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Thank You To All Zombies!!!

Thanks to all of you Zombies, the first annual East Lansing Zombie Day was a HUGE success! Over 170 cans of food were donated to the Greater Lansing Food Bank, Zombies roamed the streets of East Lansing, and we had a memorable and safe Zombie March throughout Downtown East Lansing! We can’t thank everyone enough for participating, and look forward to the next year’s Zombie Walk, as well as the next event to help make East Lansing a little cooler. A special Thank You goes out to Rob Perry and all of the DJ’s who set the mood for the Art Fair, and the bands who kicked off the walk! Be sure to check back to iReplay.net for our next event that will help make East Lansing a cooler place to live!

T-shirts still available

We still have Zombie Day T-shirts available for sale for those who were there, those who wanted to be there, and those who need to remind themselves to be there next year. Be sure to pop into The Replay to get a shirt and help support the Greater Lansing Food Bank, and let everyone know that you were there :)

Zombie Walk helps feed community

As the streets of East Lansing darkened Saturday night, the buzz of the 2009 East Lansing Art Festival began to die down.

But as fairgoers and art aficionados left, a new group arose to walk the streets of East Lansing: a macabre crowd of stumbling zombies.

Zombie Day East Lansing was organized by Replay Entertainment Exchange, 319 E. Grand River Ave. The event encouraged participants to don gory makeup, listen to local bands at an in-store concert and participate in the Zombie Walk, an organized march of the undead. Freaky fun aside, Zombie Day also promoted real living, breathing causes.

“We’re doing kind of like a local protest to make East Lansing cool again, because East Lansing is decidedly uncool after 10 years of stagnation,” said Ted Wilson, owner of Replay Entertainment Exchange. “We’re also trying to encourage people to donate to the Greater Lansing Food Bank.”

Zombies were asked to donate “canned rations” when they registered and sign a waiver that included such citations as, “I will not attack or bite anyone.”

The Zombie Walk, the most heavily participated in event of the evening, began soon after sunset.

The large crowd of the walking dead were told to assemble behind the parking lot in The Peanut Barrel Restaurant, 521 E. Grand River Ave. Moaning and groaning, the assemblage made its way down Grand River Avenue, turned right on Abbot Road, went up Albert Avenue where the walk concluded at the clock tower at Albert and M.A.C. avenues. After a brief rally, the zombies dispersed.

Will Dunlap, a friend of Wilson’s, who thought of the event, emphasized the goal of supporting local youth activities.

“We’re trying to get young people out to East Lansing again,” Dunlap said. “The city of East Lansing doesn’t plan anything for the college crowds and they’re actually trying to push out the influence because of some riots that happened a decade ago. They’re too scared to let anyone do anything fun.”

Dunlap said Zombie Day was just one event he and Wilson were planning.

“We’re planning other things in the summer and it’s gonna be nothing but just an exhibition of local youth and ideas and local business,” Dunlap said.

Rachel Keresztes, a Lansing Community College student studying psychology, dressed as a flesh-eater to help support the food bank.

“You know zombies don’t usually run out of food supplies, but there are needy people and they do run out,” Keresztes said.

John Murphy, a 9-year-old from Lansing, attended the event with his father and sister.

“I got all dressed up at my dad’s house, cut some holes in an old shirt and did it up with some marker and I’m a zombie,” Murphy said.

Not all who came to Zombie Day wore costumes; some attended out of pure curiosity.

“I have a buddy that lives in Portland, Ore., that did one of these back in October and he said they were a lot of fun,” said Andy Austin, a Lansing resident. “I think it’s pretty cool. I actually think a lot these people are pretty interesting folks.”

Following the walk, the event’s organizers deemed the day a success, collecting a total of 173 cans of food.

“It was fantastic,” Wilson said. “We drew a lot more people that had no idea we were there. It was a lot of fun; we had more people than we’ve ever had in the store.”

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Sean Cook
The State News

Participants in East Lansing’s first annual Zombie Walk, put on by Replay Entertainment Exchange, stand together at the corner of Albert and M.A.C. avenues, the final destination of the walk that started in the alley behind The Peanut Barrel Restaurant, 521 E. Grand River Ave. One of the purposes of the walk was to collect cans of food for the Greater Lansing Food Bank, which ended with a total of 173 cans donated.

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The 1st Annual East Lansing

Zombie Day

What was it?

Zombie Day is a gathering of like-minded people for a great cause! Part Food Drive, Part Local Business Awareness, and part call to action for the community of East Lansing to stand firm to make Downtown East Lansing cool & relevant again!

Why did we do it?

Food Drive? Rock concert? ZOMBIES??!! Why wouldn’t we do it?!?! Because 10 years ago, Downtown East Lansing was the center of an amazing Local Music Scene, and the place to be for our indie youth. We’re calling everyone to band together and support the shows, independent business, and help recreate the creative community that can make East Lansing cool again

How do I get involved in the NEXT UPCOMING SUPER SECRET AWESOME EVENT!?!?!?

  • Simple! Register for updates on Facebook –“Zombie Day East Lansing”, or register in the form below:
  • Await instructions from email and or facebook!
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  2. (valid email required)
 

The East Lansing Zombie Walk makes the City Pulse!

Thanks to Rich Tupica for writing a great story and for the City Pulse for keeping Neighborhood News in the forefront! Pick up an issue of this week’s Pulse today for posterity, and for other good articles about our city!

Culture shock

Organizers hope to wake E.L. with undead

by Rich Tupica

The two local men hosting this weekend’s “Zombie Day East Lansing” hope to attract hundreds of zombie-dressed ghouls for a march through downtown this Saturday, May 16, which is coincidentally (or not) the same weekend as the East Lansing Art Fair.

Festivities start at noon and run into the night. Organizers of the walk promise it will be “the creepiest thing you’ve ever seen in E.L.”

Zombie Day was conceived by LCC student Will Dunlap, 22, and Ted Wilson, 28, owner of Replay Entertainment Exchange, a CD, vinyl record and gaming store in downtown East Lansing.

All zombies are asked to sign in at noon at Replay, 319 E. Grand River Ave. At that time, the exact location of the zombie march (which starts at dusk) will be disclosed.

Participants are also asked to bring a can of food for the Greater Lansing Food Bank and sign a waiver promising not to bite or grab anyone during the walk.

By nightfall, Wilson said zombies will march the strip in East Lansing. Dunlap and Wilson hope the event will act as an adrenaline shot to a city they think is growing tired. “With this event, ‘zombies’ is such a good word, because it’s like we’re stuck around all of these cultural zombies,” Wilson said. “East Lansing used to be a way cooler place 10 years ago. I feel it’s our responsibility to shock this place.”

Dunlap said as far as festivals and events go, the city of East Lansing ignores the interests of the high school and college demographic. “The fact is, this is a college town full of young people and young ideas,” Dunlap said. “People here are very artsy and creative, and East Lansing has abandoned us. Of all the younger people I know, I don’t know one person excited for the Art Fair. I’m sure there are a lot of wonderful people who attend, but it‘s not for young people,” Dunlap said.

So could hundreds of blood-thirsty zombies crash the art fair? Time will tell. “Thirty-thousand people are coming out for the East Lansing Art Fair, and if we have 500 zombies walking around, what would people think?” asked Wilson with a grin.

To get participants feeling undead, Replay is also hosting some pre-walk activities. Starting at 11:30 a.m., DJ Rob Perry will spin records in front of the shop window (dressed as a zombie, of course) while participants sign in. At 5 p.m. local band Ouch! Me Arse will perform a free concert at the store, along with Texas Prison Rodeo (Ann Arbor) and Scared to Death, a one man band.

For more information visit www.ireplay.net/zombieday.




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