6A - Monday, September 9, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com fiA - Monday, September 9, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Unnecessary roughness, L a'csraunchy seas Wi th Desp sistentl some rm Sacko "The 's fift opener uncensi raunch delight semi-sc half-ho edy cum-pu again, ing sop humor the woi posals, The1 after I Andre Love") t and banter at "Glee") busy planning their des- tination wedding. Please tell me e forefront of a cake filled with donuts exists in real life. We also finally get FXX series to meet Ted, last year's Shiva winner and perpetual no-show. By KELLY ETZ Played to perfection by Adam Daily Arts Writer Brody ("House of Lies"), Ted moves the secret fantasy draft to pite working around a con- L.A. (California, here we come ...) ly stagnant plot - a draft, and brings the party proceedings natch-ups, Shiva glory and to a stuttering halt with his AIDS shame - announcement. Is it safe to riff on League" AIDS yet? At least "The League" h-season is universally shameless. is an The League Meanwhile, Ruxin (Nick Kroll, ored, Season "Kroll Show") attempts to opt out y five of Sacko punishment - and with . The premiere those balls, who could blame cripted Wednesdays him? - so Pete (Mark Duplass, ur com- at10:30 p.m. "The Mindy Project") forever makes memorializes his vinegar strokes uns fun FXX with yet another trophy. Here's prov- where the premiere slips a bit; phomoric there's not enough time for five isn't always a cop-out. In separate storylines and the plot rld of Top Groom and bro- fails to integrate Taco (Jonathan. subtlety is meaningless. Lajoie, "Wrong Cops") or Jenny premiere jumps in directly (Katie Aselton, "Our Idiot Broth- ast season's finale, with er") as more than set pieces. As (Paul Scheer, "Burning far as Kevin (Stephen Rannazzisi, and Trixie (Jayma Mays, "Daddy Knows Best") goes, that FXX : delights 1in on premiere AIDS cocktail can't have been hope creators Jeff and Jackie good, but at least there's the Schaffer don't get too compla- promise of more in the next epi- cent. One-offs and gag-ready sode. jokes are well and good, but even The less-than-perfect plot only the bawdiest of series need some highlights the seamless perfec- depth once in a while. tion of the cast as a comedic unit. While the new season was Practically overflowing with up- unceremoniously relocated, and-coming talent, "The League" along with "It's Always Sunny can deliver without a tightly in Philadelphia" and "Legit," to honed script and sharply writ- FXX (not a typo; FX launched a ten dialogue - or any pre-written new comedy channel that's lost dialogue, really. One-liners are somewhere in cable's triple-dig- the backbone of the series, and its), it doesn't appear affected. the fifth season doesn't disap- The move could have proved point. Flawless banter from Kroll worrisome if "The League" and Jason Mantzoukas ("Enlight- hadn't already been renewed ened"), returning as Ruxin's for 2014. As it is, the only thing brother-in-law, Rafi, and a classic in danger is viewer numbers, as "League" finish - "I don't know around five-million FX subscrib- what a trident is, but these are dil- ers won't receive the new chan- dos" - ensure that the opener is nel. satisfyingly memorable. If you can find it, the premiere Rafi's Domination League, is worth the time. Still one of the featuring Dirty Randy (Seth tightest ensembles in the current Rogen, "This is the End"), has TV landscape, "The League" is season-arc potential, and the amusing at its worst and brashly promise of more guest stars, side-splitting at its best. So don't including Griffin Dunne ("House pull a Ruxin and get stuck at the of Lies") as Andre's dad, will cer- bar drinking alone. Grab a pock- tainly help propel the rest of the et-dog and settle in, the game season plot-wise. Even so, let's only gets better from here. Call: #734-418-4115 Email: dailydisplay@gmail.com HOUSE CLEANING FOR Retired CENTRAL CAMPUS Professor. $15 per hour. Flexible hours. 6 and 7 bedroom houses Car a plus. 668-8850 great furniture/decor _________________________ eternet and wireless Stop calling Walter White an anti-hero ince Gilligan's "Breaking Bad" is well into its final season, and the Internet is alive with a general sentiment of "WHAT ARE WE GOING TO DO WITH- OUT IT?" I'm among the many "Bad" fans unprepared to let go. But first, I have a few things KAYLA I want to say UPADHYAYA about Walter White and why I cringe every time I read a tweet along the lines of "Heisen- berg is such a boss!" Early on, I viewed "Breaking Bad" as another player in the anti-hero game. As the show tore through its explosive are, I start- ed to understand it more as a critique of "anti-hero" television. Critics love to draw comparisons between Walt and the iconic anti-hero Tony Soprano (argu- ably the man to spark the trend), but place them side-by-side and you'll see that they function in entirely different ways. After the series-defining fifth episode of the show, when we see Tony kill a man with his bare hands in between college tours with his daughter Meadow, there's little doubt that Tony's a murderous monster, capable of inflicting harm upon everyone around him in an unflinching, almost mun- dane fashion. But when you look at Tony's ongoing character are throughout the series, it's flecked with crises of conscience and moments of moral clarity. Tony was knowable, even charming at times, defined by boring little humanizing qualities we all have. That's been the general formu- la for most TV anti-heroes today. Their creators push them as far as they can into corruption and villainy and then snap them back with moments of vulnerability or selflessness or compassion. "Mad Men"'s Don Draper manipulates, cheats, neglects. But he's also haunted by death and pain, and it'd be hard to build a case that Don's a villain. Walt's story moves differ- ently. It isn't marked by the same kind of moral oscillation of Tony or Don. The most commonly used descriptor in any review, interviewor conversation about Walter White is "chemistry teacher turned meth maker." On the surface level, it's a correct assessment of the character's trajectory. But it also reiterates this somewhat misguided notion that Walt underwent a complete character transformation with his occupation change. People love to talk about Walt's "turning point." When was the moment when Walter White truly broke bad? For some, it's when he mur- ders Krazy 8. For many, it's when he lets Jane die. I don't see Walt's journey in terms of a turning point or a transformation. It's more accu- rately characterized as a linear descent that sometimes varies in how fast it plummets but never deviates from course. We're not watching a hero lose his way. We're watching a villain's origin story and, as the eerily apocalyp- tic flash forwards insinuate, his eventual demise. I can't pointto one murder or lie or twisted manipulation and say: "There. That's where Walt crossed the line into unredeem- able territory." You have to zoom out to see that all of his wicked actions compound, as Heisenberg tears through his path of destruc- tion, pulling others along with him. You can sit down and tally up everyone he has killed, lied to, or hurt, but you still wouldn't be quantifying his villainy. How could you? Like any great villain, Walt operates in insidious ways. When Walt refuses to let his longtime friend Elliott pay for his medical bills - which would effectively give him an out of the drug biz - he's showing the true colors of his relentless hubris. Jesse may have pulled the trig- ger, but Walt is just as culpable t for Gale's death, and not only because he gave the order. Up until Gale's execution, we always understood Jesse as the quasi- moral compass of the duo, simply because he seemed incapable of murder. Jesse was always uncomfortable with any of Walt's plans that involved taking life. But Jane's death changed Jesse. He blamed himself, became convinced he was a Bad Guy, and self-fulfilled the prophecy by showing up on Gale's doorstep. And Jane's death goes right back to Walt. Hank's life started spin- ning out of control at the hands of Walt when he was still just the elusive, mythical Heisenberg to the DEA agentbrother-in-law. And now that Hank knows the truth, he's descending further into his obsession with trapping Walt, manipulating Marie, Skyler and Jesse in the process. I don't wish to argue thatthe characters on "BreakingfBad" - who are all flawed in real, textured ways - aren't responsible for their own actions. I'm just saying that Walt has a hand in almost everything "bad" that happens on the show. The defining, noxious qualities that make Heisenberg the terror he is were always in Walt, just under the surface. In an early epi- sode, we learn that Walt's former business venture Gray Matter Technologies achieved huge suc- cess after Walt sold his share of the company. His partners made millions while Walt walked away with nothing. Even though it has been decades, Walt confesses to Jesse that he checks the com- pany's valuations weekly, tortur- ing himself with what could have been. That's obsessive behavior. Walt's obsession, pride, megalo- mania - they didn't magically appear when he stopped being a chemistry teacher. These traits just heightened when mixed with the high-stakes chemicals of the meth industry. Heisenberg is officially the Big Bad of this show. Think about it: Walt's most empathetic characteristic is his cancer, and that has nothingto do with who he is as a person. It's just a condition that, yes, impacts and informs some of his actions, but it's not a human quality. In fact, he sometimes uses his can- cer as a weapon to control others, like when he uses his relapse to earn Walter Jr.'s sympathy. If you're still convinced that Walt's top priority is his family, you're just as delusional as he is. The cancer diagnosis triggered something potent within him: a desire to live. But that desire is only partly about protecting his family and mostly about preserv- ing his own legacy. Have you ever heard Walt describe himself as a family man or a loving husband or a caring father? No, he's in the empire business. He is the one who knocks. He is the danger. Walter White is not an anti- hero, so let's not call him one. It suggests that he's deserving of our laud and empathy. Call him what he really is: evil. Gil- ligan has geniusly made his protagonist a villain, offering a critique - an antidote, even - of the anti-hero trope. As view- ers, we still want to root for the protagonist, because that's what television has conditioned us to do for so long, which is why so many "Bad" fans end up cheer- ing for the sociopathic drug lord and viciously hating his trapped wife. This final season has made it all the more clear that we really don't have any heroes on "Breaking Bad." Gilligan trick- ing us into believing we ever did is a manipulation of Heisenberg proportions. Upadhyaya is asking Gilligan to pay for her post-'Bad' therapy. 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