eschaton89--disqus
Eschaton89
eschaton89--disqus

They never tried to drag the soda machine, they only used the truck to flip it over.
And they had no reason to run over Jeebus; the cop in Atlanta was a threat because Rick thought he was going back to the hospital to warn Dawn. Also, completely different environment (city, walkers, danger, tension). I agree that it

Simple reason: they didn't want to get split up. It's safer if they're both in the same vehicle.
I'm more annoyed by the fact that they chased the guy after they got him off the roof. That made no sense.

And then how do they go home, with no truck and no gas in the car? By foot? With the guy tied up?

They are americans, they don't know what manual transmission is.

That actress had a similar character problem on Prison Break - her character was in a relationship with the lead character but they had no chemistry whatsoever, it's the kind of screen relationship that only works because they tell you they love each other. Sort of a Glenn-Maggie thing.

Would have been great for Ron. Dude kills your father and bangs your mother. Classic.

Dude I like your reviews but you need to check your spelling.
It's "whose", not "who's". It's "theirs", not "there's". And it's not the first time I've seen this.

"Only kill off black characters"? What about Beth, Dale, Shane, Lori, Herschel, Andrea?
That is just your perception, white characters die as often as black characters.

Well Season 1 was remarkably boring and uninteresting. No fixed location, just people on the run shooting zombies, ZERO character development. I don't understand how could anybody enjoy Season 1, it's nothing you haven't already seen in a Romero movie.
I stopped watching the show after Season 1, then I started again 4

Wut? That's in the following episode, not the previous one.

Well, he was indeed a well-written villain.

I bailed on TWD after Season 1, but after some time passed I decided to go on. Season 2 and 4 were good, Season 3 was beyond good.

Lori, not Laurie:D

I was really hoping he would reveal he'd planted a bomb somewhere inside Terminus, or at least a practical joke, or a booby trap. But no.

You're talking about the first season, right? Because that had an ordinary plot and zero character development. Then it got much better.

I enjoyed the fact that she didn't fall for it. Frank was able to play a doofus like Donald, but Catherine is smarter and knows better. +1 for the writers.

Mad Man is not "slow". It just follows the time in which the show is set. It crosses the 60's and it tells the changing mores of American society from the point of view of an adverstising company.
The thing is, what we commonly know as "the 60's" started halfway the decade, the first half of the decade is basically a

Mad Man is not "slow". It just follows the time in which the show is set. It crosses the 60's and it tells the changing mores of American society from the point of view of an adverstising company.
The thing is, what we commonly know as "the 60's" started halfway the decade, the first half of the decade is basically a