Newsweek

Apocalypse Maybe

TV’S ratings monsters The Walking Dead and Game of Thrones are staggering toward oddly similar ends

- BY JOHN WALTERS @jdubs88

walkers, walls and crossbow

crusaders. All of humanity bifurcated into a good-vs.-evil, winnertake-all main event while a greater existentia­l threat—the zombie apocalypse—looms. Add to that a callous indifferen­ce on the part of showrunner­s to killing off (and then occasional­ly resurrecti­ng) a beloved main character. As the October 22 Season 8 premiere of The Walking Dead approaches, we wonder if AMC’S megahit is not Game of Thrones with a more penurious per-episode budget.

The Walking Dead premiered on Halloween night, 2010, and has since become the most-watched series in cable television history. Five months later, Game of Thrones made its debut on HBO and has since whacked The Sopranos as the mostwatche­d show ever on premium cable. For the first few years of their existence, the shows seemed to have little in common besides their massive audiences and roots in fantasy.

Dead, after all, was set in a contempora­ry, post-apocalypti­c American South. Thrones was set in the fictional land of Westeros, which bears a passing resemblanc­e to Britain, in an age of iron. Thrones was rife with clandestin­e alliances, brothels, interwoven royal lineages, giants, dragons and Dothraki.

Dead promulgate­d a far simpler plotline: Stay together and don’t get bitten.

Superficia­l links existed. How many other shows feature a crossbow, the weapon of choice for Dead’s heroic Daryl (Norman Reedus) and a toy for Thrones’ sadistic boy king Joffrey (Jack Gleeson)? And yes, a murder tool for Joffrey’s impish uncle Tyrion (Peter Dinklage).

Glenn (Steven Yeun), one of Dead’s

FUNNY, I FELT FINE THIS MORNING

Walking Dead, above, meet frozen dead: GOT’S Night King, left. Royal pains Negan and Cersei, right, both alive...for now. OCTOBER 20, 2017

Looking for a sadistic ruler with a thirst for pain? Negan, meet Cersei (one man’s Lucille is another woman’s Mountain).

most popular characters, fell into a zombie mosh pit at the end of one episode only to re-emerge in the next unscathed (are there vegan zombies?), while multiple Thrones characters have overcome stabbings, drowning and greyscale, only to return. Lord of Light? More like deus ex machina.

In the past two seasons, however, the shows have begun to approach a point of convergenc­e, albeit from opposite directions. Since Season 6, Dead has promoted a malevolent gang of fascists, the Saviors, as the most direct threat to Sheriff Rick and his posse, while relegating “walkers” (i.e., zombies) to a relative supporting role. Meanwhile, across the Narrow Sea, the Lannisters have brokered a truce with the Targaryen-stark alliance, while Thrones’ zombies, the Night King-led white walkers, sweep down toward Winterfell like a Category 5 hurricane.

The comparison­s are manifold. Looking for a sadistic ruler with a thirst for inflicting pain? Negan, meet Cersei (one man’s Lucille is another woman’s Mountain). How about a reluctant but resolute leader who is also a bastion of integrity? Sheriff Rick and Jon Snow. Hulking gingers fighting for the good guys? Sergeant Abraham and Tormund. Bad ass, blade-wielding heroines? Michonne, meet Brienne of Tarth.

At their cores, both shows have been distilled into a triad of fascists vs. freedom fighters vs. the undead. The last group is a relative force of nature, an implacable juggernaut that is not vulnerable to desertions or betrayal but is also incapable of heroism. Who will win out? Will an alliance be forged between each show’s two human factions before it is too late? Forget winter; for both series, Season 8 is coming.

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