Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

'The Last Of Us' Showrunner Confirms Parasitic Fungus From The Show Is 'Real'—And It's 'Terrifying'

Mutant creature from HBO's "The Last of Us"
HBO

While the cordyceps fungus hasn't set its sites on humans just yet, the insect kingdom is another story.

Viewers of HBO's newest sci-fi horror action-adventure series The Last of Us have been wondering about the plausibility of a plotline involving a parasitic fungus that takes over the population and transforms humans into zombie-like mutants.

They just got an alarming answer from the series showrunner suggesting the human race was inevitably doomed.


The Last of Us is based on the popular video game played from a third-person perspective.

It takes place in a post-apocalyptic wasteland where players defend themselves with weapons against hostile humans and cannibalistic creatures infected by a mutated strain of the Cordyceps fungus.

When the audience of the HBO series asked if the parasitic fungus controlling human hosts had any basis in reality, showrunner Craig Mazin who is also the creator of the five-part HBO miniseries Chernobyl, said bluntly:

"It's real."

You can see a trailer for the show here:

The Last of Us | Official Trailer | HBO Maxyoutu.be

The show's cold open began with an epidemiologist, played by actor John Hannah, who appeared on a talk show set in 1963 and warned about the looming threat of a fungus that can infect and control humans if the spores evolved long enough to survive in a warmer climate, hypothetically due to climate change.

The host told the incredulous talk show host:

“Candida, ergot, Cordyceps, Aspergillosis—any one of them could be capable of burrowing into our brains and taking control of not millions of us, but billions."
"Billions of puppets with poison minds… and there are no treatments for this, no preventatives."
"They don’t exist, it’s not even possible to make them.”
"So if that happens, we lose."

You can see the cold open here.

Referring to Hannah's warning speech from the episode, Mazin told the Hollywood Reporter:

"It’s real to the extent that everything he says that fungus do, they do."
"And they currently do it and have been doing it forever."
“There are some remarkable documentaries that you can watch that are quite terrifying.”
Twitter users were left quivering.



A 2019 National Geographic article titled "How a parasitic fungus turns ants into 'zombies'," reported how researchers thought a fungus called Ophiocordyceps unilateralis:

"...infects a foraging ant through spores that attach and penetrate the exoskeleton and slowly takes over its behavior."

The article continued:

"As the infection advances, the enthralled ant is compelled to leave its nest for a more humid microclimate that’s favorable to the fungus’s growth."
"The ant is compelled to descend to a vantage point about 10 inches off the ground, sink its jaws into a leaf vein on the north side of a plant, and wait for death."



Mazin assured audiences:

Now his warning—what if they evolve and get into us?—from a purely scientific point of view, would they do exactly to us what they do to ants? I don’t think so. I doubt it."
"On the other hand, he’s right—LSD and psilocybin do come from fungus. What I told John [Hannah] was, ‘What we’re doing in this scene is telling people this has always been here'.”

Now there's some food for thought.





More from News/science

Charlie Day smiles on the red carpet during a Paley Center event appearance.
Gilbert Flores/Variety via Getty Images

'Super Mario Bros' Star Charlie Day Just Made A Seriously Dark Joke About Luigi—And Fans Are Stunned

On paper, it’s a softball setup: You voice Luigi. You’re asked about Luigi. You say Luigi.

But Charlie Day… did not do that.

Keep ReadingShow less
A young attendee wearing a NASA cap with a mounted GoPro is interviewed by CNN at Kennedy Space Center ahead of the Artemis II launch.
Courtesy of CNN

CNN Asked A Kid Why He Was At The Artemis II Launch—And His Hilarious Response Is Everything

As crowds gathered for the Artemis II launch on Wednesday, one young attendee managed to steal the spotlight from the rocket itself with a response no one saw coming. The boy was at Kennedy Space Center in Florida with a GoPro strapped to his black NASA cap, having traveled to witness the first human-crewed mission to the Moon in more than 50 years.

As he waited, a CNN reporter approached him with a question whose answer usually involves some variation of “inspiration,” “history,” or “science.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Dan Levy; Catherine O'Hara
@fallontonight/Instagram; Kevin Winter/Getty Images

Dan Levy Opens Up About The Thing That's Given Him 'Great Comfort' After Catherine O'Hara's Death

Since the passing of the late and great comedic and character actress Catherine O'Hara, Dan Levy has opened up about how he's coped with the loss of his incomparable Schitt's Creek costar and close family friend.

When O'Hara passed away, Levy shared a touching tribute, reflecting on how she'd been an honorary member of his family for decades since working with his father, Eugene Levy, for more than fifty years on various sets. Schitt's Creek brought the pair full circle and allowed the world to see the connection between O'Hara and Levy that he'd already known for most of his life.

Keep ReadingShow less
Lana Del Rey and Jeremy Dufrene
Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for The Recording Academy

Lana Del Rey's Husband Perfectly Shuts Down Troll Who Predicted Their Marriage 'Won't Last'

Singer and songwriter Lana Del Rey married a relatively unknown man in 2024, leaving the pop culture media and fans struggling to find information (gossip) about her husband, Jeremy Dufrene.

The pair reportedly met in 2019 while Del Rey was in Louisiana for the BUKU Music + Art Project festival and decided to take an airboat tour.

Keep ReadingShow less
Nancy Mace; Kristi Noem
Heather Diehl/Getty Images; Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Nancy Mace Gets Epic Reminder After Trying To Shame Media For Reporting On Kristi Noem's 'Personal Drama'

South Carolina Republican Representative Nancy Mace received a blunt reminder after she tried to shame media outlets for revealing that former Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem's husband Bryon has a secret crossdressing double life.

Newly released photos show Bryon Noem cross-dressing in private messages sent to several women. According to The Daily Mail, the images were part of “a trove of hundreds of messages” exchanged between Noem and three women.

Keep ReadingShow less