avclub-8c6dcc4e048cbce98d9881c6880303e1--disqus
Dumb fandom fan
avclub-8c6dcc4e048cbce98d9881c6880303e1--disqus

Does "go Dutch" mean something different for you, or am I lost?
For me it means the two people are going to share the cost.

Am I the only one who thought that the secret room would be empty and Sherlock would deduce at the last second that the victim was being kept in that big rolling case that they shoved out of the way? It seemed so unnecessary: "Move that out of there. Make room."

I'm pretty sure I saw a knife

The distance thing has been bothering me. The hospital was only 50 miles away, and yet they needed to take "the fastest car" they had. 50 miles is just an hour each way in an ordinary car. Why would they need a fast one? Wh9o are they outrunning?

The Wire, actually

He just mentioned her name to hammer home the point that the wife's actions had resulted in TWO deaths, not just one.

Besides, it it a common sitcom trope that people live in spaces much nicer than they could believably afford. Granted, it is usually an apartment in a big city (Friends, Sex and the City), but it's pretty standard.

So, Cassie had to quit gymnastics when her boobs came in?

On Talking Dead, Robert Kirkman said they modeled the infection after the "Spanish" Flu from 1918.

I get that, and I agree that going against the suggestion of the judge was idiotic. Still, the eggs and bacon folks got really lucky in being given food ingredients that are nearly universally loved. Personally, if I had been given kale i'd have stuffed it like a cabbage roll, with smoked bacon and topped with an egg.

Shocking! The chefs who got to work with eggs and bacon won the quickfire, while the kale chefs lost. I think it says more about the luck of the draw than the skill of the chefs.

The average population density in Georgia is less than 200 people per square mile. Some rural counties have as few as 30 per square mile. The entire county where the prison is located has 16,000 people in it. Of course, zombies don't care about county lines, but it's not like every single zombie is going to make a

One zombie at ALL of Lori. It was so engorged that he couldn't move when Rick found it. When a horde of zombies catches a person, they seem to devour the victim completely.

The problem with zombies is that they EAT their victims. Only a fraction of the people killed by zombies would become zombies. To become a zombie you have to die somewhere that there are no zombies around to devour you, and where no one will kill you properly. Even if only 10% of the population has survived, MOST of

@avclub-e14267dedd4e1d0cc0093bc13643fd59:disqus I've never heard of a deer trap. He was carrying a squirrel or a rabbit, so I figured the traps were small snares. Not capable of catching a deer.

We were told last season that they left the zombies along the perimeter fence to form a barricade against other humans. Now they are killing the zombies. I guess they don't want to risk the fences being torn down by the weight. My question is, where are all the zombies coming from, two years after the apocalypse?

Right after his dad tells him not to name the livestock.

According to Max Brooks, zombies don't rot because insects and bacteria won't eat them. Of course, the proteins in flesh will still disintegrate and damage won't be repaired, but they won't "rot"

That was my impression as well. Patrick specifically mentioned they ate the deer and when we saw the dead deer and the dying animal that the girl was going to eat (boar?) I knew it was disease. If it were walkers (how could walkers catch a deer?) it would have been devoured.