You'll Have to Schedule Your Zombie Invasion With the Park Service
According to The Washington Post, the National Park Service has not cleared Washington, D.C. for a zombie invasion this week:
The National Park Service says it has no permit filed for zombie activity at the Lincoln Memorial Tuesday morning by AMC, a posse of zombies, or anyone else.
If the zombies are planning a "demonstration," they would need a permit—if the group of un-dead numbers 26 or more. A group of 25 or fewer zombies would not need a permit for a "demonstration," Terry Adams, public affairs officer of the National Park Service explains to WaPo TeamTV's Mall bureau chief David Montgomery.
If the Zombies visit is a "special event" instead of a "demonstration," they would need a permit, no matter how small the group, Adam adds.
A "demonstration" is First Amendment-protected activity —political speech, issue advocacy, and so forth. A march to end war, for example, Montgomery says.
Backstory: TV network AMC announced recently that a few cities would see rush-hour visits from "zombies" this week as a publicity stunt designed to promote The Walking Dead, the network's upcoming series about life after the zombiepocalypse. Now, without an event permit, it's not clear if the stunt will actually happen.
I suppose it's not all that surprising: We already know the park service doesn't like dancing at monuments without a permit. Guess they don't like brain-hungry lurching, either.
Read Reason's Tim Cavanaugh on the politics of zombie cinema.
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There is something gauche about using alt-text to pimp out your comic Mr. "Suderman".
I would think that a magazine billing itself as "Reason" would hold its writers to a higher standard.
Drink!
Thanks for that, I was looking for an excuse.
Anytime.
"I would think..."
That was your first mistake.
I thought he was ragging on Daly/Colbert when I read the headline. . .oh well.
Hahaha I thought the same thing. Boy would that have been priceless.
There's a very small possibility that this rally results in something completely different than expected, just as the Glenn Beck rally had nothing to do with politics, like most people expected (despite what he was saying while promoting it the whole time). But I'm pretty sure this will just turn into a vote-Democrat support rally. Colbert may actually be more interesting of the two.
As someone who bears a moderate resemblance to Simon Pegg, I can only be thankful I haven't had to think of a Halloween costume design for 7 years.
Brain-eating zombies would have no business in DC anyway.
They'd starve.
I don't know, they contribute nothing, continually consume, don't make rational arguments, are unable to plan or reason beyond the most basic level and react to whatever instinctively to whatever happened last without any evident memory of what happened before. I say they'll fit right in.
that explains everything!!!
Well, except the DC zombies (i.e., politicians) look neat and clean.
Oh noes, zombies have discovered dry cleaning!!!
Are there people idiots? We had one a couple of days ago
They can easily bring the number to fifty without a permit. One demonstration of twenty-five slow zombies just happens to coincide with another demonstration of fast zombies.
I don't see why they couldn't bring it to 1000. I mean, what constitutes a 'gathering' of a group?
The US Supreme Court should wrestle with this. Do the unborn have the same rights as the undead? If a mother has the right of privacy to terminate a pregnancy, do the children of zombies have the same right to privacy in terminating their parents?
Pretty good post. I just stumbled upon your blog and wanted to say that I have really enjoyed reading your blog posts.
The right of the people to speak, using their unamplified voice in a public square of the government's choosing, shall not be infringed.
Zombies don't speak, so it's their right to peaceably assemble that might be in question. The government's primary claim on restricting assembly on public property is that the organizers need Andy Gumps, 1 for every 300 assembly participants.
But Zombies don't piss or poop so this regulation is discriminatory.
I think the question of zombie rights is pretty murky. Particularly in relation to corporeal speech.
Corporeal speech is now running wild after Citizen's United
Of course there's a zombie rally scheduled. Haven't you people seen my audience?
Whoo-hoo! Yeah! Whoooooo!
They should get 24 zombies together to protest the need for a permit.
Have 1000's come, but keep them in groups of 24. That would be fun to see how it would play out.
The Walking Dead is overated.
I hope Californian make the right choice and help the state create a population full of zombies: http://lawblog.legalmatch.com/.....f-prop-19/
This is another coup for AMC's PR and marketing people -- who have not only gotten a big bite of media attention for the show but put together one of the most beautiful press kits I have seen: a full-color hardback book, a 6X9 Drew Struzan promo card, and a limited edition graphite reproduction of the hero's revolver and more, in a fancy gift box. It's nice to see skillful flackery rewarded.
A group of 25 or fewer...would not need a permit for a "demonstration...A "demonstration" is First Amendment-protected activity ?political speech, issue advocacy, and so forth.
So 25 people have free speech but 26 don't?
Maybe they can get Joe Biden to say a few words.
Whatever happened with that dancing arrest nonsense from a couple years ago, anyway? I remember some libertarian lawyer buddies got involved, but I don't remember seeing a conclusion to the story.
This is obviously voter disenfranchisement. Or at least it would be here in Chicago. Why do you think they put election day so close to Halloween? Durr.
Since it's in D.C., I might as well plug Daniel Drezner's "Night of the Living Wonks: Toward an international relations theory of zombies".
Am I the only one bothered by the spelling of zombipocalypse? Clearly, the preferred portmanteau is zombocalypse.
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