Yep, we saw them consume horses, a deer, a cow, rats, pigs.
Yep, we saw them consume horses, a deer, a cow, rats, pigs.
Yet, I can't believe the Clarkes didn't call their dog inside when they saw Pete eating the birthday partiers.
I kept waiting for the planes or choppers to start napalming the streets, as they did in Atlanta.
Yep.
SuSu likely offed herself because she thought her husband was dead, or if he weren't, that she wouldn't survive the marauding zombie neighbors long enough for hubby to return.
Aquariums, zoos, pet shops, kennels, and penitentiaries (except, of course, for manageable group sizes of prisoners locked up in their institution's canteens, where there's food and drink, and the zombies can't get to them).
The only animals that got sick on TWD were the pigs, who caught some kind of swine flu that sickened the humans.
RE: "Kim Dickens wants to be put out of her misery if she dies so her
boyfriend won't have to. The secret subtext is that she didn't offer to
do the same for the ex-wife, because apparently he'd be able to shoot
her in the face."
Travis' hesitancy isn't just annoying, it's unfathomable, given that he saw Nick's zombified drug dealer keep coming, and coming, and coming, no matter what they did to him. Even after his bones were too broken to support him, that zombie kept moving and grasping with his head and jaws.
Things will get lots more interesting when Mrs. Salazar kicks the bucket and reanimates.
Kim Dickens plays a prostitute and madame, named Collette, in the final season of "Sons of Anarchy".
Random observations whilewatching -
1. "Fuck" and its variants are as integral to the show as the setting, weather, drinking, and references to malfunctioning a/c and that recurring leak in Bungalow 3.
Can't disagree. But the following parallels are painful and unmistakable. Where to draw the line?
Polar opposite of CeCe. Though drawn to losers (ex-hubby, Danny, parasite brother Eric), she was able to put her awful, black-hole, Olivia Soprano-like mother in healthy perspective, train for and maintain a respectable, "professional" career, declined Danny's offer of financial help despite being short on cash, and…
We saw glimpses of that bent during Danny's bender, after Robert died, when the drunk/high Danny goaded the Navy guy at the bar to beat the stuffing out of him. And during his meth(?)/crack(?)-induced hallucination, we saw Danny play out his feeling that either he or John would survive, and Danny ultimately fantasized…
Weird loners, like Tobias in FTWD and Wiki in Higson's "The Fear" novels, are often Internet, sci-fi, history, sci, and/or weird happenings geeks. Makes 'em useful in an apocalypse.
Like the flu at the prison, in TWD.
Like John and his wife in "Bloodline" telling their kids to stay away from their Uncle Danny, w/o explaining why.
He'd have the zombies build a wall. And pay for it.
He said it all to Chelsea, when he pushed her away in Key West: "It's what I do."