Kc! Incredible episode. This episode had that fire of the whole first season! I never thought WA could return to that kind of excitement! Thank you thank you!
Kc! Incredible episode. This episode had that fire of the whole first season! I never thought WA could return to that kind of excitement! Thank you thank you!
What I find really scary about the whole Zombie Apocalypse conceptual life style isn't the Zombies themselves, but rather the fact that we are now a species so disgusted with normality and society that some of us would actually prefer it" - Some Zombie NerdBakkie-Pleur liked this post
Ok.
I rephrase my questions I raised earlier: What do them zombs use chemical stuff for? And is Randy really "only" a postal service - for whom exactly?
Does this mean that them organized zombs have different locations like the humans do have?
Imagine this: If this chemical stuff from Raydon Labs is in fact formaldehyd, could this mean that them zombs conserve their food that way? This would fit into the picture that them zombs show up scarcely, because they could hide somewhere and eat from their self-made conserved food. We actually know that them zombs have learned to collect and stash food big time; we learned about it in the arena. And we also know that them zombs gathered food, i.e. human (and zombie) bodies ...
And if the chemicals are NOT formaldehyd, but something completely else, where die Randy want to transport it to - and why? Only in order to ambush or trick them survivors?
One thing freaked me out: Randy seams to have similar skills or feats or attributes link Ink does - super fast, no trouble overcoming hindrances (I mean, getting passed a fence, where Michael and Puck (both trained soldiers)), quite 'intelligent' ...
Best wishes!
Liam
Zombie Story:
- raises the acceptance of killing humans in huge numbers,
- reveals everything bad and and even worse about human behaviour and psychology,
- is fun.
More fun stuff...
so I'm not actually a doctor (even though on tv, I'm a mad dentist)...but could taynas times and numbers be a rate of spreading? (think forgein bodies within the blood) could she test for that sort of thing..and if so would those numbers times line up with anything? Somebody with more knowledge on it needs to weigh in. (looking right at you,sid)
http://m.imdb.com/name/nm0001044/
that is all.
KAWCabbage Patch, Storm liked this post
W/A convoy supply and general manager: info? follow ? > @_toddisdead
Not Sid, but a couple of quick thoughts. I don't think it could be a rate of spread. Both viral load and bacterial culture take longer to test than what Tanya's doing. She could be doing some sort of cell count (white blood cells came to mind), but the numbers don't really make sense to me for that, and I don't hear a counter going either.
When she first said 195, my first thought was wow, they need to get her heart rate down asap before her heart stops, but when she got up to 375 I knew I was dead wrong on that first impression.
Maybe I'm missing something obvious, but I really couldn't think of many tests with those numbers that could be done quickly at the bedside. Glucose can be done quickly, and you could see those sorts of numbers in somebody headed into a diabetic crisis, but that doesn't really make any sense in this situation.
My guess is you'll be hearing from our lawyers soon.
Radon Labs, Inc
"We're a gas!"
Good stuff epi!
I'm at work so I can't really relisten, but sounds like if we could find the rate vs time. We might be able to pinpoint what's being tested. If I get a chance later I'll relisten and do some math...me+math=good stuff.
me+science= boom(explodey eyes)
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