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Here's the preview for next week's episode of 'The Walking Dead' teasing a new big character

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morgan carol

You may still be reeling over Sunday's season seven premiere of "The Walking Dead," but AMC has already released a sneak peek at next week's episode. 

If the premiere was a bit heavy for you, it looks like we're in for a change of pace in episode two. The teaser shows Morgan and Carol inside a new settlement we haven't seen yet called the Kingdom. Morgan hints that it's ruled by a man who refers to himself as King Ezekiel who "does his own thing."

Carol's not sure what that means, but we're pretty sure it has something to do with Ezekiel's pet tiger named Shiva who will be on the show this season.

the walking dead shiva tiger

Check it out below:

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A 'Walking Dead' actor got his hair pulled and broke fingernails making the season 7 premiere

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daryl dixon the walking dead

Warning: There are spoilers ahead for "The Walking Dead."

If you thought it was painful watching the season seven premiere of "The Walking Dead" from the comfort of your home, it was as physically and emotionally taxing for the castmembers on set. Literally.

Norman Reedus, who plays fan favorite Daryl Dixon, recounted on aftershow "The Talking Dead," how Jeffrey Dean Morgan, who plays the show's new antagonist Negan, didn't go easy on him while filming.

"After he [Daryl] punches Negan and he gets dragged away — and he did pull my hair really hard actually," said Reedus while describing the show's stunt work. "When he yanked me away, I had my fingers in the concrete and literally like broke fingernails."

daryl the walking dead

Reedus says it was a bit bloody, but it didn't make it into the episode. He chalked it up to the cast being so lost in the moment while filming the dramatic scene.

"Everybody was so into that scene it was like ... you couldn't help but be wrapped up in that," he said. "Everyone around me was just so heavy. Everybody just went for it."

daryl upset walking dead

While the live aftershow was on, Reedus' son Mingus texted him to tell him what he thought of the premiere. Reedus shared his son's review with the crowd: "Craziest television I've ever seen. Tell Jeffrey he's an asshole."

Reedus did just that for his son when he came on stage later in his own special way:

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NOW WATCH: There's a good reason 'The Walking Dead' creator doesn't use the word 'zombie'

9 details you may have missed on 'The Walking Dead' season 7 premiere

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rick grimes negan

Warning: There are spoilers ahead for "The Walking Dead."

The season seven premiere of "The Walking Dead" kicked off Sunday night with not one brutal death but two. And if that weren't enough, Daryl was kidnapped by Negan and the Saviors, and Rick was nearly forced to chop off his son's left arm.

While you were busy trying to process everything that happened in the first episode, there were some details and references you may have missed throughout the episode we rounded up.

Keep reading to see nine things you probably missed.

Before Negan bludgeoned Abraham with his bat, "Lucille," Abraham threw up a peace sign.



Some noticed that was meant for Sasha, the woman he loved. Throughout the show, the two would throw each other peace signs back and forth.



We had previously seen the bridge walker Rick jumped on in the premiere.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

9 behind-the-scenes photos from the making of 'The Walking Dead' season 7 premiere

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abraham death walking dead

Warning: There are spoilers ahead if you haven't seen "The Walking Dead."

The season seven premiere of "The Walking Dead" was quite heavy. In addition to two deaths, viewers received a nausea-inducing scene between Carl, Rick, and everyone's new favorite man to hate, Negan.

Scroll down to see what went into creating the season seven premiere.

Andrew Lincoln, who plays Rick, and episode director Greg Nicotero discuss Rick's RV scene with Negan. It looks like Lincoln's a fan of Beats headphones.



Here's the scope of that RV scene between Negan, Rick, and the many walkers out in the open.



The fog created for the set was so thick you can barely make out Nicotero giving cues to a walker here.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Why 'The Walking Dead' season 7 premiere killed off more than one character

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negan bat the walking dead

Warning: There are spoilers ahead for "The Walking Dead" season seven.

The INSIDER Summary:

• In a departure from the comics, "The Walking Dead" killed off not one, but two fan favorites in an iconic scene from the series.
• Episode director Greg Nicotero explains the decision behind the two deaths.
• The deaths were about breaking Rick's character emotionally.



"The Walking Dead" returned Sunday night with a big season seven premiere killing off not one big character, but two fan favorites. Just when fans thought a majority of the characters were safe after Abraham's death, Negan went and took the bat subsequently to Glenn. 

Why did the show kill off two characters instead of one?

Was it just to change things up from the comics and to deliver something new for fans of the series who may be expecting Glenn's death? That was part of it, but episode director and executive director Greg Nicotero said there was more to it than that.

negan abraham walking dead

"Part of the whole show is we really needed to drive Rick and Negan's story throughout the season and we felt that one death would do the trick, but the second death — Glenn's death — really, really propelled us into a very different direction," Nicotero said Monday during a conference call for the show. "It's really about Negan laying down the law and saying, 'Listen guys, the bottom line is, if you listen to me, you'll be fine. But if you step out of line, that's not gonna fly.'"

While Abraham's death in itself was difficult and will have repercussions throughout the season, Glenn's added death will really push forward some other character storylines we'll see play out.

"Glenn's death has a lot to do with Rick's future story, Maggie's future story, and certainly Daryl's future story because Daryl is the one who launched himself at Negan," said Nicotero. "It just made for a more rich, overall story arc for a lot of these other characters." 

daryl upset walking dead

For those who may have been upset that we had to wait until about 20 minutes into the episode to find out who was taken to bat, Nicotero explained why it wasn't at the start of the episode, taking into consideration that some may have felt it was dragged out. 

"It certainly wasn't intended that way," said Nicotero. "If you really step back and look at the episode, what you realize is, the majority of this [is] from Rick's point of view. So, picking up from moments after the death and then going into the beginning's of Negan trying to break Rick."

One of the big points of the episode was to really show and convince audiences that Rick — someone who has been leading a group for six seasons and has promised to protect his people — could be emotionally broken by someone.

rick grimes negan

"He [Rick] basically says, 'I'm going to kill you,'" said Nicotero. "'Not today, not tomorrow, but I'm going to kill you.' Negan realizes that what he has just done did not do the trick. So,  the episode is really about Negan's efforts — he sees that tremendous value in Rick and his people — so he's going to go to the extra effort."

"It takes us about 10 or 12 minutes into the episode to get to the point where Rick is feeling lost and he's starting to feel defeated and he's on top of the RV and everything starts flashing back to him," he continued.

walking dead rick hatchet

We see Rick start having flashbacks and memories of what had just happened. We also see him imagining what could happen to the remaining survivors — his son included — if he takes a wrong step in this moment during his RV journey with Negan.  

"The episode is 100% designed for you to go on this journey with Rick and start thinking, as he did, about what happened and when he starts reliving it, it's the beginning of him being broken," said Nicotero. "By the end of the episode, that's where he ends up."

walking dead rick

"When Rick starts imagining everybody else — he sees Rosita, and he sees Carl, and he sees Daryl, and he sees everybody else — that's his traumatized way of balancing what to do next," Nicotero added. "Everything that he does is based on the fact that someone else could die and that he can't let that happen."

rick walking dead

The decision to kill off Glenn and Abraham wasn't one that was made over night either. 

On Sunday's aftershow "The Talking Dead" both creator Robert Kirkman and showrunner Scott Gimple explained that they have been working out this episode and who Negan would kill for about the past two years. On a separate conference call Monday afternoon with actor Michael Cudlitz, who plays Abraham, the actor told us he knew his character's fate for well over a year.

Whether or not you were a bit upset with how the season seven premiere unfolded, this is something that has been in the works for a long time.

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'The Walking Dead' actor says the cast and crew lied about the big season 7 death to prevent it from leaking

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the walking dead season 6 negan finale

Warning: There are spoilers ahead for "The Walking Dead" season 7 premiere.

While fans finally found out who was killed at the end of "The Walking Dead" season six, the cast and crew have known for a long time. Despite many of them telling fans and interviewers previously that they didn't know the big reveal for a while, actor Michael Cudlitz, who plays Abraham, told reporters Monday that wasn't the case.

Cudlitz said he found out about his character's fate a year and three months ago (very specific!). He then got very candid saying they filmed both his and Glenn's deaths about a year ago and that they've all been lying to everyone since to help prevent spoilers from leaking online. 

"We had finished that just before Thanksgiving. I had been sitting with it, Steven [Yeun] has been sitting with it, and the rest of the cast for a year now," said Cudlitz. "One of the good things was that we were able to spread a rumor that not even the cast knew what was going to happen. They were going to find out when they got back. They said they filmed everybody's death scene just in case and they said they were re-doing contract negotiations for some of the cast and we weren't sure who it was going to be. All of that was a lie." 

abraham walking dead negan

The Hollywood Reporter first reported earlier this year the show filmed 11 death sequences to prevent the cliff-hanger finale from leaking. Cudlitz said all of that made it a little easier for them to try and hide who had died until the show returned in October.

Cudlitz also acknowledged that AMC has had some in-house leaks in the past. He mentioned that because the show airs worldwide, copies of the show get released to international partners for dubbing purposes and sometimes editing purposes ahead of airtime. 

"The show is available out there," he said. "Even though it's in-house a lot of eyeballs are on the show."

Even more surprising is that Cudlitz said there was some chatter about possibly revealing who was killed in the season six finale — something that the series showrunners and executive producers have never said in the past.

"They were talking about [doing it at] the end of season six, the beginning of season seven. They weren't sure exactly how they were going to do it. [Showrunner] Scott [Gimple] wasn't sure how he wanted to structure the storytelling for the greatest impact," said Cudlitz.

abraham peace sign

Though Cudlitz said he theoretically wasn't supposed to tell anyone he was being killed off, he did tell his immediate family. 

"Obviously, I told my wife because it would be kind of strange sort of just sleeping in every day in Los Angeles when I'm supposed to be in Atlanta," he said. "And I told my kids last spring for the same reason when they came home from school and sort were like, 'Why is daddy home?'"

Other than that, Cudlitz said he didn't tell anyone. When asked if it was difficult to keep the secret of his demise for so long, Cudlitz said it wasn't hard at all other than having to be at home and having to keep his hair dyed. 

The 51-year-old actor actually took the opportunity to travel overseas to try and throw spoiler-searching fans off his scent. When he would run into people he knew or fans he told them he was just about to head to set.

"I think the best thing to do is sort of pretend it's just normal," said Cudlitz. So if somebody bumped into him and asked if he was down in Atlanta the answer was pretty simple. "'Yeah, we leave in two days!' Everywhere I went I would tell somebody I'm leaving in two days or I had just gotten in town ... I had people who were pretty close to me who really didn't know what was going on." 

abraham michael cudlitz

Not everyone was fooled though. Cudlitz said there were a few people who were keeping tabs on his whereabouts pretty well and eventually put the pieces together. 

"They would write to me on Twitter and stuff and say, 'Oh, we know you're not there [or] whatever. You're almost like, you want to tell them to shut up, but you can't," Cudlitz said so that the experience isn't ruined for others.

When people at the gym became suspicious of him being there a lot of consecutive days, he ended up switching gyms for a few weeks to throw them off. 

Cudlitz even came up with an elaborate story for his barber after he asked why he was getting his hair dyed there and not on set of the show. 

"If I do it at home, I get to stay home an extra day because if I go out there then they have to bring me in a day or two early because they got to get it done before I shoot and sometimes it wraps around a weekend so that one day could mean three days," he recalled. "Even he was on board and he sort of didn't really figure it out because I would come in every three weeks or so."

the walking dead michael cudlitz melissa mcbride

Cudlitz knew that they weren't perfect in keeping the secret under wraps, but he did think the cast and crew did a pretty good job. He said the key is that you don't need to lie to people. You just need to be good at keeping people confused.

"When you really get down to it, the people who were really trying to track us and really trying to sort of ruin the experience for other people, they were able to lock us down better because they were specifically looking to do that, but generally speaking, I think we did a good job at keeping people confused," said Cudlitz. "You don't have to lie to people, you just have to keep them confused. You don't have to tell them the thing that they're believing isn't true."

If you're wondering, Cudlitz will be sporting the beard for a while longer. 

"I typically do that until I know what my next gig is," said Cudlitz. "Honestly, I have a really big fan event coming up soon and it's kind of a way for the fans to say goodbye. It's kind of a respectful thing [for fans] to not immediately take it off because for them it just happened."

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'The Walking Dead' had a massive audience for its return

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the walking dead negan

"The Walking Dead" marked another all-time high viewership for the zombie series with Sunday's season-seven premiere.

Deadline reports that 17 million total viewers tuned into the return episode, according to Nielsen. That's 16% more than the season-six premiere's 14.6 million viewers and just 2% lower than the show's record high season-five premiere of 17.3 million viewers.

As for the viewers most important to advertisers, adults under 50 years old, "TWD" nabbed 10.7 million viewers. That's up 13% compared to the season-six debut and just 3% lower than the record-breaking season-five opener.

Despite viewers' annoyance with last season's cliffhanger ending and a lot of agitation over Negan's (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) big kill, AMC is clearly celebrating this week. Not only did it reverse last season's ratings drop and nearly matched its record high, it also beat Sunday Night Football in the advertising demographic.

SEE ALSO: A 'Walking Dead' producer explains the fascinating, surreal concept of her new show 'Falling Water'

DON'T MISS: 'The Walking Dead' says it's not going to try this trick again at the end of next season

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NOW WATCH: There's a good reason 'The Walking Dead' creator doesn't use the word 'zombie'

Leaked video shows a different 'Walking Dead' actor who could have been killed in the season 7 premiere

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the walking dead negan

Warning: There are spoilers ahead for "The Walking Dead" season seven premiere.

"The Walking Dead" killed off two fan favorites in its season seven opener, but if you were scouring the internet for spoilers ahead of the episode premiere you may have thought someone very different would be feeling the wrath of Lucille's bat.

A leaked video showing Maggie (Lauren Cohan) being killed at the end of season six by Negan was uploaded to YouTube October 22. Brandon Davis over at Comicbook.com spotted the video Monday.

By now, fans know Maggie is safe from harm, and looks like she is well on her way to taking charge of the group from Rick (as soon as she gets better that is). 

As Davis noted, maybe this was something that was leaked ahead of time to try and throw viewers off ahead of Sunday's premiere. It was reported earlier this year that the cast and crew filmed every member of Rick's group in the lineup getting killed. We saw a lot of that footage used throughout the episode as Rick imagined his comrades being brutally beaten by Negan's bat. 

If the goal was to make the Maggie video go viral, it didn't work out too well. As of Tuesday morning, the clip has only been viewed a little over 600,000.

You can check out the leaked clip below while it's still online. It's a pretty tough video to watch, knowing that Maggie's character is pregnant in the show. If the leaked clip isn't doing it for you, maybe all 11 death sequences will eventually make it to the season seven Blu-ray.

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NOW WATCH: There's a good reason 'The Walking Dead' creator doesn't use the word 'zombie'


Side-by-side photos perfectly capture how the brutal 'Walking Dead' season 7 premiere compares to the comics

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daryl dixon the walking dead

Warning: There are spoilers ahead for "The Walking Dead" and some graphic imagery from the show.

If you've seen the season seven premiere of "The Walking Dead," you probably know by now that it was an adaptation of one of the biggest moments from the comic series ever. Fans have been waiting to see Glenn meet his maker for years since issue #100.

Sunday evening, we were given a bit of a twist when Abraham was also killed off in the season premiere. 

abraham the walking dead

For those who haven't read the comics and aren't familiar with how everything goes down in the series, you're probably wondering what some of the similarities and differences are between the show and adaptation. As someone who has read the comics, I could sit here and tell you how the two compare, but there are some things that just work better when seen.

The folks over at TheWalkingDead.com, which run the comics side of things, put together a brilliant side-by-side break down that compared the show to the comics, scene for scene.

The scenes may be a little tough to look at if your squeamish. Here are three of them:

The first side-by-side shows Glenn in the comics getting whacked over the head with the bat. Part of his scene was swapped with the addition of Abraham getting nixed first in the show.

taking it like a champ

The team also put together black-and-white reaction panels compared with those from the show. While watching the episode, the cuts to the character reactions reminded me of the comic's panel execution.

I think they really nailed the final panel with Glenn at the bottom. Steven Yeun's delivery of Glenn stammering to Maggie was exactly what I imagined while reading issue #100.

glenn comic vs show

This last one may be a little tough to look at too because of Negan's extreme brutality, but I love seeing the iconic moment brought to life, spread out over so many panels.

negan comic vs show

You can check out all of the side by side here. As a forewarning, some of the images over at the Walking Dead site are a bit more graphic.

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Parents want to change TV ratings after that 'brutally explicit' 'Walking Dead' episode

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The Walking Dead

A parents' group known as the Parents Television Council has come out strongly against the violent season-seven premiere episode of "The Walking Dead."

The conservative watchdog group slammed the "brutally explicit" episode, which saw the deaths of series-regular characters and shocked fans.

"Last night’s season premiere of 'The Walking Dead' was one of the most graphically violent shows we've ever seen on television, comparable to the most violent of programs found on premium cable networks," PTC president Tim Winter told The Hollywood Reporter on Monday.

Winter argued that it's "not enough to 'change the channel' ... because cable subscribers — regardless of whether they want AMC or watch its programming — are still forced to subsidize violent content."

He went on to argue that the episode demonstrates "why families should have greater control over the TV networks they purchase from their cable and satellite providers."

The episode was rated TV-MA, meaning for mature audiences, but Winter wonders if there should be a "more severe rating than TV-MA."

Some parents may not be please about gruesome violence appearing on their cable channels, but AMC is surely celebrating the milestone episode, as it had one of the largest audiences for the zombie show ever.

SEE ALSO: The 50 best movies of all time, according to critics on Metacritic

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The 15 best changes from 'The Walking Dead' comic to the show

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actress danai gurira who plays michonne says new antagonist negan is worse than previous villain the governor

Warning: There are spoilers ahead if you haven't seen "The Walking Dead" through season six.

When adapting something from a preexisting source material, the usual rule is: don’t change things. Whether it’s events or characters or relationships, fans usually don’t respond well when someone messes with their favorite stories. Adapting a book or a comic can be a bit of a minefield.

But every now and then, especially when it comes to TV, some changes are not only necessary, but welcome. AMC’s The Walking Dead is one of those rare exceptions where change can be a good thing, especially since one of the show’s foundations is shock factor. By changing up certain factors of the story, the TV show is able to keep the jaw-dropping moments fresh, and in some cases, make certain storylines more palatable or coherent for a new medium.

The show has made a ton of changes, so this list obviously can’t cover everything, but hopefully we’ve included some of your favorite original TV moments. From switching up kills to creating cool new characters, here are the 15 best changes from The Walking Dead comic to the show.

15. Dale and Andrea's Relationship

If you think back to the old days of season 1 and 2, you might recall the charming father/daughter kinship shared between Dale and Andrea. Their relationship revolved around the wise Dale doling out fatherly advice to the much younger Andrea, much like a doting dad. The two opened up to each other about the death of loved ones, and Dale even risked his life at the CDC to convince her not to give up. Dale cared for Andrea like the daughter he never got to have with his own wife.

Now imagine if those two characters started making out. Yeah, not a great image. While the TV show kept it strictly platonic, in the comics, they operate with a whole different dynamic. Yeah, that’s right, Dale and Andrea hook up.

And before you ask, no, they didn’t make Dale older for the show. He’s still in his 60s when he dates her. Try getting that image out of your head next time you rewatch their scenes together. We’re kind of thankful for this small but significant change between the comics and TV show, because we just can’t see anyone being comfortable watching that.



14. More Morgan

 

In the comics, Morgan takes a bit of a back seat to the other, bigger players. There’s simply not much that sets him apart from the other survivors of the group. Abraham had his bravado and potty mouth, Glenn was the optimist, Hershel was the wise old man, Tyreese was a leader, Michonne wielded a samurai sword, etc. In truth, Morgan never really had anything that set him apart. But when it came time to cast the TV show, the creators chose the ever-commanding screen presence that is Lennie James. It suddenly became clear that Morgan could no longer be just another survivor, which is why beefing up his character made so much sense.

After a brief but incredibly memorable appearance in season 3, we were reintroduced to him during season 5 as a completely transformer character. The writers have gone in a completely new direction this time around, making Morgan a staunch pacifist who refuses to kill, even in the most extreme circumstances. Its a viewpoint that hasn’t been explored before in the show. Even the most peaceful of characters, like Dale and Glenn, have never been so black and white on the subject of death-dealing.

Not only did it give Morgan an added layer of character depth, it also proved to supply a new avenue of story telling. Including a fascinating flashback episode — guest-starring the always wonderful John Carroll Lynch — explained how he came to make this dramatic philosophical U-turn. And as frustrating as his stance may be sometimes, it is ultimately an interesting character arc with a stellar payoff at the end, when he was forced to kill to save Carol’s life. We’ll either see a conflicted and guilty Morgan next season or, as Lennie James has hinted at, a man who has just begun to unleash his inner beast. Either way, the show has made Morgan more than just another face in the apocalypse.



13. Douglas Monroe becomes Deanna Monroe

When our survivors reach the Alexandria Safe Zone in the comics, instead of meeting town matriarch Deanna Monroe, they are greeted by her on-the-page counterpart, Douglas. Instead of the kind, tough loving mother figure and leader we had with Deanna, Douglas Monroe was actually a bit of a creep. He treated his wife Regina, who’s TV counterpart becomes Reg, poorly, and considered their marriage as merely ‘political’. In his mind, this meant he could chase as many women as he likes, often offering them positions close to him in the community and following them around. He even tried to get Andrea to sleep with him despite his marital status.

The change from a lecherous womanizer to a calm and collected female character was a welcome one. Deanna was a more interesting and formidable character (despite her sometimes naive views about the dangers of the apocalypse) and she provided a better match for Rick. Watching these two leaders challenge and learn to understand one another made the story line all that much stronger. Of course, that is until she was eaten by walkers, as nearly everyone inevitably is.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

The new 'Walking Dead' opening credits hint at a dark scene we may see in season 7

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negan bat the walking dead

Warning: There are potential spoilers for "The Walking Dead" ahead.

If you tuned in to the "Walking Dead" season seven premiere, there were a lot of nice little nods to previous seasons; but if you're one who likes to skip over the show's opening credits, you may want to give them another watch.

You may have missed a small little tease of a dark moment we may see later this season. The season premiere is available free on AMC's website, so you can revisit the moment here.

Thanks to the Reddit user plasticscissors for spotting this. (I'm guilty of skipping through the credits myself.)

You'll want to pause when Jeffrey Dean Morgan's name pops up. He plays the new antagonist Negan on the show. While you can spot his beloved bat, nicknamed "Lucille," sitting pretty, you're going to want to take a closer look at the fire.

Do you see it?

jeffrey dean morgan iron opening credits walking dead

That's an iron sitting in the fire. Fans will probably freak out when they see it.

negan iron walking dead

Why?

Well, in the comics we learn that Dwight, one of the Saviors, gets an iron to the face after defying Negan. We don't see it happen in the comics, but we do learn of it. On the show, we were first introduced to Dwight and his wife as they were trying to escape from Negan and his gang early in season six. Back then, his face was without any marks.

He obviously wound up back with Negan, as we saw later last season.

dwight burn scar the walking dead

His return to the show was probably a bit surprising to some because when he showed up half of his face was heavily marred. The burns on Dwight's face suggested Negan punished him either for abandoning the group or for something else. (In the comics, his face was burned for another reason.)

Dwight's burn was something I asked actor Austin Amelio about earlier this year after his reintroduction in season six. While we chatted about whether Daryl was alive, I also asked whether we may learn a bit more of Dwight's backstory play out on screen, perhaps in a flashback.

"Yeah, they may have something in store," Amelio hinted. "I cannot quite say, but maybe we'll see that. I'm not sure what they're doing with the backstory quite yet. That would be great."

Yes, it most certainly would be.

Episode two of season seven looks as if it will focus heavily on The Kingdom, another new settlement on "The Walking Dead," but we could definitely see it playing out later in the season. Plenty of footage from season teasers has hinted at the Saviors' hangout, The Sanctuary. Now that the Saviors have Daryl, we're sure it won't be long before we see — and learn more about — Dwight.

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NOW WATCH: There's a good reason 'The Walking Dead' creator doesn't use the word 'zombie'

This tiny gesture you may have missed in 'The Walking Dead' season 7 premiere was added after a suggestion from the actor

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abraham walking dead

Warning: There are spoilers ahead for "The Walking Dead."

If you tuned into "The Walking Dead" premiere Sunday evening, there were a lot of little nods to former seasons. One heartbreaking moment you may have missed the first time around was a small gesture from Abraham (Michael Cudlitz) before he was killed by Negan in the season premiere.

While you may have been focused on his face, he also made a peace sign toward Sasha (Sonequa Martin). 

peace sign walking dead

Fans of the show who noticed it recalled that the symbolic gesture was one we've seen before — both characters have made peace signs to one another throughout the show starting in the season six premiere.

During a conference call with journalists Monday, episode director and executive producer Greg Nicotero shared how that moment came about.

"When we were on set, we wanted to find an opportunity to have [Abraham] speak to [Sasha] without looking at her because we were locked into what we had shot in the season finale, which is, the point of view is locked on Negan," said Nicotero. "That was something that Michael [Cudlitz] added and it was a beautiful little moment."  

It sounded like the peace sign idea was actually an invention of Cudlitz's. Nicotero recalled "The Walking Dead" actor reminding him of the moment from the season six premiere between the two.

"At the beginning of season six, the scene where Sasha's going up the steps to the brownstone, and Abraham walks past and he's a little drunk, he looks at her and he gives her a peace sign," said Nicotero. "As soon as he [Cudlitz] said, 'Hey do you remember in the first episode... ' I knew exactly what he was talking about and I was like, 'Absolutely.'"

the walking dead peace sign

Later Monday, Cudlitz expanded on Nicotero's comments in a separate conference call.

“The peace sign was something that had been with Abraham and Sasha throughout the whole series — a very loaded peace sign," he said. "We had to find a way for Abraham to connect with Sasha, for him to say goodbye specifically with Sasha, because we had already established in the finale of last year that eye contact was not broken."

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"We could add dialogue, because we didn’t know if he was talking or not, but there was no way for him to literally turn away and address, any way even kind of nod to Sonequa [Sasha] because we had already filmed that," he added. "Going back into it we had to figure out a way that he could basically tell Sasha that everything was going to be okay and to say goodbye. That was what we came up with. For those who caught it, I think [it was] highly, highly effective."

It definitely was. 

The season seven premiere of "The Walking Dead" is currently available to watch free via AMC here.

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People are illegally downloading 'The Walking Dead' at an insane rate

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the walking dead season 7

The premiere of The Walking Dead season 7 is continuing to provoke debate several days after first airing, proving that if anything will get people talking about a TV show, it’s brutally killing off two main characters. The episode, titled "The Day Will Come When You Won’t Be," gave the show its second highest viewing figures since the series began and there have been plenty of positive responses from fans who loved the gory introduction to the new season. On the other hand, some fans felt that the premiere relied too heavily on shock value to make an impact – and our own review was unsure where The Walking Dead could feasibly go next.

Of course, AMC’s primary concern will be the viewing figures and they will no doubt be delighted to have received such healthy ratings – numbers that go a significant way to justifying the decision to end The Walking Dead season 6 on a cliffhanger. Although many viewers were angry at the time, the amount of interest the cliffhanger seemed to generate has dispelled any notion of fans deserting the series en masse out of frustration.

In the modern world of television, it’s perhaps unsurprising that when a show brings in strong official ratings, the number of people who watched the episode via illegal methods will also increase – and such is the case with The Walking Dead season 7. 17.03 million viewers tuned in to AMC to see which member of Rick’s group had an appointment with Lucille, but according to piracy-tracking site Texcipio, the episode was also illegally downloaded 600,544 times in the 24-hour period after airing. In terms of geography, Brazil pirated the episode more than any other country, followed by France and then the United States.

Comparatively, The Walking Dead season 6’s premiere was downloaded 569,772 times and some may argue that the increase proves that piracy is growing more problematic and prevalent as the years go by. However, it seems natural that when a TV episode draws in large legal viewing numbers, the illegal figures will increase accordingly – and although the number of pirate downloads of The Walking Dead has increased since last season’s opener, the figures are roughly proportionate with the amount of people who watched on AMC.

Although The Walking Dead doesn’t struggle to get renewed – season 8 has already been confirmed– for other shows, piracy can be a significant problem. The amount of people who watch the show illegally rather than via official channels can be the difference between getting another season or being cancelled.

Others will no doubt argue, however, that the significant number of people who pirated The Walking Dead‘s latest episode can partly be explained by their decision not to simulcast the premiere across the globe. In the past, other shows with a worldwide fan-base have aired important episodes internationally at the same time as in the U.S., in order to avoid worldwide fans seeing spoilers online. The fact that Brazil and France were the top-two areas for pirating The Walking Dead premiere this season, compared to the season 6 opener which saw the U.S. leading the illegal download charts, seems to suggest that at least part of the reason fans watched the episode illegally was to avoid potential spoilers.

The Walking Dead continues next Sunday with "The Well" at 9pm on AMC

Source: Texcipio [via Variety]

SEE ALSO: The 50 worst TV shows of all time, according to critics

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What all the gratuitous violence in 'The Walking Dead' says about our culture

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Warning: There are spoilers ahead for "The Walking Dead."

If nothing else, the seventh season premiere of The Walking Dead gave audiences a metaphor for the show’s methods: a bat to the head. Whunk! Whunk! Whunk!Splat! Goooosh!

After nearly seven months of waiting, fans finally got to see which beloved cast members would get their brains bashed in by the post-apocalyptic warlord Negan (Jeffrey Dean Morgan), the preening thug leader of the Saviors. The unrelenting sadism of this episode was calculated to test audiences’ stamina, somewhat like the “Red Wedding” episode of Game of Thrones.

But the stark difference in quality between the two shows can be seen in their treatment of scenes where powerful people torment the powerless. Where Game of Thrones’s Red Wedding episode focused exclusively on the shock and pain of the victims of a massacre and its ramifications for the surviving characters (and packed the entire incident into less than ten minutes of screen time), The Walking Dead made Negan the star of the premiere and turned the whole thing into a prolonged power-trip fantasy, of a type that some viewers (young dudes, mainly) love, especially if they’ve never experienced violence outside of the “cool” context of video games and movies.

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The brutality was nearly eroticized, with loving inserts of the villain’s bloody weapon, lingering images of hostages’ tearful, terrified faces and low-angled shots that made Negan loom like a conquering badass hero. Casting the matinee-idol handsome Morgan further glamorizes the character: In the comics he’s drawn more like the meathead ex-teacher and ping-pong coach that he was before the apocalypse, with the sort of bullet head and wrestler’s body that would’ve fattened up on beer and barbecue had the world not gone to hell.

Negan is a crushing bore already  —a bullying chief henchman from an R-rated action flick inexplicably promoted to Big Bad status. Unfortunately, this is a storytelling move typical of The Walking Dead — a fourth-rate zombie movie stretched out over 83 hours that has produced just one halfway interesting antagonist for the heroes during its seven seasons, David Morrissey’s the Governor (Jon Bernthal’s Shane Walsh, an honest-to-goodness character whose complexity is still missed, was ultimately more of an antihero). That most of the characters and situations are drawn from the pages of Robert Kirkman’s comic doesn’t blunt charges of bad faith; like Game of Thrones, a vastly superior (though still problematic) adaptation of existing genre fiction, the show’s producers are free to embellish and change things, but in this particular case they chose not to.

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Kudos, I guess, to the series for making us think that a minor, latecomer character, Michael Cudlitz’s Abraham, would be the only character to get pulped, then hewing to the source after all and killing Glenn (Steven Yeun), who miraculously (ridiculously) survived death just recently and is the soon-to-be father of a child with Maggie (Lauren Cohan). But let’s not kid ourselves. This show has always seen its characters as targets in a shooting gallery. The only compelling question is which of them will live or die during any given season, and how gruesome and protracted their death will be, and whether there will be any redeeming nobility to it.

I’ve been writing about this medium for 20 years and watching it for more than 40, and I can’t recall a major TV series marketing cruelty and trauma as cynically, even gleefully, as this AMC saga. The rampage was hyped by a lengthy, thorough ad campaign spotlighting not any regular cast member, but Negan and his weapon. If you lived in a major city during the past seven months, it was impossible to spend a day outdoors without seeing a bus ad or subway poster featuring the grinning Negan and his bat, christened Lucille, after his late wife.

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This is revealing: AMC’s marketing department generated suspense by asking who would live and who would die after Negan’s bat-fest, yet the emphasis was not on the potential victim(s), but Morgan’s George Clooney smile and Negan’s substitute phallus. The only restraint the series demonstrated was in declining to write Negan’s sexual taunts from the source into his show dialogue.

In the comics, Negan claims to be anti-rape but coerces women into becoming his “brides,” constantly compares his bat to a penis, and fills his threats with talk of rape and sexual terror — he taunts the broken and humiliated Rick Grimes with “I just slid my dick down the back of your throat and you thanked me for it,” and reassures the swordswoman Michonne that he won’t kill her because of the “race card,” but tells her, “There are a lot of things I’d like to do to you, and killing you is at the absolute fucking bottom of that list.” (Who knows, though: Maybe they’re saving the rapist-who-thinks-he’s-not-a-rapist side of Negan for next week or the week after. I wouldn’t put it past them.)

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Why do I watch this series, you may rightly ask? These days, I don’t. The Walking Dead is the reigning example of what I call a Bad Relationship Show, taking its audience for granted or treating it like garbage for weeks, then doing or saying something that momentarily makes you think the series is delivering on its promise, only to backslide quickly and become ostentatiously mediocre again. I stuck with it through season four with occasional dips into season five because many colleagues I respect kept insisting, “No, you should watch it, it’s good now,” or “It’s good again” or “They finally figured things out.” Fool me four or five times, shame on me.

Still, I checked back in with Walking Dead again last night because, as a TV critic, I’m expected to have an opinion on the most popular program on cable. Every time I’ve revisited it — for a couple of episodes at a time, to test the pulse, or aortal spray, of the series because my friends and colleagues were excitedly talking about it — I’ve only been reminded of why I stopped watching.

It’s not a matter of the level of violence; that in itself doesn’t bother me. It’s almost never the kind of violence or relative explicitness that turns me against a movie or a television series. It’s always about the worldview of the people presenting it. That’s what’s offensive to me — not the gore, but the sensibility behind it.

Hannibal — one of the bloodiest shows in TV history, and a series I love — enshrouded the entire story in a dreamlike sensibility and created moments of great beauty, terror, and tenderness, so that the show never felt like a litany of viciousness; in fact, most of the time it felt unreal, like a series of paintings come to life. On the opposite end of the spectrum, shows like The Sopranos and The Shield took a blunter approach without losing track of their moral compass, creating an attraction-repulsion effect that made the audience sympathize with casually cruel individuals and then feel horrified for having done so. I don’t see much of that on The Walking Dead, only platitudes about dehumanization and moral choice wrapped around endless, pornographically explicit sequences of zombies getting eviscerated, shot, burned, etc., often in close-up (which is “okay” because they’re zombies), plus scenes of human-on-human cruelty that are drawn out for maximum oomph, so that we can all savor the electric excitement of watching people commit emotional and physical violence while telling ourselves it’s a moral fable about the collapse of decency in the aftermath of civilization’s collapse.

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There’s none of the philosophical inquiry that the new Westworld or even the vampire series The Strain (FX’s answer to The Walking Dead) bring to stories in which violence is visited against and by nonhuman characters. The best bloody genre fiction really does pose questions like, “What makes us human?” and “Is humanity a biological condition or a moral one?” and “At what point does the obligation to survive, and to help loved ones and the species survive, become pointless in the face of all the horrible things you have to do to get there?”

I don’t see any of that when I watch The Walking Dead, only opportunistic genuflection in that direction by a show that’s always been more interested in all the different ways it can rend flesh, living or undead, then giving us a few minutes of characters (whose psychological depth wouldn’t cut it on an old-fashioned daytime soap opera) talking about their issues, pausing occasionally to spell out the show’s main themes. The longer this series goes on, the more obvious it becomes that the violence is the point, and everything else is an intellectual fig leaf. The show is not really about the slow process of desensitization to violence that occurs after disasters, during wars and so on; it’s (inadvertently, I think) about our own desensitization as audience members in a country that is, despite pockets of deprivation and violence, basically a soft place day to day, compared to the hellholes we see on the news and read about online. You get to come into your job Monday morning and talk about that awesome kill last night, or that sad but awesome kill of some character you liked.

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All of which makes Negan a horribly perfect (and literal) poster boy for The Walking Dead as drama, and the parting image of a walker bending down to lick up the brains spilled by Negan a metaphor for audiences’ addiction to this series. There’s something deep in the collective American unconscious that wants to kill and maim and destroy the Other without guilt, while telling ourselves it’s a necessary part of life, that it’s about survival, that it’s for our own good, and hey, now let’s talk about how sad we are that we had no other choice, to show that we’re not just getting off on it. We get to do that week after week and year after year while watching AMC, and now there’s a spinoff.

I will never forget the time a couple of years ago when my washing machine broke on a Sunday afternoon. I took my kids to the local laundromat. There were four TVs, and they were all playing The Walking Dead. The place was filled with individuals, couples and families, including young children. They washed and dried and folded while Rick and company blasted and fried and ripped apart walkers, spreading their guts on the ground, splattering the foliage and each other with their blood.RRRRrrrraaagghhh! Blam! HhhhnnUUHHHHHGGG! Blam! Blam! Splat! Gush! Blam! This went on for an hour, with periodic pauses for heart-to-heart talks. This is our background now, the fabric of American life. We’re the real zombies.

SEE ALSO: The 15 best changes from 'The Walking Dead' comic to the show

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Why 'The Walking Dead' season 7 premiere was so violent, according to the director

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Warning: There are spoilers ahead for "The Walking Dead."

We asked for it, and we certainly got it.

This Sunday was the premiere of The Walking Dead's seventh season, and with it came the answer to the cliffhanger we'd been discussing since back in April. And while the knowledge of who Negan killed with Lucille is satisfying, many folks weren't too happy with how they found out.

The images of Abraham and Glenn being so brutally murdered has been the thing of nightmares for fans, with many wondering if those disturbing scenes were absolutely necessary. Luckily for us, Walking Dead director, producer, and make up supervisor Greg Nicotero has opened up regarding why it had to be so brutal.

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Greg Nicotero recently sat in on a conference call (via IGN) to talk about The Walking Dead's seventh season, including the horrifying premiere episode. In regard to Negan's violent murder of Abraham and Glenn, Nicotero said the following:

It's graphic and it's horrible. We wanted to push it a little bit. When we shot the Season 5 premiere, we had everybody at the trough and we went down the line and you saw these guys being murdered and drained of blood. That was purely a mechanism just to show how bad the people in Terminus really were. With Negan, you only have to see that once or twice to know this guy means business. The haunting remnants of that episode are very very similar to how I felt when I read the comic book and I experienced that sense of loss and the futility of trying to step in. Rick Grimes is powerless to stop this and that's something we've never seen on the show. I think the violence and brutality are a part of the helplessness. Seeing our hero completely crushed in front of us is more disturbing than the actual violence for me.

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The man does have a point. Let's break down exactly what Mr. Nicotero is referencing in his statement.

For one, you can't deny the effectiveness of Sunday's premiere episode. Although we had six months to emotionally prepare ourselves for the loss of a major character, The Walking Dead still succeeded in shocking and devastating the audience. While part of this reaction is because three characters were ripped away from the group in different ways, much of the knee jerk response is because of the disturbing imagery. But let's get real: if we didn't see Negan killing them with our own eyes, it would be a major let down and would probably cause people to stop watching altogether. It couldn't be an off screen death - we needed to see the violence.

And although the premiere was hard to get through, its not like Season 7 will have more of this type of violence. Greg Nicotero points out that you only have to see this type of imagery once to forever equate it to Negan. So while some people have been campaigning for The Walking Dead to receive a new TV rating, last Sunday's visuals likely won't return to the series anytime soon. We can just wait and see what sort of messed up stuff is coming next.

The Walking Dead airs Sundays on AMC.

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15 things you probably didn't know about 'The Walking Dead'

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If you haven’t been infected by The Walking Dead yet, there’s a good chance you are already a zombie. Or don’t have a TV. In either case you are missing out and should probably get with the herd, because it’s only going to get better now that the show is back for its seventh season. That is unless you want to be the only roamer around the water cooler not discussing Lucille’s first on-screen victim.

There’s a lot we know about TWD. Like it’s the greatest show ever to feature cannibalism, chocolate pudding and a little boy getting shot in the eye. Also, Rick Grimes is a badass. But there are still plenty of off-screen trivia and on-screen easter eggs that even the most loyal of walkers have yet to sink their teeth into.

Here are 15 things you probably didn’t know about The Walking Dead.

1. HBO passed on it because the show was too violent

The network that has shown Khaleesi eating a heart, a pregnant lady stabbed to death, and is not above having a brother rape his sister, felt The Walking Dead was just too violent for their viewers. Originally, the show’s creators pitched their idea to all the big players, and HBO, one of the most obvious fits, passed. They were willing to take it on only if the producers would significantly cut down on the violence. Because imploding a man’s skull? That’s fine. But doing the same to a zombie, that’s just not cool.

Come to think of it, AMC has made a career out of devouring HBO’s throwaways. Both Breaking Bad and Mad Men were turned down by them, though for vastly different reasons. Of course, that doesn’t make a network built on a foundation of nudity, violence and vulgarity finding The Walking Dead too extreme any less odd. Luckily, AMC on the other hand has no such qualms about seeing a zombie torn in half or whatever other grotesqueries the show can dish out, just so long as no one swears while they do it.



2. The opening logo has been decaying since day one

After watching a show for long enough, it’s only natural to start zoning out during the opening credits; you might even find yourself fast-forwarding through them more often than not.  But more than likely, even the most casual of viewers have noticed that The Walking Dead’s main title sequence changing over the years. From the photos of Shane and Lori in Season One to symbolic objects like badges, watches and arrows in later seasons, the credits have definitely mixed things up over the years. But one of the coolest evolutions to keep an eye out for is the ever-changing main logo, which has been getting darker, grimier and all-around more worn out from one season to the next.

Just like the walkers themselves, who are gradually rotting from the inside out, the logo is another sign of the showrunners’ dedication to creating an atmosphere of a deteriorating society. Which begs the question, with the series’ continually being renewed, what will be left when all is said and done?



3. Networks originally wanted it to be a zombie crime procedural.

Before AMC came along and revived our interest in a zombie apocalypses, networks were reluctant to jump on board. In the years leading up to the series’ 2010 premiere, producer Gale Anne Hurd and original showrunner Frank Darabont had a rough go of it when they went around pitching Robert Kirkman’s graphic novel based on the world surviving an epidemic of walking corpses who eat people. The folks over at NBC finally offered to take it on at one point — so long as they left out the zombies.

Your guess is as good as ours as to what that would have looked like. Luckily, this idea fell dead, only to be replaced with an even more ridiculous one…turning the show into a “crime-of-the-week” procedural in the vain of Law & Order and CSI, only with zombies. That’s right readers, each week, Rick and Co. would solve a zombie related “crime” that would not only help provide a better understanding of human nature (somehow), but also answer the question that’s constantly on viewer’s minds: what exactly are the walker’s motives for eating those brains? Darabont politely declined and then ran away as fast as possible, because nothing will turn you into a mindless vegetable quicker than watching Chris O’Donnell and LL Cool J chase down criminals on a weekly basis.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Actor Steven Yeun shows Conan O'Brien how he's bouncing back from 'The Walking Dead'

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steven yeun conan o brien walking dead death tbsWarning: Spoilers ahead if you haven't watched the season-seven premiere of AMC's "The Walking Dead."

Steven Yeun is handling the big twist for his character on Sunday's "The Walking Dead" pretty well.

Viewers were horrified when the show's new big bad, Negan (Jeffrey Dean Morgan), took another life when he executed Glenn (Yeun) because Daryl (Norman Reedus) was acting out.

But Yeun told Conan O'Brien he has already moved on.

"I'm okay. Actually, I got a new job already," the actor said on Thursday's "Conan" on TBS. "Actually, I stand in for you at rehearsal."

O'Brien then explained that he and sidekick Andy Richter don't come in for show rehearsals and O'Brien had recently heard the show found a stand-in for him. Well, Yeun is that guy.

The show then rolled a montage of Yeun on the job. He has O'Brien's lines down, gets his hair to a reasonably close height (and color), and has even found a stand-in for Richter (whom "TWD" fans will appreciate).

Watch the video below:

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11 things we learned about the making of the 'Walking Dead' season 7 premiere

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Warning: There are massive spoilers ahead for "The Walking Dead."

"The Walking Dead" returned Sunday to AMC. 

Monday, episode director and executive producer Greg Nicotero and Michael Cudlitz, who plays Abraham, spoke to reporters in two separate conference calls to learn more about the gut-wrenching premiere.

From the movies which inspired the episode to the fact that the entire cast knew exactly who was going to be killed for a year, the two revealed more about the making of the anticipated episode. 

INSIDER was on both conference calls. Here's what we learned.

Michael Cudlitz, who plays Abraham, was told he was going to be killed off the show a year and three months ago.

The actor said he's just been traveling and lying to most people he would run into. He has continued to dye his hair and keep his long mustache so fans wouldn't grow suspicious. The only people he told were his wife and kids because otherwise they would wonder why he was home all the time.

You can read more about what Cudlitz had to say about his character's death here.



The cast and crew all knew who died more than a year ago too and they have been lying about it ever since.

Cudlitz said the death scene in the finale was filmed about a year ago. All of those reports about no one knowing and finding out later on were all just rumors made up and spread to make it easier on the cast and crew to keep the secret.

"One of the good things was that we were able to spread a rumor that not even the cast knew what was going to happen,"said Cudlitz. "They were going to find out when they got back. They said they filmed everybody's death scene just in case and they said they were re-doing contract negotiations for some of the cast and we weren't sure who it was going to be. All of that was a lie." 



The reason two characters were killed off in the premiere instead of one was so Negan could really break Rick Grimes emotionally.

"Part of the whole show is we really needed to drive Rick and Negan's story throughout the season and we felt that one death would do the trick, but the second death — Glenn's death — really, really propelled us into a very different direction," Nicotero said. "It's really about Negan laying down the law and saying, 'Listen guys, the bottom line is, if you listen to me, you'll be fine. But if you step out of line, that's not gonna fly.'"

You can read more on Nicotero's response here.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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