15 years of ‘The Walking Dead’: How Louisiana became TV’s zombie apocalypse heartland

Watch Brockton transform into Zombie-filled Manhattan for TV filming
Zombies and celebs took over Brockton while filming ‘Walking Dead: Dead City’ as a throng of fans looked on.
- “The Walking Dead” franchise, which premiered in October 2010, remains culturally significant, especially in the Deep South.
- While initially set in Georgia, the show’s universe expanded to include Louisiana as a key location.
- Louisiana’s landscape and history of natural disasters make it a fitting backdrop for the show’s survival themes.
This Halloween marks the 15‑year anniversary of the television premiere of “The Walking Dead,” a franchise that transformed the TV landscapes of horror and drama and remains culturally resonant in the Deep South, particularly here in Louisiana.
When “The Walking Dead” first aired in October 2010, it introduced viewers to a world where human survival mattered as much as the undead threat.
Why Louisiana Holds a Special Place in That Universe
Though set in Georgia in the comics and early seasons, the show’s broader universe includes Louisiana as a major in‑story location. According to the “The Walking Dead” Wiki entry for Louisiana, the state is described as “overrun” in the TV universe and has real‑world counterpart status.
- In the TV universe, a flashback episode titled “Blood in the Streets” is set in Baton Rouge, where characters navigate the early days of the outbreak.
- In season seven, episode 2 of Fear the Walking Dead it’s revealed on a map that Shreveport and Alexandria are two of the locations hit by the Doomsday Cults warheads.
- The wiki lists New Orleans as a “notable location” in both the comic and TV universes.
- The physical and atmospheric landscape of Louisiana—its swamps, levees, flood zones, and ghost‑town feel post‑disaster—makes it a fitting backdrop for the show’s themes of survival, community and decay.
For Louisiana residents and fans alike, the state’s fictional zombie‑apocalypse status gives a unique twist to local culture:
- The setting taps into the region’s history of natural disaster (hurricanes, flood risks), making the show’s fictional survival scenarios feel eerily plausible locally.
- Louisiana’s vernacular of resilience and rebuilding resonates with the show’s core idea: communities rising after collapse.
- Fan events, conventions or local watch‑parties in Baton Rouge and New Orleans can lean into this connection—“our own backyard turned apocalypse backdrop” creates a rich motif.
Fifteen years after the show’s debut, “The Walking Dead” stands as more than just a zombie drama—it’s a cultural touchstone. Louisiana’s history and landscape make it a natural setting for the show’s apocalypse. Fifteen years on, fans still celebrate the state’s role in bringing walkers and survivors to life.




