Tuesday, September 1, 2015

2. 1 X 02. Zombie Lives Matter

2. Zombie Lives Matter 
1 X 02. "So Close Yet So Far."
Quinn, Stephen, and Bruce discuss episode 2. We agree that the excitement level has gone up considerably since the first episode.  If zombies are a metaphor for drugs (and sex) in episode 1, what do they represent now?  We conclude that zombies this week are most closely associated with Black Lives Matter.



We disagree over how the movement is treated. Quinn likes the way the show treated the movement; Bruce thinks they are portrayed as impediments to the police trying to handle the situation.  We agree that the movement and the numerous videos of police violence against unarmed citizens has undermined the status of the police in minority communities. We also discuss the way Madison and Travis ditch Alicia's black boyfriend Matt when they see that he's been bitten. Madison is later ready to take in the white student Tobias, who has some knowledge of the outbreak. Bruce has trouble getting past the incident, especially since the characters don't fully understand the zombie process yet. He spent last week in New Orleans during the 10th anniversary of Katrina. It's hard forget the images of black people left behind when most white people had been safely evacuated. Given the high death rate of black male characters--3 in two episodes, it looks like Fear the Walking Dead is following the example of The Walking Dead in its treatment of black male characters. We also discuss the timeline of the show and how many days have passed so far. (We think two.)
Zombie Lives Matter
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2 comments:

  1. whats the point of this article ? 2 itty bitty white girls , at least 2 white men have also died , jackasses ... also in an Apocalypse everybody dies ... these were written and filmed before that so called "movement" even started...

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  2. Get your chronology straight.

    They started filming episode 2 of Fear the Walking Dead on May 11, 2015
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fear_the_Walking_Dead#Filming

    Black Lives Matter had been going for some time before that. "The movement began as the hashtag, #BlackLivesMatter on Twitter, after George Zimmerman's 2013 acquittal for the shooting death of Trayvon Martin, and gained momentum after the shooting of Michael Brown, the shooting of John Crawford III, and the death of Eric Garner, all in 2014."
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Lives_Matter

    This article tracks my own argument in the podcast.
    http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/08/30/fear-the-walking-dead-tackles-police-brutality-black-lives-matter-not-so-much.html

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