

A lovely lady living in a quiet New Mexico neighborhood is up to her ears in pizza, and it's all Walter White's fault. A lovely lady living in a quiet New Mexico neighborhood is up to her ears in pizza, and it's all Walter White's fault.

6 PHOTOS Breaking Bad See Gallery 'Breaking Bad' creator asks fans to stop vandalizing Walter White's house Anna Gunn at AOL Build. Anna Gunn at AOL Build on July 28. Gunn at the premiere of 'Equity.' Gunn promotes 'Equity' at the Tribeca Film Festival. Aaron Paul, Anna Gunn and Bryan Cranston at the 66th Emmy Awards Governors Ball in 2014. Gunn and Cranston in 2014. Up Next See Gallery Discover More Like This HIDE CAPTION SHOW CAPTION of SEE ALL BACK TO SLIDE

The chem teacher turned meth kingpin famously hurled a delicious cheese pizza onto his garage roof in an episode of AMC's award winning drama "Breaking Bad." Now fans of the show are wasting precious pies mimicking Heisenberg and tossing them onto the roof of the actual home -- which has an actual human living in it."Breaking Bad" & "Better Call Saul" creator Vince Gilligan stopped by the "Better Call Saul" Insider podcast and kindly asked them to stop.Now, Gilligan saying "stop" might not scare off superfans -- but Mike Ehrmantraut saying it? Well, that's scary! Jonathan Banks, the actor who plays Mike, joked during the podcast that he would "hunt down" pizza perps. He joined Gilligan to review the most recent episode of AMC's "Better Call Saul." Episode 6 of the new series is very Mike Ehrmantraut centric, much to the delight of "Breaking Bad" fans.Whether or not fans will heed the warning to stop vandalizing the home with pizza bombs is anyone's guess -- but if you get caught doing it, you better call Saul.