patient zero part 2 release date


And then when I looked into it, I realized I didn't know the first thing about it. Wow, and did -- at the moment that Derek Smith did it did an asteroid fall on his head or something? NATHAN WOLFE: One of the tiniest monkeys of all of the old world monkeys. My civil rights. They've looked in monkeys. He figured it was, but he thought he should at least ask. Everyone laughs, thinking it's a prank or a publicity stunt. And so what it ends up spitting out is a hybrid. ], Enhancing public understanding of science and technology. Finally, I think they're about to leave when one of them spots ... DAVID ROSNER: ... her skirt coming outside of a door. JAD: That can not only survive in the chimp, but can thrive. So how many years will go by? JAD: Wow, and he was only, like, 26 or something, right? ROBERT: This is Radiolab. Did a whole test on the house and the water and everything. Thanks. There are a couple little villages there, one of which has a market where you can buy monkey meat and crocodile meat. JON MOOALLEM: That is amazing. She was part of that CDC study. SEAN: Not yet. Well, as a human disease, as far as we know it dates to 1976. She kicks him out, swears at him. Where her cottage would be if it was still standing, but it's not standing anymore. ROBERT: This is Lutha Burke Davis, Glenn's sister. Oh, so you really are looking at the potential beginning of something, but who knows what? What do we know about chimp zero, right? What movie can we make about the beginning of the AIDS epidemic? Let's focus instead on invention. These are almost certainly what we call primary transmission events. created a weapon that can induce earthquakes and cause dormant volcanoes to erupt. Yes, and he said explicitly to Wiley Brown, "This is something I'm gonna be remembered for. That moment is the spillover. We found a whole range of new retro viruses that were moving over into these hunters. JAD: This is Radiolab. Do you feel like you robbed him? Radiolab is funded in part by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. I'm a contributing writer at the New York Times Magazine. I mean, they basically are entering a completely alien habitat. She was known willfully and deliberately to have taken desperate chances with human life. SEAN: Very nice. Patient Zero Bonus Campaign includes 4 new missions. So I called National High-Five Day, because I wanted to talk to Lamont Sleets. So what did you do when you got this press release? They're pinging it us and pinging it us. ], More information about Sloan at www.sloan.org. SEAN: Playing the role of Mary is Columbia Public Health Professor David Rosner. Is this a teeny, teeny, teeny one? DAVID QUAMMEN: So the scientists have a term for that, too. Hello, Five. The group must find a way to survive before the flesh eating virus consumes them all. And that means that when Ebola gets into us, it has no great future. Weston Ochse, Larry Correia, Mira Grant, Scott Sigler, David Farland, Christopher Golden, Tim Lebbon, Steve Alten, Jon McGoran, Dana Fredsti, Jennifer Campbell-Hicks, Javier Grillo-Marxuach, Bryan Thomas Schmidt, GP Charles, Keith DeCandido, James A. Moore, Aaron Rosenberg, Nicholas Steven, James Ray Tuck, Jeremy Robinson, and Maberry himself! SEAN: The disease is always in her, but sometimes she excretes it and sometimes she doesn't. Yeah, because it's like, they're out in their own society, you know? And chimp zero eats that monkey and gets a spot-nosed guenon version of the AIDS virus, or the SIV virus inside it. Yeah. SEAN: So George Soper's like, "I've got to find this woman." And when they tested it ... DAVID QUAMMEN: It had HIV. What happens is that the virus in the chimpanzee blood found itself in an environment that was unexpected, that was alien to it, but was not too much different from the biochemical environment it had been in, chimpanzee blood. It's good because he's a Baltimore detective that has just been secretly recruited by the government to lead a new taskforce created to deal with the problems that Homeland Security can't handle. But he makes her promise. You can hypothesize. ROBERT: And the more diversity, the longer the virus has been around. But why then? Bases are loaded. It had a, I guess a sleeping area and a sitting area. Yes. JAD: He described to us watching three male chimps converge on a tree full of colobus monkeys, which are these very small black and white monkeys. The toy plane is the exact replica of the one flown by the war hero. CARL ZIMMER: And they started finding a lot. I am wondering, like, you know, if we've -- if, since we've started noticing in 1976 a burst here, a burst there, why -- why now this? That through sheer random luck, works. They say the truth will set you free…not this time. It could function. And sometimes she was negative and sometimes she was positive. DAVID ROSNER: What are you accusing me of being sick? JAD: Greg says they hadn't heard of the Glenn Burke story when they pulled this prank, and now that they know it, they really feel bad. Two baseball players facing each other. Because really, when do you need a high-five? At least he's the first known case at this point. N. owhere is safe. There's a chance that the genes for the next virus will come out just a little bit different. It's a weird Island. Dodgers versus the Phillies. Well, it was one room. To get to that point would require a number of mutations, each of which is infinitesimally unlikely. BEATRICE HAHN: It took a couple of years ... JAD: But eventually, she says, they found SIV ... BEATRICE HAHN: In still another primate species, the sooty mangabey. And that's the moment. Currently the top-kick of Echo Team, an elite squad of first-class shooters who roll out to face down the world's most dangerous terrorists. DAVID QUAMMEN: That's right. I mean, did she outwardly have typhoid? He goes broke. -, The horror is unlike anything he has ever seen. JON MOOALLEM: Exactly. And as we all know, we are actually now at this moment facing the tragic consequences of another spillover. JAD: It's the ultimate patient zero story, really. Yes. JAD: But back at the beginning, there was a story that I've not been able to shake for the last 30 years. Patient Zero (2021), Drama released in English language in theatre near you. I guess AIDS at that point. Designer bioweapons. I was kind of like, hmm, kind of a bit blown away, you know? And when their loved ones died, people cleaned the bodies and -- and touched the bodies and said goodbye to them. JAD: It's the playoffs. That year a reporter named Randy Shilts had written a book called And The Band Played On that for the first time revealed the identity of patient zero. But when he went around playing away games, other teams picked it up and it sort of spread out. It changes a lot. JAD: Which is really just a little string of genetic code that gets into your body and into your cells and uses your cells to make copies of itself. And she says the first person that she encountered was Typhoid Mary Mallon. But he makes her promise. Dusty Baker actually had kept trying to set him up with his wife's cousins, and Burke never want -- never liked any of them. And this is something he witnessed. Still, there are of all these questions as to whether any of this is legal. It's an area probably only of a hundred square miles. And also more importantly, from the same time. We see it happening all the time. As the case count gets higher, it has more opportunities to mutate and therefore more opportunities to adapt. JUDY LEVITT: And their daughter get sick. So that's that. Nobody knows his name. He was gay. Maberry's prose sears, his dialog cuts like a knife, and his characters crackle with life. So the following is the closest that we can get to a zero point in this entire narrative. DAVID QUAMMEN: Yes. It landed on the exact right combination of genes that allowed it to evade the chimp's immune system. And in 1994, Burke is diagnosed with -- with HIV or AIDS. She made a deal and she didn't keep the deal. Somehow, scientists unearthed a very old tube of blood from hospital in Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Well, we were taking him to daycare and we're -- he's taking his shoes off, and there's this little boy who's only there two days a week and he's not adjusting well. It's actually about the first high-five ever. And the more diversity, the longer the virus has been around. There's no doubt. ], [DAVID QUAMMEN: This is Quammen. It's the playoffs. And then, you know, they kept track of her for a while. So Emil sits down on this little seat to take his shoes off. Code Zero is the direct sequel to Patient Zero. The horror is unlike anything he has ever seen. CountdownZero ToleranceDeep, DarkMaterial WitnessChangelingMad ScienceArtifactThe Handyman Gets OutBorrowed PowerInside the DMS (Character Profiles), and:Joe Ledger Reading ChronologyInterview with Ray Porter (The voice of Joe Ledger! In fact for this baby virus, the chimp is the perfect host. ROBERT KRULWICH: So this is a story that begins when? Maybe he had a bow and arrow, maybe he had a spear, and he kills a chimpanzee. ]. DAVID QUAMMEN: Yeah, they've looked in lots -- they've looked in all kinds of animals. You know, you would be crazed too, wouldn't you? That's his claim. NATHAN WOLFE: And we don't know exactly the time. A reporter had asked him, you know, if it was true about the high-five and he said, "Yeah, think about the feeling you get when you give someone the high-five. And in this hour ... JAD: A series of stories that all hew to that delicious story archetype we call ... JAD: We'll try to trace ideas and trends and massive social traumas like pandemics back to that one person. Yeah, back to Manhattan. That year's Louisville team, they were -- they were known as the Doctors of Dunk. Joe Ledger and a newly rebuilt Department of Military Sciences square off against this new and terrible threat. And to Katie Slocum from the University of York for letting us use her recordings of chimpanzees. He's the guy they'd send out to all the press events. From there, he ends up in the Castro District in San Francisco, which is the big gay neighborhood. And in that terrible darkness a dreadful plague will be released. This show, which we did a couple of years back is called Patient Zero which sort of took a look at the origins of things, not surprisingly disease, but also other things too. He had actually just reprinted with updates the chapter about Ebola from his book. JAD: And how long was she on this island for? DAVID QUAMMEN: Yeah. SOREN: And while those genes have let the virus live happily for hundreds of thousands, even millions of years in bats or whatever animal it lives in, when it gets into humans ... SOREN: It makes so many copies of itself so quickly that it just destroys the body and the person is usually dead within a few weeks, which David says is actually bad for the virus, because Ebola can only pass through direct contact with bodily fluids and because it kills so quickly, it doesn't have a lot of opportunities to get into the next person. I feel fine. The cells don't look the same. And there she sits. LUTHA BURKE DAVIS: I'm very proud. Yeah. George Soper did some legwork on where Mary had been, and it turned out she had worked at a restaurant, two hotels, an inn and a sanatorium, as well as the hospital. JON MOOALLEM: You know, rounding third, coming to the plate. And every time his mother drops him off, she has to literally pry him off her and he's wailing and you know? Next, sometime after that first kill, weeks, months, we don't know maybe it was the same day, chimp zero comes across another monkey. No one is safe. He was actually really good, even in his rookie season. It's -- it's apparently -- viruses are generally teeny. In 1984, same year that Gaëtan Dugas died, scientists isolate the virus. SEAN: But she tries. It is quite disturbing to watch, he says. ROBERT: And also to Beatrice Hahn at the University of Pennsylvania. And, you know, you'll hear all that. He was hunting. CARL ZIMMER: So they would just go to where the chimpanzees would sleep at night, and they would just, you know, collect some poop. So it can go either way, I guess. So here's the question that got me started on this story. Why 1908? By then, it had spread from these small villages into larger cities in part David says, because well, previous outbreaks had been in very remote places, it now found itself in a more densely-populated area. And so he says it's just not right that we keep a healthy woman locked up like this. Accompanied by the beautiful assassin called Violin, Joe follows a series of clues to find the Book of Shadows, which contains a horrifying truth that threatens to shatter his entire worldview. In fact for this baby virus, the chimp is the perfect host. SEAN: Just like the peach juice. Then her sister comes down with it, and then her mom, and a maid. SEAN: So we're marching around and then Lynn says to me, "Hey, look at the view." Both diarrhea or constipation are reported. Everyone's favorite snarky, dangerous, idealistic, relentless covert operative is back, and this time he's brought friends. They're pinging it us and pinging it us. And he -- and he believed it. On one end, there are all of these medical, former medical buildings, including a giant hospital where they isolated tuberculosis patients. Do you feel a little guilty? DAVID QUAMMEN: Maybe this particular virus evolved in a way that made it more transmissible in humans. JAD: In 1984, same year that Gaëtan Dugas died, scientists isolate the virus. Patient Zero is an action horror film set against the outbreak of a deadly virus that threatens to wipe out the human race. Join the Hunt! JON MOOALLEM: It was shocking to everyone. Neither side is prepared for Joe Ledger as he leads Echo Team to war under a black flag. ROBERT: So much so she says, that in the year that picture was taken, the Dodgers made him their sort of public face of the team. And yet Mary was the only one who they isolated in this way. But again, once in a blue moon ... NATHAN WOLFE: So this is a blue moon after a blue moon after a blue moon to really get this. They then told me they had received an email from Lamont Sleets's wife. JAD ABUMRAD: Okay, today we are re-podcasting a show with something extra, an update. I'm Jad. Which is really just a little string of genetic code that gets into your body and into your cells and uses your cells to make copies of itself. And that was the only one for a number of years. And what can we say about this guy? JON MOOALLEM: And from there on, the Dodgers started high-fiving and everyone else started high-fiving. JAD: Some researchers found a virus like it in macaque monkeys. JAD: Like the hub of a wheel, except all the spokes on this wheel connected to other wheels which then shot out and connected to other wheels, fanning outward. CARL ZIMMER: So in 1981, doctors for the first time described ... [NEWS CLIP: A mysterious newly-discovered disease ...], [NEWS CLIP: ... which affects mostly homosexual men.]. She felt perfectly healthy. JAD: Turns out, right about the time that the HIV virus was discovered ... [NEWS CLIP: Scientists at the New England Primate Research Center ...]. And that seems to have been the place from which the disease went global. Everyone laughs, thinking it's a prank or a publicity stunt. Until now. even fighter planes go out of control. Directed by Kaare Andrews. Cutting edge transgenics. Then the virus got into these poor neighborhoods like West Point, where people were living together in -- in crowded slum-like neighborhoods. JAD: And it all began with that one moment. By submitting your information, you're agreeing to receive communications And they couldn't figure out what had caused the disease, so they called in this sanitary engineer named George Soper. My eyes began to twitch.".