In the series finale, Walt goes to war with DISH networks, who have been cutting into his profits by selling inferior meth to schoolchildren. (DISH is a front for a massive criminal enterprise, like El Pollos Hermanos was.) The episode begins with Walt making a symbolic gesture: climbing up onto the roof of his house and throwing the family's satellite dish down onto the driveway, shattering the dish into a million cheap-looking pieces. Then he goes back inside and calmly makes an appointment with a cable company. This frightens Skyler, who was just beginning to trust Walt again. But Walt Jr., on the other hand, is ecstatic, because cable is way better for online video games. Meanwhile, Jesse is at his house, brooding. He's also extremely angry with DISH, but for a more personal reason: he lost his Walking Dead when DISH dropped AMC, yo. All by himself, he hatches a brilliant plan for revenge... a plan which involves guided rockets. He calls up Walt, and they get together at Walt's house and work on the project in his kitchen. After a few hours' work, their secret weapon is ready, and Walt and Jesse drive out to the desert. Jesse sets up the rockets in a line, Walt pushes the button, and within minutes, DISH's entire network of satellites is destroyed, shot out of the sky in a series of epic fireballs. This effectively shuts down DISH's entire enterprise, because without their front business, they can't launder the profits from their illicit operations (most of their money is made off of hookers, because nobody wants their crappy TV service). Unfortunately, the federal government views this event as an act of terrorism, and the all-seeing eye begins to close in on Walt and Jesse. Walt changes his identity, buys the M60, and heads to DISH headquarters to meet up with Jesse and Mike for the final showdown against DISH and the government. An epic battle ensues. The ragtag forces of DISH are quickly eliminated, and the government seems to fall back. But then, all of a sudden, a rogue sniper shoots Walt in the lung. Before he dies, he painfully chokes out the words: "I was just trying to provide quality TV programming for my family."
The end.