Aaron Paul Slams Toys R Us For Hypocrisy After Retailer Pulls 'Breaking Bad' Dolls

Aaron Paul Slams Toys R Us Amid 'Breaking Bad' Doll Controversy
LOS ANGELES, CA - OCTOBER 16: Actor Aaron Paul attends the premiere of 'Felony' at Harmony Gold Theatre on October 16, 2014 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Jason LaVeris/FilmMagic)
LOS ANGELES, CA - OCTOBER 16: Actor Aaron Paul attends the premiere of 'Felony' at Harmony Gold Theatre on October 16, 2014 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Jason LaVeris/FilmMagic)

On the heels of Toys R Us announcing this week that it was pulling four collectible “Breaking Bad” dolls from its shelves after a Florida mother's petition campaign, Aaron Paul has come out to criticize the toy retailer's decision.

On Thursday, Paul, who played Jesse Pinkman on the AMC hit show, tweeted this to his 2.24 million followers:

A few hours later, the actor also shared a link to a change.org petition that calls for Toys R Us to continue selling the “Breaking Bad” figurines. So far, more than 12,000 people have signed the petition.

Toys R Us announced on Tuesday that it would no longer sell the “Breaking Bad” dolls, which came with detachable bags of cash and methamphetamines. "Let's just say, the action figures have taken an indefinite sabbatical," Toys R Us said in a statement, per the AP.

Previously, a Fort Myers, Florida mother named Susan Schrivjer had petitioned for the dolls’ removal from Toys R Us shelves. In her change.org petition, she claimed that the dolls were a "dangerous deviation from [the company’s] family friendly values."

On Wednesday, Bryan Cranston, who played Walter White on “Breaking Bad,” congratulated Schrivjer for achieving her goal.

He’d previously joked that he was so angry about Schrivjer’s petition that he was “burning [his] Florida Mom action figure in protest.”

The controversy over the “Breaking Bad” dolls has proved polarizing among netizens.

Schrivjer’s online petition was signed by more than 9,000 people, some of whom claimed the dolls “glorified” drug abuse. On the other hand, many people have spoken up in defense of the dolls' sale, arguing that Toys R Us doesn’t have the right to say what adult collectors -- and children with adult supervision -- can and cannot buy.

Popular in the Community

Close

What's Hot