Till Meth Do Us Part: Couple’s Breaking Bad Pre-Nup Photoshoot
Tired of conventional pre-nup photoshoot? Well, you are not alone in this sentiment. A couple from Houston, Texas breaks away from the traditional standard engagement photos and released a series of "Breaking Bad" themed photos as their way of announcing their upcoming union.
Texan couple Hannah Schuster and Mackey Macaluso did the unthinkable and incorporate their love for the blue meth to their pre-wedding photoshoot. Photographed by Ashley Newbank, the "Breaking Bad" pictorial started as the couple dressed up in yellow hazmat suit, just like Jessie PInkman and Walter White, and share loving embraces as they are captured by the camera while sitting outside the camper van.
According to Ashley, the bride to be friend from childhood, the couple decided to have a "Breaking Bad" theme to honor their favourite TV show. "It is their favorite series that they enjoyed watching together and they watched the whole series together on Netflix," says Eubanks.
The whole "Breaking Bad" idea came from Shuster, but while shooting she felt nervous and ridiculous wearing the Walter White outfit. "People were driving by and we were wearing suits in the field. I thought, 'this is so ridiculous,'" she told The Houston Chronicle.
Macaluso is the one in charge of gathering the props and he found the perfect replacement of blue meth, a blue rock candy that is meant to imitate the crystal meth according to a report from Houston Culture Map.
The trailer used in the photoshoot, which is similar to one of Walter White's meth factory van, was barrowed with permission to its owner. The photos went viral when Eubanks posted the couples photos on Reddit which generated a lot of comments.
One of the comment is that couple is promoting drug usage, while some comments are commending them with their originality. "There were a lot of people writing a lot of negative comments, saying that we were promoting drug usage, which we're not," Schuster told The Houston Chronicle. "There were more positive [comments] than there were negative."