Tag: amc

  • ‘The Walking Dead’ Spinoff Premieres August 23, 2015


    UPDATE: It was just announced during Comic-Con 2015 that “Fear The Walking Dead” will premiere Sunday, August 23 at 9 p.m. ET on AMC. Season 1 will be six episodes, so this will lead up to the Sunday, October 11 premiere of “The Walking Dead” Season 6.

    Original story:

    “The Walking Dead,” will launch the six episodes of Season 1 this August.

    It’s always nice when The Powers That Be do what makes the most sense, and this timing makes sense. Season 6 of the main “Walking Dead” show will premiere in October, so August is a fitting start for “Fear,” to lead into the mother show. AMC has yet to announce specific premiere dates for either “Fear” Season 1 or “Walking Dead” Season 6 (guessing Sunday, October 11 for the Season 6 premiere), but Robert Kirkman — who executive produces both shows — dropped the August confirmation into a “Fear” Q&A with Fangoria.

    Kirkman noted that “Fear” is being shot digitally, not on film, so it will have a different look from the main show. He also said the L.A.-set “Fear,” which is set at the dawn of the zombie apocalypse, will have “more chaos” and be “more hectic” in its first season and moving into Season 2 than the first season of “The Walking Dead.” Fangoria asked about the potential for a limited event series in another part of the “Walking Dead” universe, and that’s when Kirkman talked about the August premiere and potential for more series:

    There’s always a possibility for [a limited event spin-off], and I certainly wouldn’t rule it out even though I can say there are no current plans to do that. I think everyone is working hard on ‘The Walking Dead’ and ‘Fear the Walking Dead’ to make them the best series they can be, and I think everyone’s happy with their work since we’re all doing our jobs. I’m really excited for ‘Fear the Walking Dead’ to debut in August and for people to see just what we’ve done, but we’re not in a hurry to continue expanding the world of ‘The Walking Dead.’

    It’s important to note that AMC and the producers didn’t rush to capitalize on the success of ‘The Walking Dead’ until we were going towards our sixth season. We’re not going to be focused on too many different things right now. So let’s see how ‘Fear the Walking Dead’ goes first and then we’ll have nine spin-offs, and that’ll be great.”

    We’re very curious to see how “Fear” looks — and also see how well it does in the ratings. TWD was a hit out of the gate and it keeps building steam each season. Will “Fear” do the same? Are you excited for this August premiere or will you wait to see what fans and critics say before deciding to invest your time?


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  • New Details on ‘Fear the Walking Dead’ Characters and ‘Satisfying’ Season 1

    A specific premiere date for “The Walking Dead” spinoff “Fear the Walking Dead,” has still yet to be released, but showrunner Dave Erickson is already talking about how long it may air on AMC.

    Robert Kirkman, who executive produces this show along with the main one, first gave the basic character rundown to Entertainment Weekly: “Fear” follows two schoolteachers, widow Madison (Kim Dickens) and divorced Travis (Cliff Curtis), who are very much in love. They both have kids from previous relationships: Madison has a high-achieving high-school daughter named Alicia (Alycia Debnam-Carey) and a dropout son named Nick (Frank Dillane); Travis has a son, Chris (Lorenzo James Henrie), who resents Travis for breaking up with his mom (Elizabeth Rodriguez).

    Dave Erickson talked to TVLine and The Hollywood Reporter about the feel of the first season and plan for what’s to come.

    TVLine: “Will these first six episodes feel like a miniseries?”
    Erickson: “It’s written as a six-hour movie and that’s the feel we want to have. That said, we’re building to a place of emotional fracture for our characters and getting to a place where we will definitely be setting up the emotional conflicts that we want to either heal or continue to fracture over the course of Season 2. We’ll be ready from an emotional standpoint to launch into the next season, [but] it’ll also be a satisfying ending.”

    The Hollywood Reporter: “Do you want to stay with a six-episode season or follow more of the original and grow to 13 and then 16?”
    Erickson: “I would imagine the network has a very specific plan. I think 13 is a great number; 15, 16, it’s really a question of having the time to sit down and make sure we’re not burning story to burn story; that we’re able to build something that’s layered and textured and compelling. I think it’s a safe bet that if things go well, they’ll probably want more rather than less, but I’m not sure what that number’s going to be.”

    THR: “As for the duration of the Fear, what’s your long-term goal? Do you see this as a show that’s running for five, six, seven seasons?”
    Erickson: “About five or six. The more we dig into it, the more we’ll find. The original show is at least another few seasons based on the material that Robert has written for the comic already, and that serves as a guiding light. I like endings, and — I haven’t discussed this with Robert but I think it’s more of a question for us to discuss when we sit down and really start breaking season two — on Sons, Kurt Sutter had a certain number in his head. He knew there was a certain number of seasons that felt right to him. I don’t have a specific set number of seasons in my head right now. I do think that the burden at a certain point, when you cross that 10-year mark … it can be pretty challenging. I’ve got some of mile markers, which don’t take me that long as of yet, but I can’t really say because it’s an AMC question.”

    AMC already gave a green light to FTWD Season 2, but we’ll have to see what they do for episode counts, and where they place the show in the 2016 schedule. The main show also started with six episodes, then upped to 13 in Season 2, then went to the 16-episode format it retains into Season 6, which premieres in October. It’s a good point to bring up how the main TWD show is tied to Kirkman’s comic, which gives a hint on its direction, but FTWD is completely untethered so it’s hard to know where it will go or how long it might be around.

    Are you getting excited for “Fear” or just afraid that it might, you know, bite?

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  • The 10 Biggest ‘Mad Men’ D-Bags, Ranked

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    AMC’s “Mad Men,” which ends its seven-season run on Sunday, was set in New York but largely situated in the grey area between good and bad, where morally compromised men and women are driven by a specific set of needs, desires, and compulsive urges. These are people who, under the confines of the social, political, and cultural norms of the time, attempted to live their lives the best way they could, even if those lives ended up messy and painful. And yet some of these characters were just jerks.

    There’s an element of wish fulfillment in watching “Mad Men,” in the ways the show creates a romantic nostalgia of another time and place, where men could be men and get away with murder, and women wore lots of interesting patterns while being denied fundamental human rights. And the biggest jerks of “Mad Men’s” seven seasons are the perfect embodiment of this wistfulness –- in some ways you want to be them, even while finding them ethically repugnant.

    It’s in this spirit that we run down the ten biggest “Mad Men” d-bags. These are the characters who you love to hate and hate to love, who gave the series even more shading by making that moral grey area really, really grey.

  • ‘Fear the Walking Dead’ Teaser Promises It’s Not Just a Clone

    Fear the Walking DeadIf you fear that “Fear the Walking Dead,” AMC’s spinoff of zombie drama “Walking Dead,” will just be a clone of the original — then you’re in for a surprise.

    At least, that’s what the producers want you to believe in this new teaser video. Robert Kirkman, Gale Ann Hurd, and showrunner Dave Erickson are really, really trying to convince fans that “Fear the Walking Dead” isn’t a rehash.

    “The audience coming to the show, because there are so many diehard fans, you expect a certain thing from ‘The Walking Dead,’” Erickson says. “We want to give that sense, and then pull the rug out from under them.”

    At the least, we’ll see more of the initial zombie outbreak — in “The Walking Dead,” Rick Grimes was in a coma for most of it. The clip doesn’t show much footage, but there are glimpses of the school where the lead characters played by Kim Dickens and Cliff Curtis teach.

    “Fear the Walking Dead” just began production and is likely to premiere sometime late this summer.Want more stuff like this? Like us on Facebook.%Slideshow-284449%

  • ‘The Walking Dead’ Spinoff Adds Two (or Three) to Main Cast

    You didn’t forget about “The Walking Dead” Season 6, which will premiere in October, but the spinoff series is also under way, with a summer premiere scheduled.

    Two new names were recently confirmed for FTWD, with a strong hint to a third. Entertainment Weekly revealed that “Orange Is the New Black” actress Elizabeth Rodriguez is joining the new TWD show as a series regular. Deadline just updated that “666 Park Avenue” alum Mercedes Mason (also credited as “Masohn”) would also be joining the show as a regular. They also noted, “I hear Ruben Blades is in talks to play her father.” “In talks” isn’t a done deal, but his name is now out there and it would be a surprise to see the “Safe House” star cut at this point.

    So here’s the current lineup:

    • Cliff Curtis as Sean Cabrera
    • Kim Dickens as Nancy Tomkins
    • Alycia Debnam-Carey as Ashley Tomkins
    • Frank Dillane as Nick Tomkins
    • Elizabeth Rodriguez
    • Mercedes Masohn
    • Ruber Blades (maybe)

    A few other characters were revealed back in September but don’t have official actors attached at this point.

    “Fear the Walking Dead” is set in Los Angeles at the dawn of the zombie apocalypse, not that anyone is likely to call them “zombies” in this show either. It’s meant to be very different from the main show and not really a traditional “spinoff” in that no one from the main show will be featured. As executive producer David Alpert told The Daily Beast back in March:

    It’s not quite a prequel. We’re going to play with the timeline a little bit, so you’ll be seeing things that you haven’t seen on [The Walking Dead]. It’s in an entirely different location-we shot the pilot in Los Angeles-and we’re going to invest ourselves in these characters that are nuanced, detailed, and honestly really f–ked up and having these awful experiences between themselves, and trying to find a way, as a lot of us do. You have an ex-wife, you have an ex-husband, and you’re trying to find out, ‘How do I pick up the kids from school?’ and just when you think you can barely hold on, zombies start coming. […] There’s going to be six seconds that reference the mother show. Six seconds. Other than that, the show will be an entirely stand-alone thing. The rules will be the same: zombies don’t talk, and there will be no zombie animals. But other than that, as far as references and things, there will only be a few Easter eggs-and those six seconds.”

    FTWD production started in L.A. then filming reportedly moved to Vancouver. Six episodes will premiere in summer 2015 (no official date yet) and AMC already gave the thumbs up to Season 2 for 2016. Are you in?
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  • Hulu Nabs ‘Seinfeld’ Reruns and New ‘Walking Dead’ Spinoff Episodes

    Get OUT, Netflix! Last year, Netflix made some new “Friends,” but Hulu is now trying to match that move by purchasing the SVOD (subscription video on demand) rights to “Seinfeld.” Oh, and right after that news came out, during Hulu’s NewFront presentation on April 29, it was revealed that Hulu also landed an exclusive output deal with AMC. That deal will include all upcoming episodes of “The Walking Dead” spinoff/companion series, “Fear the Walking Dead.” Hulu is just out with all guns blazing right now.

    “Fear the Walking Dead”

    The “Walking Dead” spinoff will debut later this summer (no official date yet) with six episodes, with a second season to follow in 2016. Variety said Hulu only mentioned that spinoff, but the deal with AMC will probably include more programming that has yet to air on the network, and it also includes other channels in the AMC family, including IFC, BBC America, Sundance TV, WE tv and IFC Films. It’s pretty big and, they added, a similar deal did well for Netflix and AMC in 2011.

    “Seinfeld”

    Back to the “Seinfeld” purchase. According to Variety, that deal is valued at just under $1 million an episode, although Deadline heard it’s around $700,000. The financial details aren’t being disclosed, but there are 180 episodes of the NBC comedy, so that’s around $130M-$180M to split between Sony Pictures V, Time Warner’s Castle Rock, and “Seinfeld” profit participants, including Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David. It’s not nothing! Deadilne said it may even be close to double the per-episode price that “Friends” landed from Netflix. The “Seinfeld” episodes are scheduled to premiere in June.

    Hulu recently made a deal with CBS TV Distribution for more than 300 episodes of “CSI.” They’re really putting a lot of money into this, investing in very popular shows. So far, some commenters are frustrated that more shows are going to Hulu, since it means more commercials. If that ends up hurting Hulu, they may have to change their ways, but for now they seem to be doing pretty well.
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  • 5 New Teases on ‘Walking Dead’ Season 6 and ‘Fear the Walking Dead’ (VIDEO)

    “The Walking Dead” has departed until October, but the spinoff/companion series, “Fear the Walking Dead,” is premiering its first six episodes late this summer on AMC. Robert Kirkman, who writes the “Walking Dead” comic books and executive produces both the main show and the spinoff, was at the 2015 National Association of Broadcasters Show with actor Steven Yeun (Glenn) and AMC president Charlie Collier, and they teased some TWD stuff ahead. You can watch a portion of the NAB Show talk in the video below, but here are five highlights:

    1. Rick and Morgan are “spine” of Season 6
    Season 5 ended with Rick Grimes finally face to face with his old buddy Morgan Jones, whom he hadn’t seen since Morgan went loco in Season 3. “Having Rick and Morgan together, finally, again is a huge deal, and it’s definitely going to be a big part of Season 6,” Kirkman said (via TheWrap). “Now it’s a very different Rick and a very different Morgan who are going to have a completely different relationship. And it’s the questions of how they’re going to interact, how they’re going to work together – if they’re going to work together – and what comes from those interactions is going to be basically the spine of Season 6.”

    2. Glenn’s future is “cool,” death may be “awesome”
    Kirkman said “a lot of cool stuff” is ahead for Glenn, but are Glenn’s days numbered on the show? Yeun admitted it “could happen” that Glenn dies, since no one is ever safe on the show, and the comic book sometimes hints in a certain direction. However, Yeun added, “The way that we make the show – the writers and everybody really want to focus on making things poignant and purposeful and meaningful. So if it were for Glenn to go, then it’s probably going to be awesome.”

    3. Why that spinoff title?
    Kirkman said the “Fear the Walking Dead” title means a lot of things, it’s taking us back to a time when the walking dead were much more dangerous and more numerous. “So it’s definitely time to fear the walking dead.” Plus, he said, a title like “Walking Dead: Los Angeles” would’ve been the “exact wrong thing” for the show’s tone.

    4. More deadly people to “Fear”
    Kirkman said he’s always liked that the title “the walking dead” refers to both the walkers and the human survivors. “They are, in a sense, all just on borrowed time, and it’s possible that the people that that we’re following in this [spinoff] show are maybe a little bit more deadly.”

    5. No outbreak origin story coming
    Kirkman said every other ZA story deals with the origins of the outbreak, and that’s “not the priority in Walking Dead; that’s not the priority in Fear The Walking Dead.” They are instead more concerned with “the heart.”

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  • Watch ‘The Walking Dead’ Cast Speculate About ‘Chaos’ of Season 6

    The Walking Dead“The Walking Dead” cast does not know what’s coming next in Season 6, but they just assume “bad things,” “chaos” and “aggressive” confrontations with The Wolves are ahead. They’re probably right! Season 5 just ended in late March, and Season 6 won’t even start filming until early May, so the cast is in the dark until they get the first scripts. Most of the producers are in the dark as well, since only showrunner Scott M. Gimple knows the exact plan for the next 16 episodes.

    AMC just released a 3-minute video with the cast and crew speculating on what’s ahead in Season 6. In this way, they are just like the fans — looking forward to seeing what happens with Morgan Jones and Rick Grimes; worrying about the “W” Wolves; and wondering how Alexandria will move forward after Pete just killed Reg Monroe in front of leader Deanna Monroe, then Rick turned around and killed Pete in front of his old “all life is precious” buddy Morgan.

    Watch the video to hear all the speculation, and check out the YouTube comments if you want to join the “Is Negan Coming in Season 6?” debate. Guessing no on that — unless it’s at the very, very end.

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  • ‘Fear the Walking Dead’ Teaser: A Virus Has Hit Los Angeles (VIDEO)

    Fear the Walking Dead, walking dead spinoff
    The upcoming “Walking Dead” companion series, “Fear the Walking Dead,” aired its first promo during the original show’s fifth season finale Sunday night, offering fans a short tease of what’s to come on the new drama.

    The 15-second clip features a radio newscaster warning Los Angeles residents to get their flu shots, since there have been “reports in five states of a strange virus going around.” Of course, longtime “Walking Dead” fans know that this ultimately leads to the zombie outbreak, but “Fear” takes place in a slightly earlier timeline than the first series — and conventional wisdom says that all sick people should do is simply get some rest and “take care of yourself.”

    There are a couple quick glimpses at walkers in the clip, first a pack of them roaming through what looks like a street carnival, and another, longer shot of a lone zombie shambling toward the frame. We’ll see how many more are introduced during “Fear”‘s first season, which spans six episodes this summer before a full, second season is due in 2016.

    “Fear the Walking Dead” stars Kim Dickens, Cliff Curtis, Alycia Debnam Carey, and Frank Dillane.

    [via: AMC]

    Photo credit: AMC

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  • ‘The Walking Dead’ Season 5 Finale Recap: Reunited, and It Feels So Good

    Earlier this season, “The Walking Dead” hammered home the notion that the world had been irrevocably changed, and that our heroes must continue pushing forward — adapting to their new life and new surroundings, and refusing to live in the past — in order to survive. “We can’t go back” became a mantra of sorts, adopted by Rick and co. to excuse the terrible things they’ve had to do throughout the series’s run, and convince themselves to keep going despite every urge to give up, and every loss they’ve encountered along the way. Even Gareth, the cannibalistic gang leader at Terminus, spouted those words, convinced that he was doing the right thing as he slit people’s throats in order to feast on their flesh.

    So viewers no doubt experienced a bit of whiplash when a new mantra entered the fold during last night’s season five finale, “Conquer,” which offered a direct counterpoint to that earlier way of thinking.

    “Everything gets a return,” says Morgan, as he’s greeted in the woods by a member of the Wolves, the mysterious gang that’s been lingering on the fringes of this back half of the season. Yes, Morgan is officially back (sometimes begging really does work!), and he’s finally reunited with Rick after a season of following in his footsteps (and teasing viewers with a handful of fleeting appearances). And what a return it is, as he quickly topples two Wolves with some serious bo-wielding skills.

    Before they’re rendered unconscious, we get a bit of exposition delivered by the first Wolf (oh, how I love a good expository chat over a campfire), who explains that the group takes its inspiration from early settlers of the area, who put a bounty on wolves and employed native tribes to help drive the animals to extinction. The natives believed that people were wolves transformed into men, the Wolf says. “They’re back now,” he sneers, showing off the W carved into his own forehead.

    It still doesn’t fully explain the group’s motivations, or its origins, but the good news is that Morgan survives the encounter, and can counsel the Alexandrians about what they’re up against moving into season six. The display the Wolves left last week, of the naked woman strung up in a tree, implies that they’re a vengeful people, as does the trap they set at the food factory, in which Daryl and Aaron are caught before they’re rescued by Morgan. It must have taken a lot of time and effort to plan and rig such an elaborate setup (and pack it full of dozens and dozens of zombies), and the limbless torsos hanging in those trucks certainly imply that the Wolves had some fun hacking up their victims before using them to torment the living. Even the first Wolf’s seemingly-benign conversation with Morgan betrays a darkness and an all-consuming need to conquer as he snaps at the man for daring to take a sip of coffee.

    “I want everything you have. Every last drop,” the Wolf says. “I’m taking you, too, and you’re not exactly going to be alive.”

    Thankfully, Morgan’s picked up some pretty impressive fighting skills in his travels, and he dispatches of the two men in short order, a zen-like aura buzzing about him as they fall. But Morgan doesn’t kill them (shame, really), and that puts him in stark contrast with Rick, the man he’s been chasing — and perhaps idolizing — all this time, and who’s become a bit more cold-hearted since they last met. (The difference in their chosen mantras is certainly telling.)

    The very moment of their reunion, in fact, occurs only seconds after Rick is finally given the go-ahead to execute Pete, an order he instantaneously obeys. The set-up to that resolution unfurled throughout the 90-minute episode (a bloated running time that hindered the proceedings, in my opinion), with talk of a community-wide meeting, led by Deanna, which would determine Rick’s standing in Alexandria following his upsetting outburst in last week’s installment. Rick’s group was well aware that Deanna would float the notion of exile, and Maggie tried to head this off by appealing to the leader directly. Reg, doing his best mansplaining routine, assured Maggie that the two camps were better off living together.

    Unfortunately, Reg doesn’t survive long enough to see that promise through. Through a chain of boneheaded events — beginning with anyone letting Father Gabriel do anything — the terrible, horrible, no good, very bad reverend leaves the front gates wide open, allowing a flood of walkers to come waltzing in. Rick, on his way to Deanna’s meeting, discovers the mistake and races through the community searching for zombies until he’s surrounded by them, beating them back one by one before shoving his hand up one’s head until its eyeballs explode. (A visual every bit as disgusting as it sounds.) He then crashes into the meeting carrying the corpse, defiantly throwing it down and delivering yet another impassioned speech about how screwed Alexandria is without him.

    “The ones out there, they’ll hunt us, they’ll find us, they’ll try to use us, they’ll try to kill us,” Rick declares. “But we’ll kill them. We’ll survive. I’ll show you how.”

    Amazingly enough, Rick’s ranting doesn’t immediately win everyone over (I guess revealing that he planned to kill some of them to prove a point isn’t the best way to ingratiate him to the locals), but that quickly changes when Pete barges in, wild-eyed and wielding Michonne’s katana. In a struggle, Pete accidentally slices open Reg’s throat, and Reg bleeds out in front of everyone, prompting Deanna to tell the constable, “Do it.” Rick is only too happy to oblige, delivering a bullet to the doctor’s head.

    In the scene directly preceding Rick’s discovery of the open gate, the constable is sitting in his house, psyching himself up for the meeting, when we hear Bob’s words from earlier this season echo through his head. Even as he was dying, Bob truly believed that life could get better for the group, and its members shouldn’t compromise too much of themselves in the process of surviving. “This is a nightmare,” Bob said of the apocalypse. “And nightmares end. … They shouldn’t end who you are.”

    It’s unclear who Rick will wind up being as the series progresses, but for now, he’s securely back in the leadership saddle — and he can’t go back.

    Other thoughts:

    – I floated the theory last week that the Wolves could be made up of the exiled Alexandrians, who were mentioned again during the finale. Since we still don’t know their whole story, I still think it’s a possibility, considering the Wolves’ vengeful nature and what little we know about the exile (they were driven out far beyond Alexandria’s walls, left with enough food and water for a day, and stripped of their guns). Aaron said two men and a woman were banished; the only Wolves we’ve seen so far have been the same two men, and we still don’t know the exact size of their pack. (And we also know that they killed a woman very recently.) Aaron seemed to regret the exile, and I think he’ll continue to regret it as season six picks up with the pack as Alexandria’s main antagonists.

    – Carol’s simultaneous disdain for the Alexandrians and willingness to lie to their faces continues to delight me. As the group is formulating its gameplan for Deanna’s meeting, Carol suggests that they pretend to agree with the community’s peacenik ways, “because these people are children, and children like stories.” Later, she boldly threatens Pete with a knife, daring him to lay a finger on her. “Play your cards right, maybe you don’t have to die,” she says as she thrusts a casserole into his arms. “And I want my dish back clean when you’re done.” Add that to the pile of perfect Carol moments from this season.

    – Abraham doesn’t mince words when it’s his turn to vouch for Rick at Deanna’s meeting: “Simply put, there is a vast ocean of s–t that you people don’t know s–t about. Rick knows every fine grain of said s–t. And then some.”

    – Several opportunities for annoying characters to die didn’t pan out, with Glenn unable to pull the trigger on Nicholas (who shot him first! And continued attacking him! And let a zombie come at him! How many reasons to kill someone do you need?), and Sasha prevented from offing Father Gabriel by an intervening Maggie. Gabriel’s death has been a seeming foregone conclusion ever since his introduction, and yet he somehow continues to survive. His pronouncement, “The word of God is the only protection I need,” as he went off into the woods alone actually made me groan, and his umpteenth improbable escape from peril had me rolling my eyes so hard that I’m surprised they’re not stuck in the back of my head.

    – I’ve missed Eugene, who didn’t have much to do in the back half of this season (or during this episode). Here’s hoping he can utter more than a handful of lines in the season six premiere.

    – The Richonne ‘shippers were probably doing cartwheels during Rick and Michonne’s heart to heart, in which Michonne assures the sheriff’s deputy that she’ll always be on his side.

    – This season was bookended by butchering, with the Terminites actually eating their prey. We don’t know yet that the Wolves are doing the same (perhaps my cries of “cannibalism” were a bit misguided; my bad), but they have the same penchant for throat-slitting that Gareth and co. enjoyed so much. (RIP, Poncho Guy.) I don’t think it was a mistake that Reg was killed in this same manner, either. Bloodshed is expected on “The Walking Dead,” but this action is especially brutal — and tellingly, is a means of killing that’s specifically human. It seems that “Everything gets a return” is also true of terrible ways to die; look for that mantra to repeat itself — especially as Rick and co. face another evil outside threat — throughout season six.

    – Until then, enjoy your summer. “The Walking Dead” is slated to return sometime in October.

    Photo credit: Gene Page/AMC

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