In this awful James Patterson middle grade book from 2012 (about a kid named Jamie Grimm who is the only survivor of his family’s car crash that put him in a wheelchair, and he’s trying to become a stand-up comic (spoiler, it’s not funny), I noticed zombies drawn into various illustrations, either on their own or mixed in with non-zombie people.
In the equally gross sequel from 2013, more zombies and predictive programming, and notice the last crowd not only has an astronaut, “dinosaur” and zombie, but also a gray alien.
Just guessing, I believe not everyone will become the kind of zombie in The Walking Dead, instead the kind that can somewhat participate in society but wants to eat brains, has a tendency to bite, and has lost his or her prefrontal cortex.
Just guessing, I believe not everyone will become the kind of zombie in The Walking Dead, instead the kind that can somewhat participate in society but wants to eat brains, has a tendency to bite, and has lost his or her prefrontal cortex.
Another statue of the resurrection pose (see earlier posts on the rebirth/resurrection pose on this channel, including the Buddy Holly section) — arguably the sickest one yet.
Resurrection pose: This pose is the symbol of rebirth associated with reptilians changing bodies after the person (just a human sleeve) fake dies, and also with the apocalypse/antichrist.