Great news for everyone who loves watching real life couples play fictional couples. The Walking Dead has cast Hilarie Burton as Negan’s (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) wife in Season 10, TV Guide has confirmed. The actress will appear in the extra episodes ordered for the season, which are currently in production. Burton and Morgan have been married
Jeffrey Dean Morgan
The moment we all knew was coming this season on The Walking Dead —Danai Gurira‘s final episode as Michonne — has finally arrived. “What We Become,” in the tradition of last Walking Dead episodes “What Happened and What’s Going On” and “What Comes After” before it, had hallucinations as its emotional power source, as Michonne
Hilltop was under attack yet again in “Morning Star,” the eleventh episode of The Walking Dead Season 10. The colony is in the most precarious position from outside forces it’s been in since the Saviors engaged in biological warfare with walker-contaminated weapons back in Season 8. The Whisperers are doing their own kind of biological
Season 10, Episode 5 of The Walking Dead did something the show has done before by showing Negan’s (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) journey after escaping from jail, but it was different this time, showing the ways the character has changed — andthe ways he hasn’t. Negan may not want to be a dictator anymore, but he’s
Aside from what seems to be the inciting incident in Michonne’s (Danai Gurira) final Walking Dead story (more on that later), “Silence the Whisperers” was an internal episode, focusing on the emotional and mental states of Lydia (Cassady McClincy), Negan (Jeffrey Dean Morgan), and Ezekiel (Khary Payton) specifically, and the increasingly paranoid and fearful communities
“Ghosts,” the third episode of The Walking Dead‘s tenth season, was as well-balanced an episode of the show as you’ll ever see. It divided its time between several characters, and gave them all compelling stuff to do that moved their stories along, especially Negan (Jeffrey Dean Morgan), who finally got to demonstrate in a measurable
The Walking Dead returned for Season 10 with a slapper of a premiere. The Angela Kang-penned, Greg Nicotero-directed “Lines We Cross” had the things fans want from the show: zombie action, meaningful character interaction, a bit of formal experimentation (this episode had title cards like “TRAINING DAY” and “NEW MEXICO” turn scenes into little chapters),