Endless Thread - Zombies And Preppers
Episode Date: April 2, 2020We speak with Max Brooks about the viral PSA he made with his dad, Mel Brooks, and how his zombie apocalypse novel, World War Z, has become eerily relevant during the coronavirus pandemic. Then, we ch...at with FrugalChef13, a "prepper," to get her advice about how we can each better prepare for crisis situations.
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Ben.
Amory.
We're nearing three weeks of working remotely and socially distancing.
And there's a very important matter we need to discuss.
Is it my shower regimen?
I think ignorance is bliss when it comes to your shower regimen or lack thereof.
No, I'm talking about a video.
I want you to listen and tell me if you know what this is.
Okay.
Imagine there's no heaven.
It's easy if you try.
No hell below us above us only sky.
That's enough.
Make it stop.
Do you know what that is?
Yeah, I know what it is.
It's the latest example of an idea whose spirit I agree with and whose execution makes me want to barf a little bit.
Yeah, they didn't even agree on a key.
That's what makes me upset.
But, no, if any listeners out there missed it, Galgado, aka Wonder Woman,
and a bunch of other celebrities like Natalie Portman and Mark Ruffalo all sang along to the wonderful John Lennon song, Imagine,
hoping that it would be this uplifting viral moment.
for everyone during this trying time.
And instead, it went viral for other reasons.
Yeah, like reminding everyone that celebrities are definitely not going to be the people who are going to save us.
Yeah, I think it was a Rediter named Jogi Berra, who summed it up perfectly in a comment that said simply, problem solved.
Brutal and appropriate.
But there's also a flip side to this.
Some public figures have used their platforms in ways that are actually,
useful, like this guy.
Hi, I'm Max Brooks. I'm 47 years old.
This is my dad, Mel Brooks.
Hey, dad. He's 93.
If I get the coronavirus, I'll probably be okay.
But if I give it to him, he could give it to Carl Reiner, who could give it to Dick Van Dyke.
And before I know it, I've wiped out a whole generation of comedic legends.
You're hearing author Max Brooks there standing outside his dad's house.
His dad, of course, is comedy icon Mel Brooks, and Mel is standing right next to Max, but he's on the other side of a sliding door, while his son is delivering a timely PSA about the importance of social distancing.
Do your part. Don't be a spreader. Right, Dad? I'm going. I'm going. Love you.
Max's PSA went viral for all of the right reasons. This is how you use your fame to inform people.
We caught up with Max the other day and asked him about the video.
I wanted to make it very personal.
Getting coronavirus is not just infecting yourself.
You have to think of others.
You have to think of society at large.
And if we all thought that way, we would be very careful about going out in public and becoming a spreader, which is why I have the hashtag, don't be a spreader.
Was your dad a willing participant?
And has he done a good job of staying home?
Yeah.
He was willing. He was in it. I call him. I say, dad, I'm coming on tomorrow. We're going to shoot this.
He's like, yeah, yeah, sure. When we shot that video, I didn't go in the house. I talked to him through glass.
I haven't hugged him since this started. And so the Brooks family, including my father, we are all doing our best to adapt to this new normal.
Max is more prepared than most to adapt to this new normal, because in 2006, he wrote a zombie apocalypse novel called World War Z.
Some people might wonder why we're talking to the author of a zombie book about coronavirus.
Can you help us answer this question?
Unfortunately, my novel World War Z is hitting way too close to what's happening now.
The zombies in my book are fake.
Everything else is real.
I based the global response to the zombie plague by looking at the history of the global response
to actual plagues.
I was not looking forward.
I was looking back.
I was basing it on the first outbreak of SARS,
so much so that World War II was banned in China
because I call out the Chinese government
for suppressing the truth at the early stages of an outbreak.
I then postulate that certain countries with a siege mentality,
such as Israel and South Korea,
handle the crisis relatively better
than, say, complacent democracies,
like the United States, which respond too little too late and let the outbreak flare out of control.
So judge for yourself how close that comes to the real pandemic we're facing now.
Max's fictional zombie novel made waves long before the coronavirus pandemic.
It was turned into a blockbuster movie starring Brad Pitt.
But also, the former president of the U.S. Naval War College added World War Z to his school's reading list.
and Max is now senior fellow at the Modern War Institute at West Point
and the Atlantic Council's Brent Scowcroft Center for Strategy and Security.
I mean, if you go back and YouTube my first speech at the Naval War College,
I'm joking about the fact that they must have screwed up the paperwork.
And so therefore, there must be a lieutenant commander, Max Brooks,
wandering around Comic-Con.
What I was told and what I've been told,
consistently told by admirals and generals and those working in national security and public safety
is that when you take out the fictional threat from my books, I present a very clear understanding of how
the real world responds to any threats, which is what I try to do, which is why in every single
book I've ever written, there's no wonder weapon. There's no, there's no magical inventive cure.
the solution to the crisis in every single book I've ever written is rooted in reality.
Can you talk more specifically about how World War Z parallels the U.S. response in particular?
I can tell you that in my fictional zombie book, the United States is caught unprepared because we didn't pay attention to preparedness.
We were very deeply in denial, and we were also greedy.
We didn't want to spend the money.
Our leadership was also cowardly because it was an election year, and nobody wanted to risk
political points.
We tried to respond to this problem with a minimum approach and business as usual, and
the contagion spread out of control.
And that is exactly what we are experiencing now.
Not enough Americans are practicing social distancing.
We do not have a social distancing national policy.
We are attacking this virus state by state while the virus is attacking the entire country.
What steps do you think should be taken right now to slow down the pandemic?
Well, I can tell you that while I'm not the expert, I sure know where to find them.
And in the course of my career as a writer, I've tried to make sure that my books are based in fact.
And so I have been lucky enough to assemble a network of experts on military and national security and disaster preparedness.
I think, number one, you need a national lockdown to stop the spread.
This is extremely contagious.
And we are just starting to see the very first surge of patients in New York.
And if we don't stop or at least slow the spread as quickly as possible, that surge is going to roll over this country like a tsunami.
What was your reaction when you learned that China had banned World War Z?
Well, from a businessman, I was obviously disappointed.
That's a potential, that's a billion readers right there.
But as a writer, I can't very well allow China to censor a book that I wrote because my book talks about China.
censorship. They're just so far. I think anyone's hypocrisy will go. So I'm sorry. And I wrote back to them. I
understand. I wrote back to the Chinese publishing company. I understand the bind you're in. But I just can't do
that. And this is my book and this is how I wrote it. Are there any lessons from World War Z that
might be relevant for people right now? Of course. You have to do your part, particularly in a
democracy, in specifically a republic, which is what we are. You know, what terrifies me right now
about this disease, and this is something that cannot be stressed enough by everyone with a microphone,
is the deaths are coming, and they're not just coming from COVID-19. They're coming from the fact
that coronavirus patients will crowd the hospitals, and they will keep out other people who will be
dying of other things. You know, people are still going to die of cancer. They're still going
to need their insulin. They're still going to have car crashes. So you're going to have people
trying to get to the hospital for a variety of other threats to their lives, and they won't be
able to get in because the coronavirus patients are clogging the hospitals. And you're going to see
a lot more secondary deaths if we don't practice social distancing and flatten the curve and give
our hospitals, give our government, give our industry, give our science time to ramp up the tools
and the inventions that are going to keep us safe.
You wrote a great piece for the Washington Post now about a month ago.
What kind of tipped you off that at the end of February,
before people were working from home,
before there was this kind of alarmist feeling,
what tipped you off that this was as big of a deal as it has now become?
So back in January, when I was laid up with the flu,
after getting a flu shot,
I was still flat on my back and I got an email from the former president of the United States Naval War College, a vice admiral who read World Wars a years ago and brought me in to speak.
He sent me an email about what was happening in Wuhan and said, you really need to see this.
And so that was when I started my studies of what was happening in China.
You ended your Washington Post piece with this statement that is kind of, kind of haunts me.
at this moment, which is, you know, you said that you were prevented from publishing your book in China
because the government didn't want to confront its own flaws, even when heavily fictionalized.
And then you say, but if we admit ours now and we work together to correct them,
we can ensure that World War Z remains firmly in the realm of fiction.
Do you think that we are on the road to doing that, to admitting flaws and working to correct them?
Well, I think it's too early to tell at this point, but I can tell you one of the ridiculously awesome privileges of being born in the United States of America is that we have a system that will allow us to self-correct.
Many people on planet Earth right now are held hostage by their governments.
Maybe their leaders will make the right choices. Maybe they'll make the wrong choices. But it's not up to these people. It is up to us.
So we all need to educate ourselves about how our systems work.
We all need to remember that we are the government.
This is a government by of and for the people.
And we all need to do our part to make sure we identify these flaws that got us into this mess
and correct them so this doesn't happen again.
Max has continued to write about these kinds of themes,
and he is a new novel coming out called Devolution.
Can you talk a little bit about,
the new book and what it's about and how relevant it might be to the conversation we're having?
Well, yeah, I write about adaptation in the face of crisis. And it could be zombies. It could be
Minecraft. It could be World War I. And in the new book, it's Bigfoot. So yes, this is a
bigfoot story. But it's about people caught unprepared for disaster. And we're talking about a very high-end,
very high-tech eco-community in the Cascade Mountains,
who are trying to live the dream
with all the comforts of the modern world,
drone deliveries, telecommuting, smart homes,
but living in the wilderness.
And so they thought they could have it all
until Mount Rainier erupts,
and then they're cut off and forgotten.
And the eruption is also driven
a very large, very hungry pack of Sasquatch creatures
right towards this pen of sheep.
And so my very highly educated, very highly paid community of David Sedaris fans have to fight for their life.
It's funny that you're bringing this up because, you know, there's been a lot of coverage.
I don't know if you, you know, there was a New Yorker article now a couple years ago.
And it's sort of this story has popped up again about the kind of prepper community among the ultra wealthy.
And I wonder what you think about that.
I have no patience for them. I have no patience for any ultra-preppers in any way, because that's going too far.
What you have to have is just regular, good old-fashioned common sense preparation.
What I have warned against, what I've always warned against is an over-reliance on an interconnected system without any sense of resilience.
When I see the panic buying in Los Angeles among my fellow Angelinos, I'm shocked that this is happening because all my fellow Angelina,
should have had an earthquake kit to begin with. It's literally that simple. Right now, when people
are panicked buying on Amazon, no one is thinking about the fact that Amazon still has a network of
truck drivers and of delivery people who could get infected themselves. What happens when they get
infected? If you don't just sensibly prepare for anything going wrong, then you're going to be in a
lot of trouble. And that doesn't mean, like I said, this does not mean loading up an assault rifle
and going into the wilderness and living on rat meat and moths.
This simply means preparing your everyday life for a moment
when you might have to hunker down for just a little while.
Max, thank you so much for your time
and for speaking so passionately and thoughtfully about all of this stuff.
We really appreciate it.
Thanks. I hope it was what you needed.
That was Max Brooks, author of World War Z, and the upcoming novel, DeVolution.
Recently did an AMA or Ask Me Anything on Reddit to talk more about the coronavirus and about why his zombie novel was banned in China.
There's a link to that on our website, wbUR.org slash endless thread.
After the break, we'll hear from someone who is definitely ready to hunker down for a little while,
and she has some practical advice for all of us.
More in a minute.
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All right.
So we just heard Max Brooks talk about preparing
for the unexpected in your everyday life.
And if you're like me, this pandemic has made you feel a little unprepared, or at least
underprepared.
So it's not surprising that one of the groups on Reddit that has seen growth during the
Corona crisis is the community for so-called preppers.
A prepper is someone who believes that something bad, maybe a natural disaster or whatever,
is going to happen in the foreseeable future and makes sure.
choices to prepare for that and to protect themselves from the fallout.
This is Angie, aka Frugal Chef 13 on Reddit, and she is a prepper, although she says prepping can look
very different from prepper to prepper. Some preppers who probably fall more on the survivalist
back to the land type side are like buying homesteads and getting off the grid and trying to cook all
of their own food, and that happens, but it's not super common. A lot of preppers are just
regular everyday people who have jobs and cars and live in the suburbs, but want to be better
insulated from disasters. Angie is neither in the burbs nor off the grid. She's somewhere in the
middle, running a bed and breakfast in Vermont. But she says she grew up in a family of preppers.
But we didn't call it that. We called it, you know,
shopping for the future or using coupons to build your pantry.
It was never like a special thing that was set aside.
It was just being prepared.
Angie remembers being caught unprepared when she got the flu in college.
It was her first time getting sick away from home.
And I didn't have money for medicine or soup or any of the things that I needed.
And that was sort of a reminder to me that I couldn't just depend on my parents to do that.
So I got better and I filled up a box with all of the things that I would need for next time I got sick.
And I put a $20 bill in it and I taped it shut.
And that was my first prep for myself.
Angie's come a long way since then.
She calls herself a deep pantry prepper.
She's well stocked up on non-perishable goods.
I also have a chest freezer, which I stock up with meat when it's on sale, frozen veggies.
I will admit there are about four.
five frozen pizzas in there as well. I make casseroles in bulk, you know, two batches instead of
one and freeze those so they're ready for the future. The other thing I do is try to keep a really
good first aid kit and a good supply of any of the medications that I or anyone else in my household
uses normally. But Angie says prepping is way more than just accumulating stuff. It's about planning
And on that front, she has a lot of tips.
Things like start a vegetable garden.
So I'm growing zucchini, patty pan squash.
I'm going to plant basil and mint.
And I'll probably plant some carrots and beets as well.
Another tip, get all of your essential documents together.
Birth certificate, insurance info, doctor contacts, so you know where they are and have them at the ready.
Also, make an evacuation plan for your household.
And evacuation plans don't have to be crazy complicated.
Our evacuation plan when I was a kid was if the house is on fire, run out to the backyard and meet at the swing set.
That's useful to do, even if this current situation went away tomorrow.
Another one, learn basic safety skills, like how to use a fire extinguisher, so your house doesn't burn down.
And also how to turn off the gas or electricity in your house.
You had some that are like less straightforward, like build mental and emotional resistance. How do you do that? How do you stock up on that?
So I don't think that there's a universal way people can build up emotional or mental resilience. Part of it is just living through stuff and continuing to go forward. You can build resilience by getting therapy and learning the tool.
to cope with that stuff
by leaning on your friends
and having a good support system.
You can build resilience
by finding hobbies
and ways to distract yourself
from worrying about things
that are going on.
Sort of putting together
that toolbox of mental
and emotional coping mechanisms
is really important, I think,
not just for prepping,
but to deal with the world in general.
You also made a post recently
intended for people who are feeling unprepared or underprepared and kind of maybe anxious about that in this current crisis. And your suggestion was just start by making a list. So the question is a list of what?
Anytime something comes up that you say, oh man, I really wish I had a can of pumpkin in the pantry or, oh, I wish I had learned how to turn off the water at the main before this happened. Make a list. Right. It's a list. Right. It's a
down and then you can either learn it later, add it to your preps in the future, or it'll also
teach you useful skills about your strengths and your weaknesses. Did you make a list like recently
when the coronavirus stuff started happening? I did, and I have a list. Right now my list is
more potatoes because I let my potato stock get too low and now I'm annoyed that I can't make
Shepard's Pie.
And I know it sounds like a small thing to complain about now.
No, I'm with you. I'm with you. I need more potatoes too.
Yeah.
I had mashed potatoes last night and it was like the greatest thing that it ever happened over the last week.
All right, Ben. All right. You don't need to brag about your potatoes.
Just make us all feel bad and sad. It's okay.
I'm putting it on the list.
You're someone who is generally more prepared than the average person.
but has this particular crisis taught you anything about ways to be more prepared?
I think it's taught me that it's really hard for me to deal with a crisis that's open-ended like this.
It just feels like it could go on forever, and I'm having an emotionally hard time dealing with that.
How do you plan when you don't know how long you have to stretch your supplies for?
I hit this point about a week ago where like I'm just not worried anymore.
I've either burnt out my worry chip or I've just hit the point where I'm just sort of doing the best I can and we'll just take what comes next.
Is there anything else that you want people to know?
Gosh, there's a lot you can do right now to be better prepared.
You can learn things. You can cook things.
You can grow things. You can plan things. You can do all of that stuff now at home with the free time a lot of us are faced with. And that can make you more prepared in the future. And it can also help you cope right now. And that's important.
Well, thank you for educating us on how to be better prepared.
Yeah. And I hope your bed and breakfast stuff, you know, obviously that I'm guessing that that's very much on pause, but I hope it returns soon.
Yeah, me too. You know, we.
it's just going to happen
and I'm going to ride it out.
You're all out of worry chips.
I'm all out of worry chips.
I'm just chilling.
I'm taking a staycation.
I'm going to read a book.
I got some macaroni
that came in the mail a couple weeks ago
that I'm going to pull out.
I know.
I stuck them in the freezer
for like a day that I needed them
and now they're my treats.
So it's pretty good.
Ben, have you started your own list
of things you need and skills you need to acquire?
Well, I have been practicing archery and the golf course next to my house.
Really?
Yeah, and there's a lot of rabbits that live on my property.
No. I'm sorry. I'm sorry to tell you that as a vegan, but that's probably the most hardcore thing that I've been doing.
I know. But I've also been learning how to make many, many meals with beans.
So I'll start there before I have to kill an innocent animal with my own bare hands.
Yeah. I took that potato's comment to Hart from Angie.
I definitely
Yeah, next time I'm definitely stocking up on potatoes
And in the meantime I have to learn all of the things
That she talked about
I have nothing set aside
I don't know how to do most of the things in my home
So I'm a work in progress
Well, just let me know if you need me to deliver
A Bloody Rabbit carcass to your front door
I'm not that desperate
We still want to hear from you though
Tell us what's on your list and how you're doing
wherever you are. You can call and leave a voicemail at 857-244-0338, or you can record a voice memo with your phone and email it to us at endless thread at WBUR.org.
One more thing for your list. If you like Endless Thread, which we hope you do, leave us a review on Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen. It'll help other people find the show just in time for our upcoming new special series, which is launching later this month.
And finally, it takes a team effort to bring you these special episodes about the pandemic.
Thank you to producer Josh Swartz, engineer and sound designer Paul Vikis, executive producer Iris Adler,
and the rest of the WBUR podcast team for kicking ass in spite of less than ideal circumstances.
Thanks, guys.
Stay healthy, everyone.
Yeah, practice your archery.
