Halloween brings to the forefront some of our favorite fears: vampires, werewolves, ghosts and goblins. However, as experts in Northeast Ohio told News 5, zombies aren't really seasonal anymore.
CLEVELAND — Halloween brings to the forefront some of our favorite fears: vampires, werewolves, ghosts and goblins.From video games, movies, tv shows, books, graphic novels, and apps on your phone, zombies have spread everywhere.
Dr. Smith, an epidemiologist professor at Kent State, also serves as an advisory board member for the Zombie Research Society and sees how zombies have carried on in pop culture parallel to current events. Consider zombie's history: in the 1930's, they couldn't eat or run. By 1968, they shocked us and ravenously ate. In 1983, Michael Jackson's dance inspired us, setting them free. And in 2002, zombies sprinted at a speed not seen before.
This IT specialist by day infects zombie enthusiasts with his eye-catching special effects makeup, with his canvases appearing in films, events, and all over.
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