I have a sense that Liv and Justin are over (or rather OVER) and Liv may well be involved next season with Chase Graves.
I have a sense that Liv and Justin are over (or rather OVER) and Liv may well be involved next season with Chase Graves.
I have a sense that Liv and Justin are over (or rather OVER) and Liv may well be involved next season with Chase Graves.
Re: Especially when the people that you were close to in that group are all dead.
GOT has pretty much cleared the deck of all the secondary story lines and they have just two or three left to deal with: The battle between Cersei and Danaerys, the White Walkers vs everyone and maybe some conflict between Jon and Sansa fueled by Littlefinger's plotting.
GOT has pretty much cleared the deck of all the secondary story lines and they have just two or three left to deal with: The battle between Cersei and Danaerys, the White Walkers vs everyone and maybe some conflict between Jon and Sansa fueled by Littlefinger's plotting.
Given that zombies are, well not exactly immortal but invulnerable to a lot of things ("…and they will never get sick again") how many people will want to become zombies? And realistically Seattle should be swarming with researchers wanting to investigate the whole thing.
Agree. It looked like something they got from the costuming department of The Expanse, after the show rejected it as too silly even for the 23rd century.
How many normal people will move away from the city? Liv at the end mentioned seeing people leaving.
As for who stole the cure, maybe Carrie Gold and her faction? Justin was revealed as part of that group (in a scene so brief if you blinked you would have missed it) so he could have told Gold what Major had told him about it. Still, we need to revisit this business.
Re: So, did we never learn who actually stole the cure, did we?
It's also odd that Major himself did not mention the cure ("I was one of you, but I took a cure— which unfortunately has been stolen."). It's possible the gang decided not to tell anyone else about the cure, except that Major did tell Justin.
This is all either a useful plot twist, or it's an unusually large flub by…
Possibly but that would still make him a remarkably uncurious boss who didn't bother to look at an employee's record. Major did some obvious zombie things, including eating brains and healing from serious injuries in the past.
I thought her annoyance was due to Ravi being the likely source for alt press's zombie story (which of course he was). If the CDC knows but is trying to keep it quiet that would be a huge problem for her.
Yes, I knew the one girl was Weckler's daughter. But I had no idea who the older woman (the 2nd girl's mother?0 was or why Clive recognized her. We already knew both girls were zombies because we saw them with the brain tubes before (hence a likely connection to Fillmore Graves). This show juggles a lot of plot and…
I have some problems with the way they've handled Bilquis myself, since rather than giving her an immediate back story, as they did most of the other gods, they jumped into the sexual stuff right at the beginning and never connected her to anything else in the show until the last episode (when she does get a Coming to…
I couldn't help but notice a couple of plot holes.
1. Shouldn't Chase Graves have been a bit curious how Major turned back human? Is that sloppy writing or a clue that Fillmore Graves is behind the theft of the cure?
2. How did Harley know about the party and where it was?
Yes, I was also wondering if Natalie was actually human. She said the cure freed her, but I wasn't sure if she meant from zombiehood or from her keeper (did she give it to him instead?) and did Major establish with her that he was no longer a zombie? Irrelevant now but I was half expecting that to be the episode…
No, we are talking about a TV show here, and a character in it. If you follow this particular thread the question raised was whether the character of Bilquis is somehow exploitive. Within the conceit of this show I would answer No. The gods are depicted as arising from something like the collective unconsciousness of…
The show has been remarkably good in stressing that Bilquis is completely pan-sexual. She is bought to America by a woman after all. The orgy scene shows her worshipers in various sorts of couplings. The implication is that she feeds off of erotic energy is any and all manifestations.
Originally weren't Sweeney and Laura going to find Ostara so she could put them in touch with (a) Jesus and he could resurrect Laura? At least I thought that's what they were talking about a few episodes back.