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* Zombie motif popular at NRA conference

* Maker expects to sell 1 million zombie targets

By Greg McCune

ST. LOUIS, April 15 (Reuters) – One of Patrick Flanagan’s

favorite movies as a kid was “Night of the Living Dead,” a 1968

horror film about a family trapped in a rural Pennsylvania house

and attacked by zombies.

“I really dug zombie stuff since then,” said Flanagan, 23,

an unemployed concrete worker from Alton, in southern Illinois.

So Flanagan combined his interest in zombies with another

hobby – guns.

He was one of many gun owners crowded around a display of

lifelike zombie paper shooting targets at the National Rifle

Association’s Guns and Gear exhibition on Saturday during the

NRA annual conference in St. Louis.

The Hollywood-inspired zombie craze – featuring blood-soaked

ghouls rising from the dead to attack the living – has extended

to gun enthusiasts. At the huge NRA exhibition, vendors

displayed zombie targets, zombie bullets, zombie paint coating

for guns and zombie patches for a shooting jacket.

Firing ranges across the country are offering zombie-themed

shooting events, some held as daylight fades for atmosphere,

said Brad Ross, a division manager for Law Enforcement Targets,

Inc, a maker of zombie targets.

Flanagan, who said he owns 19 guns, likes to drive out into

rural areas to practice shooting. He is bored with shooting cans

or simple bullseye targets and the zombie targets will be more

fun, he said, clutching his roll of 40 poster-sized images.

Sales of zombie targets are booming and are expected to grow

about 30 percent to a million targets this year, Ross said.

“It is absolutely dumbfounding,” said Addison Sovine, a

salesman hustling on Saturday to keep up with the demand for the

shooting accessory at the Law Enforcement Targets booth.

For the truly zombie-obsessed, Sovine demonstrated small

packets of blood-colored liquid that can be purchased to attach

to the back of the zombie target so that it bleeds when shot. If

an explosion is desired, a grainy mixture is for sale that will

blast like a firecracker when hit.

TAKING AIM ON “ZOMBILADIN” TARGET

Among the most popular of the 18 zombie target designs

offered in its catalog are “Becky,” an image of a wounded, pale

and dark-eyed female, and “ZombiLadin” a bearded and bloody

likeness of the late al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, company

officials said.

Ammunition maker Hornady introduced a zombie bullet last

fall with a green painted tip and it was one of their most

successful product launches ever, according to marketing

communications manager Everett Deger. The bullets come in a

bright green box saying “20 rounds certified Zombie ammunition”

with a warning that it is not a toy.

Zombie-themed paint coatings for guns are among the 10 most

popular camouflage designs offered by DuraCoat Firearm Finishes,

which paints guns, said Operations Manager Amy Lauer-Potaczek.

Much of the interest in zombies has been fed by popular

culture, such as the movie “Zombieland,” starring Woody

Harrelson, and the “Walking Dead” television series about a

group of people trying to survive in a world overrun by zombies.

But Sovine said the obsession has gained momentum from

“preppers” – people who are preparing for doomsday – and the

belief by some that, according to the Mayan calendar, the world

as we know it will end in December.

“As soon as we pass December if we are not all dead, we live

on, and it is really not the end of the world … I think you

will see it (zombie target sales) start to come back down the

other side,” Sovine said.

(Editing by Bill Trott)