Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Chemistry of Drugs

Using chemistry for it’s accuracy and precision in drug making is the only main avenue for wealth in the field. In the same pursuit as other chemist, Walt White turns his chemistry degree towards drugs opening a methamphetamine lab in suburbia.
Scientist played by Bran Cranston (Walt White) in the seven part series “Breaking Bad” on AMC takes a close look at just how to wipe the smirk off the Jones’s faces. Walt a chemistry teacher with debt hopes his methamphetamine lab will be the means to halt the madness. As a lower middle class man with a family, Walt is struggling to keep up to pace, working two jobs and waking at 5 am. “Breaking Bad” spotlights the growing hardships of middle class Americans and provides a release with comical ingenuity that seems forgotten.
Created by Vince Gilligan, executive producer of the “X-Files,” “Breaking Bad” begins as a Nobel Prize contribution in chemistry that turns criminal. Walt with good intensions began his road of hardships that leads him now to something that would disgrace his mother.
Alessandra Stanley wrote that the show follows the expectations of a middle child. Believing the story line runs at half the speed necessary Stanley calls the show a bore but makes little connection at the bigger picture.“Breaking Bad” makes public the credit burden felt by some lower class Americans that provokes unimaginable choices.

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