The Ghoul, real name Cooper Howard, is one of the protagonists 在辐射电视剧 , the other two being Lucy and Maximus. He worked as a film actor before the Great War of 2077, and was transformed into a ghoul at some point in the years following it. By 2296, he has established a reputation as one of the most fearsome bounty hunters in the west.
Background[]
Pre-War[]
Born before the Great War, Cooper served in the United States Marine Corps at the beginning of the Sino-American War. Participating in the desperate defense of Alaska, he witnessed first-hand how close the state came to falling into enemy hands, staved off only by the deployment of West Tek's T-45 power armor. While the power armor was instrumental in holding the line and buying the United States time, Cooper also witnessed many design flaws, which cost many of his comrades their lives.[1] Following his honorable discharge, he started a major acting career as a Hollywood actor,[2] establishing himself as a high-profile Western actor with movies such as A Man and His Dog (co-starring with Roosevelt, his dog)[3] and The Man from Deadhorse.
While finishing principal photography on The Man from Deadhorse at California Crest Studios, Cooper started to have misgivings about the out-of-character actions of his hero, in particular shooting the villain pleading for his life, rather than arresting him. He was unable to take the issue up with the script writer Bob, as the author was fired by the studio as an alleged communist. The director, Emil Dale, asked him to follow the revised script and make the movie as the studio wanted: A new western for a "new America." Cooper ultimately shot the scene as requested, with the movie performing spectacularly.[4] On the same day, Cooper made a far more fateful appearance; on his then-wife Barb Howard's insistence (a high ranking Vault-Tec executive), he agreed to become a model for Vault-Tec's promotional campaign, donning the Vault jumpsuit for a promotional photoshoot that was used in marketing nationwide. One of the shots included him smiling with his thumb raised up, a gesture that would become associated with him over the years.
Cooper's involvement in Vault-Tec marketing increased steadily, as he appeared in television advertisements promoting sales of Vault spaces. While the company was paying well, Cooper started losing out on movies, as other actors found his work as the face of doomsday distasteful. His first experience with a boycott was when other actors refused to leave their trailers and work with him, which coincided with him shooting an advertisement for Vault 4. Being used as a corporate mascot started to wear on Cooper, in particular rubbing elbows with disconnected executives, such as Bud Askins, a West Tek alumnus who joined Vault-Tec. Askins boasted of overseeing the T-45 rollout and how they "looked great" despite the ridiculous flaws, even after Cooper pointed out these flaws killed American soldiers.
At the wrap party for the Vault 4 advertisement, organized by Barb at their home, he ran into Askins and other Vault-Tec movers and shakers, sarcastically describing the situation to his dog as "heading into enemy territory." He commiserated with his fellow actor, Sebastian Leslie, about the situation, learning that there was a general wave of "radicalism" sweeping Hollywood, which included fellow veteran and actor Charles Whiteknife, who had worked alongside him and Johnny Morton in a Western film. Leslie was more optimistic, having sold his vocal work to RobCo for use as Mister Handy's default voice. However, doubts remained; Barb was rising in the ranks in Vault-Tec, considering the corporation as almost a family business with Cooper doing ads and floating the idea of starting Janey off at Vault-Tec's payroll when she reached 15 years of age. Cooper was growing disillusioned, looking for a way out of the bind and second-guessing his involvement with city life and the megacorps.
This caused a rift to appear between him and Barb, as she shut down any discussion of leaving the company. During one exchange, she let it slip that there was a difference in the Vaults and that her job at Vault-Tec guaranteed her family a spot at one of the "good" ones, something their wealth couldn't otherwise guarantee. With the seed of doubt planted, Cooper reached out to Whiteknife to confide in him. While still considering himself an anti-communist due to his and Charles' tour of duty in Alaska, the exchange with Charles and mention of the government effectively outsourcing the survival of the human race to a profit-driven corporation was enough to make Cooper attend a meeting of the "radicals."
His married life became strained, as he started openly criticizing the company in front of Barb, in particular the increasingly draconian and restrictive rules, such as a ban on dogs and enforced conformity, eventually snapping and stating that he "didn't go to war defending that freedom so that [he] could live in a cellar under the boot heel of Chairman Bud Askins." Barb did not understand his reservations, instead pointing out that she was working to secure her family's fate in the face of a nuclear event that could wipe out 90% of life on Earth and revealing that she was working to get her, Cooper and Janey into a special Vault for management.
Distraught, Cooper decided to attend the meeting of Charles' group, led by a former researcher named Miss Williams. He was initially repulsed by her rhetoric, especially when she pointed out that the average American had more in common with the average Chinese citizen, rather than the people in power in the US. However, while trying to make a dramatic exit, he was defused quickly by Williams, who ignored his barb about bread lines and instead suggested that his wife might not be the person Cooper thought she was, which convinced him to stay and speak with her more privately after the meeting. While he refused to be directly recruited into an attempt to recover Moldaver's cold fusion research, he held onto the listening device she gave him as a "souvenir."
Conflict with Vault-Tec[]
The doubts continued to gnaw at Cooper, who eventually tested out the listening device on his wife's Pip-Boy, successfully synchronizing it and eavesdropping on her delivering cocoa to Janey. Disgusted with himself, he threw the device in the trash and tried to move on. However, haunted by the Vault 4 advertisement, he got up in the middle of the night and went through the refuse bin to find it again. Roosevelt sat by his master, unaware of his role in pushing Cooper towards conflict with the megacorporation.[5]
Cooper decided to check out Williams' claims, giving his wife a lift to a Vault-Tec building, tuned into her Pip-Boy. Unable to get a clear signal, he decided to gatecrash and wait for his wife inside the headquarters at a guest apartment. While there, he had the opportunity to eavesdrop on a Vault-Tec conference with like-minded corporations that "make America great." The meeting, headed by Bud Askins, and involving Robert House (RobCo), Leon Von Felden (West Tek), Julia Masters (REPCONN) and Frederick Sinclair (Big MT), involved his wife pitching the idea of using Vaults to run a series of social experiments in order to create the perfect society, in the spirit of capitalist competition. When House noted the hypothetical nature of such an investment, Cooper heard his wife suggest triggering a nuclear event on purpose, wiping out billions to end war and usher in a perfect society created by her company and anyone who followed them. In that same moment, he barely registered meeting Barb's personal assistant Henry "Hank" MacLean, the new man produced by Askins' manager program and an example of this perfect society.[6]
Learning of Barb's involvement in the corporate conspiracy drove a complete rift between them. Cooper stopped working for Vault-Tec and they divorced, sharing custody of their daughter. Blacklisted over his work for Vault-Tec, Cooper started working as an entertainer at kids' parties, using his skills with horses and lassos to make a living. Although they shared custody, Cooper was ordered by the court to make alimony payments to his wife, and this was his only way to make money.[7]
Janey helped her father at work whenever she stayed with him, learning the ropes of the trade and forming an even deeper bond. On October 23, 2077, the day of the Great War, he was performing at Roy Spencer's birthday party in Los Angeles with his daughter and witnessed the first missiles impact the city. Rather than force his way into Spencers' fallout shelter, he fled the party with his daughter on horseback after the bombs fell.
After the Great War[]
Life in the post-War world greatly changed Cooper, who became known as the Ghoul. He became dependent on vials containing an unknown chem to stave off ferality. He is a bounty hunter in 2296. He has a code of honor, but also a ruthless streak.
Fallout TV series[]
By 2296, he was captured by Dom Pedro and buried alive, with a drip of anti-feral chems. He is reportedly only brought above ground every so often so that Dom Pedro can cut pieces off of the Ghoul. The Ghoul is dug up by Honcho, Slim, and Biggie to collect the bounty of an Enclave researcher named Siggi Wilzig. The Ghoul is informed of this bounty, but takes offense to them considering it their "one last job" and informs them that he bounty hunts "for the love the game." He then kills Slim and Biggie and then lassoes Honcho around the head and then kicks him into the grave, leaving him to die.
He laid low at Filly, watching Ma June's Sundries, eventually finding Wilzig. He shot off Wilzig's foot on the spot, immobilizing him, and in the ensuing firefight killed ten gunmen. Before he could seize the bounty, he was confronted by Lucy MacLean and attacked by CX404. He stabbed the dog in the belly, but before he could shoot Lucy, he was interrupted by Maximus in T-60 power armor, posing as Knight Titus. In the ensuing confrontation, the Ghoul gained the upper hand due to his military training and knowledge of the T-60's weak spots, severing one of Maximus' breathing pipes and causing the armor to fly him away out of control, but the fight allowed Lucy and Wilzig to get away. He followed the trail with CX404 at his side, as rather than let her die, he stitched her up, allowing the dog to accompany him.[8]
He followed the trail, discovering Wilzig's headless remains at the Soviet satellite Lucy left him at, remaining on her trail. He eventually caught up with her at the flooded remains of Hollywood Boulevard, where she was trying to recover the head from a gulper. He tried to use her as bait, which succeeded, but in the process he lost his remaining supply of anti-feral medicine, forcing him to make a detour, with Lucy as his prisoner. The closest source of the medicine was a local organ harvesting and chem dealing ring, operating out of a fortified Super Duper Mart near Santa Monica Boulevard.
Passing through the Westside Medical Clinic near the derelict California Crest Studios, he paid a visit to Roger, his ghoul associate. Realizing that Roger was on the verge of going feral, he showed him a bit of kindness, reminding him of ice cream and apple pie from before the War, then shot him through the head, much to Lucy's horror. After stripping the body for valuables, he started removing pieces of flesh to make "ass jerky," before having Lucy do it. On the way to the Super Duper Mart, he also forced her to drink contaminated water, delighting in breaking a Vault dweller. A brief moment of weakness resulted in Lucy attempting to get away, cut short when the Ghoul lassoed her.[9]
The resulting scuffle resulted in Lucy biting his index finger off. In response, he cut off her own finger, before delivering her to the Super Duper Mart. At gunpoint, he ordered her inside, then collapsed to the ground exhausted after the door shut, when he no longer had to pretend. When Lucy broke out, rather than killing the Ghoul on the spot, she left the door open and gave him several vials of the medicine, demonstrating that even at her most extreme, she'd stick by her Golden Rule. Dosing himself up, the Ghoul ransacked the deceased organ dealers' drug stash, going on a bender and by chance discovering an intact holotape of The Man from Deadhorse, seeing himself from what was essentially another life.[9]
After losing consciousness during the bender, he woke up to a group of self-proclaimed sheriffs arresting him for destroying a "legitimate" local business. He was brought over to the local "govermint," which turned out to be little more than a gang run by Sorrel Booker, his former associate. After a sit down where the Ghoul sewed his index finger back on, he shot both of the wannabe sheriffs as Booker ordered him to be killed. Sparing the life of his old associate, the Ghoul accidentally happened upon Lee Moldaver's wanted poster, realizing she was actually Miss Williams, the woman he had met before the War, resolving to track her down to get answers.
The Ghoul proceeded to interrogate an old associate for information, due to a letter he recovered from his son (one of the men he'd killed in Filly) that linked him to Moldaver. After shooting the man's other son, who tried to avenge his brother's death, he made way for the Griffith Observatory while tracking down Thaddeus, the current holder of the head. At the same time, he crossed paths with CX404 again, who joined him.[5] Together, they made way for the observatory. The Ghoul played a pivotal role in the ensuing battle; after the Brotherhood pushed into the building, killing everyone in their way, non-combatant or otherwise, he ambushed the attacking group. After confirming that the T-60s shared the same welding fault below the chest plate as the T-45s, which rendered them vulnerable to small arms fire, he turned out the lights and killed the attacking knights and most of the light infantry, temporarily pushing back the Brotherhood assault.[6]
He confronted Hank MacLean, finally tracking down a Vault-Tec executive to interrogate about the fate of his family. Wounding him in the face, the Ghoul let MacLean flee, reasoning that it was easier to "track a stuck pig than listen to it squeal." He then recruited Lucy MacLean to his cause, confronting the people responsible for this horrific world. This time, she joined him willingly.[6]
Personality[]
Prior to becoming a ghoul, Cooper was a loving husband to Barb and father to Janey. He considered himself a staunch believer in the American Dream and its value, having served in Alaska in the first years of the Sino-American War, and a staunch anti-communist as a result. However, the changing culture and domination of megacorporations put his principles to the test, and eventually he grew disillusioned as he did Vault-Tec advertisements and suffered ostracism from his peers. When he learned that the very corporation his wife worked for conspired to use the nuclear war to implement its own designs for the world, he lost faith and tried to make a clean break, suffering a messy divorce and blacklisting from entertainment work.
It failed to break him. What did was the Great War. Ghoulified by radiation, he used his military training and skills as a cowboy for bounty hunting, while his experience in show business led him to become the Ghoul, a larger-than-life gunslinger capable of incredible brutality, including cannibalism. While over time lines blurred, he still stuck to a twisted code of honor, as what kept him going was one thing: Learning what happened to his family.
Filmography[]
- Gun
- Valley of the Gun
- Under the Covers
- The Man From Calabasas
- The Man from Deadhorse
- A Man and His Dog
Inventory[]
- 辐射:避难所
Notes[]
- Fallout 76 Public Test Server for the America's Playground update, several textures for movie posters featuring the pre-War Cooper Howard were datamined, including Gun, Valley of the Gun, Under the Covers and The Man from Calabasas. The textures were updated and different names were added to them while the Public Test Server was active. These posters have not been implemented in-game yet, but will presumably be added as part of a cross-promotional event in the future, similar to the Vault 33 jumpsuit. The original versions of the posters can be seen below, while the updated posters can be seen in various scenes of the Fallout TV series. In the
- Cooper Howard bears similarities to the Vault-Tec rep in Fallout 4. Both characters advertised Vaults but were not able to enter one, resulting in their becoming ghouls.
- Cooper Howard drives a 1954 Kaiser Darrin pre-War.
Notable quotes[]
- "Why, is this an Amish production of The Count of Monte Cristo, or the weirdest circle jerk I've ever been invited to?" – The Ghoul after being awoken
- "Well, now that is a very small drop in a very, very large bucket of drugs." – The Ghoul after being shot at by Lucy
- "The Wasteland's got its own golden rule. Thou shalt get sidetracked by bullshit every Goddamn time."
- "Well, Lucy MacLean, it ain't all canned peaches and marmalade left up here, sweetheart. Sometimes, a fella's gotta eat a fella." – The Ghoul while harvesting Roger's remains
- "Your daughter said her last name was MacLean, well, I just couldn't believe that it was THE MacLean. Hell, this kid used to pick up my wife's dry cleanin'. Now I've waited over two hundred years to ask somebody one question. Where's my fuckin' family?" – The Ghoul confronting Hank MacLean.
Appearances[]
The Ghoul appears 在辐射电视剧 and 辐射:避难所 . Cooper Howard is mentioned on several posters 在辐射76,引入于Expeditions: Atlantic City 更新 part two, America's Playground .
Behind the scenes[]
- The Ghoul makeup is practical, not a digital effect.[10]
- Walton Goggins stated he did not primarily base his performance as The Ghoul on previous performances from the Fallout series. Instead, he drew inspiration from classic Westerns, such as the films of John Wayne and Clint Eastwood.[11]
- The Fallout social media account recommend a Fallout 76 perk loadout for him:
- Strength: Barbarian, Bullet Shield
- Perception: Concentrated Fire, Rifleman, Expert Rifleman, Master Rifleman, Tank Killer, Ground Pounder
- Endurance: Lead Belly, Cannibal, Ironclad, Ghoulish, Radicool, Chem Fiend
- Charisma: Lone Wanderer, Chem Fiend
- Intelligence: Wrecking Ball
- Agility: Moving Target, Action Boy/Girl, Evasive, Sneak, Adrenaline, Gun Fu
- Luck: Psychopath, Four Leaf Clover, Grim Reaper's Sprint, Quick Hands, Better Criticals, Critical Savvy
Quotes[]
Gallery[]
Fallout TV series[]
Fallout 76[]
References[]
- ↑ Bud Askins: "Mr. Howard, great work today."
Cooper Howard: "Ah. Oh, thanks. Thanks, man."
Bud Askins: "Bud Askins. I oversee our Southern California operations."
Cooper Howard: "Ah."
Bud Askins: "I, uh, came over to Vault-Tec in Q3 after a ten-year stint at West Tek."
Cooper Howard: "West Tek."
Bud Askins: "It's a defense contractor."
Cooper Howard: "Oh, I'm, uh, very familiar with you guys. You designed the T-45 power armor."
Bud Askins: "First of its kind. No, I-I oversaw the-the rollout. You know, the design flaws were ridiculous, but they sure looked great."
Cooper Howard: "I wore the T-45 when we almost lost the great state of Alaska to the Reds. Those design flaws of yours cost a lot of good men and women their lives."
Bud Askins: "Yeah. Product management was never my bag. I'm more focused on HR R&D now. Overseeing workflow optimization of management timelines. I'm all about scale. Most people think scale means increasing global market share. That's thinking in three dimensions, and I'm talking about four. Because what is the ultimate weapon to destroy your competition? It's not outselling them. It's not outsmarting them. It's time."
Cooper Howard: "Hmm."
Bud Askins: "Time is the ultimate weapon."
Cooper Howard: "Uh-huh."
Bud Askins: "Yeah. Sounds complicated, but the future of all humanity comes down to one word."
Cooper Howard: "Yeah, what's that?"
Bud Askins: "Management."
Cooper Howard: "Well, I'm awful happy for you, Buck."
Bud Askins: "Bud. Bud Askins."
("The Trap") - ↑ Fallout TV series, Episode 1: "The End"
- ↑ Fallout TV series, Episode 6: "The Trap"
- ↑ Fallout - A Special LIVE Report from Galaxy News, ~46:00: "The Man from Deadhorse gallops to a fast start at the box office! The Howard-led Western is said to be the next smash for California Crest Studios."
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Fallout TV series, Episode 7: "The Radio"
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 Fallout (TV series) Episode 8: "The Beginning"
- ↑ Frank: "Why the hell is Cooper Howard working kids' birthday parties?"
Bob Spencer: "What else? Alimony."
("The End") - ↑ Fallout TV series, Episode 2: "The Target"
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 Fallout TV series, Episode 4: "The Ghouls"
- ↑ Fallout: A Wasteland Survival Guide to the New TV Series
- ↑ 'Fallout's Walton Goggins Reveals Which Classic Westerns Inspired The Ghoul
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