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25 Crazy Details Behind The Making Of The Walking Dead

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The Walking Dead is one of the biggest series on television thanks to its devotion to character development, brilliant makeup effects, and an intriguing storyline. While the series' ratings have gone down in recent years and some fans have rage-quit the show for a variety of reasons, the show isn't going down anytime soon.

Like the walkers it shows us each and every week it airs, The Walking Dead isn't going down without a fight! Now, moving into its ninth season, a lot of changes are scheduled to come for the good folks of Alexandria and its surrounding communities; some for the better and some for the worse. Whether you have read the comics or not, there's plenty going on in the show that hasn't been put to the page, and likely never will.

With eight seasons already aired and a total of 115 episodes, there's a lot going on behind the scenes many fans don't know about. What goes on when the camera isn't rolling and what went on to cause not one, but two showrunners to leave production? There's plenty of behind the scenes rumors and details going on that many haven't heard anything about, which is why we compiled a list of some interesting facts about the goings on in the show. A lot goes into turning an extra into a walker, but sitting in the makeup chair is only part of becoming one of the many zombies on the show.

How many of these pieces of information did you already know in this list of 25 Crazy Details Behind The Making Of The Walking Dead

25 IT EMPLOYS MORE WALKERS THAN YOU KNOW

One of the best aspects of The Walking Dead is the show's reliance on real people and not CGI (for the most part) when it comes to the walkers. They could easily digitally create walkers to threaten the cast, but instead, chose to employ makeup and special effects artists to turn average people into undead monsters.

The showrunners hire as many as 200 extras each season.

Extras on the show tend to come around every now and again, but thanks to the makeup and costume designers, viewers never notice repeat offenders. Most spend days on set and those numbers often reach as high as 60 at a time.

24 THE COPS HAVE GOTTEN INVOLVED

You have to be careful when filming a show about a bunch of dirty people running around with weapons-- some people might get the wrong idea.

Back in season one, a SWAT team was called to the set when Michael Rooker was seen atop a building with a rifle. 

We can't blame folks for calling the cops after seeing that, but it wasn't the only time the cast had a run-in with the law. Lauren Cohan was pulled over one evening on the way home from work while she was still covered in blood! Granted, it was fake blood, but that didn't make the police officer feel any better when he approached the vehicle.

23 THERE ARE FOUR TYPES OF ZOMBIES ON THE SHOW

When you have to spend a ton of time and money turning a regular person into a zombie, you want to make sure they aren't seen 200 yards from the camera. That doesn't mean the people out in the wide shots don't receive any makeup, but it does lead to a categorization of zombies on the set.

Walkers are classified depending on how much time they will be on screen and how close they are to the camera.

Much further from the camera, they are wearing dirty clothes with cursory makeup. A bit closer, and they might grab a prosthetic, but it's the ones in full frame who really get the Walking Dead treatment.

22 ALIENS COULD APPEAR

The Walking Dead comic was already a huge franchise when creator Robert Kirkman went to pitch the series to AMC, but it didn't start out as well as he might have hoped. When he launched the book, there weren't a lot of people who thought it would succeed. How long could an endless tale of zombies really go on for, after all?

He joked in the early days that he would introduce aliens around issue #75 and make the whole story some crazy alien invasion backstory. While he was joking about that, he ended up putting some color pages in the back of the issue, which entertained most, but infuriated some readers.

21 TIME PASSES WAY TOO SLOWLY

The Walking Dead has been on for eight full seasons as of the time this article was written, but the show doesn't follow a linear progression alongside real time. Because of this, many have wondered exactly how much time has passed since the infection first struck humanity and wiped out most of civilization.

The series' official Twitter account finally cleared this up on September 11, 2018 with a post of Andrew Lincoln in a side-by-side comparison of season one and nine. The caption notes that 632 days have passed-- that's just shy of one year, nine months-- which aligns with the ages of Judith and Carl.

20 RICK WAS SUPPOSED TO LOSE HIS HAND

Fans of the comics may have been scratching their heads wondering why Rick didn't lose his hand in his first confrontation with the Governor. That's exactly what went down when the two first butted heads in the comics. It seemed a foregone conclusion Andrew Lincoln would have to wear a green glove for most of the series, but it never came to pass.

There's a simple and easy explanation for why the series decided not to go down that road: money.

It would cost a ton of cash to digitally remove his hand in each episode, not to mention the difficulty in shooting Lincoln with his hand out of frame most of the time.

19 WALKERS AND THE LIVING ARE SEGREGATED ON SET

Normally, when a bunch of people are working together like actors and crewmembers on a film production, they eat together. That's how it works in most cases, but not on the set of The Walking Dead. In order to create a distance between the living and the dead, they are forced to eat separately from one another.

It doesn't stop at simply eating apart. The craft services provided to the regular crew is usually pretty nice, but not so for the walkers. The extras are lucky if they get to eat spaghetti and a salad, which might make them want to bite the regulars a bit more when filming starts back up after lunch.

18 NORMAN REEDUS' PART WAS MADE FOR HIM

Norman Reedus' Daryl Dixon is probably the fan-favorite of the series. He even gets paid more than Andrew Lincoln, but he almost didn't make it onto the show. When Reedus first went in to audition, he did so for Merle Dixon's role, which went to Michael Rooker. Rooker had already been cast at that point, but the producers really liked Reedus.

To get him onto the show, they created an entirely new character for him.

As any fan of the comics will tell you, the Dixon boys were both created for the series, but it says a lot about an actor's skill that a series would create another brand new character just to cast them.

17 BLINKING HAS TO BE DIGITALLY REMOVED FROM WALKERS

On average, humans blink 15 - 20 times a minute. Odds are, you started blinking just reading this piece, which just goes to show how easily we do it. It's constant and involuntary, but there's one thing we know about blinking and that's that you don't do it when you cease to be alive.

When The Walking Dead tells its walkers what to do on set, they don't bother telling them not to blink. Because of this, they have to go into post-production editing and digitally remove the blinking from anyone working as a walker. It's a small change that costs a lot of money, but believe us, you would notice if they didn't do it.

16 THE ZOMBIE SOUNDS ARE ADDED IN POST

There's a common sound all walkers make that is meant to frighten the audience as well as the people on screen. It's the constant moaning and groaning they make as they lurch towards their prey.

To make the show, the walkers are told to keep their mouths shut and avoid their tendency to moan out "brains" as much as possible.

There are a lot of reasons for this, but the most obvious has to do with sound editing on a television series. Instead of putting microphones on each and every walker in the fields or holding up production for a sneeze, they simply add the sound effects in post-production.

15 Episodes cost $2 million each to make

Putting together an episode of The Walking Dead is anything but cheap. When the series launched in 2010, the average cost of an episode for season one reached $3.4 million dollars. That's a lot of money for a series on cable television, but the cost didn't remain as high for long. The huge budget led to issues between the showrunner and AMC, which ended up forcing the show to drop its cost.

These days, an episode runs AMC approximately $2.75 million, which isn't a small amount of money. It is far less than the cost for season one, which may be why the series has stuck it out as long as it has.

14 CAST SALARIES ARE A BIG PART OF THE BUDGET

It's easy to think the majority of the show's cost goes towards special effects and makeup, but then you might be forgetting the incredibly large cast the show employs. Andrew Lincoln, who plays Rick Grimes, pulls in a hefty $92,000 each episode. Add Norman Reedus' $80,000 to $124,000 (depending on the source) per episode in the early seasons. Their costs have since gone up to an estimated $550,000 for Lincoln and $650,000 for Reedus, which already consumes around 40% of the budget, and that's just two cast members.

Add the rest of the cast's salaries, which is estimated to be between $40 and $60,000, and the budget starts to make sense.

13 WALKER MAKEUP TAKES 2 HOURS

You have to imagine the makeup department over at The Walking Dead is huge. They constantly have dozens of walkers needed on set, which requires intense amounts of makeup to achieve. To get these people to look like they've been decomposing for more than a year requires an extensive amount of time in the makeup chair. In most cases, that averages out to about two hours.

Some people who are involved in the wide shots may get out of there earlier, but not everyone is so lucky.

For the folks who really suffered from burns or being underwater for a while, they could end up in the chair for hours and hours.

12 ZOMBIES MUST ATTEND ZOMBIE ACADEMY

Just because we all like to throw our arms up and groan about brains, that doesn't mean we know how to be a good walker for The Walking Dead. In order to achieve a sort of unity across all of their walkers, the people coming in to play them must attend Zombie School.

The training involves teaching a person not to do the things we just mentioned. Keep their mouths shut, don't walk around like Frankenstein's monster, and nobody wants to hear about a desire to eat brains. Furthermore, the actors are told to act like they just stumbled out of the bar at 2:00 am and try to bite and lunge at the camera.

11 WHY THEY FILM IN GEORGIA

Before 2008, nobody would have considered the state of Georgia to be a prime filming location. Things began changing when the state started offering hefty tax credits to anyone interested in filming there.

The Walking Dead was an early adopter, having come to the state less than two years after it began courting Hollywood to film there.

The credit offers a 20% incentive on productions costing $500,000 or more, plus another 10% if their peach logo pops up at the end of the film's credits. By 2016, Georgia filmed more feature films than California. Marvel Studios made the leap to Georgia in 2018 and the state continues to reap the benefits.

10 WALKERS EAT PICKLED HAM

Nobody on the set of The Walking Dead is eating humans. When a walker has to chow down on a real-life person, they get to eat a rather interesting snack instead. The meat the people are eating in this picture and many others is pickled ham.

Not everyone likes eating it, but that hardly matters when you are trying to portray a zombie.

As far as the viewer knows, the walkers are eating human, which is why the meat is perfect for filming, but you better show up on an empty stomach if you are playing a walker or you could get a stomach ache.

9 AMC'S BIG MONEYMAKER

Usually, when a production makes the move to Georgia for the tax break, they reinvest the savings back into their production. That makes sense when you consider the hundreds of thousands of dollars involved. Increasing a film's budget through tax incentives is one of the biggest reasons Georgia has been able to pull production into the state, but The Walking Dead handles things a bit differently.

Instead of reinvesting, the entirety of that money reportedly goes right back into AMC's coffers. That allegation was made by the first showrunner, Frank Darabont, who insisted the money was meant to go back into "alleviating shooting conditions" for the cast and crew.

8 THE WALKERS CONTINUE TO DECOMPOSE

As we have mentioned, the series has gone on for a little under a year in show-time, which has helped guide the special effects artists in their work with the walkers.

If you go back to season one and look at the walkers, you will notice they aren't as disgusting as they are now, in season nine.

These zombies have been traipsing around the country in the heat and rain for more than a year and a half, which means they have taken some damage. The producers continued to decompose the walkers since the first episode and will continue to do so as the series progresses.

7 THE FIRST SHOWRUNNER SUED AMC

Frank Darabont was fired from the show after the first season, which led to some serious allegations made by the filmmaker as well as quite a lot of animosity. In his complaint, he claimed AMC was pocketing the money from the tax incentive, but his issues didn't stop there.

The slashing of the budget by $650,000 per episode was a huge issue for Darabont, which led to him battling with the producers at every turn. Despite the incredible ratings from the first season, the stink raised by Darabont led to his being fired by Joel Stillerman, head of original programming at AMC.

6 DALE'S ACTOR ASKED TO BE BITTEN

When Darabont was canned from the series, there weren't a lot of actors or crewmembers who spoke out in his defense. There was one castmember who refused to keep quiet: Jeffrey Demunn, who played Dale Horvath in the first and second season.

His character was definitely going to perish, but not for a long time, according to the comics. That didn't stop his protestations when he asked to be "bitten off the show." Demunn was a longtime friend and collaborator of Darabont's, having worked with him on numerous projects over the years. He showed his pal loyalty and succumbed to the bite of a walker in protest.

5 IT'S GOOD TO LIVE IN SENOIA

One of the biggest benefits of having a series film in and around your town is the boost to the local economy. Before The Walking Dead began filming in Senoia, Georgia, the town had five shops. Times have changed and the town has increased in size thanks to the production.

More shops are open and there is even a tourism industry related to filming locations for the series, but that's not the only benefit residents receive.

Most of the town's families receive $400 a month from the production for the "inconvenience" of having them film in the town. The money also guarantees their silence should they notice a plot twist or two.

4 THE 2ND SHOWRUNNER WAS MICROMANAGED

After Frank Darabont was fired from production, he was replaced by Glen Mazzara, who had been working on the series under Darabont. He was surprised to be given the task and ended up staying on for two seasons before he left. When he did leave, he didn't talk about his reasons much, but eventually opened up about his experiences.

While he was given the title of "showrunner," he was not given much control.  After about six episodes under his helm, Mazzara says that executives he never met stormed down on him like a walker horde. They reportedly began giving him notes and directing his actions to the point he couldn't take it anymore.

3 HBO PASSED ON THE SHOW

When you think about it, The Walking Dead is one of the most violent television series ever made. It even tops shows like Game of Thrones, but despite all of that, it still landed on AMC. Interestingly, AMC was not the first choice when the show was being pitched. In what seems an obvious choice, the pitch first went to HBO, but the company decreed it was too violent!

The network indicated it might be interested if they toned down the violence.

That wasn't going to happen: you can't have a zombie series without zombies eating people. The Walking Dead ended up at AMC without those notes and the series skyrocketed to success.

2 MORE VFX THAT YOU MIGHT THINK

You might think a series all about practical zombie effects wouldn't employ much CGI, but that's nowhere near the case for The Walking Dead.  It's true that the show features some of the best makeup on television, but that's not the only VFX trickery going on in front of our eyes. We already mentioned some of the CGI done to mask blinking, but most of the CGI used on the show goes towards the sets.

It's much cheaper to digitally matte a backdrop behind Rick than it is to find a junkyard precisely like the ones the showrunner wanted.

It doesn't always look good, but usually, it works well enough to fool the audience.

1 THE SHOW DOESN'T FOLLOW THE COMICS THAT CLOSELY

There have been a number of deviations from the comics the series has made for a wide variety of reasons. They didn't cut off Rick's hand, but they generally follow the same storylines. That doesn't mean the series hasn't gone different ways in terms of casting.

In a major surprise, they eliminated off Carl, but in an even bigger surprise, some familiar faces are departing in season nine.

Andrew Lincoln's departure has been a long-time-coming, but it was recently announced that Lauren Cohan was also leaving. This is a huge change from the books, but unlike comic book characters, actors can't remain forever.

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Do you have other The Walking Dead trivia to share? Let us know in the comments!



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