy.

SEE ALSO: RANKED: Every actor who's played Batman, from best to worst

Join the conversation about this story »

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'Better Call Saul' is better than 'Breaking Bad' — here's why

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better call saulIt’s a tough time to be making great television. If the aughts marked the dawn of the medium’s golden age—when a few ambitious shows, like TheSopranos and Mad Men, reached new aesthetic heights and got big audiences chattering—we now seem on the brink of an upcoming collapse. We’re living in an era of grotesque abundance. Everyamazingshow is just one of countlessamazingshows we could be watching. Even the most devoted viewers miss something amazing each week. Which means that it’s very difficult for even the best shows of the current moment to attain the buzzy cultural electricity of their predecessors, the charge that comes from being a common object of obsession.

Into this landscape sidles Better Call Saul, the Breaking Bad spinoff whose second-season finale airs Monday night. The show sounded shticky when announced—it would tell the backstory of Saul Goodman, the sleazeball lawyer played by comic Bob Odenkirk—and when the first season aired, the largely positivereviews were marked by a sense of relief that Saul hadn’t tarnished Walter White’s legacy. Since then, the show has drawn good notices, solid ratings, and praise for the subtlety and pathos of Odenkirk’s central performance as Jimmy McGill, the man who will become Saul. It got picked up for a third season. It’s doing fine.

But Better Call Saul should be doing more than fine, because it is already better thanBreaking Bad, and thus has a shot—if it stays this good—at being one of the best television shows ever made. Better Call Saul takes the style that made Breaking Baddistinctive—the astonishing cinematography, dark comedy, and brashly confident pacing—and elevates it by applying it with more beauty, subtlety, and moral sophistication. And yet the spinoff has less buzz than the original. That’s criminal. No matter how glutted their DVRs, the American television-viewing public should be collectively freaking out that a show as great as Better Call Saul exists.

Perversely, Better Call Saul aims higher than its progenitor by lowering the stakes. Through its first two seasons, the show has concerned itself not with murderers and kingpins but with the mundane dilemmas of Jimmy McGill, a silver-tongued man with a gift for conning people who is trying not to use it. The show’s emotional core lies in his relationship with his older brother, Chuck, a brilliant lawyer who doesn’t believe that no-good Jimmy can play it straight for long. Jimmy aspires to please Chuck and go legit even though his talents offer tempting shortcuts. The result is a fascinating portrait of an underestimated man figuring out who—and how—to be.  The show could be called Breaking Good.

Of course, we know where Jimmy ends up, and that crookedness will continue to beckon. But his struggle is powerful because it is human. Breaking Bad was, at its core, about a monster: Walter White is a thwarted milquetoast who gets a taste of power and goes mad for it. The show tells a story of inexorable descent. But Jimmy is a much more complicated figure, one who wants to help those around him but whose oddball ideas about how to do right have bad results as often as good ones. The forces he encounters—an undermining brother, a lurching love affair, disappointment at the office, his own underutilized talents—are sketched not with the chiaroscuro darkness of Walter White’s temptations but with subtler shadings that feel more like everyday life. It’s thrilling to see the storytelling bravado of Breaking Bad applied to these familiar but rich concerns.

And about that bravado: Saul is run jointly by Vince Gilligan, who created Breaking Bad, and Peter Gould, the Breaking Bad producer who wrote the episode that introduced Saul. One of the most remarkable things about Breaking Bad’s run was the way it ratcheted up the tension through its finale; it didn’t waste our time with wobbly late seasons or a flabby denouement. What that means, though, is that Vince Gilligan and his team dropped the mic at the top of their game. He and Gould have very swiftly picked it up again for their work on Better Call Saul. The whole show is operating at the same level of chutzpah and brio as Breaking Bad when it wrapped.

This is clear in Saul’s understated, methodical, and deliberate plotting, and the suspense the show creates with each subtle turn. Why is Mike Ehrmantraut, the beloved Breaking Bad heavy, drilling holes in a garden hose with his granddaughter? Why does Nacho, a savvy drug-world apparatchik, pause to check out the leather seats in that Hummer? Why does Kim Wexler (Jimmy’s friend, colleague, advocate, and love) rip a business card with his name on it in half? Every modest moment in the show builds to a fascinating payoff. It’s also notable that the characters the show has introduced—including meticulous Nacho (Michael Mando), loyal and ambitious Kim (Rhea Seehorn), and conniving Chuck (Michael McKean, who like Odenkirk is a comic actor giving an authoritative dramatic turn)—are as compelling as the two we’ve watched for years.

Saul is also so casually visually stunning that its pedestrian beauty feels like grace. Gilligan has retained his eye for the warm geometries of Albuquerque, and he and the other directors who’ve worked on the series (including Gould) find elegant compositions for every gritty tableau. In the second-season opener, one establishing shot reveals the deserted industrial parking lot where a drug deal is about to go down, and then—for a brief, improbable instant—a hummingbird flits into the frame, pauses to look at the camera, and flits away. The shot was a lucky accident(especially so since the scene that follows features a brightly bedecked Hummer as a key plot point), but the choice to leave it in and make a moment of it is characteristic of the show’s confidence and charm.

better call saul

Indeed, Saul’s pacing is so assured it’s like watching a glossy thoroughbred take a few powerful turns around the oval. Many scenes start early and go long, allowing the characters to make slow approaches, size each other up, react, rally, and breathe. The show skips forward and backward in time with nimbleness and purpose, revealing incidents as they shed light on key players without undue deference to chronology. All of this is done without pretense or self-regard, although Saul isn’t above a little showboating: One recent episode began with a four-minute tracking shot at the U.S.-Mexico border, a taut, kinetic homage to Orson Welles’ famous opening sequence ofTouch of Evil. This time, though, the sensitive cargo is not a ticking bomb but a melting popsicle, a delicious little visual joke.

It’s a joy to watch Saul nail these and other details—from the cobwebs in a baseboard hidey-hole to the tinny sound of rap emanating from a small boombox while lawyers toil at late-night document review—as it methodically lays the groundwork for what will hopefully be many seasons to come. It may be early to declare Better Call Saul an all-time great TV show, but the necessary ingredients are there. The Season 2 finale airing Monday may reveal just how far astray Jimmy’s pinwheeling moral compass can lead him; events foreshadowed last week may push him more decisively toward Sauldom and the end of his relationship with Kim. Or perhaps that journey will take a few more laps. No matter how Saul gets where he’s going, though, you’d be a fool not to join him on the road.

SEE ALSO: 8 TV shows you're watching that are probably going to be canceled

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13 shows people binge-watch the fastest on Netflix

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walt jesse breaking bad

Tuesday, Netflix released a study saying it knows which shows viewers are most likely to binge-watch.

The reveal came as a bit of a surprise since the streaming service is particularly secretive when it comes to releasing data about shows and movies watched on the platform.

In a press release, Netflix broke down the way people view shows into two categories — those they "savor" and view over a period of time and those they "devour," or binge-watch for more than two hours per day.

What falls into the latter category? According to Netflix, fans are more likely to breeze through thrillers and horror series. Keep reading to see the 13 shows Netflix says viewers binge-watch the fastest, in no particular order.

"Bates Motel"

The A&E prequel series to "Psycho" follows a young Norman Bates and his mother leading up to the movie's events. A fifth season is set for 2017.



"Breaking Bad"

AMC may have been the home of the critically acclaimed series which saw Walter White go from a teacher to drug lord in five seasons, but the show often gets praise for getting popular on the streaming site first.

When the series won its first Emmy for best drama series, creator Vince Gilligan credited the show's popularity on Netflix with keeping "Breaking Bad" on air.



"Dexter"

The Showtime series, which followed a serial killer who only murders other guilty people, ended with a controversial finale after six seasons.



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Sunday's 'Game of Thrones' is now the internet's highest-rated episode of TV ever

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jon snow game of thrones battle bastards

It's only been a few days since Sunday's massive episode of "Game of Thrones" filled TV screens with dragons and a giant battle for Winterfell, but it's already been declared the best episode of the HBO series yet.

And now, it's officially fans' favorite episode of television ever, too.

As pointed out by Reddit, Sunday's episode, "Battle of the Bastards," has received a perfect 10/10 rating on IMDB from over 75,000 users. That's more than the over 70,000 users who have given "Breaking Bad" season five, episode 14 ("Ozymandias") a perfect score on the film and television site.

Even more impressive is that "Battle of the Bastards" acquired that many votes in less than three days, whereas it has been nearly three years since "Ozymanias" aired on AMC in September 15, 2013.

GOT breaking bad imdb

Many online have said it's kind of tough to compare the two episodes, and they're right. 

As a reminder, "Ozymandias" is the episode where everything truly fell apart for Walter White.

Not only did it bring us the shocking hand-to-your-mouth death of lead character Hank (Dean Norris), but it also involved Walt's heart-wrenching betrayal to his former student Jesse Pinkman (Aaron Paul). Walt both gave Jesse over to Todd's Nazi family, and, after several seasons, he revealed he watched his girlfriend (Krysten Ritter) choke to death on her own vomit. It was a serious one-two punch to the gut. 

walter white breaking bad

If that wasn't enough, the episode culminated in a giant fight between Walt and his wife Skylar that ended with Walt kidnapping their baby girl before deciding to leave her safely at a fire station. Walt's transformation from timid, pushover school teacher into reckless druglord was complete. Except now, he was on his own. Being at the top of the pyramid can be lonely.

"Ozymandias" brought us some of the best well-written and emotionally-charged scenes that you'll ever receive in an hour of television. HBO's fantasy series offered up cinematically huge action sequences that will be tough to ever rival. 

Dragons fire game of thrones

Now, maybe the audience for "Game of Thrones" skews a bit younger to those who are frequently online rating television episodes of shows across the board. The "Game of Thrones" audience may be a bit younger than some of the "Breaking Bad" crowd, too.

Either way, it's still pretty impressive that after two-and-a-half days "Battle of the Bastards" has already overtaken "Ozymandias" as the best-rated TV episode on IMDB of all time.

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NOW WATCH: 4 things you might have missed on this week’s ‘Game of Thrones’

Bryan Cranston says he's 'all in' to bring back Walter White on 'Better Call Saul'

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bryan cranston

Bryan Cranston, the star of AMC's acclaimed series "Breaking Bad," says he's "all in" to bring his character Walter White to AMC's "Better Caul Saul," the network's successful "Breaking Bad" prequel series.

In an interview on "The Rich Eisen Show" on Tuesday, Cranston discussed the possibility of reprising his Emmy-winning role and praised the vision of Vince Gilligan, the creator of both "Breaking Bad" and "Better Call Saul." 

"I owe Vince Gilligan so much. He was my champion to get this role," Cranston said. "If they were to call me and say, 'We have this idea, we'd like' – I would say: 'Yes, you don't have to finish the pitch, I'm there, what do you want me to do?'"

Gilligan alluded to a possible Walter White appearance in "Better Call Saul" in a New York Daily News interview last year. Cranston says he's onboard with the decision, as he's sure that Gilligan and his crew would handle the cameo skillfully.

"I would do whatever they want because I know how careful they are and proprietary they are with those characters and the storyline," Cranston said. "It would be something kind of unique and obscure and creative, and I'm all in."

Cranston also revealed that he's been tapped to direct an episode of "Better Call Saul," though he's unsure of whether he'll follow through on the opportunity.

"I'm debating whether I want to or not because I'm a fan of the show," he said. "There's a part of me that says that would kind of kill it for me as a fan, to peek behind the curtain."

Watch his interview with Rich Eisen below:

SEE ALSO: How Amazon saved 'Breaking Bad' star Bryan Cranston's new show

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NOW WATCH: Kit Harington explains why he showed up to his 'Game of Thrones' audition with a black eye

HBO's new must-watch show has one eerie parallel to 'Breaking Bad'

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Night of Naz

Warning: This post contains spoilers for the most recent episode of "The Night Of."

On this week's episode of "The Night Of," Naz (Riz Ahmed) broke bad. 

Naz has been accused of murdering a woman, a crime that he claims he did not commit. While waiting for the trial that will determine whether or not he'll have to spend the rest of his life in prison, Naz sits in New York's infamous Rikers Island. Even though he claims to be innocent, Naz is starting to look and act more like a criminal every week.

In this week's episode,"The Season of the Witch," he got violent revenge on another prisoner and helped smuggle drugs into prison. He's now riding around with Freddy (Michael Kenneth Williams), the most feared man in Rikers, who sees that Naz has some pent up rage inside of him.

It's a sudden transformation that is starting to remind us of "Breaking Bad," in which cancer-stricken chemistry teacher Walter White (Bryan Cranston) transforms into notorious meth kingpin Heisenberg.

The first point of comparison is pretty obvious: Naz's shift it marked after he shaves his head:

Night Of Head Shave

Night Of Naz Shaved

Same goes for Walter White:

Walter White Bryan Cranston Breaking Bad

walter white breaking bad

Walter White's transformation helps to explain what has happened to Naz.

Just like with Walter White, we automatically assumed that Naz was a good kid from the get-go, and therefore he seems unlikely to be a murderer. He's the hardworking son of immigrant parents who can barely keep down a shot of tequila.

You get the same feeling about Walter White, who at first seemed so incapable of being dangerous that you couldn't imagine him becoming bad for any reason besides trying to protect his family.

It helps that Riz Ahmed, who plays Naz, has a boyish quality to him that makes you believe he's still a good kid even as he's kicking someone in a prison shower. Just like with Walter White, you can't help but wonder whether Naz was bad all along, or if prison is slowly turning him into a monster.

According to a 2005 study from the Bureau of Justice, within just three years of release, about two-thirds (or 67.8%) of released prisoners were rearrested. As pointed out by the National Institute of Justice, that same study found that people arrested for crimes like burglary, arson, or theft were the most likely to be rearrested, and typically for a new crime.

Michael Williams Night Of

Basically, prison can turn people into criminals. We still don't know whether or not Naz is actually guilty, and as Stone (John Turturro) points out, there is still a lot we don't know about him.

If prison is turning Naz into a criminal, then it's an indictment of the criminal justice system. If he was bad all along, then it shows how little we actually know about these characters so far.

Just like "Breaking Bad,""The Night Of" proves to viewers that you can't make assumptions about anyone.

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NOW WATCH: EX-UNDERCOVER DEA AGENT: What I did when drug dealers asked me to try the product

The 50 best TV show seasons of all time, according to critics

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walt hank breaking bad

The most critically acclaimed TV shows in history have earned their praise by repeatedly producing innovative and memorable seasons.

Shows like "The Wire,""Breaking Bad," and "The Larry Sanders Show" consistently won over critics, and their best seasons have set a standard for what great television should look like.

To find out which series have been the most influential, we turned to the review aggregator Metacritic for its list of the all-time best TV seasons, which ranks shows by their composite critical reception.

Check out the 50 best TV-show seasons of all time, according to critics:

SEE ALSO: The 20 most-watched TV episodes ever, ranked

50. "The Larry Sanders Show" (Season 1)

Metacritic score: 91/100

User score: 6.7/10

Notable episodes: "The Garden Weasel,""Party,""The Hey Now Episode" 



49. "Sherlock" (Season 2)

Metacritic score: 91/100

User score: 9.1/10

Notable episodes: "A Scandal in Belgravia,""The Hounds of Baskerville,"The Reichenbach Fall"



48. "Frozen Planet" (Season 1)

Metacritic score: 91/100

User score: 8.8/10

Notable episodes: "To the Ends of the Earth,""Spring,""Summer"



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Netflix says this is the episode of ‘Breaking Bad’ that got you addicted to the show

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walt jesse breaking bad cooking

Netflix thinks it knows what episode of "Breaking Bad" got you addicted to the hit AMC series.

The streaming site released a study Wednesday, claiming it knows when viewers got hooked on a variety of the shows it streams.  

How did they pinpoint that episode?

According to a release, Netflix analyzed global streaming data from the first seasons of a number of TV shows. 

Netflix defines a "hooked episode" as one where 70% of viewers who watched one episode carried on to stream the rest of the season.

So what episode of "Breaking Bad" got people hooked?

Netflix says it was season 1, episode 2, "Cat's in the Bag," which premiered January 2008.

If your memory's a little fuzzy, the episode contains one of the series' most memorable, and gross, scenes.

Before their partnership into the meth-making business really begins, the two need to dispose of a body. The plan is to dissolve it in hydrofluoric acid inside a specific plastic bin. Jesse ignores Walt's instructions and disposes of the body in a porcelain tub. 

breaking bad jesse

Big mistake. 

The acid eats through the second-floor tub, and everything comes crashing through the ceiling. 

breaking bad bathtubaaron paul bryan cranston breaking bad

At last year's Tribeca Film Festival, Cranston told a packed crowd it was the grossest scene he ever did on the five-season show.

You can check out the scene, here:

But this metric only looks at Season 1 of a series, and that might not paint a perfect picture.

While memorable, this episode is no fan favorite. Check out this chart from graph.tv, which breaks down shows according to IMDB ratings.

Episode 2 is clearly one of the least liked episodes of the season by fan reception:

breaking bad graph tv

So while Netflix says it may be the episode that got people on the "Breaking Bad" train, the reality is that could be a little skewed if it wasn't in season 1.

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NOW WATCH: The 15 Best Quotes From 'Breaking Bad'

'Breaking Bad' star Bryan Cranston reveals he was once a murder suspect in real life

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bryan cranston

Bryan Cranston played a very, very bad guy on "Breaking Bad," but the actor had a bizarre run-in with the law over a murder.

Cranston recently told Jimmy Fallon on "The Tonight Show" about the time in the 1970s that he was a suspect in a murder.

As Cranston tells is, he and his brother, in the middle of a "two-year motorcycle ride across the United States," took a job waiting tables in a Polynesian restaurant called the Hawaiian Inn in Daytona Beach, Florida. Everyone there absolutely hated the chef Peter Wong.

"During the waiter meetings, we'd have a little food and they'd tell us what to push on the menu. And we'd all talk about how each one of us would kill Peter Wong if we had the opportunity," Cranston told Fallon. 

"I would slice him up. Nice, tender slices," Cranston said he joked at the time.

But the jokes about killing Wong became less funny when Wong actually turned up murdered. Cops apparently asked who had left the restaurant who had talked about hurting Wong, and suddenly the cops were pursuing Cranston and his brother.

 

Watch Cranston tell the story on "The Tonight Show" below:

Watch Cranston tell the story on "The Tonight Show" below:

SEE ALSO: Here are the must-see movies most likely to win Oscars in 2017

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NOW WATCH: Here's what 'Game of Thrones' stars look like in real life

Bryan Cranston says he'll move to Canada if Donald Trump becomes president

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bryan cranston

Actor Bryan Cranston says he will "absolutely" move to Canada from the US if Donald Trump is elected president.

"I would definitely move. It's not real to me that that would happen. I hope to God it won't," Cranston said in a recent interview with The Bestseller Experiment podcast.

As The Hollywood Reporter points out, the host asked Cranston if he would vacation to Vancouver, British Columbia, if Hillary Clinton were to lose on November 8. 

"It wouldn't be a vacation," Cranston said. "I'd be an expatriate."

The "Breaking Bad" star is not the first celebrity to claim to want to emigrate to the country up north if Trump wins. Lena Dunham, Barbara Streisand, and Chelsea Handler have all said that they would leave the US for Canada in the event of a Clinton loss.

Cranston has spoken out against Trump's candidacy in the past, variously describing the Republican nominee as "an anomaly to the human race" and an "empty... huge cargo ship" with a wake that "leaves tremendous problems."  

SEE ALSO: 41 celebrities who are taking a strong stand against Donald Trump

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NOW WATCH: The first trailer for Marvel's ‘Guardians of the Galaxy’ sequel is here

The best TV show of every year since 2000, according to critics

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Mad Men

Each year in television, one show stands out from the rest as the most critically acclaimed program of the year.

Since the turn of the new century, review aggregator Metacritic has compiled an annual list of the year's most well-received TV show seasons by assigning scores based on their composite critical reception.

We selected the top show from each year starting with 2000. The resulting list includes repeated appearances from contemporary classics like "Breaking Bad,""The Wire," and "Mad Men" for their most notable seasons.

Check out the best TV show of every year since 2000, according to critics:

SEE ALSO: The 20 best new TV shows ranked, according to critics

2000: "The Sopranos" (Season 2)

Critic score: 97/100

User score: 9.3/10

What critics said: "It's difficult to single out any particular aspect of the show: It's just plain brilliant."— Variety



2001: "The Office: UK" (Season 1)

Critic score: 98/100

User score: 8.6/10

What critics said: "It takes a little while to get into it (episode two clinched it for me), but once you get used to the accents and dry humor, you're hooked."— The Chicago Sun-Times



2002: "The Office: UK" (Season 2)

Critic score: 93/100

User score: 8.9/10

What critics said: "The pleasure to be taken from 'Office' isn't merely that of laughter — it's the pleasure of watching a piece of entertainment so perfectly made and so delicately acted."— Entertainment Weekly



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Netflix is trying to make you believe that 'Breaking Bad' is a prequel to 'The Walking Dead'

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What if The Walking Dead and Breaking Bad took place in the same universe?

What if Breaking Bad is actually a prequel to The Walking Dead, and it was Walter White who caused the zombie apocalypse?

We know, it's not a new fan theory. But for the benefit of those who are just hearing about it for the first time, Netflix has had a crack at trying to make you believe it.

The video points to four reasons that support the theory.

1. Merle's hidden stash of drugs in The Walking Dead episode 2 includes blue-sky meth – seemingly the same type which Walter White was making.

meth drugs

2. The red sports car that Walter bought for his son looks like the same one Glenn drove to lure the walkers away in The Walking Dead episode 2.

breaking bad red car

3. Daryl says, "I'm going to kill you, bitch". Sounds a little like something Jesse Pinkman would say.

4. Gus Fring was the first ever zombie. Remember his death?

breaking bad gus los pollos hermanos

Okay, so it's all a bit of a stretch. But it's fun to briefly entertain the idea that both shows are connected other than the fact that they're both on AMC.

The Walking Dead is still going strong in its seventh season – with Rick's gang facing a new threat in the form of Jeffrey Dean Morgan's Negan.

He killed Glenn and Abraham in the season premiere, but actress Lauren Cohan says Maggie will want vengeance.

"What Negan's actions do to Maggie is light this crazy fuse," she recently said. "And we'll see that burn pretty strong."

The Walking Dead airs on Sundays at 9/8c on AMC in the US, and UK viewers can watch every Monday at 9pm on FOX.

MORE FROM DIGITAL SPY:

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