HBO turned down the chance to make The Walking Dead, but the network’s reason for passing on the show suggests it wouldn’t have been as violent as Game of Thrones. At the beginning of the “Peak TV” era — also known as the Golden Age of Television — HBO was considered to be the home of prestige TV. HBO pioneered the TV antihero with The Sopranos and The Wire and blazed the trail for meta single-camera sitcoms with Curb Your Enthusiasm and The Larry Sanders Show. HBO ditched the old episodic traditions and told serialized stories that felt like really long movies.
However, as the Golden Age went on, more and more networks launched their own HBO-style shows with cinematic visuals, complex characters, and risqué subject matter. AMC was one of the first networks to throw its hat in this ring. Shows like Mad Men and Breaking Bad gave HBO’s best dramas a run for their money. AMC scored a blockbuster hit with the record-breaking ratings of The Walking Dead, but The Walking Dead could’ve been an HBO show if the network had changed its stance on gore a couple of years earlier.
HBO Was Interested In The Walking Dead (If The Violence Was Toned Down)
HBO & NBC Both Offered To Buy The Show If It Was Made Less Gory
When producer Gale Anne Hurd was first shopping The Walking Dead around TV networks, there was plenty of interest in the project, but there were some disagreements over the show’s graphic content. NBC and HBO both made offers to become the home of The Walking Dead, but they didn’t want to air the show as it was pitched to them; they wanted to make some stylistic changes. These networks only made their offers on the condition that the series tone down the violence and gore from Robert Kirkman’s comic books.