Say, some hundreds of thousands of years ago. SEAN: She was what we needed at the time. Terrorists have acquird a terrible new weapon that can crash the power grid and plunge America into a new dark age. We don't know that for sure, because nobody has ever isolated live Ebola virus from an African bat. And chimp zero eats that monkey and gets a spot-nosed guenon version of the AIDS virus, or the SIV virus inside it. Well, as a human disease, as far as we know it dates to 1976. Do you feel like you robbed him? Yeah. And it was years later that he started playing college basketball at Murray State and started high-fiving all his teammates. You know what I mean. SEAN: And with this disease, the fever's just the first part of it. It's the playoffs. It's either gonna burn out and come to an end or we're gonna stop it. Buy or Rent Movie Patient Zero from FamilyVideo.com. What movie can we make about the beginning of the AIDS epidemic? On opening day of the new baseball season a small model-kit airplane flies. When you have to kill the same terrorist twice in one week there's either something wrong with your world or something wrong with your skills... and there's nothing wrong with Joe Ledger's skills. - DAVID MORRELL, New York Times bestselling author of FIRST BLOOD and CREEPERS, Buy from your favorite Indie BooksellerBuy from Mysterious GalaxyBuy from AmazonBuy the eBook from iTunesBuy the audio book from iTunesBuy from Barnes & NobleBuy from Powells, Saturday 09:11 Hours: A blast rocks a London hospital and thousands are dead or injured…. He had actually just reprinted with updates the chapter about Ebola from his book. Now when I first saw that, AIDS had already infected two and a half million people. NATHAN WOLFE: I mean, one of the amazing things to think about is how many -- how many hopeful monsters you had to have in order to get that one that actually survived. Even though Glenn Burke died believing that the high-five was his legacy, at more or less the same moment that he invented it, a guy named Derek Smith, a basketball player for the Louisville Cardinals was at practice ... And a guy named Wiley Brown went up to Derek Smith and was going to give him just a ordinary low-five, and Derek Smith looked him in the eye. And every time his mother drops him off, she has to literally pry him off her and he's wailing and you know? And with this disease, the fever's just the first part of it. For instance, it might mutate and adapt in such a way that it kills fewer people or kills them more slowly, and leaves people infectious for a longer period of time. [NEWS CLIP: The inability to find a similar disease in research animals.]. The red-capped mangabey. These two viruses will end up inside the same cell in the same chimp at the same time. If we had to guess, that human was probably a Bantu man living very near the forest or in the forest in southeastern Cameroon. If you have a virus here and a virus there ... You could measure how different they are, and you would know that it would take a certain amount of time for them to get that different. These two viruses will end up inside the same cell in the same chimp at the same time. I guess AIDS at that point. So I went to southeastern Cameroon and I chartered a little boat, about a 30-foot wooden boat with an outboard motor. And when he finds her ... JUDY LEVITT: She's in New York City working for another family. Former cop. Do you feel like you robbed him? JAD: So then the question was, which one of these monkeys or primates passed it to us? But Lamont thinks he probably did invent the high-five. College basketball player at Murray State in Kentucky. [60 MINUTES CLIP: He was a French-Canadian. My eyes began to twitch.". Because really, when do you need a high-five? My friend, we're talking about thousands of men whose faces I cannot even remember and you want names.]. 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. JAD ABUMRAD: Okay, today we are re-podcasting a show with something extra, an update. N. owhere is safe. In the '90s, he had an undiagnosed heart condition and he just died all of a sudden on a cruise ship. If this is where her cabin was, then one window of it looked exactly onto Manhattan. JUDY LEVITT: Just completely vanishes. DAVID QUAMMEN: They probably encountered each other in the stomach of a chimp. So in 1981, doctors for the first time described ... A mysterious newly-discovered disease ...], ... which affects mostly homosexual men. DAVID QUAMMEN: Yeah. And Jon asks him the sensible first question. I was stirred by the work of Beatrice Hahn and Mike Worobey to see what this scenario looked like on the ground. It had a kitchen. 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. She coached women's volleyball in the 1960s, years before Glenn Burke and Derek Smith. And she had been sending her own feces samples herself to a private lab in Manhattan. Thanks to Nathan Wolfe. Let's get his story. I often said he should have been a comedian. JAD: As the virus duplicates itself inside a person, the dupes often have little copying errors in them, little mutations. Giving the high-five handshake. Can we talk about them? And a few years ago, Michael went back to Kinshasa and found a second HIV sample. [DAVID ROSNER: Hi, this is David Rosner. A New York family had a house for the summer ...]. I've wanted you to believe that he was hero at this point, right? No, I don't think so. There are essentially 12 major groups of the HIV virus. JAD: Starting us off today are our producers Lynn Levy and Sean Cole. But we didn't really know of Glenn Burke at that time. JAD: And he traced the path of the virus. [CLIP: The laundress had recently been taken to the Presbyterian hospital with typhoid fever.]. Compelled by grief and rage, Joe rejoins the DMS and within hours is attacked by a hit-team of assassins and sent on a suicide mission into a viral hot zone during an Ebola outbreak. From microscopic nanobots to massive self-guided aircraft. Now we got to investigate that. Well in 1996, I believe. And, you know, you'll hear all that. NATHAN WOLFE: Okay, boom! [CLIP: And the only child of a family, a lovely daughter was dying of it.]. She's broke -- broke her promise. Yes. NATHAN WOLFE: These sorts of viruses, they're constantly pinging at us. They played above the rim. SEAN: She was actually the first documented case in North America of a healthy carrier, which is to say someone who has the disease and is contagious, but never actually feels ... SEAN: The symptoms. 1908? As the case count gets -- we've talked about this. JAD: Because think about it he says, HIV landed in humans in 1908, but we didn't know about it until 1981. JON MOOALLEM: He was gay. Radiolab is produced by Jad Abumrad. That is amazing. Its genome is carried on just one strand of the -- the genetic material RNA. There are 2 stories by NorthDT, including: Patient Zero, Part 2: 'Red' (~5249 words) [OC] Patient Zero (Part 1: 'Trespass') This list was automatically generated by HFYBotReborn version 2.13. It is quite disturbing to watch, he says. Can I just ask you just to describe the Ebola virus? All across the country artificial intelligence drive systems in cars, commuter. I was stirred by the work of Beatrice Hahn and Mike Worobey to see what this scenario looked like on the ground. But you can tell in the picture just from the way that Glenn is sort of throwing his whole body forward that he's the one initiating the gesture. I said, "You can kill yourself if you want but you got no right to take somebody else along with you." They have blood on their face, in their eyes. There are essentially 12 major groups of the HIV virus. SOREN: Are there boundaries around that? They looked in plants. And when you look into the details, they tell us some very difficult things about who we were and who we still are in a lot of ways. And this is something he witnessed. So David Quammen's book Spillover has -- it's been out for a couple years now. NATHAN WOLFE: And one individual managed to grab two juveniles, and then the three individuals all met up and ... JAD: Began to eat the monkey while it was still alive. I'm living a moral life. JAD: So you didn't know who was who, but you could tell immediately when you look at this thing, that of all the 30 or so circles, there was one circle that was special. DAVID QUAMMEN: Yes, every time it replicates there is a chance of a mistake. A little bit mangabey, a little bit guenon. The campaign includes four new missions from revisited Season One locations and features its own standalone storyline. Where does HIV come from?" I'm not a vagrant. Found zero traces of live Ebola virus. So the infection spread. Still, there are of all these questions as to whether any of this is legal. Yeah, the zeros behind the ideas. He's an outfielder. Maybe she could ask for blood, feces and urine a little more gently than ... SEAN: I just don't know how you ask for that gently. In still another primate species, the sooty mangabey. Buy from your favorite Indie BooksellerBuy from Mysterious GalaxyBuy from AmazonBuy the iBook from iTunesBuy from Barnes & NobleBuy from PowellsBuy the Audio Book from Audible. ROBERT: Let's focus instead on invention. My civil rights. With Glenn it was like he would always be on the stage. College basketball player at Murray State in Kentucky. And the story in the press release went something like this. JAD: But why then? It changes a lot. Someone—or something--wants that technology back. Maybe this particular virus evolved in a way that made it more transmissible in humans. Millions will die unless Joe Ledger meets the this powerful new enemy on their own terms as he fights terror, Joe Ledger and the Department of Military Sciences  rush headlong into the heat of the world’s strangest and deadliest arms race, because the global race to recover and retro-engineer alien technologies has just hit a snag. He was actually really good, even in his rookie season. Joe Ledger and the Department of Military Sciences go on the hunt for whoever is controlling these machines, but the every step of the way they are met with traps and shocks that strike to the very heart of the DMS. Turns out Jon had already been poking around into this question of who invented the high-five, and he had stumbled on this photograph. So the spillover is not a highly improbable event. This time we've got a very different situation. -  JAMES ROLLINS, New York Times bestselling author of THE JUDAS STRAIN"PATIENT ZERO is a first-rate thriller with a bioterror angle that is as horrific as it is plausible. And when their loved ones died, people cleaned the bodies and -- and touched the bodies and said goodbye to them. So maybe I should tell you a little bit about Derek Smith, right? He ended up coming to live with me. ], In 1959, a sailor in Britain died of pneumocystis pneumonia.]. That was our one glimpse into the kind of deep history of HIV. The mother of this kid puts this little boy next to Emil and he is just crying. Let's just go with the best high-five. 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. All these cases. Turns out, right about the time that the HIV virus was discovered ... Scientists at the New England Primate Research Center ...]. It's the ultimate patient zero story, really. But you can tell in the picture just from the way that Glenn is sort of throwing his whole body forward that he's the one initiating the gesture. That is when it started in human beings. And again, by molecular work scientists have been able to determine that the chimp virus is actually ... JAD: Two different monkeys from two completely different species. A technological apocalypse is coming and we may be too late to stop it. It had lines coming out in every direction. And in it somewhere is a -- literally, the -- the patient that is called Zero. And he -- and he believed it. So we need to end this outbreak in West Africa before this virus learns too much about us. She was part of that CDC study. Joe Ledger and his team go on a wild hunt to stop the terrorists and uncover the global super-power secretly funding them. JAD: It's the ultimate patient zero story, really. If they have to call Joe Ledger - it's already hit the fan. I think -- I think this has the feeling of something that was born. One room. DAVID QUAMMEN: Like a network drawing with circles representing patients, and then lines representing sexual contact. Have they tried? And to make a long story short ... JAD: That AIDS entered the United States ... DAVID QUAMMEN: At a time when Gaëtan Dugas was still a virginal adolescent. Radiolab is supported in part by the National Science Foundation and by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, enhancing public understanding of science and technology in the modern world. His mother died about a week later. Thanks again to David Quammen. You know, they're a high-flying team. The group must find a way to survive before the flesh eating virus consumes them all. Buy from your favorite Indie BooksellerBuy from Mysterious GalaxyBuy from AmazonBuy the ebook from iTunesBuy the Audio Book from iTunesBuy from Barnes & NobleBuy from Powells. His book is Ebola: The Natural and Human History of A Deadly Virus. And how it might happen again. ROBERT: He figured it was, but he thought he should at least ask. SOREN: So we really don't know where it's coming from or where it might come from next. Enemies old and new rise as America burns. Wait a second, Sean Cole. Yes. DAVID QUAMMEN: Of a group of about 30 patients. An important feature of Case Zero is the ability to take any progress learned by the player (such as levels and weapons) and transfer them to Dead Rising 2. The chimp's immune system is pretty sophisticated. JAD: What is this, like the mob or something? ROBERT: Because then our producer Lynn Levy also discovered that in the movie Breathless in 1955, at exactly one hour, 18 minutes into the film, you will see two Frenchmen do a very distinct haute cinq. They hijack these enzymes to make copies of themselves. SEAN: But if you keep reading it, and in fact, it's addressed to a lawyer, it's clear that she was fighting this. She coached women's volleyball in the 1960s, years before Glenn Burke and Derek Smith. In here you’ll find the following declassified data... Buy from Mysterious Galaxy BookstoreBuy from the PublisherBuy from your favorite Indie BooksellerBuy from AmazonBuy from Barnes & NobleBuy from Powells. Literally hundreds of different species they looked in. DAVID QUAMMEN: Yes. This distinction, which was reinforced by books, films and countless news reports made him the “arch-villain of an epidemic that would eventually kill more than 700,000 people in North America.” ROBERT: And I think we can do that. So this is ... JAD: Yeah. Just completely vanishes. Our Senior Editor Soren Wheeler will bring you that. You can hypothesize. And thank you also to him and to Michael Worobey. It became sort of part of the institutional lore in the athletic department there. JAD: Two baseball players facing each other. Steven Guyer and his colleagues published a paper in Science in early September which involved doing exactly that. ], [DAVID ROSNER: Reading this message. So -- so one thing that people started to do ... CARL ZIMMER: ... was to -- they went started going back and looking at people who had died. CARL ZIMMER: And they started finding a lot. LUTHA BURKE DAVIS: This is Glenn Burke, the faggot. I mean, some of these places -- I work in some places in Democratic Republic of Congo, you basically have to fly in to get there. You say which one is the better story. I spent a while on here. Literally hundreds of different species they looked in. BEATRICE HAHN: Over 90 different wild communities. That through sheer random luck, works. SEAN: Which is funny, because when you cook food you kill the bacteria in the food. Sometimes it disappears for a decade, and then it spills over and causes a human outbreak. We wanted to see if the media would -- would run with it. For instance, it might mutate and adapt in such a way that it kills fewer people or kills them more slowly, and leaves people infectious for a longer period of time. 1960. JAD: It's got a spot on its nose, I assume. SOREN: Yeah. That can not only survive in the chimp, but can thrive. ROBERT: He's the guy they'd send out to all the press events. But there are other scenarios that are a little more probable. SEAN: This was like the most horrible seaside vacation. But what's the real movie? There were some local newspapers who, you know, picked it up. Starting us off today are our producers Lynn Levy and Sean Cole. Everyone's favorite snarky, dangerous, idealistic, relentless covert operative is back, and this time he's brought friends. But what he's left with at this point is he's left with the original high-five, right? CARL ZIMMER: You know, new diseases in humans tend to pop up from animals. And when Lamont was younger, they would all sort of hang out at the house in Kentucky, and he couldn't keep all their names straight. But the real definitive blow to this whole patient zero nonsense came by actually looking at the virus itself. If you really honestly want to get to the bottom of who invented the high-five? I mean, even George Soper, the guy who hunted her down said it was contrary to the Constitution of the United States to hold her under the circumstance. JAD: That can not only survive in the chimp, but can thrive. There was this outbreak of a strange disease at the Yambuku Mission in northern Zaire. Spillover's the term that scientists use to describe the moment when a virus in one species passes into another species. NATHAN WOLFE: Yeah. I'm Jad. Release Calendar DVD & Blu-ray Releases Top Rated Movies Most Popular Movies Browse Movies by Genre Top ... Dr. Gina Rose (Natalie Dormer) is seeking out the patient zero from Minnesota to develop a vaccine. It's an area probably only of a hundred square miles. LYNN: "When I first came here, I was so nervous and almost prostrated with grief and trouble. Put on music. His sister died, his grandmother died, other people in the village died. In New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco, to see who had had sexual contact with whom. SEAN: We went there to just to try to get our heads around what she must have thought. These chimps were essentially penned in between these three rivers. Sam Claflin Natalie Dormer, Julianne Moore, and Stanley Tucci attend the world premiere of the film 'The Hunger Games: Mockingjay - Part 2' As seen in the video below, filmmakers Le and Ruzowitzky joined the cast on a 2015 Comic-Con panel to discuss Patient Zero.At the beginning of the discussion, Natalie quickly corrected the panel's host by saying that this movie is not about zombies … SEAN: This is from a letter that Mary wrote from the island.