Episode 25—Zombies Before Brains: Haitian Folklore, Soul Theft, and How Hollywood Ruined Everything
Failed to add items
Add to Cart failed.
Add to Wish List failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Adding to library failed
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
-
Narrated by:
-
By:
Zombies didn’t start with brains, viruses, or apocalyptic gunfights—they started with fear, control, and the loss of autonomy. In this episode of Some Topic, two dangerously underqualified individuals descend headfirst into the real origins of zombies, tracing them from Haitian Vodou and colonial trauma to Hollywood’s flesh-eating spectacle. What begins as a horror discussion quickly becomes a philosophical, historical, and deeply unhinged exploration of what zombies actually represent.
We unpack how zombies originally symbolized spiritual enslavement rather than death itself. Rooted in Haiti under brutal French colonial rule, the zombie myth reflected the lived reality of forced labor, loss of identity, and the terror of existing without free will—even after death. Bokars, Vodou practitioners often misunderstood by outsiders, played a complex role in these stories, blurring the line between spiritual authority, community enforcement, and fear-based control.
From there, the episode pivots into the science—or alleged science—behind zombification. Neurotoxins, hallucinogens, pufferfish poison, and real documented cases raise uncomfortable questions about whether folklore and pharmacology might overlap. Can science explain everything? Or does reducing these stories to chemistry strip them of their cultural and psychological weight?
We then follow the zombie’s evolution into modern pop culture: Romero’s reinvention, Cold War paranoia, viral outbreaks, brain-eating tropes, and society’s obsession with collapse scenarios. As zombies shift from soul-based horror to pathogen-based panic, something vital gets lost—historical context, moral warning, and the original meaning of autonomy stolen rather than lives ended.
The episode closes by asking why zombies still matter today. From pandemics and technological dependence to social conformity and existential dread, zombies endure because they mirror us. They aren’t just monsters—they’re cultural artifacts shaped by trauma, fear, and imagination. Along the way, we also answer life’s most important questions: where to survive a zombie apocalypse, why Costco isn’t the move, and how high your hole should be.
---
Timestamps
00:00:00 – Intro: Two dangerously underqualified individuals enter the ruins of reason
00:03:10 – Zombies in pop culture vs. original folklore
00:06:45 – Haitian Vodou, bokars, and the fear of spiritual enslavement
00:10:40 – Are zombies about death or losing control?
00:14:30 – Slavery, autonomy, and why the original zombie was terrifying
00:18:50 – Soul loss vs. chemical zombification: which is worse?
00:22:40 – Pufferfish poison, hallucinogens, and real zombification cases
00:26:20 – Can science explain folklore—or does it miss the point?
00:29:50 – From Haiti to Hollywood: Romero and the zombie reinvention
00:33:30 – When zombies became viral, brain-eating monsters
00:36:40 – What modern zombie stories lose by ignoring folklore
00:39:10 – Why zombies still matter today
00:41:20 – Surviving a zombie apocalypse: caves, bluffs, and bad decisions
00:44:27 – Outro: This is not journalism. This is Some Topic.
---
## Hashtags
#Zombies, #ZombieOrigins, #HaitianFolklore, #Vodou, #HorrorPodcast, #ZombieHistory, #PopCultureAnalysis, #Folklore, #HorrorDiscussion, #PhilosophyPodcast, #DarkComedy, #UnderratedPodcasts, #SomeTopicPodcast