Anonymous wrote:As a weird DH, I read a lot of car blogs and some mommy blogs. The Pontiac Aztec is infamous on the car blogs as Walter White's car. I think it was also missing one or two hubcabs. I believe it was a discontinued model by the time the show was made, but it had a resurgence on the used market.
The casting and sets and clothes and vehicles on that show were so perfect. I also loved Gustavo Fring's totally non-descript, but kind-of-upscale Volvo station wagon. He was my idol for stealth wealth, aside from the drug lording and brutal murdering.
Another show with excellent house/set casting was the Sopranos. Think of Corrado (Uncle Junior's) little New Jersey shit shack from the 1940s with the wood paneling and formica kitchen.
And Tony and Carmela's house was fancy, but kind of gaudy and certainly not perfect, with a very generic decorating flavor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Skyler's car was super ugly too.
Look, I know the house and cars are supposed to realistically represent their financial station, but for crying out loud, does the home have to always look so dark? They didn't have to leave the curtains drawn all the time.
It's the darkness that I most object to. It was a depressing as hell.
That.was.the.point.
Anonymous wrote:Skyler's car was super ugly too.
Look, I know the house and cars are supposed to realistically represent their financial station, but for crying out loud, does the home have to always look so dark? They didn't have to leave the curtains drawn all the time.
It's the darkness that I most object to. It was a depressing as hell.
Anonymous wrote:Also, I hate it when I’m watching shows and the people are supposed to be struggling for money but the set decorator obviously just bought beautiful things and so their house has 10s of thousands of dollars worth of furnishings.
Example: New Girl when they all live in the loft, but they have a $5000 sofa that looks like it’s from Room and Board.