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Owner of iconic 'Breaking Bad' home takes extreme measure to get fans off her Albuquerque driveway

Owner of iconic 'Breaking Bad' home takes extreme measure to get fans off her Albuquerque driveway

Daily Mail​5 hours ago

The house where Walter White descended into criminal infamy has a new antihero - but one armed not with blue meth or a barrel of cash, but a garden hose.
Joanne Quintana, the real-life owner of the iconic Breaking Bad home in Albuquerque, New Mexico has finally had enough and reached her own breaking point.
Years of trespassers and photo-hungry superfans have turned her home into a zone of conflict between a private life and pop culture obsession. Now Quintana is taking matters into her own hands and striking back.
In a video posted to Instagram, Quintana can be seen sitting on a lawn chair in her front yard keeping watch.
When fans linger too long or come too close to her property, she jumps into action and blasts them with a powerful jet of water from her garden hose before barking commands at them to keep away.
'You can take a picture from that corner,' she can be heard telling one stunned visitor. 'Do not get close. And no tripods, no nothing. One picture, then you go!'
The ranch-style house on Piermont Drive was immortalized on screen as the residence of Walter White, his wife Skylar, and their son Walt Jr. in AMC's Emmy-winning masterpiece, Breaking Bad, which ran from 2008 until 2013.
For five seasons, the house stood in as the symbol of White's descent as he went from struggling teacher to ruthless drug kingpin.
And while the show ended 12 years ago, the house and other filming locations around town continue to pull in crowds of fans hoping to catch a glimpse of where the show was set.
White and his on-screen home because familiar to millions of fans around the world.
But for Quintana, it has always been her home after her parents bought the property in the 1970s.
She grew up in the house along with her siblings. She watched the show's production unfold from her front porch, and even befriended cast and crew in the early days.
It all started after Quintana's mother was approached in 2006 by a film scout with hopes to shoot the pilot episode at their home. Within months the filming had begun.
At the time, she told KOB-TV that it felt like 'the magic of Hollywood.'
The family had the opportunity to watch behind the scenes and meet the cast and crew. Quintana's mother also always had cookies for anyone working the set.
But in the years since Breaking Bad ended, Quintana has seen the house transformed into something of a pop culture pilgrimage site.
The family didn't shy away at welcoming fans at first but when the doorbell rang in the early hours of the morning their attitude changed
Tour buses come down her street while selfie stick-holding fans regularly appear at dawn. Fans have taken the 'reenactment' of famous scenes from the show to absurd new heights.
On more than one occasion, die-hard fans have hurled entire pizzas onto her garage roof, mimicking the infamous scene where Bryan Cranston's character loses his cool and throws a pie after his character's wife, Skyler, shut the door in his face.
Since then, the homeowners said it was difficult to stop fans from attempting their own pizza tosses or sneaking into the iconic backyard pool.
The house was only used for gear and prep. Any interior scenes were shot on a set at the studio lot.
The stunt became such a problem that Breaking Bad creator Vince Gilligan had to personally intervene on a 2022 episode of the Better Call Saul podcast.
'There is nothing original, or funny, or cool, about throwing a pizza on this lady's roof,' Gilligan said, exasperated.
'She is the sweetest lady in the world, and if you are getting on her nerves you are doing something seriously f***ing wrong.'
Initially, Quintana was happy to take pictures with fans, but when there was a knock at the door in the early hours of the morning the family's attitude quickly changed.
'Around 4:30am the doorbell rang, my mom got up and opened the door and it was a package,' Quintana said. The package was addressed to Walter While, so they called the bomb squad.
'My brothers said "That's it, we're done, fence is going up. That's too close for comfort is the front door",' she added.
She has since installed a perimeter fence to keep people back but has now taken to hosing down unwanted guests with her hose when her pleas go ignored.
'Back up, cowboy,' she told one visitor trying to inch closer for a better shot.
When another gushed that he was a fan of the show, she snapped back: 'The whole world is a fan. Doesn't impress me.'
The viral clip has split opinion online. Some viewers support Quintana, calling her 'a legend' defending her right to protect her property while others have mocked her behavior, suggesting she could instead have capitalized on the attention.
'She just sits there all day and tells people how stupid they are lol,' one commenter wrote.
'If she was smart, she'd start charging,' another quipped.
'The street and sidewalk are public property,' added a third, questioning her legal footing.
In January, the tension seemed to boil over. Quintana quietly listed the home for $4 million, a figure that reflects not just the property, but the burden that comes with it.
The three-bedroom, two-bathroom home was described as one of Albuquerque's 'most famous landmarks' that is recognized globally by millions of fans.
Some fans have even proposed that she rent the home out on Airbnb to cash in on its notoriety.
The home's listing has approached its sale as embracing it as a relic of the show, calling it Walter White's House and offering it as a chance to own a 'piece of television history.'
'I hope they make it what the fans want. They want a BnB, they want a museum, they want access to it. Go for it,' Quintana said.

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