The Zombie Research Society recently spoke with director Matt Beurois regarding his new film The Barn, a wonderful thriller that finds itself at the crossroads ...
Read More »SELF-PROPELLED INFECTIOUS ZOMBIE BLOOD
It’s generally assumed that a zombie infection is transmitted via blood as the result of a bite. But delivering anything into damaged tissue, even medicine, ...
Read More »NEW STUDY OFFERS CURE FOR ZOMBIE AGGRESSION
Our ongoing search for answers regarding the relentlessly aggressive nature of the undead have focused on everything from primal psychology to postmortem addiction. But a ...
Read More »VIRUSES ARE NOW WORKING TOGETHER TO KILL US
People often ask us whether a “zombie virus” actually exists. Of course, it doesn’t… at least not yet. Scientists would have to combine a number ...
Read More »TRANSHUMANISM AND THE LIVING DEAD
The Zombie Research Society defines the modern zombie in strictly biological terms; a relentlessly aggressive human corpse reanimated by a biological infection. However, we often ...
Read More »BOOK REVIEW: DESTROY ALL ZOMBIES
We received a copy of Destroy All Zombies quite a while ago, and couldn’t wait to share it with our members, friends, and followers! Not ...
Read More »ROMERO BUST DEBUTS AT MONROEVILLE MALL
The Monroeville Mall in Pennsylvania is known to film fans all around the world thanks to George A. Romero’s zombie cult classic Dawn of the ...
Read More »RADIO WASTELAND: ZOMBIE RESEARCH AND SURVIVAL
Zombie Research Society expert and Advisory Board member Cameron Carlson recently sat down with Radio Wasteland to discuss everything from prepping for the inevitable zombie ...
Read More »MOTHER’S DAY WITH ZOMBIE A-GO-GO
It’s purely a coincidence that Mother’s Day is celebrated during Zombie Awareness Month. But if anyone will worry about you during the inevitable zombie apocalypse, ...
Read More »ZOMBIE RACCOONS PLAGUE THE MIDWEST
Police in Youngstown, Ohio have received more than a dozen calls last March regarding a plague of zombie raccoons! The nocturnal animals were often seen ...
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