Fear The Walking Dead, The Key: Things To Note

Garret Dillahunt as John Dorie - Fear the Walking Dead _ Season 6, Episode 4 - Photo Credit: Ryan Green/AMC - Fear the Walking Dead _ Season 6, Episode 4 - Photo Credit: Ryan Green/AMC
Garret Dillahunt as John Dorie - Fear the Walking Dead _ Season 6, Episode 4 - Photo Credit: Ryan Green/AMC - Fear the Walking Dead _ Season 6, Episode 4 - Photo Credit: Ryan Green/AMC /
facebooktwitterreddit
Prev
4 of 5
Next
Fear the Walking Dead _ Season 6, Episode 4 – Photo Credit: Ryan Green/AMC
Fear the Walking Dead _ Season 6, Episode 4 – Photo Credit: Ryan Green/AMC /

11) While discussing the investigation into Cameron’s death, Ginny tells John a story about a murder in the first community she was a part of after the apocalypse hit, and how the town elders decided to execute the killer by using music to lead walkers to him as a means to “Keep everyone in line”. Where, exactly, was this place? How far along into the apocalypse was it, because…that seems pretty brutal for something as early as Ginny implies it to be. And, what happened to this place?

12) John mentions to Rabbi Kessner a case his dad investigated of a serial killer in Houston who turned out to be a cult leader. As John recalls, the cult leader was talking about “Death” and “New beginnings”. I wonder if he specifically said “The End Is The Beginning”?

13) Janis is the second named character to die this episode, the ninth named character overall to die this season, and the first member of the convoy to die. That last fact is rather bleakly coincidental, considering the fact that the last member of the convoy to die was her brother, Tom, in last season’s penultimate episode, “Channel 5”.

14) Janis is also the fourth named character to turn this season, behind Walter and Emile (Both as just heads), and Cameron, earlier in this episode.

15) Considering the fact that Ginny uses the same “use music to lure walkers to eat the condemned” method of execution she claimed she didn’t want to emulate from her earlier group, it makes one wonder if that group was a failed experiment in leadership, and the “town elders” were, in actuality, Ginny herself.