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#781 | ||
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Fleet Captain
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Re: The Walking Dead Season 3
I'm not a scientist at all either, & even I know that in order to observe the possible reaction he is looking for, he has to isolate the subject from anything that could contaminate the environment, like a hot meaty lunch waving their arms in front of its face. 1st & foremost, when a person reanimates they are forever in a state of carnal frenzy, so long as there is anything present upon which to feed. Everyone should know that much & since he learned from Michonne's mules that a neutralized walker becomes more docile. His experimenting should now reflect that understanding. He ought to have been creating a neutral condition in which to study his subject, & he didn't |
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#782 |
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Idealistic Cynic and Canon Champion
Location: RJDiogenes of Boston
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Re: The Walking Dead Season 3
The killing of the Hermit kind of bothered me, but everything happened very fast, so it was understandable. What felt off to me was the beginning, when they brought in Michonne. She showed up at the fence with baby supplies, ready to faint-- why would Rick hurt her and Daryl hold a crossbow on her? It's good to see the prisoners being integrated into the group, but I have a feeling they are just there to be fodder in the war with Woodbury. Another thing that interests me is the Red Zone. Presumably, the Red Zone is especially zombie-ridden. And, presumably, that's where our people have been all this time. So, first of all, what makes the Red Zone so appealing to zombies? Second of all, if things aren't that bad outside the Red Zone, why hasn't civilization made more of a comeback? |
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#783 | |||
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Captain
Location: Delta Vega
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Re: The Walking Dead Season 3
Even the term "walkers" was used in one of the Romero films (I think Land of the Dead, although "stenches" was the most used term).
...and one of the biggest flaes of this series is a lack of revulsion to the smell of a decomposing human. the longer it goes on, the more overpowering/sickening it gets. The governor should not be able to sit that close to his daughter, much like Michonne's two zombies should have turned her stomach. I've read accounts of former soliders who routinely dealt with the smell of death, and years later, if encountered again, it was still a grueling experience. So, it is not like getting used to bad breath or someone passing gas.
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"...to be like God, you have the power to make the world anything you want it to be." |
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#784 |
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Fleet Captain
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Re: The Walking Dead Season 3
Clearly there is major walker activity all around that prison, & it's likely a pretty steady vein of geek traffic from Atlanta or whatever, but with the right practices in order, it's apparently not only possible for a small group to survive there, but even just a single woman who's damn crafty & skilled with a blade Probably not a place that any of the sheep in Woodbury want to be wandering through, like Expensive Bow Girl & her shitty aim |
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#785 | |
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Fleet Captain
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Re: The Walking Dead Season 3
Frankly, Hershel's barn should have smelled like an open mass grave. It would permeate the whole farm. No one could live there with that... in reality. This show is no worse than any other zombie fiction in that respect. |
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#786 |
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Commodore
Location: Calgary, Alberta
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Re: The Walking Dead Season 3
I'm guessing that during the initial outbreak there would have been enough people getting bitten and not treated because no one knew how to deal with it. When things got really bad, lots of people would have been bitten, run off, and then died; there wouldn't yet be hordes of the undead wandering around to eat you up. In the firmly post-apocalypse world, there would be far ewer "new" zombies reanimating after an attack. When a settlement or group is over-run, it's generally because there were far too many walkers to deal with; the victims would thus be brain food. As for the Red Zone, we know that there are herds of walkers roaming around. Perhaps if they're mostly originating from the cities, I figure that topography would be a factor. Inasmuch as water will flow according to gravity, maybe the walkers' aimless wanderings will force them into valleys or clearings by simple physics of motion and tendancy to move in less obstructed areas, unless stimulated by some external force (food, etc.). Thus, after months of stumbling about, the walkers would generally end up in certain areas more than others. There would certainly be outliers (such as the group Rick and company ran into this week, a mere mile from Woodsbury), but overall there may be more dangerous areas simply because the geography of the area makes walkers stumble into one place more than others. That, or whoever came up with the Red Zone was spouting pure BS in an attempt to apply some logic to the world and/or make the population of survivors feel better. Certainly not out of line with what we've seen so far. Mark
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Mark Nguyen - Producer The 404s - Improv Comedy Group Oh, I like that Trek thing too... |
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#787 |
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Captain
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Re: The Walking Dead Season 3
When I hear him talk to Maggie, I can see the deception that he played with the National Guard pilot. I can see why he would want to conquer the prison - it's near a natural water source. With camps killing each other over resources, there won't be many survivors left in the end. Eventually, someone has to say this crap has to end, and begin the process of consolidating camps. So, Woodbury has 75 or so survivors, some of them children, and the Governor wants to send in forces to remove people from the prison - a place he considers in his 'backyard'. One can't build a sustainable community with 75 people - one needs more. Now, he is planning a military operation with paramilitary wannabes that could result in further deaths to his community. I am beginning to think this man doesn't care about the long-term sustainability of his community. Like many sociopaths, he sees something he wants, and will do anything to get it, and damn the consequences. As for Andrea, I think she is a lost soul who is looking for something she didn't have when she was growing up. I watch crime dramas and they describe such people. For instance, the followers of Jim Jones. When Andrea hugged the Governor, I thought of a child hugging a father. Her smile clinched it for me. It's interesting that Michionne picked up on the fact that the Governor is a Jim Jones-type leader. It's rather scary when I think about. The implications for Woodbury's future are not great. Jim Jones convinced by force of will or force of gun to have his followers kill themselves when their community was facing imminent destruction. Would the Governor in the same situation order the destruction of every man, woman, and child in his community? There are other parallels between Jim Jones and the Governor. Both acted to kill anyone who left the community. Both acted without thought for the future of the community - Jones had his people kill an official representative of the US government, along with his entourage, and people who chose to leave the community, thus bringing about the ire of the host country, and the Governor is planning an operation that will reduce his manpower, when it has been suggested that individuals from the prison community might be on their way to liberate their people. Unless the people in the prison community act stupidly, they can wait out the recon party until Rick gets back to dispose them of as he will. I notice this year that the zombies are appearing grayer than normal. I thought I was imagining things, until I read a text note on the aftershow, "The Talking Dead", that the make-up people altered the makeup of the zombies to show that these creatures were further along in their decay. As for Milton, I don't know what career he had before the zombie apocalypse. I do have the feeling that he was someone who felt comfortable working from home and didn't have friends. I see Milton as prey who sought shelter in the comfort of predators - whatever skills or training he had before, made him valuable to these predators. |
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#788 | |
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Commander
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Re: The Walking Dead Season 3
__________________
HIPSTERS VS. ROBOTS - my webcomic: http://www.hipsters-comic.com |
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#789 |
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Fleet Admiral
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Re: The Walking Dead Season 3
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#790 |
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Admiral
Location: Arizona, USA
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Re: The Walking Dead Season 3
__________________
Over the course of many encounters and many years, I have successfully developed a standard operating procedure for dealing with big, nasty monsters. Run away. Me and Monty Python. Harry Dresden - Blood Rites (The Dresden Files #6) |
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#791 |
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Captain
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Re: The Walking Dead Season 3
A minor question, who was the dark haired female that slept in his bed and what happened to her? She appeared once, then disappeared. |
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#792 | |||
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Captain
Location: Delta Vega
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Re: The Walking Dead Season 3
Jones regularly used the idea of "revolutionary suicide" as a means of testing loyalty and the threat of death always bubbling under the surface, while the Governor--surrounded by literal walking death--uses the bait of a restored civilization as his top controlling tool.
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"...to be like God, you have the power to make the world anything you want it to be." |
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#793 |
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Rear Admiral
Location: Sacramento, CA
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Re: The Walking Dead Season 3
Things are heating up, can't wait for the Confrontation, and yea, I hope Carl takes care of the Entire Raiding party himself, LOL. The Talking Dead Sneak Peek was very interesting (Spoilered in case anyone is sensitive to extra information not in the actual Walking Dead Episode)
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One Day I hope to be the Man my Cat thinks I am Where are we going? And why are we in this Handbasket?
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#794 |
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Rear Admiral
Location: fresno, ca, us
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Re: The Walking Dead Season 3
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#795 | ||
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Commodore
Location: St. Paul, MN
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Re: The Walking Dead Season 3
The purpose of the crazed old man was character development. It showed that Rick is still willing to at least negotiate instead of coming in guns blazing (despite what people said he might do in Glenn's place last week). It also showed that Michonne had no qualms stabbing this dude. It's not just Woodbury people after her that she kills, but anyone who is a threat to her. It shows that she's far more dangerous than we might think, despite what she says about Woodbury. And this crazy guy being there could have a million explanations. Maybe he had meds that he was on and he only recently ran out. Or maybe his isolation and the zombie apocalypse caused him some serious mental issues that developed into him forgetting all about what happened. It's even possible that he was always a bit crazy, stockpiled lots of food, and lived quietly in his cabin. People can still be functional while at the same time having delusions. The smell of the cabin could have been more than just a dead dog. It could have been that he never went outside to go to the bathroom.
As for the quantities of zombies, it's possible that many of them were rounded up looking for the helicopter, and many of them strayed off. That could be part of the reason there is a red zone. And it's not like this is the first time the red zone has been mentioned. Even in the premiere this season, they mention that they have been unable to escape because they are surrounded by hordes. It's likely that if hordes form that there would be pockets that are safer, but it's only a matter of time before those pockets become red themselves. I think that it's likely that after whatever skirmish may happen in Woodbury, that the zombie hordes will end up taking out whatever survivors remain in that town. I wouldn't be surprised if during their attack if some zombies get in the middle. |
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