The Walking Dead - TV Series on AMC ( Comic and Un-aired Spoilers unwelcome!)

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Re: The Walking Dead - TV Series on AMC

:lol aw man, harsh. These things are out of my control.

edit: my awesomness never fades....

awesome-kirk.jpg
 
Re: The Walking Dead - TV Series on AMC

:lol alright. Back to the topic at hand, show was really good and pretty ballsy. There really is nothing like it on TV.
 
Re: The Walking Dead - TV Series on AMC

This show is getting so much positive feedback, can't wait till Sunday night :rock

So what are the minor nitpicks that you have Shatterer? Without getting into spoilers of course :D
 
Re: The Walking Dead - TV Series on AMC

:lol alright. Back to the topic at hand, show was really good and pretty ballsy. There really is nothing like it on TV.
All of AMC's shows are that way, I've recently gotten into Breaking Bad and Mad Men and they are both amazing shows. Couple that with the fact that Frank Darabont is at the helm and I had no doubt that this was gonna rock.
 
Re: The Walking Dead - TV Series on AMC

without trying to spoil anything i would say that there are a couple of sceens where Rick is doing the whole meditative "this all sucks" thing and they are a little drawn out. But really other than that; and again a very minor gripe, the show was amazing.

oh also, all that hushed talking ala Lost. Certain sceens require it (they have to be quite) but others do not, they are just going for intensity and hushed talking has become the go to thing for displaying intensity.
 
Re: The Walking Dead - TV Series on AMC

Ker Than
for National Geographic News
Published October 27, 2010

In the zombie flicks 28 Days Later and I Am Legend, an unstoppable viral plague sweeps across humanity, transforming people into mindless monsters with cannibalistic tendencies.

Though dead humans can't come back to life, certain viruses can induce such aggressive, zombie-like behavior, scientists say in the new National Geographic Channel documentary The Truth Behind Zombies, premiering Saturday at 10 p.m. ET/PT. (National Geographic News is part of the National Geographic Society, which part-owns the National Geographic Channel.)

For instance, rabies—a viral disease that infects the central nervous system—can drive people to be violently mad, according to Samita Andreansky, a virologist at the University of Miami in Florida who also appears in the documentary.

Combine rabies with the ability of a flu virus to spread quickly through the air, and you might have the makings of a zombie apocalypse.

Rabies Virus Mutation Possible?

Unlike movie zombies, which become reanimated almost immediately after infection, the first signs a human has rabies—such as anxiety, confusion, hallucinations, and paralysis—don't typically appear for ten days to a year, as the virus incubates inside the body.

Once rabies sets in, though, it's fatal within a week if left untreated.

If the genetic code of the rabies virus experienced enough changes, or mutations, its incubation time could be reduced dramatically, scientists say.

Many viruses have naturally high mutation rates and constantly change as a means of evading or bypassing the defenses of their hosts.

There are various ways viral mutations can occur, for example through copying mistakes during gene replication or damage from ultraviolet light.

(Related: "New, Fast-Evolving Rabies Virus Found—and Spreading.")

"If a rabies virus can mutate fast enough, it could cause infection within an hour or a few hours. That's entirely plausible," Andreansky said.

Airborne Rabies Would Create "Rage Virus"

But for the rabies virus to trigger a zombie pandemic like in the movies, it would also have to be much more contagious.

Humans typically catch rabies after being bitten by an infected animal, usually a dog—and the infection usually stops there.

Thanks to pet vaccinations, people rarely contract rabies in the United States today, and even fewer people die from the disease. For example, in 2008 only two cases of human rabies infection were reported to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

(See pictures of infectious animals in National Geographic magazine.)

A faster mode of transmission would be through the air, which is how the influenza virus spreads.

"All rabies has to do is go airborne, and you have the rage virus" like in 28 Days Later, Max Mogk, head of the Zombie Research Society, says in the documentary. The international nonprofit is devoted to "raising the level of zombie scholarship in the Arts and Sciences," according to their website.

To be transmitted by air, rabies would have to "borrow" traits from another virus, such as influenza.

Different forms, or strains, of the same virus can swap pieces of genetic code through processes called reassortment or recombination, said Elankumaran Subbiah, a virologist at Virginia Tech who was not involved in the documentary.

But unrelated viruses simply do not hybridize in nature, Subbiah told National Geographic News.

Likewise, it's scientifically unheard of for two radically different viruses such as rabies and influenza to borrow traits, he said.

"They're too different. They cannot share genetic information. Viruses assemble only parts that belong to them, and they don't mix and match from different families."

(Take a quiz on infectious diseases.)

Engineered Zombie Virus Possible?

It's theoretically possible—though extremely difficult—to create a hybrid rabies-influenza virus using modern genetic-engineering techniques, the University of Miami's Andreansky said.

"Sure, I could imagine a scenario where you mix rabies with a flu virus to get airborne transmission, a measles virus to get personality changes, the encephalitis virus to cook your brain with fever"—and thus increase aggression even further—"and throw in the ebola virus to cause you to bleed from your guts. Combine all these things, and you'll [get] something like a zombie virus," she said.

"But [nature] doesn't allow all of these things to happen at the same time. ... You'd most likely get a dead virus."
 
Re: The Walking Dead - TV Series on AMC

I watched the preair of episode one last night, and as a die-hard fan of the comic series I can say that I was very pleased with the live-action adaptation.

If I had to make a complaint, it would be that the pacing was a little slow in this first episode. But now that they've got the characters established and backstories in place, it'll probably move along at a fair clip from now on.

The hardest part is knowing which characters are going to live and which ones are going to die, assuming they follow the storylines established in the comic. But then again, they could always throw us a curveball and take the series in entirely different directions.

In any case, I'm onboard for the long haul. Can't wait for the next installment.
 
Re: The Walking Dead - TV Series on AMC

The producers have talked about numerous times how they will be taking the show off course times from the comic. It will be interesting to see how they do things differently. One thing I think they mentioned would be the ability to keep characters around a bit longer than Robert did.
 
Re: The Walking Dead - TV Series on AMC

I wont get to watch it until Monday morning though :(

Still, its nice to know my DVR will be watching it while I'm sleeping :lol
 
Re: The Walking Dead - TV Series on AMC

I'm sure your DVR loves you for it. :lol

I was late to work twice so that I'd get my Sunday shift cut. Normally I'd be starting work at 10, but now I have it off. :rock

My niece is going to hate me though, because I'm going to watch it at a friend's house and she won't be able to come with me. :(
 
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