Oddly enough, that was probably one of the best episodes of Grey's Anatomy.
Oddly enough, that was probably one of the best episodes of Grey's Anatomy.
I really hate the way Jim Parson is photoshopped on these side ads for The Big Bang Theory. It's freaking me out, him staring at me.
I think the WASPs mention had more to do with the fact that they're white, rich, and drunks.
See, and I thought that was genuinely tragic and sad.
Oh, and - "You just don't get it, do you?"
And then RICK and SHANE make out.
Cut to black.
"The Walking Dead"
I seriously wish the show had more of mythology (it kind of hinted at it in the final two episodes). I still want to know about that helicopter from the pilot, the black guy and his son, the guy that chopped off his hand, the secret that was whispered in Rick's ear (I doubt she's pregnant because she's going to find…
I agree with the whole, no one is safe thing. With the exception of Rick, Carl, Shane, and the wife, anyone could have died. People were dropping left and right.
Um, didn't she stab the shit out a zombies face in the previous episode?
So Shane can conveniently be there when the fat guy decides to go get medical supplies.
I think it's so funny how everyone keeps pointing out everything the characters do wrong (i.e. not saving flares, Rick wanting to leave, T-Dog and his injury, Shane taking forever to leave). Now, I'm not saying these aren't valid points, and I feel ridiculous defending these characters in a fictional situation, but…
Ew, you better not know that for a fact or else you're a spoiler!!!
Let me try: With all the dead bodies around the zombies wouldn't smell them?
They didn't necessarily eat people. They infected became very violent and that is all the virus made them focused on, hence them starving in the end of the movie.
The show stopped following the graphic novel after the first episode, didn't it?
I guess this is the point, to see if this show can successfully expand the mythology of zombie stories. Personally, I think the action is good and the human drama element is strong.
Totally agree. It's an awesome show.
There's still a lot The Walking Dead needs to answer people - the helicopter from the pilot, the red neck who sawed off his hand, the rumored military site, the black guy and his son, and what exactly did Genner (?) whisper to Rick as they were leaving the CDC.
I thought Sister City was one of the worst episodes ever. But the rest are good.
Wow, when you lay them all out like that, one realizes how impressive their cast was.