As in shut up anyone who hates series finales, science, and Sting.
Three bald men and a funeral.
Now. I don't mean to make anyone's head asplode with more Breaking Bad postulations, but I've been thinking about some of my favorite series finales. I'm confident BB is going to cook its way into my top three, in its rightful spot (maybe even at the top of the pyramid) next to Six Feet Under and The Shield.
Not to get more morbid than the show has already become, but the endings of popular TV shows are a lot like funerals: They either offer finality and something resembling closure so we can more easily move, mentally unencumbered, onto the NEXT hit show (open casket), or they shroud the show's final moments in ambiguity, a tactic that makes for a lively Twitter feed for a few days, but also for a communally messed-up psyche — we never get all of the answers we so desperately seem to want and seek from our screens (closed casket). Go back and examine the excess all-caps rage that filtered down your feeds after the rather ambiguous Dexter finale last week if you don't believe me.
Of my favorite shows of the last decade, I place Six Feet Under and The Shield in the former category, The Sopranos and LOST in the latter. That's not to say I didn't enjoy and/or appreciate the way The Sopranos and LOST wrapped things up. I did, in a way. But in another way — not really.
It's weird, because I've always preferred ambiguity over finality in movies. But I'm not as vested in a movie. It's only two hours out of my life, not six years. And the endings of Six Feet Under and The Shield were both so exquisite in their conclusions. You don't get any more terminal than showing the deaths of a show's characters, either their real ones or their slow, metaphorical ones in a fluorescent-lit cubicle.
There are striking similarities between Walter White and Vic Mackey. Bryan Cranston and Michael Chiklis are both former sitcom dads gone wrong, breathing life into characters who justify their downward spirals into sin as a Mephistophelian (yet practical) means by which they can provide for and protect their families. Tony Soprano's delusion, on the other hand, didn't run quite as deep when it came to his own underworld endeavors — this was the life he was raised in, a life in which The Family was ostensibly more important than even his own.
But as resigned and pragmatic as he was in this life that was chosen for him, Tony Soprano often seemed to Just. Want. Out. He became obsessively attached to the wild ducks that fed in his swimming pool, suffering from severe anxiety when the "goddamn ducks" eventually flew away, leaving him floundering in his existential ennui. Walter White and Vic Mackey, on the other hand, chose their paths and had the chance, on more than one occasion, to retake the righteous one, a path that would lead them back to the stand-up white-collar lives they were supposed to live. Yet, despite the looming consequences, they just kept on wanting in.
I get the sense that Vince Gilligan is going to go the Vic Mackey route tonight. The entire show has revolved around these consequences. It seems like, if we're going to keep to the code, that it would be impossible to pussyfoot around that fact — we're going to know exactly what happens, at least to Walter White. There will be little to no ambiguity.
Anna Gunn (Skyler White) has said the 75-minute finale is going to be "apocalyptic." I wouldn't venture to guess the specifics of what Breaking Bad has in store for us, especially because that's already been done by the rest of the Internet — but I'm 96 percent sure (an even higher percentage than Jesse's last cook) that it's going to be open casket.
Thanks a lot, curmudgeonly commenters. You've ruined science for the rest of us.
Popular Science decided to shut off comments for its online content this week. Its reasoning: a "fractious minority" has the power to skew reader perception, which can then snowball into adverse effects for public policy and, subsequently, scientific funding. Associate editor Dan Nosowitz said the vexing comments simply became "too much to really fight back."