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Nothing compares to Zoo: a tribute to TV’s dumbest joy, and my greatest love

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CBS’s animal uprising drama can’t live forever, but here are 10 beautifully silly reasons it should.
When I first started watching Zoo, I joked that the CBS drama about a determined group of brilliantly stupid misfits fighting a violent animal uprising was my favorite show on television. Three seasons later, I think it might actually be true.
If you haven’t already gleaned as much from the aforementioned synopsis, Zoo is an entirely ridiculous show. So in the interest of maintaining some level of professional dignity, I will be upfront and say Zoo probably won’t blow your mind so far as thematic nuance goes. But let me be clear when I say Zoo will definitely blow your mind with a chaotic swarm of kamikaze bats, telepathic lions, 70-foot invisible snakes, and so very much more. And I can safely say that if its third season — which wrapped on September 21 — turns out to be Zoo ’s last, I will mourn it with all my jaded heart.
This is around the time when my editors will ask me to explain in more depth what Zoo is about for the many readers who inevitably have no idea what on earth I’m talking about. I’m happy to try (seriously, if you mention Zoo around me at any time, I will hastily drop whatever I’m doing to gush about the origin story of hybrid razorback wolves). But I will warn you that there is no point in trying to make heads or bushy tails of this beast. Zoo is, by both design and fortuitous accident, the most illogical show on television. Taking it apart doesn’t reveal how it works, but rather how it’s held together by gum and curling packing tape, trying desperately to keep itself in one piece.
The basics are these: Zoo began as a stupefying adaptation of a James Patterson novel that focused more on corporate conspiracies than its rebelling animals, the obvious stars of the story. It united a team of renegade zoologist Jackson Oz (James Wolk), his right-hand safari man Abe (Nonso Anozie), snarky “veterinary pathologist” Mitch (Billy Burke), intrepid blogger Jamie (Kristen Connolly), and a French romantic interest for Jackson who died unceremoniously in season two, so that is all you need to know about her. Together, they bumbled through the world trying to quell a virus that was making all the animals of the world rise up against humans.
But by season two, the show had burned through Patterson’s novel and was free to go truly nuts — which was the best thing that could have ever happened to Zoo and the world at large.
The show has since evolved into something far more stupid, and much more spectacular, than its initial premise. The second season packed the crew into a giant plane to fly around the world and hunt down a variety of mythical creatures, ranging from a sabertooth tiger to a sloth whose yawns caused earthquakes. In the second season finale, they managed to cure the animals of the virus — but then the show’s random new villains released a toxin into the atmosphere that sterilized all h uman beings and released their lab-grown hybrids (the aforementioned razorback wolves) for good measure. Also, the show then leaped forward 10 years — yes, a full decade! — to better live in a real dystopia for season three.
Still with me? No? Great! Now you know what it’s like to be a fan of Zoo, though to be frank, all of this is just scratching the surface. Season three introduced the show’s most nonsensical twists yet, from a series of secret family reveals to Jackson putting all of humanity at the mercy of hordes of vicious zombie animals. (Oh, yeah: Season three for real ended on the reveal that the hybrids can now turn animals into zombies .)
So, look: I could be here all day explaining the confounding ins and outs of this show (in fact, I spent a full hour trying to do so with Uproxx’s own Zoo expert Brian Grubb — who is responsible for many of the glorious gifs to come — on the TV Avalanche podcast just a few weeks ago, if you’re truly curious). I could talk to you about Jackson’s heretofore-unknown past as a teen dad, Jamie’s new role as a billionaire author who spies by night and tortures bad guys by day, and how Mitch spent 10 years in a stasis tank and came back with an evil alter ego named “Mr. Duncan.” I could talk to you about how Jackson’s secret evil sister plotted to take down all of humanity because she was mad at her brother for being their dad’s favorite, and about Mitch accidentally shooting his daughter before she revealed herself to be pregnant with humanity’s last hope.
But since we can’t pull a Zoo and fast-forward through the decade it would take me to explain it all, I shall instead share with you the 10 best creatures Zoo ’s bloodthirsty menagerie introduced in season three, in honor of what may be their final ride into the apocalyptic sunset.
“But Caroline,” you might be saying through a skeptical squint, “this doesn’t look like a creature at all! Why, this looks like a human woman!” That’s where you’re (apparently) wrong, friends. Abigail, a.k.a. Jackson’s evil sister and the world’s most wanted terrorist, is revealed to be not just the monologuing mastermind behind the hybrids taking over the world but one of the hybrids herself. (I’d explain the logistics of this, but Zoo never felt a need to, so that is all you get.)
Jackson realizes Abigail’s true nature as the team is trying to hunt down and collect spinal fluid from each of the different hybrid varieties — which, yes, is pretty much exactly the plot of season two’s global animal-hunting quest. They manage to capture and collect a sample from Abigail, and she eventually dies in their custody. But then she springs back from the dead (a development that is never once explained) and shoots almost every single cast member on her way back out into the world.
Again, I could explain how they all came back from their injuries, but who has the time when we still need to talk about:
These creatures — which look something like a hyena crossed with another, mangier hyena — first appear in the season two finale before the time jump. Their introduction was startling and beautiful, especially as they dragged Mitch’s body offscreen, leaving a trail of blood and a pair of glasses behind. (I was not a fan of Mitch.) But after watching the third season, the way I feel toward the razorbacks is about how I feel toward crispy M&Ms. When they first came out, they were a game-changing revelation; now I can’t bother giving this basic variety the time of day when there are so many weirder ones to know and love. (Have you ever had a raspberry M&M? Pretty good!)
Take, for instance:
We meet these enormous birds a few episodes into season three, and every time they show up thereafter is a guaranteed good time. They burrow underground only to pop up randomly elsewhere; they snatch unsuspecting dumbos out of cars by their heads; they dive-bomb volcanoes in hot pursuit of the beacon that summoned them (a plan executed by our heroes that results in one of the best moments on Zoo or television, period).
At the end of the day, however, these hybrids are pretty much just giant birds. And trust me when I say, oh, man, can Zoo do better than that.
At first glance, Pedro and Samson may just look like lions. And to be fair, they are. But what you can’t tell at first sight is that they are, in fact, under the control of one Jackson Oz. In the season three premiere, this is explained with — as his new bland blonde lady calls it — a “clickity-clack machine” that he uses to interrupt their brain frequencies, or some such mumbly science nonsense. But in that very same episode, it’s suggested that Jackson may, in fact, be controlling them with his mind.
By the end of the season (bless this show), it is confirmed: Jackson Oz, renegade zoologist, can control animals with his mind.
For as cool as mind-controlled lions are, however, there’s no way they could beat the simple majesty of our following creature.
Our tufted, armored friend here quite literally pops up in the season premiere and surprises the hell out of Jackson and his fellow hybrid hunters, who have spent the past decade defending Portland, Oregon, from razorbacks. It crests the hill, majestic and barely clinging to the CGI afforded to it, before charging at Jackson in a snorting rage. Wolk has had to act opposite many a blank space on this show, but his sprint from this creature is like Indiana Jones running from the rolling rock, except the rolling rock is an armored woolly mammoth rhino.
Hurting this particular hybrid’s standings in the season three rankings is that it never appears on the show again. But the reason it ranks this high is because once it’s captured, Abe discovers through Science — because Abe is a reproductive endocrinologist in the future — that the hybrid’s blood can grow into a fetus.

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