TV: A Major Breaking Bad Question about Gray Matter Has Finally Been Explained

playahaitian

Rising Star
Certified Pussy Poster
A Major Breaking Bad Question Has Finally Been Explained


The world of Breaking Bad was so rich and deep that years after its excellent series finale, fans are still talking about the ins and the outs of Walter White’s rise and fall, as there are still plenty of details and questions that were never fully explained. And despite creator Vince Gilligan’s stance that viewers should get what they want from the show, he’s finally cleared up one of the biggest mysteries: what made Walt leave his company Gray Matter?

To refresh: Walt co-founded Gray Matter with his college friend Elliott Schwartz, helped along by Gretchen, Walt’s lab assistant and girlfriend. Seemingly out of the blue, Walt ditched Gretchen and her family while on vacation and later took a $5,000 buyout from the company that would later be worth billions. Walt has always held a massive grudge against Elliott and Gretchen (who later married) for using his research to find success, and here’s what Gilligan says really caused Walt’s earliest detour down the path to breaking bad.

I think it was the kind of situation where he didn’t realize the girl he was about to marry was so very wealthy and came from such a prominent family, and it kind of blew his mind and made him feel inferior and he overreacted. He just kind of checked out. I think there is a whole other side to the story, and it can be gleaned.

So there you have it, folks. One of the most interesting and captivating lead characters in all of television made what was then the biggest decision of his life because he felt inferior to his romantic partner and her family.

I can’t help but assume that mindset soon branched out to ensnare Elliott and spun him into another source of Walt’s ego-damage, causing him to opt out of Gray Matter.

_1458258021.jpg


What’s most surprising about this answer is the lack of surprise that it inspires. Even though Breaking Bad viewers knew that Walt had a huge problem with the couple, the show never exactly played them up as the kind of ruthless monsters who would screw a friend out of anything. Even when they lied in the finale about Walt’s contribution to the company, it was obvious they were only doing it to save public face, not to sincerely discredit everything Walt had done in the past. We never really got to know how Walt’s rapid absence changed their lives, for either the good or the better, and I never really found a reason to dislike them as people.

Gilligan also offered up another piece of insight to Huffington Post.

I think the interesting thing is not exactly what happened but the fact that Walt hasn’t let it go over all these years. He has no perspective on himself. He gets to the point where all he can really do is try to justify everything that he’s done.

And everything that he did, no matter how he spun it to anyone else, was all for himself. He moved beyond cooperative occupations and mostly singularly took over a drug empire because power and control make up his life force. He let people die because they would have challenged his uprising. And going by Gilligan’s explanation, we can also make light assumptions that Walt ended up marrying Skyler specifically because she was the kind of woman who could arguably never rise above him in intelligence or authority, as well as someone who might naively avoid noticing him doing ridiculously illegal things.

Before his death, Walt sort of came around and made a bunch of good decisions that didn’t reverse time, but gave everyone around him a different outlook moving forward. (Well, not Hank, but you know.) Sucks that it took him all those years to understand that he was crafting his own downfall, but at least he got final say on how it went down.

As one of the greatest shows of all time, Breaking Bad absolutely held our attention the entire time it was on the air. And we couldn’t be happier that the show can still give us gifts years after it ended its run. Now I want to see Better Call Saul throw in an easter egg reference to Gray Matter and the Schwartzes at some point.
 
56e863be1e0000c600710451.jpeg


It’s been about three years since the show ended, but somehow we just got a huge bit of “Breaking” news.

Yeah, your life has to be pretty messed up to make you throw pizza on the roof of your house. (That’s just wasteful, bro.) Now we finally know more about how Walter White got to that point in “Breaking Bad.” Namely, show creator Vince Gilligan and co-showrunner Peter Gould filled us in on why he left his old company, Gray Matter.

In the series, we learn White co-founded Gray Matter Technologies along with his friend Elliott Schwartz. White is dating his lab assistant, Gretchen, but he suddenly leaves her while spending 4th of July weekend with her family. He sells his shares of Gray Matter to his partner for $5,000. The company is later worth billions, Elliott and Gretchen get married and White goes on to, you know, die in a meth lab. (And they all lived happily ever after.)

The real reason White left Gray Matter, which serves as part of the motivation for the character’s dark turn, has remained a mystery, but while chatting with The Huffington Post about “Yo Soy Saul,” an original song created for “Better Call Saul,” Gilligan and Gould also finally opened up about one of the biggest unanswered questions from the series:

Here’s why Walter White left Gray Matter.

giphy.gif


“Breaking Bad” actress Jessica Hecht, who plays Gretchen, mentioned in an AMC Q&A that Walt left the company and their relationship because he felt inferior. Gilligan confirmed this was true to HuffPost, saying, “She’s correct, and that’s what I explained to her and to [Bryan Cranston] before they shot that big scene between the two of them where they were at the restaurant.”

The scene Gilligan is referring to takes place in the Season 2 episode “Peekaboo.”

“It ends with him being so nasty to her saying, ‘Fuck you,’ and then she leaves tearfully,” said Gilligan. “In my mind, the interesting thing here — and I always kind of hate to nail it down so explicitly — but let’s put it this way, most viewers of ‘Breaking Bad’ assume Gretchen and Elliott are the bad guys, and they assume that Walt got ripped off by them, got ill used by them, and I never actually saw it that way.”

Gilligan explained that the truth is more nuanced. It all stemmed from White’s feeling of inferiority while spending time with Gretchen’s family.

“I think it was kind of situation where he didn’t realize the girl he was about to marry was so very wealthy and came from such a prominent family, and it kind of blew his mind and made him feel inferior and he overreacted. He just kind of checked out. I think there is that whole other side to the story, and it can be gleaned. This isn’t really the CliffsNotes version so much. These facts can be gleaned if you watch some of these scenes really closely enough, and you watch them without too much of an overriding bias toward Walt and against Gretchen and Elliott,” said Gilligan.

Gould added, “I think the interesting thing is not exactly what happened but the fact that Walt hasn’t let it go over all these years. He has no perspective on himself. He gets to the point where all he can really do is try to justify everything that he’s done.”

Gould believes Walt did finally change at the very end. “He was there for one thing: to take care of his family,” he said.

“The short answer here is that I think people tend to think of Gretchen and Elliott as the villains because they’re a couple of rich happy people, and they seemed to be arrayed against our hero, ‘Walter White,’ but the truth may be not so quite on the nose,” said Gilligan.

So there you go, Walter White. The reason you left Gray Matter had to do with feeling inferior.

Admitting that is the first part of the healing process. The second part is not throwing your pizza.

Just don’t do it, dude.

giphy.gif
 
great series,, but the dumbest thing about the plot is, that couple was gonna pay for his treatment,, but he'd rather turn that down, poison his community & risk his family and freedom instead,, for the majority of people, breaking bad woulda lasted 1 damn episode
 
great series,, but the dumbest thing about the plot is, that couple was gonna pay for his treatment,, but he'd rather turn that down, poison his community & risk his family and freedom instead,, for the majority of people, breaking bad woulda lasted 1 damn episode
He only turned to cooking meth because the whole cancer thing made him realize if he dropped dead his family wouldn't have shit.
 
great series,, but the dumbest thing about the plot is, that couple was gonna pay for his treatment,, but he'd rather turn that down, poison his community & risk his family and freedom instead,, for the majority of people, breaking bad woulda lasted 1 damn episode

Walt started the show completely powerless. Couldn't have real bacon on his own birthday, scolded for using the wrong credit card on a small purchase. Had to wash his student's cars on the side to make ends meet. Saw people belittling his son's disability. Then he's about to die as a broke pushover nobody.

Given The same skill set and circumstances I would have done the same thing Walter did.
 
That may explain why he didn't marry Gretchen but it doesn't explain why he sold his interest in the company. Gretchen was his lab assistance, if it gets too uncomfortable to be around her, get a new lab assistance. It also doesn't explain why a brilliant scientist with a billion dollar idea was working as a high school teacher and car wash clerk when the series started.
 
He only turned to cooking meth because the whole cancer thing made him realize if he dropped dead his family wouldn't have shit.

Walt had over 20 plus years as a teacher. He'd be eligible for early retirement. If he croaked, his wife would most likely get an instant death benefit (usually one year's salary) and his retirement every month (usually more than half his salary a month) from the state for the rest of her life. I'm not including any benefit from any life insurance policies.

It also doesn't explain why a brilliant scientist with a billion dollar idea was working as a high school teacher and car wash clerk when the series started.

Happens more often that you think in real life.
 
great series,, but the dumbest thing about the plot is, that couple was gonna pay for his treatment,, but he'd rather turn that down, poison his community & risk his family and freedom instead,, for the majority of people, breaking bad woulda lasted 1 damn episode

He was a multimillionaire...he wasn't poisoning his community.
 
That may explain why he didn't marry Gretchen but it doesn't explain why he sold his interest in the company. Gretchen was his lab assistance, if it gets too uncomfortable to be around her, get a new lab assistance. It also doesn't explain why a brilliant scientist with a billion dollar idea was working as a high school teacher and car wash clerk when the series started.

If he had got a new lab assistant who would have funded the business? They would have stayed eating 5/$1 ramen from the hardware store
 
one more -

When I watch a (good) show I tend to obsess about it - trying to peel the layers of skin away like an onion - A showrunner like Vince Gilligan (and Matt Weiner from Mad Men) thinks about every aspect of the show and makes it more than just a CSI or Bones - but puts real depth into the story and tons of bread crumbs to follow along

 
Are you an idiot?

great series,, but the dumbest thing about the plot is, that couple was gonna pay for his treatment,, but he'd rather turn that down, poison his community & risk his family and freedom instead,, for the majority of people, breaking bad woulda lasted 1 damn episode
He was a multimillionaire...he wasn't poisoning his community.
 
I love Breaking Bad and have done much forensic on the final scene to come to the conclusion that Walt is still alive - but for this so called revelation

giphy.gif

I too think he is still alive.

He maybe in custody of the Feds and working with them as a informant.

That Blue Meth is no longer a trade secret, others out there may have gotten their hands on the formula.
 
I too think he is still alive.

He maybe in custody of the Feds and working with them as a informant.

That Blue Meth is no longer a trade secret, others out there may have gotten their hands on the formula.

I agree that he's alive, but I can't cosign the rest.

Even if the late-stage cancer did stop him from dying of a gunshot wound to the torso, it's still late-stage cancer. He would be lucky to survive the month. And really, what incentive would he have to confess anything during that month?

As far as copying the formula, Gail couldn't do it, the Mexican cartels couldn't do it, the Nazis couldn't do it, nobody in the Czech Republic could do it. That formula dies with Walt. especially since Jesse probably got himself arrested on the same night. Even if he didn't, there is no way in hell he would ever cook again.
 
Back
Top