Vince Gilligan’s Writing Credits By IMDB Score

Vince Gilligan's appearing at Comic Con

With the recent premier of The X-Files and the upcoming season two premier of Better Call Saul, Vince Gilligan has his fingerprints all over our television sets.

Need proof? How does this do: As a young X-Files writer, Vince pushed for and cast Bryan Cranston in the X-Files episode Drive. That episode was later used by Gilligan to sell AMC execs on the idea of Cranston playing the now iconic role of Walter White. And with Better Call Saul being a direct spinoff from Breaking Bad, it’s easy to see the heavy correlation between The X-Files and Better Call Saul.

And it’s also easy to take a step back and marvel at the prolonged writing dominance of Vince Gilligan. This guy is like the Bill Belichick of TV. In honor of his excellence, we put together a handy infographic of his writing career:

Vince Gilligan's career writing credits by the numbers infographic

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Vince Gilligan Writing Facts That Surprised Me:

That A.M.P.E.D. was so poorly received. This was the show pilot Vince wrote directly before Breaking Bad. The Breaking Bad pilot episode ranked 10th best and A.M.P.E.D. was his worst, at 5 a score of 5.9. Sorry Spike TV and congrats AMC.

That Felina was so universally loved. I loved this episode in real-time, but as the series finale of a beloved tv show (Breaking Bad) one would expect at least a little division. The high score of 9.9 has to be pretty satisfying. Compare it with the finale of say, Seinfeld (7.9 rating), where the critic and audience response was much more mixed. It’s something Seinfeld still gets ragged on for. It appears Vince will never have to worry about that.

Such a large portion of his writing credits are for The X-Files. I knew Gilligan had written on The X-Files, but I’m not sure I understood how prolific his writing was. 53% of his career writing credits (30 episodes) are for that one iconic tv series.

He’s only written 1 episode of Better Call Saul. With how his attachment to the show has been promoted, I think I just assumed he’d written all or most of the first season. No fears, though – he did write the Pilot episode and is a creator and executive producer. His influence is all over the new series.