Daryl even made mention that Randall wasn't bitten, was confused by it, AND was in the lab when the CDC guy was explaining everything.
Shane killing that guy was off-camera, which makes no sense unless something is being concealed from our view for a reason.
I love the show, but a lot of the plot holes are sloppy. Darabont and other writers removal from the show is really showing now.
You can breath the zombie-infested air, but you can't be bitten or die in it? That's fucking stupid, season one explanation or not. Tyrone had a festering wound, only for it to magically heal, get into a big fight with zombie blood flying everywhere, yet he's still around acting like the token black guy, hanging out in the corner and riding out his contract until it's his time to go.
You can breath the zombie-infested air, but you can't be bitten or die in it? That's fucking stupid, season one explanation or not. Tyrone had a festering wound, only for it to magically heal, get into a big fight with zombie blood flying everywhere, yet he's still around acting like the token black guy, hanging out in the corner and riding out his contract until it's his time to go.
Plot
After the destruction of the Center for Disease Control (CDC) in Atlanta, Rick Grimes (Andrew Lincoln) and the survivors decide to travel to Fort Benning. Their group consists of Rick, along with his wife Lori (Sarah Wayne Callies) and son Carl (Chandler Riggs); Carol Peletier (Melissa McBride) and her daughter Sophia (Madison Lintz); Shane Walsh (Jon Bernthal), Dale Horvath (Jeffrey DeMunn), Andrea (Laurie Holden), Glenn (Steven Yeun), T-Dog (IronE Singleton), and Daryl Dixon (Norman Reedus). The group encounters a blockade of abandoned vehicles and Dale's RV breaks down, much to their dismay. Alongside with Glenn, Dale tries to repair the vehicle; the rest search for clothing, food, and water. Andrea argues with Dale about how his decision to stay with her at the CDC took away her choice to end her life on her own terms. Shane notifies Lori that he plans on leaving the group of his own accord.
A large herd of zombies—or "walkers" as they are referred to—abruptly arrives in the distance, prompting the survivors to seek shelter under abandoned vehicles. Andrea is trapped in the bathroom of an RV, and a walker suddenly discovers her. Dale hands a screwdriver via an opening in the truck's roof, and Andrea uses it to stab the walker. Meanwhile, T-Dog slices his arm and attracts walkers from his trail of blood. Daryl rescues him by stabbing a walker; with T-Dog, he hides under nearby dead bodies, whose scent protects them. Two walkers locate Sophia hiding under a car, and they chase her into the woods. Rick pursues them and, when he catches Sophia, urges her to seek refuge in a hole near the riverbed so he can deflect the attention of the walkers. Once Rick distracts the walkers, Sophia escapes from the premises. Daryl and Rick attempt to track her down but are unsuccessful, and the search is temporarily called off. A frantic and distraught Carol blames Rick for losing Sophia, exacerbating the guilt he already feels.
The next morning the search for Sophia resumes. The group later encounters an electric bell on a church; three walkers are housed at the building. After killing the walkers, Lori and Carol go inside to pray. Desperately, Carol begs for forgiveness and for the safe arrival of Sophia. Andrea overhears Shane and Lori arguing about his plans to leave, and Andrea professes her willingness to go with Shane. As the stresses worsen, Rick questions his stance as leader of the group. He asks the statue of Christ in the church for some sign that he is making the right decisions for the group. Afterwards, Rick, Carl, and Shane discovers a whitetail deer in the woods. Carl proceeds towards the deer when a gunshot bullet fires; it passes through the deer and strikes Carl in the stomach. Rick frantically rushes to his son, who is severely injured.
After the destruction of the Center for Disease Control (CDC) in Atlanta, Rick Grimes (Andrew Lincoln) and the survivors decide to travel to Fort Benning. Their group consists of Rick, along with his wife Lori (Sarah Wayne Callies) and son Carl (Chandler Riggs); Carol Peletier (Melissa McBride) and her daughter Sophia (Madison Lintz); Shane Walsh (Jon Bernthal), Dale Horvath (Jeffrey DeMunn), Andrea (Laurie Holden), Glenn (Steven Yeun), T-Dog (IronE Singleton), and Daryl Dixon (Norman Reedus). The group encounters a blockade of abandoned vehicles and Dale's RV breaks down, much to their dismay. Alongside with Glenn, Dale tries to repair the vehicle; the rest search for clothing, food, and water. Andrea argues with Dale about how his decision to stay with her at the CDC took away her choice to end her life on her own terms. Shane notifies Lori that he plans on leaving the group of his own accord.
A large herd of zombies—or "walkers" as they are referred to—abruptly arrives in the distance, prompting the survivors to seek shelter under abandoned vehicles. Andrea is trapped in the bathroom of an RV, and a walker suddenly discovers her. Dale hands a screwdriver via an opening in the truck's roof, and Andrea uses it to stab the walker. Meanwhile, T-Dog slices his arm and attracts walkers from his trail of blood. Daryl rescues him by stabbing a walker; with T-Dog, he hides under nearby dead bodies, whose scent protects them. Two walkers locate Sophia hiding under a car, and they chase her into the woods. Rick pursues them and, when he catches Sophia, urges her to seek refuge in a hole near the riverbed so he can deflect the attention of the walkers. Once Rick distracts the walkers, Sophia escapes from the premises. Daryl and Rick attempt to track her down but are unsuccessful, and the search is temporarily called off. A frantic and distraught Carol blames Rick for losing Sophia, exacerbating the guilt he already feels.
The next morning the search for Sophia resumes. The group later encounters an electric bell on a church; three walkers are housed at the building. After killing the walkers, Lori and Carol go inside to pray. Desperately, Carol begs for forgiveness and for the safe arrival of Sophia. Andrea overhears Shane and Lori arguing about his plans to leave, and Andrea professes her willingness to go with Shane. As the stresses worsen, Rick questions his stance as leader of the group. He asks the statue of Christ in the church for some sign that he is making the right decisions for the group. Afterwards, Rick, Carl, and Shane discovers a whitetail deer in the woods. Carl proceeds towards the deer when a gunshot bullet fires; it passes through the deer and strikes Carl in the stomach. Rick frantically rushes to his son, who is severely injured.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/What_Lies_Ahead said:
"What Lies Ahead" is the first episode of the second season of the post-apocalyptic horror television series The Walking Dead. It originally aired on AMC in the United States on October 16, 2011. The episode was written by series developer Frank Darabont (under the pseudonym Ardeth Bey) and series creator Robert Kirkman, and directed by Gwyneth Horder-Payton and Ernest Dickerson.
Having Shane come to a balancing point, only to suddenly have his biggest psychotic shift, then kill him in the same episode isn't better writing than watching Lori pout about being pregnant for six episodes, flip her fucking car, and STILL manage to be pregnant? They should have drug his psychosis out, not meddled in it until it was appropriate for a single episode's diagram.
"you think we're going to try and kill each other and then just move on" or something to that effect are the words right out of his mouth, of course talking about the fight him and rick had and admitting that he never let it go, and will never let it go. if anything, his psychosis has been dragged out over 18 episodes total now, from season 1 to this episode. you say it happened instantly, ive been screaming hes a cancer to the group and the most dangerous element the group is facing for a long while now. sure, maybe he was a little more extreme, because ricks cunt wife lori had to agitate the crazed beast with whatever stupid little manipulative motivations she had when she gave him that false hope speech, but he was bound to bite again sooner or later. same beast, different degree of ferocity. i guess we just have different opinions on the matter, but to me he was just as psychotic when he was staring dale down asking for the guns back is the biggest example that comes to mind, then taunting dale to go ahead and shoot him in the chest. or other confrontations with dale and rick, as when he was staring the kid down getting ready to execute him right then and there in the shed. to me when he was baiting dale to go ahead and shoot and calling him a pussy and all that shit, it was just as psychotic as when he was asking rick to draw his gun and fight back.
by no means am i saying the show is perfect, or even "great", but this shits good enough to keep me entertained and to keep watching it. im invested now, and every now and then there are glimmers of how this show could be great and memorable. i guess we'll just have to wait and see