Why does one dead bulb turn off the whole string?

Pop a single holiday bulb and the entire strand can go dark. But a burnt-out lamp in your house never turns off the others. Same bulbs… so what's really going on? Let's wire it up and break it on purpose.

1Two things electricity needs

It has to make a full loop — and a bulb only glows when the flow goes through it

Electricity is like a one-way parade that leaves the battery, marches through the wire, and must get all the way back. No complete loop, no march. And a bulb only lights up while the parade is actually flowing through that bulb.

The loop must close

The flow only moves if the path is unbroken — out from the battery and back. Leave a gap and the whole parade stops.

Flow makes it glow

A bulb shines only while the flow passes through it. Cut off its flow and the light goes dark.

2Two ways to wire the same bulbs

One big circle, or lots of little loops

Series = one single loop

The "everyone holds hands" string

All the bulbs sit on one shared path, like kids in a circle holding hands. The flow has to go through every single bulb, one after another, to finish the loop.

Parallel = side-by-side loops

The "everyone has their own door" string

Each bulb gets its own little loop straight back to the battery. The flow splits up and visits the bulbs side by side, not one-after-another.

3Your turn — turn on the power

Push the battery and watch the flow light the bulbs

Here's a single-loop string. Slide the battery up and watch the power flow around the loop and light every bulb. This is just to feel how the loop works — the real test comes next.

One single loop (series)power off
Battery push: off
OFFFULL POWER

4Now break one bulb — on purpose

Same bulbs. Two wirings. One gets unscrewed.

Here are two strings made of the exact same bulbs — one wired as a single loop, one wired side by side. You're about to unscrew one bulb in each of them.

Guess before you find out

You unscrew one bulb in each string. In which string do the other bulbs stay lit?

5So which wiring is better?

Each one trades something

Single loop is cheap & simple

One thin wire, tiny bulbs that split up the battery's push between them. Easy and inexpensive to build.

The catch: one gap kills the whole string — and finding the one dead bulb is a pain.
Side by side keeps shining

Each bulb has its own loop, so one dying never touches the rest. That's how your house is wired.

The catch: it needs more wire, and every bulb must handle the full battery push, so it costs a bit more.

It isn't the bulb that decides — it's the wiring. A single loop dies all at once, because one gap stops the only path. Side-by-side loops keep going, because each bulb has its own way home.

Psst, grown-ups: in a series circuit there is exactly one current path, so an open — a burnt or unscrewed bulb — breaks the only loop and current everywhere drops to zero. In a parallel circuit each branch is its own loop across the supply, so an open in one branch leaves the others' loops intact. Many modern light strings are still series but hide the failure with a tiny shunt inside each bulb: when the filament burns open, the shunt shorts across the gap and keeps the loop closed, so the rest stay lit.