Anybody kept track of how long it's been since Beth was kidnapped? Seems like over a couple weeks now, but I have to recheck
I don't think it's any more than a week, actually.
Short side of a week I'd say.
Anybody kept track of how long it's been since Beth was kidnapped? Seems like over a couple weeks now, but I have to recheck
I don't think it's any more than a week, actually.
Whether it would have worked or not is not the question. The question is why didn't he try?
Well, after reviewing, I guess the bare bones estimate that it could be is Daryl returns to the church 6 days after Beth was kidnapped, which I'll say is the same night that Carol shows up at the hospitalAnybody kept track of how long it's been since Beth was kidnapped? Seems like over a couple weeks now, but I have to recheck
I don't think it's any more than a week, actually.
Short side of a week I'd say.
I'm gonna go all the way back to the pilot episode/second episode with this one. Why didn't Rick try to startup that tank he was trapped in? The battery obviously had some charge since the radio still worked.
That's always sort of bugged me.
I'm gonna go all the way back to the pilot episode/second episode with this one. Why didn't Rick try to startup that tank he was trapped in? The battery obviously had some charge since the radio still worked.
That's always sort of bugged me.
Is it a trivial thing to start a tank? Does it have a key and an ignition? I truly have no idea.
What makes it a bit tough to swallow that timeline is that it means Daryl was only captive at Terminus between late-ish morning & late-ish afternoon of one day, because they had to hike in though some of the morning after the night of killing Joe's gang, & then hiked out of Terminus & set up camp in daylight the following day.
Been looking into it, and it turns out that Rick climbs into the turret. The driver of an M1 Abrams has a separate hatch & sits in the hull, between the treads. Rick couldn't operate it at all, from that position in the tank
Been looking into it, and it turns out that Rick climbs into the turret. The driver of an M1 Abrams has a separate hatch & sits in the hull, between the treads. Rick couldn't operate it at all, from that position in the tank
lol, funny you should ask. He couldn't have. It's an error. The M1 Abrams doesn't have a belly hatch. The last U.S tank to have one was the M60 Patton, retired from use in 1997, & it has the driver in a separate section too. Rick is clearly shown popping out of the turret hatch though. He couldn't drive it from thereBeen looking into it, and it turns out that Rick climbs into the turret. The driver of an M1 Abrams has a separate hatch & sits in the hull, between the treads. Rick couldn't operate it at all, from that position in the tank
How did he climb into the turret from the belly hatch?
The wiki timeline I just found has the fall of the prison only nine days before their first night in the church
http://walkingdead.wikia.com/wiki/Television_Show_Timeline
That's a pretty shitty week they've been having. lol
The wiki timeline I just found has the fall of the prison only nine days before their first night in the church
http://walkingdead.wikia.com/wiki/Television_Show_Timeline
That's a pretty shitty week they've been having. lol
So, the series is now back to compact periods of time rather than undetermined stretches, such as the period between seasons 1 & 2.
The wiki timeline I just found has the fall of the prison only nine days before their first night in the church
http://walkingdead.wikia.com/wiki/Television_Show_Timeline
That's a pretty shitty week they've been having. lol
So, the series is now back to compact periods of time rather than undetermined stretches, such as the period between seasons 1 & 2.
They're going to need to do some-kind-of significant time-jump at some point so that the ages of the actors more closely match the ages of the characters. Or sooner or later Carl is going to be in his late-teens which would certainly have impact on everything that's happened over the course of the series dependent on Carl being younger but won't make any sense if only a few years have passed.
But, it'd be hard to have a significant time jump without compensating for everyone's survival and encounters in the intervening time as well as the rotting of the walkers, which has progressed over the course of the series.
I've been following this map,
https://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=....201965&spn=1.200565,1.175537&z=10&dg=feature
which seems pretty accurate, & I figure the show hasn't ventured more than 70-80 miles from Atlanta this whole time. Hell, Marietta is the closest they've even come to another city
That's a map of the physical, real-world, filming locations the show has used. As for an "in universe" map it's all over the place as-to where everything is. For example, it has Rick, Michonne and Carl passing the hitchhiker on a stretch of road that isn't coming from where the prison is, and in the group where they deal with Morgan in Season 3 it's nowhere near where Rick's and "Morgan's" house were in the first episode. Click around on the call-outs on the map enough and recall the events of the series and the map makes no sense whatsoever in regards to where things are.
I just don't like the idea of them going back to Atlanta. I mean they left Atlanta 4 seasons ago so it feels like the story is going backwards instead of forward. I would have preferred the Hospital to be north, toward DC. Actually, I really don't know where anything is geographically, so it's possible that Atlanta is between them and DC but it feels like they're backtracking.
But, it'd be hard to have a significant time jump without compensating for everyone's survival and encounters in the intervening time as well as the rotting of the walkers, which has progressed over the course of the series.
But, it'd be hard to have a significant time jump without compensating for everyone's survival and encounters in the intervening time as well as the rotting of the walkers, which has progressed over the course of the series.
It would be a nice change for the series if the producers did not lay out every season with guaranteed deaths of major characters. At least it would show the survivors gained some edge in the world, rather than 3 or 4 of their number being picked off every season.
Heh, if we went a whole season without any Walkers killing off cast members, Fans heads would probably explode just as likely as if Doctor Who Producers had The Doctor regenerate into a woman.But, it'd be hard to have a significant time jump without compensating for everyone's survival and encounters in the intervening time as well as the rotting of the walkers, which has progressed over the course of the series.
It would be a nice change for the series if the producers did not lay out every season with guaranteed deaths of major characters. At least it would show the survivors gained some edge in the world, rather than 3 or 4 of their number being picked off every season.
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