The Walking Dead - Makes Television Ratings History!!

Jambo82

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AMC’S THE WALKING DEAD SCORES A 3.7 HH RATING

AMC ORIGINAL SERIES GARNERS HIGHEST 18-49 DELIVERY FOR ANY CABLE SERIES PREMIERE FOR 2010

HIGHEST PREMIERE IN AMC’S HISTORY FOR ORIGINAL SERIES

New York, NY – November 1, 2010 – Last night’s premiere of AMC’s original series, “The Walking Dead” resulted in a 3.7 HH rating netting over 5.3 total million viewers making it the largest audience for any original series on the network. The Adults 18-49 demo garnered 3.6 million viewers making it the highest delivery for any cable series premiere for 2010.

Key Ratings Highlights for The Walking Dead:
10pm airing – 3.7 HH rating with 5.3 million total viewers;
10 pm, 11:30 pm and 1am airings – Cumed to a 6.0 HH rating with 8.1 million viewers;
Adults 25-54 – 3.1 million viewers;
Adults 18-49 – 3.6 million viewers;
Adults 18-34 – 2.1 million viewers.

“It’s a good day to be dead. We are so proud of this series, its depth of storytelling and the remarkable talent attached,” said Charlie Collier, AMC’s president. “As the network dedicated to bringing viewers the best stories on television, we are so pleased to have the opportunity with ‘The Walking Dead’ to raise the bar within this popular genre and continue our commitment to being the home of premium television on basic cable.”

“’The Walking Dead’ is that rare piece of programming that works on so many levels. It is legitimately great storytelling that is not only highly entertaining, but incredibly thought provoking as well. People who are familiar with the comic books know what’s coming, but suffice it to say, this is only the beginning of a long, intense, and powerful ride. Long live ‘The Walking Dead’,” said Joel Stillerman, AMC’s SVP of original programming, production and digital content.

AMC’s first wholly-owned original production, “The Walking Dead” premiered globally on October 31 through an unprecedented partnership with AMC and Fox International Channels. Similar to a theatrical film release, all Fox International Channels are launching the premiere episode this week, resulting in the series’ debuting in 120 countries and in 33 languages.

The Walking Dead premiered as part of AMC FEARFEST, the most highly anticipated horror movie marathon of the Halloween season. The network’s two-week marathon featured nearly 300 hours of horror-themed programming, including more than 60 films. The marathon aired October 18 through October 31, culminating with the 90-minute world premiere of “The Walking Dead.”

“The Walking Dead” is based on the comic book series written by Robert Kirkman and published by Image Comics. Kirkman serves as an executive producer on the project and three-time Academy Award-nominee Frank Darabont (The Shawshank Redemption, The Green Mile) serves as writer, director and executive producer. Gale Anne Hurd (The Terminator, Aliens, Armageddon, The Incredible Hulk), chairman of Valhalla Motion Pictures, serves as Executive Producer. David Alpert from Circle of Confusion serves as Executive Producer. Today’s announcement also includes the addition of Charles “Chic” Eglee (Dexter, The Shield, Dark Angel) as Executive Producer.

“The Walking Dead” tells the story of the months and years that follow after a zombie apocalypse. It follows a group of survivors, led by police officer Rick Grimes, who travel in search of a safe and secure home. The comic goes on to explore the challenges of life in a world overrun by zombies who take a toll on the survivors, and sometimes the interpersonal conflicts present a greater danger to their continuing survival than the zombies that roam the country. Over time, the characters are changed by the constant exposure to death and some grow willing to do anything to survive.

“The Walking Dead” received rave reviews from countless critics, who heralded the series as “visually stunning…and daring in its artful use of silence” (TV Guide), “…breathtaking in its small moments, in which the pain and glory of being human are conveyed with only the flick of a filmmaking wrist.” (Wall Street Journal), “…evocative, suspenseful” (Boston Globe) “…surprisingly scary and remarkably good” (The New York Times) “…a triumph of tone and mood” (Contra Costa Times) and “a real achievement for a horror show on a basic-cable network” (Rolling Stone). In addition, “The Walking Dead” received “4 Stars” from People and “3 Stars” from the New York Daily News and New York Post, among other outlets.
 
I've read some good (non-spoiler) things about it this morning, and it made me glad that I recorded it last night. Not sure when I will get around to watching it, but I do plan on recording the rest of the series.
 
I recorded it and watched it this afternoon. I really liked it. I think it's beautifully filmed....for a zombie series! :)
 
We watched it...like watching paint dry. The entire opening was the same as 28 Days Later(though I don't know if that movie or the comic this is based on came out first).

The show is impossibly slow. An hour and a half and almost nothing has happened. The acting is sub par. The entire first almost 7 minutes was just two dudes sitting in a car doing exposition!

Nope...not for me. This has been done before and done much much better.
 

I disagree with above poster. I love anything scarey and I liked this show. I watched it once then again when rebroadcast later. I wasn't bored and felt the dialog was good. The first segment was that way to establish the background of the character since he went home and his family was gone. How else would we know he had a wife and son and was having marital issues?

Anyway, I am looking forward to seeing this one through.
 
I disagree with above poster. I love anything scarey and I liked this show. I watched it once then again when rebroadcast later. I wasn't bored and felt the dialog was good.

I agree. I was a little jarred when the episode ended... I thought we were only half-way through. It wasn't that the episode went fast or anything like that, but it kept my interest very well.

One other thing I noticed: The series appears visually stunning as compared to most everything else on television. Not sickly-sweet pretty, like Pushing Daisies, but just very well-done from a cinematographic perspective.
 
We watched it...like watching paint dry. The entire opening was the same as 28 Days Later(though I don't know if that movie or the comic this is based on came out first).

The show is impossibly slow. An hour and a half and almost nothing has happened. The acting is sub par. The entire first almost 7 minutes was just two dudes sitting in a car doing exposition!

Nope...not for me. This has been done before and done much much better.

Were you watching the same show because I disagree 100% with your analysis. If you felt the pace was too slow try "Zombieland" with Woody Harrelson, might be more up your alley. Constant shooting, lots of blood and guts, little plot and character development.
 
I disagree with above poster. I love anything scarey and I liked this show. I watched it once then again when rebroadcast later. I wasn't bored and felt the dialog was good. The first segment was that way to establish the background of the character since he went home and his family was gone. How else would we know he had a wife and son and was having marital issues?

Anyway, I am looking forward to seeing this one through.

I agree. DH and I both enjoyed it. I didn't think it was too slow and I thought the acting was very good.I'm excited to see more.

I HATED 28 Days later and was very glad this was much more entertaining. 28 Days was the most boring and tedious horror movie I have ever seen!
 
I agree. I was a little jarred when the episode ended... I thought we were only half-way through. It wasn't that the episode went fast or anything like that, but it kept my interest very well.

One other thing I noticed: The series appears visually stunning as compared to most everything else on television. Not sickly-sweet pretty, like Pushing Daisies, but just very well-done from a cinematographic perspective.

We ADORED Pushing Daisies, and the visual was half the appeal. However, it would have been VERY bizarre if this series looked anything like the visuals in Pushing Daisies. LOL! There is a time and place for everything.
 
I agree. DH and I both enjoyed it. I didn't think it was too slow and I thought the acting was very good.I'm excited to see more.

I HATED 28 Days later and was very glad this was much more entertaining. 28 Days was the most boring and tedious horror movie I have ever seen!

I thought 28 weeks later was much better, especially the opening scene.
 
I haven't seen it yet (don't have cable - boooo!) but I've read the comic book series and it is absolutely AMAZING. I'm not normally a big fan of comic books/graphic novels, but this series made me laugh, cry, and everything in between. I'm hoping the show will live up to the books. :thumbsup2
 
We ADORED Pushing Daisies, and the visual was half the appeal. However, it would have been VERY bizarre if this series looked anything like the visuals in Pushing Daisies. LOL! There is a time and place for everything.
Yes yes of course. My point was that both shows, in their own way, are visually remarkable.
 
I thought 28 weeks later was much better, especially the opening scene.

that's fine. To each their own. I thought 28 Days Later was a big ol' snoozefest. Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
 
Yes yes of course. My point was that both shows, in their own way, are visually remarkable.

LOL gotcha! I think I read it wrong! Both shows look great for their genres! :thumbsup2
 
We watched it...like watching paint dry. The entire opening was the same as 28 Days Later(though I don't know if that movie or the comic this is based on came out first).

The show is impossibly slow. An hour and a half and almost nothing has happened. The acting is sub par. The entire first almost 7 minutes was just two dudes sitting in a car doing exposition!

Nope...not for me. This has been done before and done much much better.

Just to let you know - I have a friend sitting next to me right now who agrees with you that it was "like watching undead paint dry". So you're not alone! :laughing:

She says for her it was a lot of exposition and not enough showing of the drama. She bailed after an hour saying, "I've read the books, bored now." She thinks the original 1974 Dawn of the Dead did a better job of showing what happens when a zombie bites you, without giving it all away. And on a much smaller budget, with lousy effects!

She also thought the hospital scene in the Walking Dead was basically 28 Days Later with a soupcon of the Stand, but slower. And with no Gary Sinise!

And she's a HUGE zombie fan!
 
Were you watching the same show because I disagree 100% with your analysis. If you felt the pace was too slow try "Zombieland" with Woody Harrelson, might be more up your alley. Constant shooting, lots of blood and guts, little plot and character development.

No sweat. Disagreement makes life more interesting.

I liked Zombieland a lot. Mostly for the humor. Also, liked (or rather were more scared of) the zombies from that movie, and 28 Days Later. The ones from Walking Dead are old school, "slow and moan" style zombies. Everytime I see one I want to yell at the survivors to "WALK!! Walk for your lives!!" hehehee
 
No sweat. Disagreement makes life more interesting.

I liked Zombieland a lot. Mostly for the humor.

Zombieland rocked! :thumbsup2

I also enjoyed:

Fido (sigh... :love: lots of character development here!)
Night of the Living Dead, Dawn of the Dead (1974), and Land of the Dead (cheesy, sometimes terrifying, character development).

And for the MOTHERLOAD of character development and doing talky exposition RIGHT (in my not-so-humble opinion)...

PONTYPOOL

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1226681/

Scariest zombie flick I ever saw, yet minimal gore and lots of talking.

British zombies rock of course (Sean of the Dead, for ex.) but Canadian zombies (Fido, Pontypool) definitely give them a run (stagger, crawl, drag...) for their money.
 
Magpie and I are probably the only people to see Pontypool :)

I have an extensive collection of Undead movies from all over the world (Canada, USA, UK, Thailand, Australia, NZ, Italy) and feel that Walking Dead is an excellent representation, all things considered, as it is on TV.
 
LOVED it!

It was like "28 Days later", meets "I am Legend", meets "LOST" (new folks popping up) and I am so looking forward to the next episode. The first few shows developing a series are always slow as they develop the characters but I liked where it's going. Can I just mention,Poor Horsey... I was not ready for that.

My kids watched it with us and my DS had us all laughing as he recited his tips from his "Zombie Survival Guide"
 
LOVED it!

It was like "28 Days later", meets "I am Legend", meets "LOST" (new folks popping up) and I am so looking forward to the next episode. The first few shows developing a series are always slow as they develop the characters but I liked where it's going. Can I just mention,Poor Horsey... I was not ready for that.

I knew the horse was going to get destroyed.
 


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