I have to agree with Carousel, Breaking Bad is an excellent show (as it happens, I just finished watching the finale of the show today). It's not a pleasant show, but it's not supposed to be. The writing is brilliant and tightly focused, and the actors are perfectly cast and are incredibly believable. I really like how pretty much every character is morally ambiguous and has a nasty side to them (there is no protagonist to "root for", really, with perhaps the exception of Jesse Pinkman) and how they often turn out to be the opposite of what they initially appear. Despite being very grey-on-grey morality-wise it still manages to be compelling. The cinematography is really beautiful as well, I especially enjoy the unusual camera angles and perspectives. The world feels gritty and brutally realistic, yet at the same time somewhat surreal and stylised.
In fact, Breaking Bad is almost like a Shakespearean tragedy (or what a "Shakespearean tragedy" is apparently supposed to be, since I've gotten more out of a single episode of Breaking Bad than out of all the Shakespeare plays I've ever watched/studied put together). Coming to think of it, it's actually like a modern version of Macbeth, but with drug kingpins, hydrofluoric acid, and intelligible dialogue instead of actual kings, witches and outdated language that makes my brain melt when I try to make sense of it.
I did watch the first few episodes of Mad Men, but honestly, it just didn't grip me. I just got the impression it's basically about a bunch of misogynistic men who pull random advertising slogans out of thin air (and are called "geniuses" for it), chain-smoke, and cheat on their wives. There's nothing really compelling to me about that.
Retribution (3rd place in BRAWL 2015)&Smeagol make the most of being surrounded by single, educated women your own age on a regular basis in college
AquaMorph I dunno women are expensive