Travis strides through followed by Daniel who tells them firmly to go back into the front, Travis is worried it won't be safe there. Travis is agitated and wants to know: Is there a back way out? Is there roof access so that they can see? Daniel wants him to slow down and to stay in the front, in the shop, and not go in the back which looks to be their home. He doesn't look happy, but he does as his wife asks and lets them in and locks up, as he does so some young men kick at the shutters - the street is chaotic now. They ask to go in until it's over, Daniel wants to refuse and tries to but his wife, Griselda Salazar his wife, tells him, in Spanish, to let them in and shut the door. He's already pulling the metal shutters down when the Manawas arrive at his door. " So Close, Yet So Far": Daniel Salazar is just finishing up with a customer, seeing him out of the door and closing up his shop because of the disturbances." Pilot": Daniel does not appear in this episode.He reverts to the man he once was, a man who will do anything to ensure the survival of his family, he also starts to become tormented by memories past events and of the people he killed during the Salvadoran Civil War. The Fall brings out facets to Daniel's character that have been long hidden and brought to the surface memories of events he would much rather forget. He took great pride in his business but remained a very private man, people who knew him for years actually knew very little about him. He moved there because of troubles in his original country and did his best to leave all of that behind him. A humble man who keeps to himself and shelters his family.īefore The Fall Daniel lived quietly in the US, owning and running a barbershop, until the apocalypse. They have raised one daughter in America. After the war, he moved to Los Angeles with his wife where he owns and operates a barber shop. Daniel Salazar was born in El Salvador and actively participated in the Civil War during the 1980's.
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