lol. Not at all. Though, being somewhat trained and all, you still wouldn't find me down a dark alley in the first place.
Yep. Hysterical strength. It's what Dr Banner was researching when he gave himself a nice overdose of gamma radiation (in the 70s TV series, at least). I don't doubt it can happen, though there's no way of knowing whether there was any metal fatigue or structural damage in the cases of the car doors (presumably, they crashed) and since it's a rather peculiar set of circumstances, and even then doesn't occur in every case, by nature it'd be next to impossible to recreate and measure under controlled conditions. As I say, though, I don't doubt that it happens.
Even so, such a bite would have taken longer and would have required movement. Even dogs and wolves would have to pull back, twisting their heads to tear the meat away. Nor was there any evidence that Rick was hepped up on crack or meth. On the basis of all that, I still don't buy it.
But it's like this: if you can accept it, fine. If you think it was a strong moment, OK. I didn't accept it - it yanked me out of the story, and that's never a good thing - and still can't/don't. Because it took me out of the story, it became and remains a weak moment, for me. Ultimately, it's as I said to my mate when we discussed the same thing over the weekend, you can be a big fan of the show and still point out things that, in your opinion, really didn't work. (That was because, while you're not (or at least don't seem to be), he's one of those who won't hear a single word said against anything to do with TWD and went totally fanboy when I expressed criticism.)