The Zombie Rights Campaign Blog

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We hope you'll find this blog an educational, entertaining, and inspiring source of information, whether you're recently undead, a long-time member of the differently animated, or a still-living friend of your fallen, yet risen again, brethren. Everyone with an interest in zombie rights is welcome!

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More Details on ‘Dead Island’

Posted By on February 20, 2011

We talked about the technically impressive, morally degenerate trailer for upcoming Anti-Zombie game ‘Dead Island’ here previously on the ZRC blog as the massive Zombie/Worker Solidarity thing started to crank into high gear.

Now there are some details available on the game behind the trailer:

Deep Silver announced today that it will publish Dead Island, the upcoming zombie slasher by developer Techland.

Dead Island combines first-person action with melee combat, character development and weapons customisation. The game’s story is inspired by classic zombie movies, with a campaign that can be played with up to four players in co-op mode.

Dead Island will be released worldwide for the PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, and Windows PC later this year.

From the description and pictures, it looks like ‘Dead Island’ is an ambitious attempt to make an Anti-Zombie game for all Anti-Zombie gamers. It has the graphical polish of a ‘Resident Evil’, the co-operative hatemongering of a ‘Left 4 Dead’ and the improvised weaponry system of a ‘Dead Rising’, only without the silly road cones (presumably).

Clearly, this is a game to watch from a Zombie Rights perspective. It could be the first title in a new and boldly Living Supremacist gaming dynasty.

The Associated Press is Lying to You About Madison Protests

Posted By on February 19, 2011

[Hey guys, this is Jenny the Artistic Director, Technical Director, and Whatever Title I've Been Awarded This Week, with an edit as of 2/22/2011 -- several of the quotes below have mysteriously disappeared from the AP article online. This rewrite is not admitted to on the page, leading us to question even further the AP's basic journalistic integrity. Our post continues below as originally written.]

This is a really blatantly biased article from the AP, whose reporters (Todd Richmond and Jason Smathers) go out of their way to lie to you about what’s happening here in Madison.

Take a look at some of this:

After nearly a week of political chaos in Madison, during which tens of thousands of pro-labor protesters turned the Capitol into a campsite that had started to smell like a locker room, supporters of Gov. Scott Walker came out in force Saturday.

Madison police estimated that 60,000 or more people were outside the Capitol on Saturday, with up to 8,000 more inside. The normally an immaculate building had become a mess of mud-coated floors that reeked from days of protesters standing shoulder-to-shoulder.

I didn’t get inside the Capitol building today, so I can’t attest to whether it’s muddy; however, I’d note that in Wisconsin when winter’s thawing out, *everywhere* gets a little muddy. In fact, we use lots of sand here in Madison to make the streets driveable because we also reduce salt use to protect our lakes, which suffer from the runoff when the ice melts. So we’re muddy by choice, and by sound environmental policy. Which you might know, if you did basic research.

Oh, and nice grammar there guys, btw. ‘The normally an immaculate building’? You got paid for that? Wow. The AP’s standards are really slipping.

I was *all* around the Square today, however, and I can tell you for a fact that it is not a reeking ‘campsite’. Things are, considering the enormous crowds, very neat and tidy. It’s far messier during Freakfest or Art Fair on the Square, which anyone who’s lived in or covered Madison competently would know, but that’s not the game here from these two AP clowns. They’re here to paint the overwhelming majority of protesters as dirty, unwashed, uncivilized spoiled children, and if that means making up phantom odors, so be it.

Again, in fact, if they had been paying any attention, they probably would have noticed the volunteers amongst the protesters picking up trash and tidying things up. Then again, that wouldn’t have been on message, would it? They also fail to mention the large number of out of state protesters on the Union side; I personally saw contingents from Nebraska and Ohio today, while the art director spotted some Iowans.

Then you have their absolutely pathetic attempts to pass off the pro-Walker protesters (what few there were) as being remotely comparable to the pro-Union side, in numbers, intensity or legitimacy:

MADISON, Wis. – Sometimes they cursed each other, sometimes they shook hands, sometimes they walked away from each other in disgust.

None of it — not the ear-splitting chants, the pounding drums or the back-and-forth debate between 70,000 protesters — changed the minds of Wisconsin lawmakers dug into a stalemate over Republican efforts to scrap union rights for almost all public workers.

After nearly a week of political chaos in Madison, during which tens of thousands of pro-labor protesters turned the Capitol into a campsite that had started to smell like a locker room, supporters of Gov. Scott Walker came out in force Saturday.

They gathered on the muddy east lawn of the Capitol and were soon surrounded by a much larger group of union supporters who countered their chants of “Pass the bill! Pass the bill!” with chants of “Kill the bill! Kill the bill!”

Note how they conflate the groups in the 70k headcount, and how they talk about Walker’s supporters coming out ‘in force’, even if they mention that the pro-Union forces were a much larger group.

It’s also funny how when they’re talking about overall numbers they use actual, you know, *numbers*, and when they want to pump up the Walker contingent, they use airy-fairy language, and talk about ‘throngs’.

Here, I’ll show you how those two sides stacked up.

These are the Pro-Union people, who filled all four sides of the square much of the day:
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And here are the Walker supporters, who managed, with effort, to cover one half of one walkway up to the Capitol*:
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By my admittedly unscientific estimate, I’d say the Walker supporters were outnumbered at least 25-1 today. Minimum.

Not that the AP wants you to know that, either.

*They also had a few smatterings near Brocach on the East side of the square. It’s a bit of a landmark, but since these AP ‘reporters’ obviously aren’t familiar with the area, here’s how to find it on Google Maps.

Twits.

Update: I dropped an ‘f’ in ‘funny’ and thus invented a new word, which I have now returned to the ether from whence it came.

Update 2: I also dropped a ‘d’ in ‘sound’. I may need to check out this keyboard, which is unfortunate as it’s a laptop.

Update 3: It’s been pointed out to me that the whole ‘campsite’ thing might refer not to people actually camping out downtown but to people inside the building. In which case they referred to the Capitol interior as a campsite that smells like a locker room AND it’s muddy.

A campsite… that smells.. like a locker room… that’s muddy. That is some fantastic writing. All we need now is a reference to gym socks and I’d win this round of Cliche Bingo.

Update 4: AP moved their article, probably because it had the wrong date in the URL, implying it was published in the future when it went up yesterday. So I fixed the URL.

They’re a well-oiled machine, aren’t they?

Fantastic Video of the Madison Protests

Posted By on February 19, 2011

Man I wish I could get video like this, but we all have our own skills I suppose. Mine is working for Zombies.

Wisconsin Budget Repair Bill Protest from Matt Wisniewski on Vimeo.

Rachel Maddow Explains Why This Matters

Posted By on February 19, 2011

Rachel Maddow does a great job outlining the proud history of Wisconsin in standing up for the little guy (and soon, we hope, for the Undead guys as well) here:

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Another Great Day in Democracy

Posted By on February 19, 2011

Back from the protests again; managed to hurt my left ankle but it was so worth it, had a blast, talked Zombie Rights to a few people, handed out some literature. My new sign was a hit too.

Today’s photos are up on flickr here.

The turnout was absolutely unbelievable.

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That’ll tide the blog over for a bit; it’s time to start video uploads to Youtube.

It should go without saying, but all these pictures are creative commons licensed (noncommercial, with attribution) so feel free to pass them around. Just let people know where you got them. Heck, that’s what Flickr’s for, passing photos around. If you need the full sizes they’re all up there.

Now to take some aspirin for my foot and start sorting these mp4s.

New Sign

Posted By on February 19, 2011

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(Yeah I know, the two ands aren’t great grammar, but the alternative was blotting out one, and that’d be ugly)

I also made some subtle improvements to the design, using some scotch tape on the open edge to make it resist flapping open and absorbing moisture if it’s another wet day.

One of the benefits of being a professional activist is that you always have signmaking material on hand.

Would You Like Some Literature?

Posted By on February 19, 2011

Hey, kids, would you like to learn more about the differences between Gov. Scott Walker and Zombies?

Would you like to get that information in a handy trifold pamphlet format?

Well then are YOU in luck! Here it is.

Enjoy, from your friends at The Zombie Rights Campaign.

ZRC Video from the Capitol Protests on Thursday, Plans for Tomorrow, Update

Posted By on February 18, 2011

First of all, the good news: the vote on Walker’s new ‘budget’ that strips public employees of their hard-fought union rights has been delayed until at least Tuesday in the Assembly; no word on when it will go to the Senate, or when the Democratic Senators, who fled the state for our own good (literally), will return or take up the matter.

Walker, who is contending for the title of World’s Biggest Jerk this week, has been getting snippy and petulant over the whole ‘democracy’ thing.

So for now, things are looking up.

Tomorrow’s continuation of the rally downtown is expected to generate a counter-rally by Walker supporters, aka the Tea Party, which should be hilarious beyond words so I definitely plan to make an appearance and get video and pictures.

Who wants to bet they bring racist signs?

Also, the movement to recall Walker and his anti-union friends in the State Senate is proceeding apace. Here are details on who is eligible for a recall now, when Walker is eligible (next January sadly), and here’s a pledge to recall Walker if he succeeds in this little plot of his that you can sign.

In the meantime, here are four videos I shot the other day that I got uploaded to Youtube. Enjoy!

‘Dead Island’ Trailer: Graphic, Disturbing, Virulently Anti-Zombie Work Pushes the Boundaries of Computer Animation

Posted By on February 18, 2011

One of the big stories in Anti-Zombie Media that I had to pass on writing up for the ZRC due to the Solidarity we were out showing the union workers this week was the release of an astonishing, breathtakingly well animated trailer for an upcoming Anti-Zombie videogame that is making the rounds. The game is called ‘Dead Island’ and will apparently concern a, you guessed it, Zombie Apocalypse scenario, this time set on a Carribean island of some sort:

Dead Island is the brain child of Polish developer Techland, but you have to admit that the trailer looks very pretty (in a CGI kind of way.) Apparently the world is a mess (I know, shocking with zombies involved) and you crash land on an island thats swarming with them. Past that? Not a whole lot is known about this really hot little shooter that should be gracing the PC and every major console this year. I’m sure that’ll change over the next few months though.

The buzz around this trailer is incredible:

I’m going to take a break from my usual financial reporting here to give you a look at one of the best video game trailers I’ve ever seen. It’s for Dead Island, an upcoming zombie-horror Xbox 360 title where players try to survive on an island full of zombies. Par for the course for a video game concept, but it’s this amazing trailer that’s made the internet catch fire with buzz.

It’s played mostly in slo-motion reverse, interspersed with forward moving real-time scenes. Eventually the two halves meet, and by the time they do, you’ve realized the tragic circumstances surrounding the demise of a family on vacation on the wrong island. For anyone wondering, the incredible music in the trailer is by Ólafur Arnalds, though you can’t find the track by itself online as it was made just for the game I believe.

From the perspective of someone who’s watched an awful lot of trailers in his life, I actually find the overall *trailer* to be slow and more than a little pretentious. Slow-motion is just so easily abused it’s become a visual cliche; look no further than Zombieland for a very in-depth demonstration of this phenomenon. But at least in real life, slow-motion provides us with insight that isn’t normally there, and often requires a great deal of technical work, expensive cameras, etc.

When you do slow-motion with CG, those factors disappear to a large degree; you’re just rendering the same models to produce a different output, you’re not revealing anything new about the world. I’m sure there are unique technical challenges involved, but still, fundamentally, it’s the same idea.

But from a technical perspective, some of the *quality* of the animation is stunning. The realism involved in some of the shots makes me think extremely accurate motion-capture must have been involved, ala Avatar; regardless, I’ve never seen CG in a game mimic real life so accurately (and Avatar after all, shooting real actors in real time, isn’t animation as much as the world’s most sophisticated rotoscope).

It’s for this reason that the video is so disturbing from a ZRC perspective. The trailer implies that this game has serious muscle and creative and technical talent behind it; the popularity of the video on Youtube is also help feed an online audience rabid for more Anti-Zombie games, stoking enthusiasm for this project. No doubt it will be something the ZRC has to deal with extensively when it is released.

Let’s also address the issue of transplanting Romero style imitation Zombies back into a tropical locale, as if to deny and undercut the rich Caribbean Voodoo Zombie tradition. Interestingly enough, by focusing on what is presumably a well-to-do white tourist family, this trailer, and perhaps the larger game, may be trying to tap into the same race/class based fearmongering that helped make Voodoo Zombies a popular early Hollywood movie ‘monster’. Is ‘Dead Island’ the ‘King of the Zombies’ for the 21st Century? If a German spy ring shows up (maybe it’d be an Al Qaeda spy ring these days) then it’ll be a little more obvious.

Spreading fear and discord (and perhaps race/class tensions) with cutting edge technology and videogame violence? Sigh. It’s like someone flicked the ZRC Signal, and we don’t even *have* a ZRC Signal; nevertheless, your friendly neighborhood Zombie Rights Activists are on the case.

The video is embedded below. I should warn our audience that it is extremely graphic and disturbing.

Update: Slight correction to some hideously poor phrasing in one paragraph.

‘The Living Dead Boy and the Zombie Hunters’ a Symbol of Everything Wrong With Anti-Zombie America

Posted By on February 18, 2011

This story from BuyZombie got under my skin perhaps more than it should:

Rhiannon Frater has to be happy these days. First off her novel The First Days is being reissued with a hot new cover and, probably slightly more exciting for her, one of her novels is going to be up on the big screen! Apparently The Living Dead Boy and the Zombie Hunters has been optioned for film treatment and the script is currently being written for it. Congratulations Rhiannon!

The summary of the book is absolutely chilling:

Josh Rondell is twelve years old and known as the “living dead boy” due to his rampant love of all things zombie. As the head of the Zombie Hunters Club, he’s obsessed with preparing for the zombocalypse. Though no one around him really believes that zombies will one day rise to devour the living, Josh is convinced it just might happen. When zombies do shamble into his schoolyard, Josh finds himself the leader of the dwindling band of zombie hunters, and he is charged with protecting them all. Josh’s baby brother, his closest friends, and the love of his young life try to survive as the undead take over their town. Trapped in his treehouse and surrounded by the dead, will Josh be able to save them all?

This, ladies and gentlemen, sums up everything we’re fighting against here at the ZRC when we campaign for better treatment of Zombies in the media, and it shows the stakes of the fight as well. Here we have vile hatred of the Differently Animated being peddled to *children*, to corrupt and prejudice the minds of the next generation, and not only is this deemed socially acceptable, but it’s being optioned to be made into a feature film.

As if the world needed more Anti-Zombie movies fixated on the fantasy notion of a ‘Zombie Apocalypse’.

Instead of helping education children about tolerance and understanding and how to relate to their Undead neighbors and fellow citizens in what was a democracy the last time I checked (though Governor Walker is working on that), here we have a book that attempts to do the exact opposite, to spread division, fear, and the fervent belief that cooperation and coexistence with the Differently Animated is impossible.

We’re shocked. Shocked and appalled. Is a country where our young and impressionable minds are indoctrinated with hate speech masquerading as fiction really the country you want for your family? Is an America where children form gangs of ‘hunters’ to seek out and destroy their fellow Americans really a country you want to live in?

If not, then we strongly suggest you avoid this book, and spread the word about its dangers, to others immediately. But is the author of this dangerous and subversive tome satisfied with corrupting the minds of kids? No! This is actually her second book in a one woman crusade against our clients, the Differently Animated. The first one is getting a snazzy new cover and a reissue to help it find new minds in which to plant its seeds of misery and woe:

Two very different women flee into the Texas Hill Country on the first day of the zombie rising. Together they struggle to rescue loved ones, find other survivors, and avoid the hungry undead.

Yes, they flee their fellow Americans, and avoid them when they hunger and go unfed.

Not to get all religious on you, but since Texas is in the heart of the Bible Belt, it might be appropriate to bring up a particular passage from Matthew:

31 “When the Son of Man comes in his glory, and all the angels with him, he will sit on his glorious throne. 32 All the nations will be gathered before him, and he will separate the people one from another as a shepherd separates the sheep from the goats. 33 He will put the sheep on his right and the goats on his left.

34 “Then the King will say to those on his right, ‘Come, you who are blessed by my Father; take your inheritance, the kingdom prepared for you since the creation of the world. 35 For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you invited me in, 36 I needed clothes and you clothed me, I was sick and you looked after me, I was in prison and you came to visit me.’

37 “Then the righteous will answer him, ‘Lord, when did we see you hungry and feed you, or thirsty and give you something to drink? 38 When did we see you a stranger and invite you in, or needing clothes and clothe you? 39 When did we see you sick or in prison and go to visit you?’

40 “The King will reply, ‘Truly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me.’

And yet, when it’s the Zombies who are hungry in Texas, compassion is not to be found. I think we can all learn a lesson from this: if you see a hungry Zombie, don’t avoid them, don’t turn away. Help them out. It’s the right thing to do, and for you Christians out there, it’s also what Jesus would do.

Update: Just follow this Amazon link to see how many people are praising this book for specifically going after kids! Shocking. Just shocking.