The Walking Dead: Zombie Plot Device

I was, is and am a big proponent of the TV series The Walking Dead. I championed the show when it was first announced and couldn’t believe that one of my favorite writer/directors Frank Darabont was the one who was heading up the series. And, after the stunning first season of The Walking Dead I became even more fanatical about the show and counted the days until the start of the second.

And even with the second season, after Darabont was unceremoniously dumped from the show and The Walking Dead shifted gears from instead focusing on a group of people on the run from a zombie apocalypse to instead a group of people holed-up on a farm trying to wait out said apocalypse I still was, and am, a fan of the show.

But I have to admit that I feel like after the start of the second half of the second season of the show I started liking The Walking Dead less and less with each viewing. And I’d have to guess the reason for this is because of that farm.

Click here to continue reading this column on the TV series The Walking Dead.

Acorn Media Cashing In on British Revivals

“They are, quite frankly, a bit different from a number of other home video distributors,” he said by phone. Unlike other companies, which are focused on selling blockbuster titles at ever-lower margins in big-box retailers, Acorn has a business model in which “they identify a set audience, develop a relationship with that audience and develop a portfolio that’s going to work with that audience,” Mr. Randisi said, allowing the company to steer customers to new purchases with relatively little marketing.

via Acorn Media Cashing In on British Revivals – NYTimes.com.

Neil Gaiman and Todd McFarlane: The Story So Far (March 1993 – March 2012)

Although Gaiman and McFarlane’s first meeting in court was on the 1st of October, 2002, nearly ten years ago now, the cause of their dispute goes back nearly ten years before that, with roots set in place some years before that, again. So, in an attempt to put it all into some sort of context, I’m listing what I see as the main points of their dispute, in chronological order, as exactly as I can, along with some earlier events, to put it all into context.

via Pádraig Ó Méalóid: Neil Gaiman and Todd McFarlane: The Story So Far (March 1993 – March 2012).