T-Dog is then left to watch over Merle while he is still unsuccessfully trying to radio the others. Rick intervenes, hitting Merle with the butt of the rifle and handcuffing him to a pipe. Merle beats T-Dog and presses a handgun to his forehead. Merle scoffs at him by saying he'd never take orders from a "n*gger," which sets off a fight between the two. He chastises him for wasting bullets and attracting more walkers. On the roof, T-Dog and the group find Merle firing at walkers with a rifle. "Oh god, is that Dixon?" Andrea says in disbelief, as they all leave to investigate. T-Dog tries to make radio contact with the camp, but fails to get a signal, wondering if they might have better luck on higher ground. Jacqui suggests that it was just a hallucination. He tries to explain he was trying to flag down a helicopter. T-Dog and the group questions Rick about what he was doing roaming around the streets of Atlanta aimlessly. "You just rang the dinner bell," Andrea seethes, as the group's attention turns to a crowd of walkers outside that are slamming themselves against the outer set of glass-pane doors, furiously trying to gain entry. Morales informs Rick that his gunshots have attracted numerous hordes of walkers. "We're dead because of you," Andrea tells him, furious at his recklessness. Inside the department store, Andrea points a gun in Rick's face as he and Glenn enter. Rick and Glenn rush into the building, followed by them. In Atlanta, Glenn radios his group, prompting T-Dog and Morales, wearing riot gear and brandishing baseball bats, to emerge from the building and beat down the walkers. Sometime later, they encountered and joined a campsite of survivors outside the outskirts of Atlanta. Later in life, he became an employee of his local church, Holy Cross Lutheran Church, and drove their van to transport members to sermons.ĭuring the onset of the outbreak, T-Dog used a van from his church to help evacuate elderly residents to refugee centers before finding and rescuing Glenn. Nothing is known about Theodore's life prior to or as the outbreak began, except that he resided in or near Atlanta, Georgia, and he played football in college, where his fellow teammates gave him the nickname T-Dog. He is very religious, as demonstrated in his conversation with Carol Peletier that his inevitable death is part of God's plan, who always watches him, and also when he told Glenn Rhee he was saving old people in the early stages of the apocalypse and bringing them to his church. He gets along with most people, except Merle Dixon. He is also somewhat clumsy, but is ready to protect his group from threats or dangers whenever possible. T-Dog sometimes feels insecure and/or guilty when something bad happens within the group. He rarely speaks, but will add his input when serious matters arise.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |