Bring Out Your Dead

Union Square was full of zombies this morning.

Not real ones, admittedly, but actors dressed in torn, bloodied clothing, with white painted faces spattered in blood.

They were part of a brilliant guerilla campaign for AMC’s new show, Walking Dead, which sent zombies out on the town in 26 cities around the country – a relatively low cost way to drive buzz for the series across the news world and the blogosphere.

In Union Square, the zombies drew quite a crowd: onlookers laughing, tweeting, shooting the scene with phone-cams.

But, weirdly enough, the Zombies and I also rode the subway together, starting up at 49th St., when a dozen of them and I both boarded the same car of a downtown R train.

The zombies stayed in character for the whole ride, staggering around, drooling, making odd noises. But in the train, they pulled a totally different reaction. By and large, the riders completely ignored them.

Problem is, staggering, drooling, and odd noises don’t stand out much on a New York subway, where mentally ill homeless are a too common part of the morning commute.

Perhaps it’s a sign of the terrible desensitization – even dehumanization – inherent in city life. But zombies and the homeless apparently fall in the same category for most New Yorkers – something we don’t want to think about, at least when trapped together awkwardly in the enclosed space of a subway car.

On a train, we don’t have the luxury of physical distance, so we create it psychologically – we avoid eye contact, make overly casual displays of looking around everywhere else. If we all collectively ignore someone, we seem to think, it almost means they don’t even exist.

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