How Does Glenn Die In The Walking Dead And Did Fans Accept It?

2025-10-31 10:03:34 231

4 Answers

Malcolm
Malcolm
2025-11-01 16:25:02
Years after watching, the fallout from Glenn’s death still interests me because it exposed how divided fandom can be over fidelity, shock value, and representation. In the show, the execution of the scene — the staging, the camera, the pacing — was crafted to maximize emotional impact; the writers wanted viewers to feel the weight of Negan as an antagonistic force. The show adapted that moment from the source material, where the moment also exists as a turning point. But the context around the TV version included a controversial fake-out in Season 6 where Glenn seemed to die under a dumpster, then was revealed to be alive later; that trickery left some viewers feeling manipulated when the actual death came later at Negan’s hands.

Fan acceptance was not uniform. Many viewers appreciated that the show raised the stakes and committed to hard consequences, arguing that storytelling gains depth when it avoids safe zones. Others, though, felt the violence was excessive or that killing Glenn — a well-loved character and one of the more visible Asian faces on the show — had implications beyond plot mechanics. There were thoughtful critiques about narrative necessity and about how such scenes are handled on-screen. For me, the scene worked dramatically but also opened important conversations about how stories treat beloved characters and the responsibilities creators have to audiences.
Mia
Mia
2025-11-01 17:27:48
That moment hit me like a truck. In the series, Glenn dies at Negan’s hands — after a tense, drawn-out scene where Negan uses Lucille, he kills first Abraham and then Glenn, which left fans reeling. Reactions were all over the place: immediate outrage and sadness, petitions, and lengthy debates about whether the show went too far or whether it was necessary to show real consequences.

Acceptance didn’t happen overnight. Some people never forgave the show for how graphic it was; others came around and said the death reinforced the sense that the world was dangerous and unpredictable. Personally, I still get chills thinking about that scene — it changed the tone of 'The Walking Dead' for good, and we all felt the ripple effects through later seasons.
Hazel
Hazel
2025-11-01 23:27:56
The moment Negan swung Lucille is burned into my head. In the TV show 'The Walking Dead' Glenn gets killed in the Season 7 premiere scene that was staged to show just how terrifying Negan is — the Saviors have Rick's group lined up, and after a lot of tension Negan brutalizes two people with his barbed-wire-wrapped bat, Lucille. On screen Abraham is hit first and then Negan turns to Glenn; the sequence is gruesome and drawn out to maximize shock. It directly mirrors a pivotal, heart-stopping moment from the comics, where Glenn also dies at Negan's hands, so the show was keeping close to that source moment.

Fans had wildly mixed reactions. A lot of people were stunned and angry — there were online petitions, furious social media threads, and real debate about whether this level of brutality was necessary for television. Others accepted it as part of the story’s commitment to consequences and stakes: killing a beloved main character made it clear the world had real danger. There was also a lot of discussion about representation, since Glenn had been one of the few prominent Asian characters, and whether his death carried other cultural weight.

Personally, I felt torn: the scene was narratively powerful and earned a massive emotional response, but it was hard to watch and some of the backlash felt understandable. It changed how I watched the show — nothing felt safe anymore, and that adrenaline was both thrilling and exhausting to follow.
Oliver
Oliver
2025-11-02 01:28:47
I binged a chunk of 'The Walking Dead' with friends the night that scene aired, and the room went silent when it happened. The way Glenn dies on TV is deliberately brutal — Negan swings Lucille repeatedly after choosing victims from the group, and Glenn ends up being the victim after Abraham. The writing and acting sell the horror; Steven Yeun’s performance makes the moment devastating. There was a huge online uproar right after: angry tweets, thinkpieces, and petitions demanding the scene be different or criticizing the writers for cruelty.

Acceptance came in waves. Some fans immediately rejected it as gratuitous violence and felt betrayed by a character they loved; others defended the show for sticking to the comic and for showing that no one is safe. I noticed that time softened a lot of criticism — people processed the grief, discussed the story implications, and many eventually admitted the death gave the series heavier stakes. For me, it was a gut-punch that proved the series wasn’t afraid to make hard moves.
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