avclub-fcd4c889d516a54d5371f00e3fdd70dc--disqus
miles_underground
avclub-fcd4c889d516a54d5371f00e3fdd70dc--disqus

Speaking of, I think Meyer is probably my favorite of the crew.

Yeah, assume the mom died sometime in the past 10 years or so since they mention the youngest sister (12ish?) didn't really remember her mom. 

The only thing I've ever seen him in was "Tigerland".  

Maybe we'll find out that's how Merle solves all his problems since he got off that roof.  "I can't fit in this closet, I better amputate my legs.  I'm hungry, better cut off half my stomach."

I read a book by the "Sit, Ubu, Sit.  Good Dog" guy, and he talks about hiring Bill Lawrence to work on "Spin City".  He said that if he came up with 100 ideas, 90 of them would be bizarre and the other 10 would be brilliant.

Maybe they lived in the stadium.

My favorite scene was early on when they brought out the map and were talking about doing a grid search to find Sophia, who has been missing fo72 hours.  Herschel mentions that Rick is weak from blood loss and Shane has a hurt foot, and Rick says, "All right, we'll get started on it tomorrow."

That blanket in the closet didn't look big enough for Merle, but I guess you could cram in there if you had to.

So, if every dead body animates as a zombie (as opposed to just turning from zombie bites), and Lori were to miscarriage fairly well along into her pregnancy, does that mean a zombie baby would be chewing it's way out of her belly?  

I didn't mind it.  It upped their badassery quotient.  Since it fell out of fashion to have Indians in the bad guy role, they've been a little bit neutered.  Maybe we'll get to see the Indians side of it more later, but either way I'll take a scalping raid over buffoonery (film version of "Maverick" I'm looking at

I was kind of hoping that when the camera panned back during Meany's soliloquy that there would be a terrified engineer or someone sitting there with him.

I kept missing parts of this episode from flipping around during commercials, but I was left with the impression that Common was a slave the Josey Wales guy had owned and set free.  At the beginning it was like they didn't know each other, but the tent scene only really made sense to me if they had a history together.

Ted Levine apparently didn't.

Like our grandparents!

She looks like someone who should be freezing a Disney princess in ice, but that's neither here nor there.  

Four a family of four, $60 for an on-demand movie plus another $10 in snacks would be cheaper than a night at the movies, which would be around $48 for the tickets and another $40 if everyone wants soda and either popcorn or candy.

I liked "The Zero Effect".  

When Jimmy cut the guy's throat, he was very careful to step back so he didn't get blood on his shoes.

I think he just loaded his family and left.  There were some people bit in the night attack (amazingly, the cans on a string didn't repel the zombie hordes), but I would challenge anyone— even the actors who played them— to remember who they were.

There also tends to be a distrust of mental health professionals in the military.  When I served, the regimental psychiatrist was referred to as "the Wizard" and the clear implication was anyone who was ordered to see him was clearly fucked up, regardless of the diagnosis.  It definitely wasn't viewed like going to