The odd number? The final episode, “Felina,” was almost cut into two parts to make 17 episodes, giving AMC an extra week of ad revenue. Gilligan threatened to leak a fake spoiler online if they did. AMC backed down.
The compromise was strange and unique: split the season into two halves of 8 episodes each. That’s 16 total , not 20. But why 8 and 8? how many episodes are in series 5 of breaking bad
They realized Breaking Bad was their golden goose—critical darling, awards magnet, and just starting to explode in streaming viewership. So they came back with a counter-offer: “Make it 20 episodes. We’ll pay you more.” The odd number
Gilligan refused. He famously worried about “running out of story” and diluting the tension. AMC pushed back. Negotiations got tense enough that Gilligan half-joked he’d walk away. AMC backed down
The real story is that Gilligan wanted 13 total, AMC wanted 20. They met in the middle at 16—but the narrative reason for the split was simple: Gilligan realized that to do justice to Hank’s discovery of Walt, Walt’s descent, and the finale’s aftermath, he actually needed a few more episodes than 13. Not 20. Just 3 extra.
But then the network suits did the math.