England no longer existed. He’d got that — somehow he’d got it. He tried again. America, he thought, has gone. He couldn’t grasp it. He decided to start smaller again. New York has gone. No reaction. He’d never seriously believed it existed anyway. The dollar, he thought, had sunk for ever. Slight tremor there. Every Bogart movie has been wiped, he said to himself, and that gave him a nasty knock. McDonalds, he thought. There is no longer any such thing as a McDonald’s hamburger. Arthur passed out. When he came round a second later he found he was sobbing for his mother.Comical? Yes. But also a recognition that horror and loss can be as subjective in their own way as art. Shortly after starting this comic, I posted a blog detailing some previous concepts of zombie ranching I had run across, like the game Zombie Rancher, and I mentioned how their idea of people eating the zombies as a delicacy made me look elsewhere for wrangling motivation. While there’s a fantastic dose of irony in the idea of people consuming zombies, out of respect for those who came before I chose from the beginning to move in a different direction, subverting the assumption that the “greenies” were being gathered for food. Admittedly I may have been too subtle about it, since at least one review of the comic proclaimed they were being gathered for food, and I remember on our first convention outing that Dawn was repeatedly stating to passerby “No meat like aged meat!” until I had to ‘splain to her that might give people the wrong idea (writers are such a buzzkill for artists). I’ve already said as much in my World FAQ a long time ago, but with this week’s comic, here it is at last out in the open. Zombies, whether they were once people, cattle, or prairie dogs, taste like utter crap… and the more I thought about that second part, the more I realized I’d created a rancher’s worst nightmare. Hell, it even kind of gives me the willies. Dawn and I both like our steak, and the idea that the last one I had might suddenly end up being the last one I ever had? Oh, sure, it wouldn’t kill me to go without, and for you vegetarians out there you’d give a collective shrug, at best, but that’s when we get back to the subjective horror thing, and you think about the impact on people whose livelihood for as long as they can remember has revolved around cattle. Not just them, but generations before them. That’s pretty damn personal. That’s the kind of thing that might have you sobbing for your mother. So yeah, civilization as we knew it went to hell, people died, people didn’t stay dead, and humanity pulled through only after some very, very bad years. But the crashing realization of a Texas without beef? Submitted for your approval, that for one Chuck W. Zane, that was horror, indeed.

Latest Comics
-
#126. 121 – A Looming Decision
16 May 09, 2012
-
#125. 120 – One With A Bullet
18 May 02, 2012
-
#124. 119 – Gotta Laugh Or Cry
15 Apr 25, 2012
-
#123. 118 – Brewing And Stewing
35 Apr 18, 2012
-
#122. 117 – Crazy Like A Phoenicopterus
46 Apr 11, 2012
-
#121. 116 – The Lawn Ranger
41 Mar 28, 2012
-
#120. 115 – But Beer Itself
42 Mar 21, 2012
-
#119. 114 – Smoke, Noise, And Hollerin’
33 Mar 14, 2012
-
#118. 113 – A Moment With Suzie
12 Mar 07, 2012
-
#117. 112 – A Fence Situation
16 Feb 29, 2012
-
#116. 111 – Pushing For Decisions
14 Feb 22, 2012
-
#115. 110 – Staring Is Caring
17 Feb 15, 2012
-
#114. 109 – I’ll Make You Famous
13 Feb 08, 2012
-
#113. 108 – Second Prize Is First Loser
15 Feb 01, 2012
-
#112. 107 – Show Don’t Tell
14 Jan 25, 2012
-
#111. 106 – …There’s Ire
18 Jan 18, 2012
-
#110. 105 – Where There’s Smoke…
18 Jan 11, 2012
-
#109. 104 – Do You See What I See?
14 Dec 28, 2011
-
#108. 103 – Reply Hazy, Try Again
17 Dec 21, 2011
-
#107. 102 – Chaos Theory
21 Dec 14, 2011
One thought on “544 – Hanker For A Hunker”
Dr. Norman (not a real doctor)
That feels like my life with my eyes these days …
“These goggles don’t got no magnification on ’em”