thats still a decent sized audience. if they can average a few million through the season . its enough to keep it going for another season. but when Rick has his last episode though i expect the numbers to really collapse. if the season ends with practically nobody watching, i still think they will give it another season. this is the flagship program of the network. they already talked about how this show is going to keep going for years to come. they will retool the show and streamline it before they just cut it loose.The numbers are in for the premiere... 6.1M viewers, down 47% from Season 8's premiere. Almost half their viewership said sayonara to the show. RIP TWD~
I finally got to the premiere...I made it until I see them wheeling a wagon down the steps into a glass floor.
Done, fuck this shit.
so finale binged the 1st 4
the writing is just as retarded as ever
apparently everyone just forgot about winches and come-alongs
seriously don't think there was a single scene that didn't have something stupid in it.
timeline says 3 years, 3 months now, and this is like the 5th time seen them planting and harvesting crops
don't know where they go/trade with in the comics, but about 30 miles north of where they are supposed to be
is one of the largest greenhouse complexes in the country
2 more huge ones to the south of them.
just 11 reviews, but this season has 98% on RT with 80% of crowd liking it .....
guess spoilers have been out for a while, just not cared enough to look
Rick doesn't die, he gets taken away by the Helicopter. E6 will pick up 6 years after he goes missing, with the whispers
I laughed when he fell off the horse.They putting Rick down in the stupidest way LMAOOO
Is your spoiler accurate? What is the helicopter? (my question isn't a spoiler, the trash lady saw it)
'Walking Dead' Expansion Plans Revealed: Andrew Lincoln to Lead 3 AMC Movies
The actor, who officially departed the flagship series Sunday, will reprise his role as Rick Grimes in a trio of big-budget, feature-length movies that will air on the basic cable network as content chief officer Scott M. Gimple talks with The Hollywood Reporter about his larger plan for the franchise
"The story of Rick will go on in films," Gimple says. "Right now, we're working on three but there's flexibility in that. … Over the next several years, we're going to be doing specials, new series are quite a possibility, high-quality digital content and then some content that defies description at the moment. We're going to dig into the past and see old characters. We're going to introduce new characters and new situations."