Community Corner
The Cars of 'Breaking Bad'
From Walter White to 'Ken Wins.' Are there any coincidences as to who drives what on the show?

By Mischa Arnosky
βKeys, scumbag. Itβs the universal symbol for keys.β
Remember this? Mike Ehrmantraut says this to Walter White in the desert in the first episode of the first half β¦ of the last season ofBreaking Bad.Β Mike had just left a makeshift hospital in Mexico (after feeding the chickens) and ran into Walt and Jesse. He ultimately ditched his Cadillac DTS to hop in Walt and Jesseβs white, sand-covered Dodge Charger.
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Oh, and if you havenβt seen all of the episodes of best show that ever graced television (sorry, Iβm one ofΒ thoseΒ guys), you might want to stop reading.
And while Iβm one of those insufferable supporters of AMCβs former flagship show, Iβm also a car guy β and Iβm thinking a lot of the writers ofΒ Breaking BadΒ were car guys/girls as well. Cars are big on the show.
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Iβm always excited when a TV show doesnβt cover a carβs badging with a piece of haphazardly placed electrical or duct tape. (βOh, I had no idea that was a Porsche 911 because thereβs a piece of tape over the crest.β)Β Breaking BadΒ makes no apologies when it comes to showing car brands.
So letβs break down the marques and see who drives what.Β There are some weird coincidences β¦ if youβre a nerd β¦ and into that sort of thing.
Cadillac: Walt, Saul, Mike, Tuco
Yep. Walt is probably best known for driving the biggest joke to ever come out of General Motors, the Pontiac Aztek. But, in the first episode of season five, we see that Walt has upgraded (?) his Volvo 240 DL to a mid-70s, reddish brown Cadillac DeVille courtesy of his gun guy Lawson β replete with an aftermarketΒ M60 machine gun in the trunk and (definitely aftermarket) keyless entry.
Jackβs white supremacist colleague Kenny was impressed.
βDamn man, this thingβs a classic!β Kenny said. βWhat block you got in there, [a] 500 or 425?βΒ
Walt doesnβt know the size of the engine.
βHuh. Five-hundred,β Kenny replies. βThatβs the one you want. No replacement for displacement.β
See, even Kenny's a car guy
Saul drives a newer version of the DeVille, with the much-ballyhooed Northstar 32-valve V8 and the now classic βLWYRUPβ tag. Β Mike drives a Cadillac after heβs discharged from the hospital. Again, after feeding the chickens. (βIf Wendell doesnβt eat, nobody eats.β)
Tuco was a drug dealer β¦ and the writers decided to have him drive in an Escalade. Iβm OK with that.
General Motors G Body: Jesse (twice), Emilio, Krazy-8, drug dealers who βeyeballβ Combo βhardβ
G Body? G Body. Β GM made a bunch of cars on what's calledΒ the G Body platform, spanning from 1978 to 1988,Β according to G-Body.org, and a bunch of them show up inΒ Breaking Bad.
Jesse initially drives a red Monte Carlo with the showy tag βTHE CAPN,β first shown in the pilot episode β¦ and escapes from the neo-Nazis' compoundΒ in the final scene of the final episode in another G Body car, an older El Camino. Emilio and Krazy-8 show up to the desert in the pilotΒ in a Regal coupe; and Fringβs drug dealers who threaten Jesseβs buddy Combo drive a murdered-out (that means two things)Β '80sΒ Monte Carlo β probably an LS mocked up to look like an SS.
And for all of the GM talk, it's interesting that creepy Todd drives a newer 5.0-liter Ford Mustang.Β
Volvo: Gus Fring, Walter
βIs Walter turning into Gus?β the internet asked.
Well, Walter steals an old Volvo 240DL in New England and drives it across the country. Zillionaire drug lord Gus Fring also drove a staid Volvo, probably a V70. Fring's once had a bomb strapped to its undercarriage. Not much of a connection.
Chrysler Group: Walt, Walt Jr., Hank, Skyler, the Cousins
Iβll never forget the scene: Walt sells the Aztek for a bucket of baseballs and comes home with a 300 SRT for him (formerly known as a Chrysler 300C SRT8), and a Dodge Challenger SRT for Junior. The scene showed both Walters revving their 6.4-liter 470 horsepower engines to theΒ music ofΒ Knife PartyβsΒ Bonfire.Β It was clearly an in-show commercial for Chryslerβs SRT division, and I loved it. I also enjoyed the scene where Walt paints a parking lot in spent Goodyears and then sets the Challenger on fire.
Less cool was whenΒ Walt and Walt Jr. (over breakfast, of course)Β were bragging over which of their cars had more horsepower, as both cars have the same engine, but Iβll let it slide. Especially becauseΒ Junior lets an expletive slip during the conversation ...Β which is always awkwardly entertaining.
Hank drives a Jeep Commander; Skyler drove a Grand Wagoneer until it's replaced by a Ford Edge; and Walt Jr. had to trade in his Challenger for a snazzy PT Cruiser. Also, the cousins, who show up to murder Walt at his house with an axe, show up driving a middle-of-the-rung 3.5-literΒ Dodge Charger -- a step down from the Benz they had in Mexico.
Toyota: Jesse, Jesseβs parents, Walt
Jesse, who needed to replace his Monte Carlo, decides against buying what looks like a β69 Chevelle, and grows up by buying a (probably) reliable Toyota Tercel 4WD wagon β¦ which is a pretty rare car. Jesseβs well-to-do parents have two Priuses; and Walt drives a Yaris after he wrecks his Aztek.
Terrible GM cars: Walt, Badger
Waltβs green Pontiac Aztek makes me depressed, especially when he and Skyler drive it to the Schwartzβ mansion for the garden party. Badgerβs Pontiac Fiero is equally terrible, but itΒ seems like a perfect place for concoctingΒ Star TrekΒ scripts.
BMW: Ted Beneke, βKEN WINS,β lady at the carwash
While it pains me to say this, the two biggest weasels to appear on the show drive BMWs.
Tax evader Ted Beneke, while we donβt see him driving it, likely owns the black E46 BMW, possibly a 328i, in the Beneke Fabricators lot. And instead of paying off Uncle Sam with his βwindfall inheritance,β he takes a chunk of that money and buys a Mercedes-Benz SL550 β with a heated steering wheel, according to Saul.
The other jerk β the guy who steals Waltβs parking spot, talks on his Bluetooth device at the bank, and almost runs over an old person at the gas station β drives a maroon E36 318iC with the license plate βKEN WINS.β Walt gets the satisfaction of setting βKenβsβ BMW on fire by putting a wet squeegee in the engine bay (even though the carβs battery is in the trunk). Walt does not get the satisfaction of punching Ted in the face or torching his BMW or Geo Metro, though.
Iβve owned an E36 and an E46 and have never cheated on my taxesΒ orΒ yelled at an old person at a gas station.
There is also a very brief glimpse of what appears to be an E31 850 on perhaps Dinan wheels at Bogdanβs car wash. Itβs the last car Walt sees before he passes out.
Bonus: Janeβs dad Donald Margolis
Even if you donβt think itβs a coincidence that Jesse drives the same brand of car as his parents, thereβs no denying that the writers went out of their way to select a specific car for Donald Margolis. In keeping with the tradition ofΒ revealing plotlines right in the show β like show titles, for instance β Margolis, who in later episodes is revealed to be responsible for causing a plane crash while heβs working as an air traffic controller, is seen driving a LincolnΒ NavigatorΒ earlier in the season. Β
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Do you buy into any of the coincidences? What was your favorite car of the show? Did we miss any? Were any of the older cars misidentified?Β Was Marie's car purple?
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