But it was nice, and emblematic of what this show has become-- an effort to preserve the essence of humanity in dark times. This was echoed by Dwight's encounter with Max Headroom's crony. I wonder if his gesture will prove fruitful or if it will end up biting them all in the ass. Or if we'll just never know.
So in the end, Grace decided not to confirm or rule out her diagnosis. This is kind of interesting. With Grace and Alicia, and possibly Morgan, exposed to potentially lethal doses of radiation, I wonder if they are leading up to revealing that the Zombie Virus confers some measure of protection against disease or injury.
At this point, too many tropes are aligning spelling out Grace is headed to her deathbed that it would truly be a surprise if she survives the season. Alicia's storyline seems to be more stemming from her being traumatized from her potential brush with death to the point that she's seemingly unwilling to get back into the fight, meaning at some point by the end of the season she's going to end up in a fight or die type situation.It would be a nice surprise if Grace was wrong about her diagnosis. The showrunners seem to be playing this "I do / don't want to know" / Walking Hopelessness angle with her and Alicia, but Grace is the one I hope survives.
Yeah, and I'm a little tired of that.No good deed goes unpunished.
Well, I don't mean that it confers complete immunity or indestructibility-- just resistance and enhanced healing. If the injury or illness is bad enough, then they die-- but still keep walking. It would fit in with my theory that the Zombie Virus is a military biotechnology project gone awry.Doubtful, as we have seen characters become very sick in the TV WD universe with no sort of protection, such as Andrea (TWD - early season 3, and according to Merle, she nearly died), the "flu" which killed many of the prison residents (season 4), and Father Gabriel who ended up sick and losing an eye due to whatever he was suffering from.
Yeah, and I'm a little tired of that.
Well, I don't mean that it confers complete immunity or indestructibility-- just resistance and enhanced healing. If the injury or illness is bad enough, then they die-- but still keep walking. It would fit in with my theory that the Zombie Virus is a military biotechnology project gone awry.
Yeah, and I'm a little tired of that.
Well, I don't mean that it confers complete immunity or indestructibility-- just resistance and enhanced healing. If the injury or illness is bad enough, then they die-- but still keep walking. It would fit in with my theory that the Zombie Virus is a military biotechnology project gone awry.
I'm not familiar with that show, but it does sound similar. And if there was an activation signal, rather than just the tech going viral, that raises the possibility of there being an "off" signal.I have a similar theory...this is a universe where the nanites from the NBC show Revolution are the Zombie virus which reanimates humans. A sorldwide signal activates them so that the dead all arise at the same time....the "bacteria" from bites might be some malfunction in that process.
Well, I was thinking of stuff like Rick surviving all that time in his coma, plus not needing physical therapy when he revived, and Carl being shot and nearly killed, undergoing amateur surgery, and being all right in a couple of days. And then there was Rick's grand finale when he was impaled on a rusty rod, rode around on a horse with massive internal injuries, fell off a roof, and got blown up by dynamite, and survived. I had a few other examples at one point, but I forget now. Also, this theory could explain why food and gasoline and car batteries don't go bad as quickly as expected.Interesting, RJ. As theorized in TWD's "TS-19" the virus could be man made, and act of God--anything, and there's probably enough evidence to support any of those theories based on how one views the "why" the ZA hit humanity at all. Regarding healing and resistance, I still think the characters have suffered so much by common maladies, and injuries, that the only physiological difference with the humans are the fact that they will return from the dead as cannibals, which bears no defining changes to the host while alive.
Maybe they were walking to the hospital.Why are there so many zombies outside?
I'm not familiar with that show, but it does sound similar. And if there was an activation signal, rather than just the tech going viral, that raises the possibility of there being an "off" signal.
Well, I was thinking of stuff like Rick surviving all that time in his coma, plus not needing physical therapy when he revived, and Carl being shot and nearly killed, undergoing amateur surgery, and being all right in a couple of days. And then there was Rick's grand finale when he was impaled on a rusty rod, rode around on a horse with massive internal injuries, fell off a roof, and got blown up by dynamite, and survived. I had a few other examples at one point, but I forget now. Also, this theory could explain why food and gasoline and car batteries don't go bad as quickly as expected.
Maybe they were walking to the hospital.When you think about it, a lot of Zombies are in unlikely places, as if most people died in an instant, without warning. Why were all those Zombies at the mall? Was there an Apocalypse Sale? Or were they all looters?
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Why are there so many zombies outside? In Walking Dead and the first part of Fear, it kind of makes sense. The military firebombed Atlanta and Los Angeles, trying to kill all the walkers. That's why portions of LA and Atlanta are scorched. But, rural Georgia, Virginia and Texas aren't. When the zombie virus started, most people it manifested in as a version of the flu, then the people died. So, wouldn't most of the zombies be trapped in their houses, after having been bedridden? Sure, there'd still be some walkers, erm, walking around outside, but most people when that sick aren't going to be shuffling around outside, especially when they're on their deathbed.
Well, I was thinking of stuff like Rick surviving all that time in his coma, plus not needing physical therapy when he revived
and Carl being shot and nearly killed, undergoing amateur surgery, and being all right in a couple of days.
And then there was Rick's grand finale when he was impaled on a rusty rod, rode around on a horse with massive internal injuries, fell off a roof, and got blown up by dynamite, and survived.
I can easily see a mall being used as an emergency shelter. It's a large location the public has easy access to and can hold many people within. Granted, the mall in this week's episode didn't seem to be set up as an emergency shelter. Still, they could have been looters or just people doing the usual mall thing when shit suddenly broke loose.Why were all those Zombies at the mall?
I can easily see a mall being used as an emergency shelter. It's a large location the public has easy access to and can hold many people within. Granted, the mall in this week's episode didn't seem to be set up as an emergency shelter. Still, they could have been looters or just people doing the usual mall thing when shit suddenly broke loose.
That's possible. When there were fewer Zombies, it would have been easy to get bit and run away.And perhaps many people got bit, and ran for their lives...with many hospitals being closed, or perhaps "closed" so people had to wait outside...they died of the bacteria bite outside
The streets and highways were filled with abandoned cars, so all those people must have tried evacuating on foot.Not only that many people proably died while fleeing cities or at makeshift military camps.
There was little to no indication of an impending Zombie Apocalypse when Rick was shot, yet civilization was gone and his friends and family were in a refugee camp when he woke up. That had to take a while. Even taking into account that short film where the nurse stayed with him for a long time, he still would be undernourished and in need of physical therapy when he woke up.That's still a debatable issue among fans because the official word has often dodged pinning a hard time on how long Rick was in a coma, or provided conflicting dates. That, and fact he was recently out of surgery when Shane visited him (Rick's memories), yet if he was in a coma--and unattended--he had no bedsores, and his underclothes were not repeatedly soiled from his own waste, etc.--indicators that he would have been abandoned for some time. He just looks like he forgot to shave for a couple of days, and cut flowers dried out (that does not take long). So, Rick being in a coma should--for believability's sake in an abandoned hospital--be reduced to a week or so. Not a month or longer.
Yeah, but it was still pretty extreme in a world where the Zombie Virus is supposed to be the only fantastic element. It would explain a lot, since we know that "we are all infected."Plot armor because there was no way AMC was going to close the door of finality on the most important character in the franchise--even if the actor was leaving the series.
Actually, a lot of Zombies do exhibit some kind of muscle memory of their former lives, like Morgan's wife and those people in the church. Maybe these were all people who found comfort in wandering the mall when they were alive.I can easily see a mall being used as an emergency shelter. It's a large location the public has easy access to and can hold many people within. Granted, the mall in this week's episode didn't seem to be set up as an emergency shelter. Still, they could have been looters or just people doing the usual mall thing when shit suddenly broke loose.
Although considering the entrances were barricaded with benches, one wonders how Walkers would have gotten around that.Actually, a lot of Zombies do exhibit some kind of muscle memory of their former lives, like Morgan's wife and those people in the church. Maybe these were all people who found comfort in wandering the mall when they were alive.
There was little to no indication of an impending Zombie Apocalypse when Rick was shot, yet civilization was gone and his friends and family were in a refugee camp when he woke up. That had to take a while.
"63 days since the disease abruptly went global."
Even taking into account that short film where the nurse stayed with him for a long time, he still would be undernourished and in need of physical therapy when he woke up.
Although considering the entrances were barricaded with benches, one wonders how Walkers would have gotten around that.
Undoubtedly. I was using the barricades to shoot down the theory they Walkers ended up in the mall due to muscle memory from being alive.Plot convenience, or the walkers were simply those who died after barricading themselves?
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