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USA Today Sports Media Group
USA Today Sports Media Group
Sport
Mitchell Northam

Breaking Bad debuted 15 years ago and fans celebrated by sharing their favorite moments from the iconic series

It’s been 15 years since television viewers were introduced to The One Who Knocks, the chemistry teacher turned meth kingpin and the one they called Heisenberg – Walter H. White.

Breaking Bad – the iconic AMC series starring Bryan Cranston and Aaron Paul – first appeared on television screens 15 years ago this week, making its debut on Jan. 20, 2008.

The show, created by Vince Gilligan, follows the evolution of Walt (played masterfully by Cranston) as a middle-class high school chemistry teacher who is diagnosed with lung cancer soon after his 50th birthday. Walt then starts cooking meth to secure financial stability for his wife (Anna Gunn), son (RJ Mitte) and soon-to-be-born daughter, should he die. He enlists his former student, degenerate drug dealer Jesse Pinkman (a breakout role for Paul) to help him. Eventually, the duo winds up working for the menacing and cool Gus Fring (Giancarlo Esposito), the owner of a meth empire in the southwestern U.S. masquerading as the operator of fast-food chicken joints. Along the way, Walt and Jesse encounter hitman-slash-fixer Mike Ehrmantraut (Jonathan Banks), scam artist and crooked lawyer Saul Goodman (Bob Odenkirk), Vamanos Pest Control employee Todd Alquist (Jesse Plemons) and Walt’s brother-in-law, the DEA agent Hank Schrader (Dean Norris). Mark Margolis, Bill Burr, Krysten Ritter and Robert Forster appear in the show in key supporting roles too.

Ultimately, Gilligan said he wanted to take a “milquetoast-ish guy and turn him into a bad guy,” and to “take this Mr. Chips character and have him turn himself into Scarface.” Mission accomplished.

Gilligan’s show ran for 62 episodes, spanning five seasons over six years. Its first season was shortened by a writer’s strike, which contributed to the show’s slow burn in gaining popularity. A lot of folks came to it via Netflix, which picked up the first three seasons just before the fourth aired in 2011.

Breaking Bad won 12 Emmys and two Golden Globes. It spawned a pair of spinoffs in “El Camino” a 2019 film focused on what happens to Paul’s Jesse Pinkman after the events of the show, and separate TV series, “Better Call Saul,” a prequel – and late in the show, sequel – centered around Odenkirk’s Saul Goodman.

It’s often associated with The Sopranos, The Wire and Mad Men as the Mount Rushmore of sorts of prestige television in the 21st century. In writing about the four shows in 2011, Chuck Klosterman wrote at the now-defunct Grantland: “Breaking Bad is the only one built on the uncomfortable premise that there’s an irrefutable difference between what’s right and what’s wrong, and it’s the only one where the characters have real control over how they choose to live.” Indeed, once Walt becomes cancer-free and financially secure by most folks’ standards, he keeps cooking and selling meth, because – as he later admits to Skyler – “I did it for me. I liked it. I was good at it. And I was really… I was alive.”

Where it ranks among the greatest television shows of all time can be debated, but what’s inarguable is that the show is a true masterpiece in storytelling. And it has no shortage of fans, judging from the outpouring of admiration it received on social media on its 15th anniversary.

Some of the clips here include some NSFW language. And of course, a spoiler warning for anyone who hasn’t seen the show.

“I am the one who knocks.”

This scene is from Episode 6 in Season 4, “Cornered.” It earned Gunn an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series. This is one of the moments where Walt truly embraces his Heisenberg alter-ego and, in a way, admits to Skyler that he’s responsible for Gale Boetticher meeting his demise.

“The money, Skyler, where is the rest?”

Here’s another one from Season Four. This one earned Cranston one of his six Emmy nominations for the series. It’s an emotional moment, where Walt – panicking after being threatened by Gus – runs home and jumps in his crawl space to receive some stashed away money so he and his family can make an escape. Except, while he’s down there, he has to hear Skyler tell him that she gave most of it away to Ted Beneke (whom she cheated on Walt with) so he could pay off the IRS. Walt then has, well, a nervous breakdown of sorts. The cinematography here is by Michael Slovis, and the way the camera zooms out of the crawl space and hangs over it, focusing on Walt laughing, is quite remarkable.

“Enough.”

A lot of folks widely consider this episode, “Ozymandias,” to be not just the best Breaking Bad episode, but one of the greatest in the history of television. It’s directed by Rian Johnon (yes, he of The Last Jedi and Knives Out). The episode won three Emmys for the series, Cranston and Gunn for acting, and Moira Walley-Beckett for writing. In this scene in particular, Skyler finally reaches her boiling point with Walt, and Walter Jr. does to.

“I’m not turning down the money. I’m turning down you.”

This is just a wildly incredible bit of acting and line-reading from Paul, who is hospitalized in Episode 7 of Season 3 after being nearly beat to death by Hank. Michelle MacLaren was nominated for an Emmy for directing this episode. It’s one of the many times Jesse tries to quit Walt.

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