When did "global apocalypse" become the go-to scenario for zombie stories? I mean, the modern notion of zombies is quite a recent invention, with the basic idea only dating back to 1968's Night of the Living Dead and the brain-eating concept originating in 1985's Return of the Living Dead, only 30 years ago. But this idea that a global apocalypse -- not just the risk of one, but the actual onset and aftermath of one -- is an expected part of any zombie story seems to be more recent, a product of the current century. Maybe it dates to 28 Days Later?
Anyway, it's weird to me to see this show and its audience treating these zombie tropes that are far younger than I am as if they were ancient, immutable traditions of zombie lore.
For the record, I don't believe the two need to go hand in hand. I'd be perfectly happy if Blaine's self-serving threats of apocalypse turn out to be exactly what I think they are - total BS. I'm really enjoying the fact that this show has a much more original take on the zombie genre, so I'd prefer it not revert to all the basic cliches.