Breaking Bad Spoilers [VIDEO] What's Next After 'Confessions?' Experts Agree This Season Will End In Walter White's Demise [READ PREDICTIONS]

Breaking Bad spoilers may not be available, but experts are weighing in on what might happen in the next coming episodes. Breaking Bad is in its last season and every episode feels like a thriller movie, and this Sunday's episode was no exception. Next Sunday we will find out if Jesse actually sets Walter's house on fire or if Heisenburg can get to him first. 

Last episode of Breaking Bad , titled 'Confesions',' had the relationships between Hank, Skylar, Walt and Marie all come to an end. The scene at teh meican restaurant and Walter making the black mailesque video tape all concluded to the demise of the close couples' relationship.

And Jesse Pinkman finally had had enough of being manipulated by Heisenberg, aka Walter White. The episode ended with Jesse going on a rampage beating up Saul and throwing Gasoline over the White house. But how did Jesse come to such a revelation by just looking at his cigarettes? Unfortunatley I think the writers just want you to 'go with it' because the scene just wasn't parsimonious enough to be credible. But it works for the show and we will give these awesome writers a break. 

So what's next? Kornhaber, whose a Breaking Bad expert, has his own predictions:

 'With that final (sensational) gas-can scene, the show wants us to suspect that we've witnessed the event that leads to the devastation that had befallen the White residence in the "Blood Money" flash-forward. And perhaps we did--the next installment may well open with Jesse lighting a match and spray-painting "HEISENBERG" in the living room. If I may indulge in some fruitless, likely-to-be-embarrassing speculation, though: Remember that scene tonight when Hank responds to Gomez by calling DEA agents off Jesse's tail? It ends with Hank canceling an appointment and leaving the office. Might he have gone to stake out Saul's himself, and then follow Jesse? Might we be in for a last-minute intervention from Hank, who suddenly finds a more-willing ally in Heisenberg's apoplectic ex-partner?

Here's a safer prediction: Todd, his neo-Nazi friends, and Lydia will somehow constitute the third horseman of Walter White's apocalypse. (Actually, now that I'm using the cliché, let's throw cancer in and say that there are four horsemen.) They, after all, embody the satanic bargain Walt long ago struck. When he allied with the life-destroying force that is the drug trade, he allied with evil. As this episode's Tarantino-esque cold open reminded for the zillionth time in Breaking Bad's run, evil can look pretty banal--smiling at diner waitresses, grooming itself in bathroom mirrors, trading back slaps in parking lots. But it also reminded that, despite Skyler's earnest assurances to Hank and Marie tonight, the evil that Walter invited into his life is not safely in the past.'

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