Clearly, they're pushing the common core agenda.
Clearly, they're pushing the common core agenda.
Well, it's a show adapted from a comic book about zombies in the apocalypse. Perhaps the error is yours in believing that a literary and cinematic masterpiece will evolve from said comic book.
According to you. Some of the things you enjoy, others may find are shit as well.
Do better then. Go write a spectacular sitcom that will blow our minds to pieces.
They obviously foreshadowed this with the "pee-pee pants" reference.
I wonder what Beth thinks about the strength of scissors in this game? Oh…
Quite the impasse.
Well then, thanks for showing up to let us know you don't watch it and never will! Time well spent, I'm sure.
Because some people have different taste in entertainment than you and that is why there is a plethora of genres and shows available in the real world.
You probably would have enjoyed this episode, then, since it wasn't shown.
Kinda seems like a lot of people here wanted to see it. Otherwise, how did the scene "not do it justice?"
Most of us probably know enough to figure who it might be (especially with the "hurry up" attitude that seems to be prevalent here regarding Negan's appearance), but the "will they or won't they" is the angle that the show decided to take as a method of suspense. Guess we'll see if it pays off in a few long months.
Yup. Just meant that it is being talked about more than basically any previous episode or finale so far, and I don't expect that to die down by, like, tomorrow.
But the finale was a huge failure, right?
Yeah…but you're still gonna tune in.
Not really. I was responding to someone else's post and you interjected with your own thoughts. My point was that it seems pretty apparent that the ending made an impact on pretty much everyone that watched it.
I liked it too. The rv scene was the group's unraveling from confident to desperate, and was done well. The Carol/Morgan scenes were impactful if you let them be, and didn't just want everything to hurry up so you could see Negan.
It seems like he did have an order to it, but the direction scrambled it to confuse the viewers. Let the graphed and drawn out theories begin!
Different times, though. There wasn't the internet and people had to accept the cliffhanger and move on til the next season. There were different reasons why the cliffhanger did, and then did not work until the turn of the century.
To me it showed glimpses of his personality - vaguely humanistic, but mostly narcissistic and brutal. That is a psychologically scary and scarring villain.