**Twelve months ago today I wrote a blog based partly around the concept of zombies and why they resonate with the living as proper scary monsters. Rereading that blog today I had a strong urge to do something utterly trivial with the same concept...
I give you the closest I have got to being a real geeky nerd for a long time mixed with the miserable git many of you know and love...
The Walking Dead started as a cult comic
book and eventually became a massive TV hit, spawning a companion series and
propelling Robert Kirkman, the ‘creator’ of the series into Spielbergian realms
of fame and opportunity.
As any
die-hard fan of the comic or TV show will tell you, it’s never really been
about the zombies (a word that is NEVER used in the series), it’s been about the survivors. TWD is a bleak dystopian
drama that shows how low humans will go to survive and has become more of an
analogy of how some people believe humanity would perceive a post-apocalyptic world.
The problem
is, while I have been a fan of the show since it began, it is hard work and
during season 6, which started brilliantly and ended like some many other TV
series now, as more of an introduction to what will happen in the next series,
I started to think about the three or so years that Rick Grimes and his glum
posse of survivors have been lurching around the locality of southern USA and
while I’m no expert, I began to pick holes in the entire concept – not of a
zombie apocalypse, but of what sensible
humans would do in the event of one.
The genius of
TWD’s set-up is there has never been any explanation about the plague,
nor has there been anyone ‘official’ in it – no government, no radio
broadcasts, nothing official.
Therefore as a viewer we have no idea what the percentage of survivors is and
while the world might be readjusting to it in some cities, in and around Atlanta,
Georgia and in Virginia it’s the Wild West with flesh eating Indians and
psychotic cowboys.
I mean, if
you had half a brain you’d sit down and look at your situation and make some
plans, which would be reassessed once you realise that it’s you versus
everything. The problem is, while TWD has never been clear about the actual
amount of time that has passed since Rick woke up in a hospital room (which itself
was suggested to be about two weeks after everything went to Romero-land in a
hand basket) and the point at the end of season 6 where one of his team faces
certain death at the end of a militarised baseball bat, we have to presume that
a minimum of three years has elapsed. Filming schedules means we rarely see a
Georgia winter, but we have seen autumn leaves a number of times, so let’s
presume Rick, Michonne, Carol, Darryl and all the others have been on the road
for three years...
1. Food
TWD is set in
and around some of the hottest and most humid areas of the USA. Research tells that almost everything that is organic in origin will begin to rot within a
relatively small period of time. During the hotter months the humidity is so
high that bread can go mouldy inside 36 hours and, more importantly, dry goods,
even well packaged, succumb to the moisture in the air considerably quicker
than in more temperate or drier regions. That means when we see a cast member
munching a cracker or a biscuit they have found in a glove compartment or
ignored in a deserted store, it should be soft, mouldy and inedible.
I have a friend who has lived in that area all his life, I asked him about food longevity and he confirmed things go off quickly. “Packets of chocolate chip cookies have gone stale within two days of opening them, hell, even Hostess Twinkies go off.”
I have a friend who has lived in that area all his life, I asked him about food longevity and he confirmed things go off quickly. “Packets of chocolate chip cookies have gone stale within two days of opening them, hell, even Hostess Twinkies go off.”
2. Water
It would be
very stupid to drink any water, especially if the series is now three years
since the Walker Apocalypse. Stream and river water would highly likely be
contaminated, either by a number of pollutants or simply dead bodies. Bottled
water, especially in areas where it will be heated, cooled, heated and cooled
repeatedly runs the risk of whoever drinking it getting Legionnaire’s Disease.
Most health bodies do not recommend drinking bottled water that has had the
seal broken or is more than three years passed its sell by date. Water can go
off just as easily as milk and therefore the safest things to drink would be
alcoholic. Unless you have a way of filtering rain water or want to boil everything.
3. Vegetation/wildlife
Apparently in
Georgia and surrounding states nothing grows or overgrows. Admittedly the
constraints of budget and where they have to film dictate certain factual
inaccuracies, but botanists, scientists and expert gardeners will tell you that
inside one year, left unchecked, most vegetation will begin to encroach and
take over anything man-made. After three years everywhere should resemble
unkempt fields and meadows, roads would be covered, anywhere where vegetation
exists in abundance would be overgrown.
Wildlife is portrayed as being eaten by man and walker. There are no deer anywhere; no domestic cats, in fact except for a couple of horses, some wild boar and some dogs, TWD world is almost devoid of any kind of life – no fish, no amphibians, no birds... Some of these are explainable, but generally animals outnumber people by a ridiculous amount and the USA has bears, coyotes, wolves, wildcats, mountain lions... Do I need to continue this list? Sheep can go feral if left away from humans for long enough... Why don't animals succumb to the same virus as humans? How come we haven't got flocks of zombified buffalo or armadillos?
Wildlife is portrayed as being eaten by man and walker. There are no deer anywhere; no domestic cats, in fact except for a couple of horses, some wild boar and some dogs, TWD world is almost devoid of any kind of life – no fish, no amphibians, no birds... Some of these are explainable, but generally animals outnumber people by a ridiculous amount and the USA has bears, coyotes, wolves, wildcats, mountain lions... Do I need to continue this list? Sheep can go feral if left away from humans for long enough... Why don't animals succumb to the same virus as humans? How come we haven't got flocks of zombified buffalo or armadillos?
4. Decay
Georgia isn’t
a dry state like California is (where FTWD is based) and the point about
humidity made regarding food is also prevalent with the general infrastructure
and the Walkers. A book a friend has recently read by an undertaker points out
that the human body decomposes almost 50% faster in hot and humid environments;
it’s one of the reasons that funerals are fast and done quickly in hot
countries.
Now, even if the walkers rate of decomposition was much slower by virtue of the virus, within three years the original first year walkers would have rotted from constantly getting wet from rain (as was witnessed early on in the series when they found a dead guy in a well), being frozen and defrosted constantly every winter, any of the elements from thunderstorms to high winds – dead humans would be as liable to erosion as everything else. Bones would become brittle and shatter; teeth would fall out, fingers drop off, clothes would rot – the smell alone would be horrendous, which leads us nicely to...
Now, even if the walkers rate of decomposition was much slower by virtue of the virus, within three years the original first year walkers would have rotted from constantly getting wet from rain (as was witnessed early on in the series when they found a dead guy in a well), being frozen and defrosted constantly every winter, any of the elements from thunderstorms to high winds – dead humans would be as liable to erosion as everything else. Bones would become brittle and shatter; teeth would fall out, fingers drop off, clothes would rot – the smell alone would be horrendous, which leads us nicely to...
5.
Climate/Environment – these states down south also have winters (as hinted at a
couple of times) and sometimes temperatures can drop well below freezing for
long periods and snow and ice storms are frequent throughout the winter months.
The average lowest temperature during the winter is a reasonably nippy -4c, which
would freeze the walkers – they generate no heat because they are dead and are
effectively the same ambient temperature as any non-living object. This means
they would snap or break if they attempt to move while frozen; could shatter if
they fall and generally would be considerably easier to deal with if they were
frozen to the road or a tree. Eventually the environment would become a far
more dangerous adversary to the Walkers than any band of psycho humans.You have to
ask yourself why the survivors haven’t broken into a library, looked up
self-sufficiency; tried to find where the nuclear bunkers are, the survivalists,
the people who installed generators, solar panels, independent water supplies –
such as a well or an unpolluted mountain stream? Why haven’t they moved into
the mountains where not only is the water safer, but the distribution of
walking dead will be considerably less and much easier to deal with. Plus they
have natural defences – high up, good vantage point against not just the dead
but the nutters who still live. Why haven’t they given themselves an advantage?
Considering the people ‘in charge’ are in charge, no one has come up with a
plan to avoid the walkers; no common sense is being applied when you consider
it is very clear that the real enemy in the series is now each other rather
than the slow and usually easily dispatched dead.
Obviously, a
TV series about a bunch of self-sufficient mountain dwellers, safe in their
beds with good solid defences against the rest of the world would probably make
very dull TV. Just look at spin-off series Fear
and its lifeless characters, dull plots and a post-apocalyptic world full
of wankers – the creators of all of this must think the rational people will be
the first to succumb to the bite of a zombie (probably due to our general
disbelief) and the only people left will be the idiots who are too stupid to
end up being bitten by anything. The underlying theme in both TWD series is the
stupidity of people, it’s not really about surviving because it’s a TV series
not real life.
So ask
yourself this – if there was a zombie apocalypse tomorrow, would you make the
same decisions as Rick and his mates or would you look for somewhere safe,
well-stocked and presumably a place where, in this world, even Bear Grylls
would forget about if a zombie was trying to bite his ear off?