Liked for the reference, not the implication.
Liked for the reference, not the implication.
I'd call it a practical rather than moral justification, but I agree with you otherwise. Any other option would have been, overall, more dangerous: killing her was the least evil of all their options (in the 'lesser of two evils' sense, not the 'they're bad people for killing her' sense).
Leaving an ambulatory, tooth-or-nail-retaining walker alive unnecessarily is a more per se dangerous act than releasing a man-eating tiger in a public place: at least the tiger could be theoretically tamed/might not automatically attack/wouldn't convert its victims into man-eaters. And I wouldn't release one as such…
In much the same way as zombies feast on the living but not the dead, I'm not sure Dexter would get the same kick out of offing zombies as he does live people. Unless of course by 'zombie' one means the last season of his show.
The imperative to kill her is as follows: she is a walking monster, a virus in a human body, now and forever, amen. I'm against the 'death penalty' for many reasons, one of which is that all people have at least the theoretical potential for rehabilitation. Zombies, on the other hand, cannot ever be rehabilitated and…
A) It didn't look like his aunt's home B) I seem to recall two separate scenes: one where Jesse and Saul persuade the Pinkmans to sell a house for $400k face to face because it was a meth lab, and one where the Pinkmans sell a house to an anonymous bidder only to be astounded when Jesse shows up at the house and…
Carol knows that walkers are a) dead and b) dangerous. They have no self, so letting them do anything is irrelevant to them as they cannot perceive it: they are nothing more than a virus in a human body, less than a savage animal which at least could be theoretically tamed given enough time. Therefore leaving them…
Would you have been less confused if the penultimate full stop had been a dash? Unless you thought the final sentence is irrelevant to the penultimate one (which you shouldn't have done unless you don't understand that a grammatically accurate PPS can only make a single point), the meaning is there of everything…
I disagree with several of your opinions. I am not however as mean as Bart and Lisa Simpson, so I won't express that by saying 'You stink, Strawb-erry! We want Head-Shot Walker! And Daryl! Daryl!'
How unlucky can one girl be?
I stabbed her and she shot me,
Like Sophia once said,
Ain't that a Rick in the head?
My mind was completely black,
I stabbed her and she shot back,
Like the walker said, quote,
Ain't that a hole in the throat?
The world keeps spinning
The cast goes to sleep and keeps thinning
If this is just the…
And anyway, Emily Kinney sounds more like Evanna Lynch than Brighton Sharbino does.
Because walkers and men are not created equal, and walkers do not have certain inalienable rights. They have no life, they have no liberty, and they cannot pursue happiness.
Maybe that'll change now he's started taking his hat off.
If you'd called them 'little people' instead of 'midgets', it would have served the dual purpose of a) being the appropriate term and b) poking fun at their relative underdevelopment as characters. Political correctness Gets Off A Good One!
I disagree that this episode served only shock purposes. Lizzie was a promising character and it's sad to see her go so abruptly: not because she was established enough to feel like a friend but because she had an interesting mental condition. Also, and more importantly in the long run, Carol and Tyreese have forged a…
They were children. Filthy drug-peddling children.
Firstly, have you seen Breaking Bad? Secondly: the last line I admit could confusing if you haven't seen House, in which Allison Cameron dyes her hair blonde after 3 seasons, but I implied nonetheless that 'Cameron-style' means 'going blonde' with my references to blonde sister couples on TWD and Maggie making a…
She got off the kill shot at the third attempt after two complete misses from close range. Sure that's relatively good when compared to someone who empties the whole clip into the sky or drops the gun, and you may be right that it's relatively good shooting in a reality context, but the show doesn't operate on such a…
Let's not forget of course that we've seen the 'Here's a gun, I did a lot of terrible stuff to you, kill me if you want'/'No, I refuse' idea rather recently on a somewhat superior show. Major difference: Carol wasn't already dying and Tyreese maybe choosing to not shoot because of seeing as such. Although personally I…
The best laid plans of Walking Dead gang aft agley.