The Walking Dead (TV series)/YMMV


 * Adaptation Displacement: As usually happens when a non-superhero comic is adapted.
 * Alas, Poor Scrappy: While Lori wasn't well-received by the fandom (which may be the reason why she was killed off, not because the actor wished to leave the show (for example, Dale), even her haters can find her death to be depressing.
 * Andrea also suffers a similarly depressing death, but one can argue that she was rescued from the scrappy heap by that point.
 * Alternative Character Interpretation:
 * Shane -- the most effective leader in the group, who can make tough decisions quickly, or a Complete Monster who is slowly becoming more and more insane?
 * Andrea -- useless and a complete change from her comic book counterpart, or an action woobie?
 * Rick -- an effective leader, or a fine example of Good Is Dumb?
 * And the Fandom Rejoiced:
 * At the news that Frank Darabont, maker of The Shawshank Redemption and The Green Mile, two of the greatest films of The Nineties, was the executive producer. And at the fact that Robert Kirkman was directly involved as a part of the creative team. And at the fact that AMC is not holding back one bit on the violence. Really, just about every announcement that came out of the project was met with this reaction.
 * A more minor one, but Bear McCreary getting the job of composer raised some enthusiasm.
 * The Governor from the comics appeared in the 16 episode long Series 3, played by David Morrissey.
 * The series 2 finale revealing at the end.
 * Arc Fatigue: The search for Sophia, while not as ridiculously long as other examples, certainly tested the fanbase's patience during season two's first half. Lack of plot progression was mostly blamed on the search, and with all of the subplots, looking for Sophia could potentially take forever.
 * Award Snub: Despite getting positive reviews from critics (though generally regarded as being inferior in regards to pacing, characterization, dialogue, etc in comparison to AMC's other series) and gaining great ratings from audiences, the only Emmys it received were two nominations for Visual Effects and Sound Editing and a win for Makeup (which was really impressive, but still...)
 * Awesome Music: Bear McCreary's music for the series; also, the use of John Murphy's "The Surface of the Sun" in episode five, "Wildfire", and Wye Oak's "Civilian" in the season 2 trailer.
 * Darkness-Induced Audience Apathy: After awhile, the abject horrors are thrown at the audience with such extreme regularity that they eventually cause a sense of dull "Oh like I didn't see that coming" instead of shock or sadness. Not all deaths in the series are cruel and unusual though.
 * Designated Protagonist Syndrome: Literally. The moment Rick meets up with the group, he proclaimed their leader evidently solely on the basis of his being the Sheriff. He does survive a horde of zombies, but only Glenn is there to see it.
 * Ensemble Darkhorse: Daryl Dixon. In the first season he was a mildly-racist Jerkass (though not to the extent of his older brother), but when he made the switch to a heroic Badass in season 2 his popularity exploded and he has become possibly the most popular character on the show. This is likely the reason his character has lived on, even though his brother Merle was killed off by the end of Season 3.
 * Evil Is Sexy: If the Governor weren't sexy, Andrea probably wouldn't be sleeping with him.
 * Harsher in Hindsight: There are several people in Season 2 who come very close to dying and whom are nursed back to health in Hershel's farmhouse, with the exception of Dale who simply can't be saved. Then comes the revelation that
 * Also, the reveal that puts his Despair Event Horizon in a whole new light.
 * Hilarious in Hindsight: The last survivor of the CDC plays a major in the finale of season one. In May 2011, the real life CDC issued its own Zombie Preparedness guidelines. (Don't follow them, you'd die.)
 * Homage: When
 * Ho Yay: Between Shane and Rick. Especially in season 2, episode 2, when Shane is . Shane does eventually decide to kill Rick so that he can be with Lori, however.
 * Idiot Ball:
 * If the highway is packed bumper-to-bumper with abandoned cars pouring out of the rumored safe haven, it shouldn't take running into the zombie horde to make you realize you should stay away. Lampshaded by Glenn, who calls Rick a dumbass shortly thereafter.
 * Who brings a crazy redneck who's gonna jeopardize a scavenge mission with them? If Rick hadn't come along, Merle certainly would've killed them or gotten them killed.
 * Rick aims a gun at the aforementioned redneck's brother's head, so where does Shane stand? Right opposite of said brother, in line with where the bullet from Rick's gun would go had he actually pulled the trigger. Neither of the cops who are supposed to be trained in Gun Safety think anything wrong of it.
 * This would be a case of what camera angle looked good and dramatic to the creative team, who didn't stop to think that it'd look really stupid for two cops to stand opposite sides like that.
 * Morgan, driven to despair over his wife's reanimation, retreated to the attic and started popping shots at several zombies in an attempt to attract his undead wife's attention. While he intended to kill his undead wife, not only did he ultimately fail to follow through with it but he had alerted every zombie within earshot to his and his son's presence. This after he had warned Rick about gunshots attracting zombies, too. Duane ultimately dies because of his decision.
 * While searching for Sophia, Andrea blindly wanders far enough away from the group that when she is ambushed by a walker, nobody is close enough to help her. She's only saved by a Big Damn Heroes moment.
 * Andrea again. She has a gun and is atop Dale's RV and apparently eager to prove herself. When she spots a walker and calls it, Rick, Shane and T-Dog all go out to meet it with weapons, but she brags she can nail it from where she is. And she can; the problem is, it wasn't a walker.  who was walking like a zombie because he was tired, sore, and badly injured.
 * The whole group when they decide to bring the kids along when they scavenge through a maze of abandoned cars. When the massive walker herd comes along, Sophia loses her nerve and gets spotted, which leads to her running off into the woods and sparking off the arc to find her. If they just kept the kids safe in the camper,.
 * The bigger problem could be argued to be letting the kids wander off knowing that there are zombies and not knowing whether there are any in the area. If they had kept the kids next to them, Sophia probably wouldn't have left cover.
 * Lori deciding to drive off alone in search of Rick, not knowing exactly where she was going. And thus looking at a map instead of keeping her eyes on the road.
 * Carl must've got it from his parents. After being a relatively smart kid, he steals a gun from Daryl, goes deep into the woods where Sophia was lost, and decides to taunt a walker who's stuck in the mud. Wouldn't you know it, it gets free...
 * Jerkass Woobie:
 * Merle is a Jerkass, of course then also portrayed as "racist", but once he's handcuffed to a pipe and left to die, crying as zombies start breaking through the door, you can't help but feel a little sorry for the guy. He later has a Redemption Equals Death moment. He doesn't kill the Governor, but the intent to save Rick and his friends is still there.
 * Another family trait, as Daryl seems to veer into this territory. He gets more likeable as the series progresses.
 * Like You Would Really Do It:
 * You didn't really think that they were going to kill off so early, did you?
 * Unfortunately for, they meet their makers in the second and third season.
 * Or the main character in the pilot, for that matter.
 * Love To Hate: Negan, though there are moments in the series where the audience doesn't hate him.
 * Memetic Badass:
 * The "bulletdeer" from the second season premiere, with fans jokingly suggesting that.
 * Hilariously T-Dog in certain internet circles.
 * It seems Hershel has become this thanks to his "God Shotgun" in the Season 2 Finale.
 * Memetic Mutation: There are more than a few variations of "Stay in the Fucking House, Carl!" floating around.
 * Moral Event Horizon: Shane's could either be, , or
 * As the title of the episode would imply, Season 4, Episode 8 has the Governor turn down his chance of redemption and kill Hershel. Rick tried to reason with him, but he simply wouldn't listen. He's killed by Michonne shortly afterwards before being shot in the head by Lilly to prevent reanimation.
 * Nightmare Fuel: The walkers, obviously, but also present are the evil survivors that Rick and his companions encounter the show. The Governor in particular proves to be the first major threat to the heroes.
 * Shane goes from Rick's best friend to being Rick's worst enemy. The turnabout is really remarkable. And before he tries to kill Rick, he decides to betray and kill Otis, who dies a horrible death.
 * The Claimers aren't quite Governor caliber, but they're still frightening. They spend their time looting houses and raping women. And they're not safe from each other's wrath. Rick Grimes was lucky to escape the house he was staying in alive, especially when Tony attempts to point out Rick to his Len before he strangles him into unconsciousness over a dispute over who got to sleep in the bed Rick was hiding under.
 * Rescued from the Scrappy Heap: Andrea. Though she's by far the most useless, and annoying character in Season One (except for maybe neglectful Lori), Season Two shows her slowly developing into a much more level-headed character. Slowly becoming closer to her comic incarnation as well. Unfortunately, she meets her maker in Season 3.
 * Screwed by the Network: AMC allegedly decided to cut the budget for the second season while doubling the number of episodes. Then Frank Darabont was fired.
 * Squick: It's a show about zombies. Of course this is going to pop up from time to time.
 * In the second episode, when Rick and Glen hack up a zombie body with an axe and paint themselves with the guts. Glenn and the other survivors react appropriately, with someone vomiting at the sight and smell.
 * In the first episode of the second season, Rick and Daryl cut open a dead zombie's stomach.
 * All zombies are pretty squicky, but special notice must go to the zombie the group finds in a well on Hershel's farm: after sitting in the well for who knows how long, it has become extremely bloated. When they manage to pull it out of the well.
 * And then the zombie trying to get at Lori when she's trapped in an overturned car. It starts pushing its head through a hole in the windshield, peeling all of the skin and flesh off its face in the process so all Lori sees on the other side is a set of bloody, exposed jaws clamping at her.
 * The Scrappy:
 * Andrea has become this after the events of "Chupacabra" after whining for the whole season. However, she seems to have redeemed herself somewhat in the second half of Season 2, taking leaps and bounds towards her comics characterization. She does sleep with the Governor, but that's only because she doesn't realize that he's evil. And she does a surprisingly good job of defending herself from him, though she still gets captured by him in the end and is ultimately bitten by the zombified Milton.
 * Shane's becoming this, especially after the mid-season finale. Though one could argue that he was designed to be hated.
 * Many viewers feel this way about Lori, viewing her as the most useless character on the show, citing her as a neglectful parent, something that would inevitably spell disaster in a world as dangerous as The Walking Dead. One might still might find her death by childbirth to be depressing though, especially by what she tells Carl that she loves him.
 * People aren't very happy with Carl, due to him  He does at least show remorse for his actions, but that didn't mean he didn't cause the walker in the first place. Thankfully, he becomes a fighter in Season 4, where he successfully defends himself from walkers and even lampshades it.
 * Carol might have become one of these to some.
 * The Woobie: everyone, really, but Helen from the webisodes deserves some special recognition
 * Sophia now too when you realize just how much she's suffered over the course of the series. She was raised with an abusive and potentially pedophilic father, witnessed the world ending and the dead coming back to devour the living, been on the run as everything fell apart, living in mortal terror every step of the way, and then It Got Worse.
 * Unfortunate Implications:
 * Most female characters winds up playing damsel-in-distress far more often than not and don't mind sitting around doing more than domesticated roles. Lori explicitly calls Andrea useless because she is standing watch and scouting with the guys rather than performing domestic duties with the women in "18 Miles Out". One can argue that Season 3 fixes this by adding Michonne, who while technically a damsel in distress in the fourth episode of Season 8 still proves herself to be a badass in the same episode.
 * Lori wanting to effectively Stay in the Kitchen is probably justified, Andrea does want to help, as mentioned, and, well, time will tell with the others. Of course, Lori showing this attitude before that spoiler is probably harder to excuse, as is her wanting to project those gender roles onto others.
 * Andrea's pretty incredulous when Lori says that, and more or less tells her that's a stupid attitude and that Lori's lucky she's been sheltered enough to be able to keep it this long.
 * T-Dog is a serious offender. He's only known by the type of nickname normally associated with rappers. After Morgan, he's one of the only major black characters, and yet stands around doing next to nothing, in some episodes saying next to nothing, adds no real value to the group, and only seems to be in the show for Anvilicious moments (i.e., Merle's racist rant) or to say "black guy" things (his statement about "not doing that gangsta shit" during a firing range training). This may be the reason why he was killed off in Season 3.
 * The show seems to go out of its way to portray its female characters as foolish, stupid, and impulsive whenever they dare to act on their own initiative. See Andrea's shooting of, and Lori's crash in "Nebraska". None of the male characters, even the barely trained civilians such as Dale or Glenn, ever face such problems. This is averted in Season 3 where Michonne turns out to be absolutely correct in her judgment about not trusting the Governor, who was secretly a mass shooter.
 * The show seems to go out of its way to portray its female characters as foolish, stupid, and impulsive whenever they dare to act on their own initiative. See Andrea's shooting of, and Lori's crash in "Nebraska". None of the male characters, even the barely trained civilians such as Dale or Glenn, ever face such problems. This is averted in Season 3 where Michonne turns out to be absolutely correct in her judgment about not trusting the Governor, who was secretly a mass shooter.