Breaking Bad


How many of you fans of The Wire also liked Breaking Bad? I've just started to give Breaking Bad another shot. But it just feels so childish compared to The Wire. It's like all the problems that the characters face in Breaking Bad would not even warrant a 2 minute scene on The Wire. I know that they have a different focus, but the main idea is still that they're in this drug game, but it's almost like there's no other players on other sides in Breaking Bad. Whereas in the Wire everyone is a player and everyone is on different sides trying to win their own game.

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I've seen both series from beginning to end. How many seasons of Breaking Bad have you watched? Just curious.

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3

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So you don't like anything unless it's just like the wire? Just because people love both of these shows doesn't mean they're alike.

If your only point now is that you don't like breaking bad. Oh. Thanks for the information.

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Breaking Bad was great. It doesn't hold up as well on repeated viewings and even with the ridiculous plot contrivances its still one of the best shows ever made.

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It was a fantastic show but is really boring the second time around. The best part of the Wire is it's great the 2nd, 3rd and even 4th time around because of how many topics and characters are portrayed on the show.

Breaking Bad also doesn't feel like the living and breathing city like the Wire did. It is probably too focused on such a small group of characters.

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Breaking Bad is excellent. More entertaining than The Wire.

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Breaking Bad is a cartoon compared to the wire

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That's why Breaking Bad is ranked #3 while The Wire is at #5

I'm into 2nd season of the Wire. Pretty good.

Seen B.B. 4 times completely thru. Will be happy to watch it again.

Wire has more intense drama, B.B. great entertainment. So many unexpected turns. Very funny as well.
The Wire, every episode you know you're in for some kill'n shoot'n and bad guy chas'n.
All just my opinion.

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Breaking Bad is a damn-good show. It's the only show I've spent $3 per pop to get the episodes the day after they aired (for the last season at least).

However, if you really love The Wire, you're doing yourself no good if you constantly compare BB to TW.

Both are very different shows. TW is - for the most part - rooted in reality. BB can go over the top, but hey, TV is entertainment. (And I"m guilty of loving that. For instance...it seems that a LOT of people hated the cousins with the cool boots, but I loved em.)

Who knows...BB may just not be the show for you. But before deciding that, drop the comparisons to TW and see if you enjoy it more :)

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You said that brilliantly. I own both series. I can binge on both but The Wire just pulls my heart out, stomps on it and tries to put it back in.

IMO there wasn't any character, other than Jessie in BB, that stole my heart. Walt did bad things for a good reason. But I was on the edge of my seat, from start to finish. What an explosive story.

I wish there were great series like these two on now. I just started the British version of Cracker and based on the message boards here, I think I'll love it.

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Yeah, Cracker is a good series and well worth the watch. Robbie Coltrane is excellent in it.

Another British show that I'd suggest is a lesser known one called Between the Lines. It's an early nineties three series show that deals with police and political corruption, and doesn't pull its punches. It focuses on an anti-police corruption unit investigating police malpractices, where they're allowed to tackle certain police officers to publicly show that such "bad apples" are being dealt with, but find that they're obstructed the higher their target gets. It's well acted, particularly by Neil Pearson, and although it tends to be episodic in nature, there is a story arc throughout the series (corruption in the higher ranks and beyond, as well as other story arcs).

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Thank you. I shall put that on my list based on your explanation of it. The examination of corruption of people in power is a theme that I'm quite drawn to.

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Cracker and Between The Lines are great, but it's also worth seeking out the daddy- or rather mother- of them all, Prime Suspect. Great stories, great writing and of course Helen Mirren...

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Yes, agreed. Put Prime Suspect on your list, too.

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Thank you both. I do have Prime Suspect already on my list. You can't go wrong with Helen Mirren.

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I cannot find Between the Lines. I have Prime, Hulu Plus and NF. I also can't find State of Play, the one with Bill Nighy. I guess I'll just have to buy them.

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Is there a 'like' button for this comment?
I couldn't agree more with this post.
I'm into the 3rd season and I admit, it's growing on me.
It is a very involved show. Well worth a second viewing when I can get to it.
Breaking Bad is a whole different animal. It would be too easy for me to start talking about 'this and that' in BB.
It's basketball and football...the two shows.

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The wire is more of a procedural cop show with a realistic approach to the gangster side of the show. Breaking bad is the complete opposite, I'm a huge fan of BB but I have to admit his crime life is completely sensational, there's no way one person could have pulled all of that off in real life without getting capped or arrested very early in their crime career.

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I "feel ya". I can't stomach Breaking Bad after watching much more quality shows like The Wire, The Sopranos, Oz, Deadwood, etc. It's a great story poorly directed. I've tried twice to get into it, only to be discouraged by a terrible cast except for Bryan and Aaron. I always quit after the performance of the latino drug dealer that unrealistically wants to destroy a rare golden-goose in the drug/chemist world; give me a *beep* break. IMDB gives it a 9.5 but McDonald's has served billions so just because something is popular, doesn't make it necessarily great. This is my opinion of course, and if I get flamed for it, I can simply laugh at how easy it is to butt-hurt the masses that love that dribble. I'd rather watch a superb, unfinished series called Deadwood, over and over again.

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Why the comparison/contrast? They're so dissimilar in almost every aspect.

BB is naturally more popular: it's unashamedly pitched at commercial audiences. Its pop cultural memes and casual violence is classically American and instantly & to many audiences reassuringly familiar. It has much more accessible appeal as a non-critical escapist fantasy, instantly recognisable and non-threatening in nature. It's comfortable, familiar and predictable in a similar manner to much other crime drama, albeit taken from an unusually skewed aspect. The Faustian pact is a recurrent theme in contemporary drama.

My major criticism is that there's little or no exploration of the societal, cultural and familial damage wrought on contemporary society. Such baggage is far beyond the scope of this entertaining adult fantasy.

The Wire is far less accessible. There's no instantaneous gratification here. The subtlety, the obtuse interrelationships between characterisation and its saturnine development of plotlines I believe actually works against many viewer's expectations. Without thematic and episodic payoffs, many will likely lose interest, which is reflected I suspect in much of the series' dismissive criticism.

Therein, however, also lies an element of literary nonpareil that echoes through the ages. In a similar manner to classical greek drama we see that the gods are indeed capricious and jealous. Not all that appears right and fair may be so, and that which is seen as wrong is not necessarily existentially evil either. In fact the subtle dichotomies of good and evil are recurrent tropes that both enrich and elevate beyond any contemporary drama.

Some may actually find the screenplay's convoluted plotlines alienating and confusing. Not of themselves unnatural reactions to the unfortunate propensity for some to inevitably compare this Magnum Opus to comtemporary drama. The Wire vagariously defies most attempts of categorisation; the scope is just too large, and the subject too multi-faceted to allow a priori analysis.

If I were pressed to make analogous comparisons, then perhaps Breaking Bad is to be likened to popular music that would appear in the playlists of commercial radio stations, whereas The Wire would be more indicative perhaps of Richard Wagner's Ring Cycle, played live in a sequential week-long performance at Bayreuth.

For University Students of the future, tasked with analysing historic literary sources that illuminate urban decay & the reasons for the fall of the American Empire, which series do you think would be more helpful?

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Breaking Bad and The Wire don't even belong in the same sentence together. Breaking bad is for people with attention issues as there's only a couple of things going on at the same time.

It doesn't hold a candle to The Wire.

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