In the final episode of Breaking Bad ended with season 5, episode 16, “Felina.” After fleeing to New Hampshire and living under a new identity for months, Walt decided to return to Albuquerque to settle his old scores. He killed all his surviving enemies, he found a way to get what was left of his blood money to his family, and he freed Jesse from a life of meth-cooking servitude.

Before Walt met an untimely end in the Breaking Bad finale, he got one last moment with every major character. He poisoned Lydia, he watched Walt, Jr. come home after school, and he saved Jesse (after originally planning to kill him). Ahead of his fateful trip to Jack Welker’s compound in a car rigged with a machine gun, Walt stopped by for a final conversation with his estranged wife, Skyler, and this might be the most important scene in the entire series. This conversation confirms that the thesis set up in Breaking Bad’s first episode was built on a falsehood.

Walter's Conversation With Skyler In The Finale Confirms He Never "Broke Bad"

Walt Didn't Get Corrupted, He Just Gave In To His True Nature

Walt talks to Skyler in the Breaking Bad finale

When Walt visits Skyler in the Breaking Bad finale, he tells her why he got into the meth business in the first place. Both Skyler and the audience think they’re in for another tired monologue about how Walt only did what he did to provide for his family, and he’s really a good guy deep down. At that point, Walt had beaten that dead horse into the ground. But instead of rehashing the same thing he’s been saying since the beginning, he reveals the real reason he became a drug lord, and it had nothing to do with his family.

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He tells Skyler that he did it for himself. He enjoyed being the best at something, so he kept at it even after he’d made more money than he could ever spend in a lifetime. In the beginning, Breaking Bad set itself up as a show about someone slowly losing their morals and their humanity as circumstances force him down a dark path. As Jesse puts it, he just decides one day to “break bad.” But that wasn’t really it; rather, it was a show about Walt enabling himself and showing who he really was.

"Breaking Bad" Wasn't A Suitable Title – Walter White Was Always Like That

Walt Was Always An Arrogant, Selfish, Ruthlessly Ambitious Monster

As catchy as it is, Breaking Bad wasn’t really a suitable title for this story. Walt wasn’t a good person who “broke bad.” He was a bad person who showed his true colors. Of course, Walt didn’t murder anyone before he entered the drug business. In the world he inhabited before his drug business — the world of high school chemistry and industrial science — he was never put in a position to commit awful crimes. But that doesn’t mean he wasn’t a bad person who willfully did bad things.

The series finale of Breaking Bad originally aired on AMC on September 29, 2013.

When we first meet Walt, he feels like the world is mistreating him. He believes that Gretchen and Elliott wanted him out of their company, Grey Matter, and that he was unfairly ousted. But it soon becomes clear that it was his choice to leave the company and the Schwartzes were never anything but gracious to him. Walt’s self-centered belief that he’s always in the right and the world is against him made him an insufferable jerk long before he ever recruited Jesse to cook meth and maintained a fierce stranglehold on his territory.

Walt’s cancer diagnosis was the push he needed to throw caution to the wind and embrace his true nature. As soon as he had nothing to live for, the villain in him came out.

The series tells us that Walt is a good person who gradually transforms into a bad person. But it also makes it clear that he was always that arrogant, selfish, ruthlessly ambitious person who used people and thought he deserved more than what he had. Walt’s cancer diagnosis was the push he needed to throw caution to the wind and embrace his true nature. As soon as he had nothing to live for, the villain in him came out. He didn’t break bad; he just found himself in a position that allowed his inner monster to thrive.

Breaking Bad Gave Us A Lot Of Clues That Walter Was Always "Heisenberg"

Heisenberg Was Never Really An Alter Ego – It Was Walt's True Self Coming Out

Heisenberg in Breaking Bad

Throughout Breaking Bad’s five seasons, the show gave us plenty of clues that Heisenberg was never really an alter ego; it was just Walt’s true self coming out. In season 1, when Walt was supposedly still a good guy starting on the path to villainy, he did plenty of bad things to prove he was never that good to begin with.

He let Hugo, the school janitor, get fired to cover up his own crimes. He blew up Tuco’s office, risking injury to innocent bystanders, just to prove a point. And he was blackmailing and exploiting Jesse from the start.

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A brief flashback to Walt and Skyler’s early married life showed that Walt was never humble; he was always covetous and ambitious. Season 3, episode 13, “Full Measure,” goes back to the show the moment that Walt and Skyler decided to buy their house. Walt wanted something more extravagant, with more bedrooms and a bigger backyard. Wanting a bigger house isn’t as bad as killing people, but it’s a sign that Walt always felt he deserved more, and that he was so greedy that nothing would ever be good enough — even when he had a storage locker full of cash.

It's Good That Breaking Bad Made It Clear That Walter White Did It For Him

It Could've Been Left As Subtext, But Then The Character Could've Been Misinterpreted

Skyler sat at a table in the Breaking Bad finale episode Felina

Vince Gilligan didn’t have to give Walt a monologue where he confesses to Skyler that he did it for himself in the finale. It could’ve been left as subtext, because it was already clear to most viewers that Walt was always bad. But I’m glad Gilligan did decide to give Walt that monologue. For starters, Bryan Cranston knocked it out of the park as always, and brought the perfect frankness to his delivery. Plus, it feels in character for Walt to get this off his chest before he embarks on what he knows is probably a suicide mission.

A lot of Breaking Bad fans still saw Walt as the good guy by the end of it.

And on top of that, some audiences missed the subtext. A lot of Breaking Bad fans still saw Walt as the good guy by the end of it, just like some audiences did with Joker, Fight Club, and Taxi Driver. This monologue makes it clear that Walt is, indeed, the villain, and there’s no room for the character to be misinterpreted.

Breaking Bad TV Poster

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Breaking Bad
Release Date
2008 - 2013-00-00
Network
AMC
Showrunner
Vince Gilligan

WHERE TO WATCH

Streaming

Directors
Vince Gilligan, Michelle Maclaren
Writers
Peter Gould, Gennifer Hutchison, Vince Gilligan, George Mastras, Moira Walley-Beckett, Sam Catlin, Thomas Schnauz
Franchise(s)
Breaking Bad