Walter White Breaking Bad Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Walter White Breaking Bad. Here they are! All 12 of them:

I am the one who knocks.
Walter Hartwell White
There's nothing more dangerous in life than not living".
Walter White (Breaking Bad)
If a man jumped as high as a louse (lice), he would jump over a football field. In Ancient Egypt, the average life expectancy was 19 years, but for those who survived childhood, the average life expectancy was 30 years for women and 34 years for men. The volume of the moon is equivalent to the volume of the water in the Pacific Ocean. After the 9/11 incident, the Queen of England authorized the guards to break their vow and sing America’s national anthem for Americans living in London. In 1985, lifeguards of New Orleans threw a pool party to celebrate zero drownings, however, a man drowned in that party. Men and women have different dreams. 70 percent of characters in men’s dreams are other men, whereas in women its 50 percent men and 50 percent women. Men also act more aggressively in dreams than women. A polar bear has a black skin. 2.84 percent of deaths are caused by intentional injuries (suicides, violence, war) while 3.15 percent are caused by diarrhea. On average people are more afraid of spiders than they are afraid of death. A bumblebee has hairs on its eyes, helping it collect the pollen. Mickey Mouse’s creator, Walt Disney feared mice. Citarum river in Indonesia is the dirtiest and most polluted river in the world. When George R R Martin saw Breaking Bad’s episode called “Ozymandias”, he called Walter White and said that he’d write up a character more monstrous than him. Maria Sharapova’s grunt is the loudest in the Tennis game and is often criticized for being a distraction. In Mandarin Chinese, the word for “kangaroo” translates literally to “bag rat”. The first product to have a barcode was a chewing gum Wrigley. Chambarakat dam in Iraq is considered the most dangerous dam in the world as it is built upon uneven base of gypsum that can cause more than 500,000 casualties, if broken. Matt Urban was an American Lieutenant Colonel who was nicknamed “The Ghost” by Germans because he always used to come back from wounds that would kill normal people.
Nazar Shevchenko (Random Facts: 1869 Facts To Make You Want To Learn More)
There must exist certain words in a certain specific order that can explain all of this, but with her I just can't ever seem to find them.
Walter White (Breaking Bad)
tread lightly
Walter Hartwell White
Here the methamphetamine produced was of a quality that even Walter White, the drug cook in the TV series Breaking Bad,
Norman Ohler (Blitzed: Drugs in the Third Reich)
Walt, is that you?” Is it? At this stage of our viewership, it doesn’t seem like it. It seems like the two death sentences our man receives in this hour—first from the oncologist, then from Krazy-8—have woken him up from years of slumber, and made him act in ways his wife couldn’t imagine. But as Breaking Bad moves along, we begin to see that this is who Walter White was all along, and it’s only his changed circumstances that have revealed him as a man capable of these things. The
Alan Sepinwall (Sepinwall On Mad Men and Breaking Bad: An eShort from the Updated Revolution Was Televised)
Stay out of my territory.
Walter White (Breaking Bad)
Sometimes it feels better not to talk. At all. About anything. To anyone.
Walter White (Breaking Bad)
Although Breaking Bad owes a great deal of its success to its talented cast and crew, fundamentally the program utilized a simple formula to keep people tuning in. At the heart of every episode — and also across each season’s narrative arc — is a problem the characters must resolve. For example, during an episode in the first season, Walter White must find a way to dispose of the bodies of two rival drug dealers. Challenges prevent resolution of the conflict and suspense is created as the audience waits to find out how the storyline ends. In this particular episode, White discovers one of the drug dealers is still alive and is faced with the dilemma of having to kill someone he thought was already dead. Invariably, each episode’s central conflict is resolved near the end of the show, at which time a new challenge arises to pique the viewer’s curiosity. By design, the only way to know how Walter gets out of the mess he is in at the end of the latest episode is to watch the next episode.     The cycle of conflict, mystery and resolution is as old as storytelling itself, and at the heart of every good tale is variability. The unknown is fascinating and strong stories hold our attention by waiting to reveal what happens next. In a phenomenon called “experience-taking,
Nir Eyal (Hooked: How to Build Habit-Forming Products)
This is the former laboratory of Dr. Fritz Hauschild, head of pharmacology at Temmler from 1937 until 1941, who was in search of a new type of medicine, a “performance-enhancing drug.” This is the former drug lab of the Third Reich. Here, in porcelain crucibles attached to pipes and glass coolers, the chemists boiled up their flawless matter. Lids rattled on potbellied flasks, orange steam released with a sharp hiss while emulsions crackled and white-gloved fingers made adjustments. Here the methamphetamine produced was of a quality that even Walter White, the drug cook in the TV series Breaking Bad, which depicts meth as a symbol of our times, could only have dreamed of.
Norman Ohler (Blitzed: Drugs in the Third Reich)
i am the one who cocks
Walter White (Breaking Bad)