Musings about zombies used to entail more of a commitment to a niche, and that niche could be found at places like widely ignored lunch tables. What was once a cultish fascination has gradually trended into the mainstream, so much so that one of the most popular shows on television takes place in a world overrun by walking corpses. Years ago, zombie-chats were for pale introverts with little interest in locker rooms or hunting shacks, but with the success of The Walking Dead, popularity is quite shockingly starting to work in the favor of nerds.
However,
when it comes to withstanding the violence of a zombie uprising, being a nerd is a serious drawback. Unlike
Resident Evil,
I never got into rugged pursuits such as hunting and fishing. My stance
is that I can buy meat from a store or restaurant without going to
all the trouble of killing and gutting some animal. It makes sense to
me, but I have to admit, should tomorrow be fraught with mayhem,
anarchy, and zombies, I have almost NO survival skills. I'd be
screwed.
I have friends who hunt, fish, and most importantly, own guns, and they tend to lack strong feelings about The Walking Dead. (It's a limited sample size, but I think it represents a greater truth.) They usually have better things to do than game plan strategies regarding a hypothetical event that involves monsters. When I was out playing laser tag in high school, they were shooting holes in the guts of bucks. I'm at peace with that, but the moment I spot the mailman eating a data entry clerk, I know I'll have to call up a friend with a gun collection.
I'll have to beg to be a part of a group with firearms. But I will have a lot of tactical ideas to
offer that group. Far too much thought on the matter of zombies has
culminated in me realizing the best place to survive such a hellish ordeal. And I'll soon tell you what I'd do and where I'd go,
as long as you promise to keep it a secret.
Once I got a pal to break
down and agree to let me join their gun-wielding posse, I'd
grab my aluminum bat and head straight for my car, using my quick
feet to avoid trouble, only swinging when necessary. Home runs are
exciting, sure, but it's much easier to hit a single to ensure you'll
be safe. At my friend's house, I'd probably get the lowdown on hunter
safety, everything from "don't point this at me” to “blah-blah-blah.” Then I'd cock my shotgun just 'cause it looks and
sounds cool and declare to my team of survivors:
“We're going to Miller Park.”
When fleeing Fond du Lac, the home of
the Milwaukee Brewers will be my closest, most rational safe haven
from those dreaded z-words. Some reasons for occupying a stadium are
more obvious than others, so allow me to expound on Miller Park's resume
as a doomsday sanctuary. For protective purposes, the facility
contains fences at every major entrance. Its barriers
against predators are plentiful, and its ascending bleachers provide
easy access to higher ground. In emergencies, even higher ground
can be taken by snipers on catwalks as well as in Bernie's Dugout atop
that winding yellow slide.
Sanitation and living
conditions are made suitable by the ballpark's expansive locker
rooms, which include showers and lavish bathrooms. Who wouldn't want
to store their stuff in the old locker of the once-living Ryan
Braun, or bathe away all that splattered blood in a hot tub powered by a generator?! Additionally, a number of luxury boxes
and offices permit the kind of comfort most humans wouldn't dare
dream of during an onslaught of dumb, psychotic cadavers.
The food horde is astounding, and the power generator also proves its worth in the kitchens. Miller Park's stadium guide cites over two-dozen restaurants and
bars. Whether you prefer to gorge on a stockpile of hot dogs,
bratwursts, Polish and Italian Sausages,
hamburgers, nachos, pizzas, soft pretzels, grilled cheese sandwiches,
waffled and cheese fries, or that make-shifted hamburger/ grilled
cheese double-decker the snobby vendor never agrees to cook, you'll
soon be so pleasantly plump the zombies on the other side of the
gates will ogle you the way I ogle Lauren Cohan.
As a more dangerous and fun alternative, ballpark survivors are free to determine once and for all how long they could last on a diet composed strictly of beer and peanuts.
As a more dangerous and fun alternative, ballpark survivors are free to determine once and for all how long they could last on a diet composed strictly of beer and peanuts.
You can stuff your face with
those ordinarily overpriced brats and nachos for a while, but for a
renewable source of food, the outfield has to offer over three acres
of natural grass for farming. As an important aside, remember to raid
a small town's Walmart en route to Milwaukee for a plethora of
supplies, including fertilizer, seeds, and gardening tools.
Granted, as we all know, vegetables are not as tasty as burgers and cultivating crops seems kind of dull, but renewable food is a must, and on the bright
side: broccoli can be dipped in nacho cheese, and if you find
yourself in a bind, a boring old rake can be used for exciting things
like impaling rotted skulls. To further enhance farming, the towering planes of glass that
outline the stadium facilitate sunlight and therefore natural grass
even when the roof is closed.
That retractable roof will be
useful throughout inclement weather and, of course, the long winters,
and get this: the seating area is warmed by up to 30 degrees when
Miller Park transforms into its cocoon state. Meanwhile, zombie Ryan Braun and all the other staggering ghouls outside the Park will have their bad intentions impeded by snowfalls and icy
sidewalks.
Other perks to
consider when the walkers come to devour us all include security-staff weapons such as nightsticks and pepper spray, holding cells and handcuffs, scores of
baseball bats (and if there's a Henry Aaron bat in a display case
somewhere, I call dibs), sprinklers and plenty of outdoor fun, escalators to mess with the
zombies, and in the announcer's booth: a joke-gift of the entire Major League trilogy on DVD that Bob Uecker never
bothered to unwrap.
Perhaps the best thing of all
is a footnote. Imagine having to go on a rescue mission to save a
loved one, or--if your fantasy prefers, Hank the Dog--and advancing
with four friends across the parking lot in a blaze of bullets, bashing craniums in stride, only to be swarmed by the undead. Imagine their savage
teeth chomping at your throat with endless malice.
And imagine overcoming that carnage with your rescued teammate in tow, retreating safely into the stadium, where everyone would remove their protective costumes: Brat, Hot Dog, Italian, Polish, and Chorizo.
And imagine overcoming that carnage with your rescued teammate in tow, retreating safely into the stadium, where everyone would remove their protective costumes: Brat, Hot Dog, Italian, Polish, and Chorizo.
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