breaking bad tv program
- 'Breaking Bad' prequel shows true price of survival in U.S.
- In the "Gotham" episode titled ¿Viper,¿ Stan Potolsky, a biochemist with the heart of an evil philosopher, unleashed a potent drug on Gotham.
- If the new Fox drama "Gracepoint" looks too good to be on network TV, that's because it's stacked with the kind of talent you normally see only on cable. And the work here is so good it could help change the way networks do drama in the future.
- Violent behavior and imagery extends far beyond NFL and into popular culture
- Emmy Award-winning actor Bryan Cranston depicts the Orioles' pie-in-the-face celebration in his one-man-show commercial for the MLB playoffs.
- Johns Hopkins University will host a former North Korean detainee, the outdoorsman whose canyoneering accident was adapted into the movie "127 Hours," and actors from "Breaking Bad" and "The Office," among several other speakers this fall.
- I love "Breaking Bad," and even I didn't think it would win as big as it did Monday night at the 66th Primetime Emmy Awards.
- David Zurawik: It's time for the Emmy Awards again, and I am excited and angry.
- All kinds of impressive numbers were flying around last week in the wake of Emmy nominees being announced. HBO ran up an industry-leading 99 nominations overall with 19 for its gory and glorious ¿Game of Thrones¿ alone.
- A recap of the June 1 premiere episode of AMC's "Halt and Catch Fire"
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- In final season of "Mad Men," expect to witness the anguish of Don, the power of Peggy.
- A Johns Hopkins political science professor has decided to analyze Walter White's performance in his original calling, as a teacher.
- Maryland-made "House of Cards" was one of several entertainment series to win a Peabody Award.
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- Since screening the Season 2 premiere of "House of Cards" almost two weeks ago, I have been dying to talk about a showstopper of a moment in it.
- In the original, 1990's British version of House of Cards, Francis Urquhart is a conservative ideological extremist who rises through the political ranks by defeating one starry-eyed opponent after another. The American version — the second season of which is set to launch on Netflix Friday — is considerably different. For one thing, the House majority whip Francis Underwood (Kevin Spacey) may nominally be a blue-dog Democrat from South Carolina, but he is as free of ideology as it's
- Julia Louis-Dreyfus won a top SAG Award Saturday night for her work in Baltimore-made "Veep."
- Netflix production had led TV series with four nominations coming into evening
- The most important TV moment of 2013 didn't even happen on television.
- A recap of the Nov. 17 episode of 'Homeland,' in which Carrie takes one from the team -- again
- This week's episode of "The Walking Dead" was especially quotey but not especially bitey.
- Equipped with a small gladiator shield, plastic sword and red cape, Beth Lewis, 48, said her daughter talked her into completing in the Tomato Run 5K at Ripken Stadium for her birthday. Before the race began, she said she hopes her shield will block her and keep her from getting too messy.
- "Breaking Bad" went out big Sunday night for AMC in the ratings attracting an audience of 10.3 million viewers for its final episode. That was three times the audience it drew for last year's season finale.
- The Heisenberg's vanilla base is laced with pieces of Crystal Blue(berry).
- Wins for Jeff Daniels, Claire Danes edge out Kevin Spacey, Robin Wright
- When the Maryland workers building the sets for "House of Cards" started sawing and hammering the offices and homes of characters like Francis and Claire Underwood 20 months ago in Harford County, most of them were thinking only of earning a steady paycheck, not being part of TV history.
- "Breaking Bad," on AMC, is one of the most successful TV shows in recent memory. Sony Pictures Television grows worldwide, expanding channels into 840 million households.
- Forget the stars. The people I always wanted to talk to were the writers and producers who created the fictional worlds that became long-running TV series.
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- Tommy Brenton, a former Howard County basketball Player of the Year, takes a moment to do a 30-second timeout
- Pop culture Q&A with River Hill boys basketball player