By Gary Stix
Donna J. Nelson, BB's science consultant, all dressed up for a never-used cameo appearance as a nursing-home attendant.
Since 1983, Donna J. Nelson has taught some 10,000 students as a
professor of organic chemistry at the University of Oklahoma. Her
research extends to characterizing carbon nanotubes and examining
carbon–carbon double bonds every which way and even promoting chemistry
education as a means to increase the number of chemists and chemical
engineers in the workforce.
On her 31-page, single-spaced CV, one item that leaps out is the
notation of her role as a science consultant to the smashingly popular
cable TV show
Breaking Bad. Nelson decided to help the show’s writers when she read in
Chemical & Engineering News
that they were looking for expertise to ensure accuracy of the dialogue
and plot devices related to chemistry. Since then she has gone on to
suss out answers to questions such as how much meth you could synthesize
with 30 gallons of methylamine using the P2P meth recipe.
[
An edited transcript of the interview follows.]
Scientists often criticize the way that their various disciplines are depicted in popular media. How does Breaking Bad stand up as far as that goes?
I have heard people at professional meetings, such as AAAS [American
Association for the Advancement of Science], who were in symposia about
taking science to the public. They did not know that I was in the room
and they would start talking about
Breaking Bad. They asked one
of the speakers what was going on with the show because it seems to get
the science right, disproving the myth that it’s impossible to get the
science right and still have an interesting show.
Can you give me an example of where your input has had an impact on the show?
In
season 4, episode 1, there’s a lot of dialogue about
enantiomers and
diastereomers
and how a reaction creates
chiral centers, things like that. I did work with them on that scene. It’s where
Walt
is really trying to impress people, telling them that they’re not going
to be able do the synthesis without him and his knowledge.
Anything else?
One thing I thought was sort of humorous was when I was to talking to them about
methylamine and
I said when you use that precursor—and the writers stopped me and said,
“Precursor? What’s a precursor?” And if you notice they now they throw
that word in all the time.
Another suggestion I made was when Walt was teaching high school and
there was a scene on alkenes. They asked is there anything that Walt
would write on the board. I told them I could send a drawing of alkenes
and that is indeed what’s on the board. The
alkenes are missing a couple of hydrogens but otherwise they did a pretty good job of drawing them.
Didn’t they ask you to calculate the exact yield you get from
30 gallons of methylamine using the P2P method of synthesizing meth?
The story behind that is that the first step in the synthesis
is pretty much the same in any P2P method. Step two, the reduction step,
can vary from one synthesis to another, and there’s a lot of
differences in the
reducing agents.
And so I said, I don’t know what reagent you want. They said to send
them a list, and they liked the one that was aluminum–mercury because it
would be easier for the actors to say those words. I looked at the
other reducing agents and they would, indeed, have been difficult for
the actors to the say on the air.
That’s another example of where I let them be boss. I wouldn’t go
back to them and suggest another reagent because it might be safer,
cheaper or have a higher yield, I just said “yes sir.”
That reagent turned out to be obscure, and I had to go to a German
patent from the 1950s to get the information to make the calculation.
Fortunately, when I was a graduate student, I had taken German. So I was
able to get back to them and tell them the quantity of meth produced,
in pounds. So it worked out, but it was a little trouble.
A lot of people harp on the fact that meth would not really
be blue, the way Walt’s supposedly hyperpure meth is. Did you talk to
them about that?
When advising them I didn’t run into the lab to try to
reproduce these syntheses. I can only draw on my own experience as an
organic chemist making crystals, I did one time make one compound with
huge needles, similar to what they show in
Breaking Bad. That was
9-Borabicyclo[3.3.1]nonane.
Some people call it “banana borane.” I used that when I was a postdoc
with H. C. Brown [a 1979 Nobel chemistry laureate] at Purdue. I was
usually able to get it very, very pure just like Walt was able to get
his very pure. If these large needles are really pure, they are
colorless. But when I looked at them closely, it was almost as if they
had a slight bluish tinge.
What Walt is supposedly synthesizing is powder blue. I can tell you
the pure crystals I made never looked anything like that. I don’t think
that’s realistic. but it’s part of artistic license that we must allow
allow creative artists to have. I think it was just meant to be Walt’s
trademark. There are times I think people try to make too much of these
details as if
Breaking Bad were a science education show. That
perhaps is one time in which we just need to let the writers have a
little bit of artistic license and let them go with it. Overall, I was
not uncomfortable with the way they showed things because of my own
experiences.
Were there things changed to ensure that you wouldn’t teach people how to make meth?
I’m sure there were. Vince [Gilligan, the show’s creator and
producer] had DEA [U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration] agents advising
the show and checking everything written. The DEA helped to ensure that
certain critical steps were omitted and that everything in this regard
was kept legal. That was very smart of Vince. That ensured that any
complaints they received could be referred to the DEA.
How did you get involved with the show?
During
Breaking Bad season 1,
Chemical & Engineering News—an
American Chemical Society magazine—interviewed Vince. He said his
writers had no scientific background and he would welcome constructive
comments from chemically inclined people. I recognized this as an
opportunity to help the show and the public, as well as an opportunity
to do something really fun. I volunteered to help, and Vince took me up
on the offer.
Do you think Breaking Bad has fostered interest in science?
I think it has. My students will say that they just love that
show and that they’re so interested in science now. Previously, very few
students would come up and talk enthusiastically about chemistry, and
now they do.
Did the chemistry-related theme, making meth, ever give you pause?
I hadn’t seen the show before when I read an interview with Vince Gilligan in
Chemical & Engineering News.
So before deciding to offer to help, I watched season 1, and I saw it
show Walt getting beaten up and dragged through the sand. At that
point, I realized that no kid watching this would want this as a
lifestyle, so I decided I could volunteer as an adviser with a clear
conscience.
Image Sources: Donna Nelson and Wikipedia
source: scientificamerican