The Walking Dead Season 6 Paves The Way For Negan
I was trying to push myself to take it in a new direction, maybe not permanently but for these next eight episodes I wanted to do something different and you’re going to see something different.
The following story contains spoilers from Sunday’s finale of The Walking Dead. Listen up Eugene, it’s the zombie apocalypse, everyone is scared. The tower crashed through the wall and the Walkers were making their way through for an Alexandria buffet. Everyone has to act quickly and run, as there’s no way to them out in the open. I have a ton of walkers in a house. The series has been hampered by multiple showrunners and the actual text of “The Walking Dead” comics was never Shakespeare, but even die-hard fans would be hard-pressed to name three interesting lines they can remember.
There aren’t any scary fights with walkers this time around either. There’s been an array of leadership examples shown, from the ruthless to the savage, but Deanna was certainly the most rational we’ve seen, and far from a failure-despite being ill-equipped to prepare her people for survival. It was why Deanna explained to Rick that even though he sees numerous Alexandria residents as expendable, they’re still his people. In the end, Negan will lose and will be sentenced to life in prison. Rick and the group decide to escape the house using the famous “wearing walker guts” trick.
Morgan and Carol, meanwhile, spend most of their time fighting.
It’s tough to be patient when the AMC drama, in its sixth season, is staggering even slower than the living dead to tell the story of Rick Grimes and his motley crew of survivors.
Additionally, there’s a member of the Wolves who Morgan is holding captive right inside the community. Ron will allegedly draw a gun to shoot Rick, and Carl will step in front of the bullet. This time, we’re looking at Carl and Ron, the two teens who have unresolved issues. In the fifth season opener, the show teased at the grizzly fate suffered by Glenn Rhee at the hands of Negan in the comic books. Jessie, when all of this is over, go find Aaron (where is he, by the way?), and tell him to get some Borax on the next supply run. Again, if the show follows the comic book, Deanna’s help will cost one character a body part. But after lasting thing long, shouldn’t they both be smart enough to put their differences aside and worry about the massive zombie horde instead of the single, insane Wolf dude that Morgan is keeping hostage?
So Deanna goes down in her own blaze of glory-in a room, shooting walkers-and leaves us and Michonne with a great question to ponder, too, before the second half of the season premieres in February. One of the coolest things about The Walking Dead – and this site has been consistent about that – is how willing it has always been to kill off main characters in shocking ways. “Split you right in two, straight through to the sinuses, so come on”.
“For [Morgan], it’s wonderful that an audience, especially a TV audience, knows him to be very sensitive and loving and giving”. But just what can they do to try to save the people inside the Safe-Zone? Then in a teaser that aired after last night’s episode “Start to Finish”, our biker heartthrob friend, along with Abraham and Sasha, were pulled over by more of those thugs, all operating under the orders of someone named “Negan”. And there are some (including yours truly) who would argue the season’s fourth episode, aka the Morgan flashback, is among the finest episodes of television for any show this year.