California’s first “Entertainment Zone” played host to another event with the goal of boosting downtown San Francisco.
A Halloween block party along Front Street drew in thousands in costumes and people looking to engage in the festivities and holiday-themed drinks. The Entertainment Zone recently drew an estimated 10,000 attendees during an Oktoberfest celebration.
“San Francisco knows how to have fun, host major events, and draw visitors from across the Bay Area and around the world to enjoy,” Mayor London Breed said in a statement earlier this month. “We know what this surge of activity does for our small business community and local economy, and we are seeing lasting benefits.”
The Oktoberfest event last month marked the state’s first Entertainment Zone event. A recently passed state law allows attendees of a special event to carry their beer and go-to drinks inside a specific area.
“Nightmare on Front Street” included three permitted businesses along Front Street – Schroeder’s, Harrington’s Bar & Grill, and Royal Exchange – to sell alcohol within the party zone.
Attended were met with live music, Halloween-themed games, horror movie screenings, costume contests, and more during the block party.
NEW YORK (AP) — Halloween has plenty of traditions, from candy to jack-o’-lanterns — and the annual spectacle of Heidi Klum’s costume.
The supermodel-turned-TV personality is fond of surprising her guests with her elaborate costumes, like in 2022, when she arrived at the event on the end of a fishing line, encased in a slithering worm costume.
“I just wanted to be something random,” she explained while lying on the floor for maximum worm-like effect. “I don’t think I’ve ever seen anyone being a rain worm before.”
“A lot of planning goes into it, you know,” Klum said through her peacock beak, with husband Tom Kaulitz next to her, dressed as an egg. “Because first, you have to have an idea.”
At her 2008 party she dressed as Kali, the Hindu goddess of death and destruction — complete with multiple arms, dangling heads and a deep coat of blue body paint.
Klum told The Associated Press she would immediately be planning her look for the following year. “After tonight I’ll be thinking about what I’ll do next year. It’s always got to be different. Completely different,” she said.
Other notable Klum costumes over the years have included a giant Transformer, a clone (complete with several Klum-lookalikes) an elderly version of herself, and an alien experiment gone awry.
The star has also transformed into a terrifying butterfly, an ape, a cat, a crow — and cartoon characters including Jessica Rabbit and Fiona from “Shrek.”
Her tip to those still trying to decide what to wear this Halloween? Leave the store-bought masks at home.
“I personally don’t like it when people hide behind those full masks. I prefer when people get a little bit creative and they play with their face, when they put a lot of makeup on,” she told the AP in 2007. “I always love that the most on me, I really go scary on the face.”
Some are well-worn warnings as familiar as the changing of seasons. Others are slow burns that end with a bang. Still others are just plain eerie.
Stories of spiritual entities, paranormal activity and creepy cryptids are passed through generations the world over, becoming local legends that only sometimes reach across borders and cultures.
So if the sordid tales you grew up with no longer make you shiver, it’s time to reanimate your roster with global tales of ghosts, hauntings, and petrifying processions.
With Halloween nigh, and the season in many parts of the world ripe for campfires and spooky stories, people gravitate toward fear even in a complex and sometimes scary world. Here are some favorites — lore and fiction, with maybe some truth sprinkled throughout — that The Associated Press gathered from its journalists around the planet:
A visitor dressed in a ghost costume at Goosebump market as a part of Halloween festival in Bangkok, Thailand, Wednesday, Oct. 30, 2024. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)
China: The corpse walkers
A visitor dressed in a ghost costume at Goosebump market as a part of Halloween festival in Bangkok, Thailand, Wednesday, Oct. 30, 2024. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)
A street sign for Balete Drive is seen in Quezon City, Philippines, Friday, Oct. 25, 2024. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila)
Dogs walk in a dimly lit portion of supposedly haunted Balete Drive in Quezon City, Philippines, Friday, Oct. 25, 2024. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila)
Roberto Perez, a 53-year-old who works part-time near Balete Drive, is seen here in Quezon City, Philippines, Friday, Oct. 25, 2024. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila)
An effigy is seen near a railway track where two commuter trains collided in 1987, killing 139 people, in Bintaro, Indonesia, Friday, Oct. 25, 2024. (AP Photo/Tatan Syuflana)
A young girl walks next to a railway track near the scene of a 1987 train collision that killed 139 people in Bintaro, Indonesia, Friday, Oct. 25, 2024. (AP Photo/Tatan Syuflana)
Motorists ride near a railway track where two commuter trains collided in 1987, killing 139 people, in Bintaro, Indonesia, Friday, Oct. 25, 2024. (AP Photo/Tatan Syuflana)
A woman walks in an important Brazilian historical construction from the 18th century named Arco do Teles, in Rio de Janeiro, Friday, Oct. 25, 2024. (Bruna Prado/AP Photo)
If you were out on the road in China in the old days — if you believe the stories, that is — you might have encountered a strange procession.
First, a man carrying a white paper lantern and scattering fake paper money ahead of them, chanting, “Yo ho, yo ho.” Then, a towering, hooded black figure wearing a ghastly mask and marching in an awkward, wooden gait. Bringing up the rear, another man guiding the giant by touch, perhaps with a black cat.
They were corpse walkers — and the giant was the corpse.
Bad things happen when someone gets buried far from home: Without descendants to feed their spirit and keep their grave clean, they’ll have a hard time settling in. They could even come back as a hungry ghost. So when a traveler died, the family would hire people who knew the strange art of walking a stiff body home.
When interviewer Liao Yiwu asked about memories of corpse walkers in the 2000s, some said they’d use a black cat to imbue the body with static electricity to make it walk. Others said there was a third man hiding under the cloak and giving the corpse a piggyback ride.
People kept their distance, he wrote, but the corpse walkers were always welcome at inns because they paid three times the normal rate and were said to bring good luck.
— By David Cohen in Bangkok
France: The legend of St. Denis
One of France’s oldest spooky legends is also one of its most gruesome, because it involves a walking headless corpse.
Said to have been Paris’ first bishop, Denis — later St. Denis — went on to lend his name to what is now the northern Paris suburb of Saint-Denis, famous for its magnificent basilica, its soccer stadium and the Olympic village that housed athletes during the Paris Games.
The third-century Roman rulers of what was then Gaul were apparently less than thrilled that Denis and companions Rustique and Éleuthère were making converts. Even after tossing them in prison, Denis continued to celebrate Mass. In some accounts, Denis suffered all manner of unspeakable tortures to make him renounce his faith — not just run-of-the-mill flagellation, but also mauling by famished wild beasts and being locked in a scorching oven.
Eventually, the three were sentenced to death and beheaded.
Legend has it that Denis’ corpse, lifted by two angels, picked up his severed head and walked from the Mount of Martyrs — the supposed execution site now called Montmartre — for about 6 kilometers (nearly 4 miles) before collapsing in the village of Catulliacum, now the town of Saint-Denis.
In Montmartre today, Suzanne Buisson Square has a statue of St. Denis holding his head, which he is said to have washed in the waters of a fountain there before staggering away with it.
— By John Leicester in Paris
Mongolia: The death worm
Slithering beneath the vast dunes of the Gobi Desert, legend has it, is the monstrous Mongolian Death Worm. It kills prey by squirting lethal venom and can even electrocute from a distance. So goes the folklore that has since inspired depictions of deadly giant worms in movies and fiction. In Mongolia, the creature is known as olgoi khorkhoi, which roughly translates as “intestine worm.”
The critter became known abroad after American paleontologist and explorer Roy Chapman Andrews wrote about it in his 1926 book, “On the Trail of Ancient Man: A Narrative of the Field Work of the Central Asiatic Expeditions.” During a meeting with the Mongolian premier, Andrews was asked to capture a specimen of the giant worm.
“None of those present ever had seen the creature, but they all firmly believed in its existence and described it minutely,” he wrote. “It is shaped like a sausage about two feet long, has no head nor legs and is so poisonous that merely to touch it means instant death.”
Some believe the lore began with a more common animal — a snake called the Tartar sand boa. Others, undeterred, believe the giant worms exists. Subsequent expeditions have yet to yield any proof.
— By Emily Wang Fujiyama in Beijing
Brazil: Bárbara of the Pleasures
It’s the turn of the 19th century, and colonial Rio de Janeiro is bustling. There are merchants, vendors, enslaved people, sailors — and a Portuguese immigrant, about 20 years old, named Bárbara. Legend says she stabbed her sleeping husband to run off with a lover, who then began exploiting her. Bárbara killed him, too, and was on her own.
As the story goes, she turned to sex work inside the Teles Arch. The dank, dark passage led off the plaza where the Portuguese emperor sat, and members of the royal court became faithful clients of the beautiful courtesan known as Bárbara of the Pleasures.
But age and disease caught up to her. One chronicler, Hermeto Lima, wrote in 1921 of a hole in Bárbara’s nose, her bulging eyes, scratched eyelids and skeletal hands.
To rejuvenate, Bárbara started washing with animal blood. When that failed, it’s said, she used blood from infants abandoned in the Wheel of the Exposed — the revolving compartment for foundlings outside a Catholic institution. Between 1738 and 1848, 20,966 babies were left in the wheel, according to text of an imperial ministry report provided by Esther Arantes, a retired professor in the infancy department of the State University of Rio de Janeiro.
Paulo Knauss, 58, director of the Museum of the Brazilian Historical and Geographical Institute, shows how to use the “wheel of the exposed” or “wheel of the foundlings,” a 1738 mechanism used to deposit newborns for charitable institutions, at the Museum of the Brazilian Historical and Geographical Institute in Rio de Janeiro, Friday, Oct. 25, 2024. (AP Photo/Bruna Prado)
A “wheel of the exposed” or “wheel of the foundlings,” a 1738 mechanism used to deposit newborns for charitable institutions, is seen at the Museum of the Brazilian Historical and Geographical Institute in Rio de Janeiro, Friday, Oct. 25, 2024. (AP Photo/Bruna Prado)
Arantes’ archival research yielded no evidence of Bárbara, but Rio’s rumor mill claimed otherwise:
Whenever someone brought a baby to the wheel, “the miserable woman, like a toad, came out from her hiding place, and ran to steal the child,” Lima wrote, adding Bárbara would make sure to drip its blood upon her leprous ulcers.
Bárbara disappeared, but her story lingers. Word is that she still prowls Teles Arch by night, surviving on the blood of babes.
The “madam” in question often walked around hostels with her red heels, especially at night, the sound of “koi koi” trailing behind her. You dare not come out if anyone raised an alarm that they heard the sound. Sometimes horrified students ran out and hostels were shut until morning, or even for days.
The backstory? No one knows for sure, but one popular theory was that she was fired as a teacher and died days later — vengeful, jobless and sad.
— By Dyepkazah Shibayan in Abuja, Nigeria
Britain: The Talbot Hotel
A sobbing woman. Ghostly, dressed in white — or, sometimes, black. And a storied oak staircase with royal connections.
The spooky stories revolve around a staircase that still stands at The Talbot Hotel in Oundle — a United Kingdom market town about 85 miles (135 kilometers) north of London that’s been around since the 1500s.
Mary, Queen of Scots — rival to England’s Queen Elizabeth I — is said to have descended the very same flight of steps on the way to her execution in 1587. But at the time, the multilevel structure was part of nearby Fotheringhay Castle, the site of Mary’s beheading.
Nearly four decades later, the Talbot was rebuilt using stones and other material salvaged from the abandoned Fotheringhay — including the castle’s storied staircase.
Guests and staff have reported seeing a ghostly woman on the stairs, and some have said they heard sobbing in the wee hours — all thought to be the doomed queen. The Associated Press has visited several times and can confirm quality coffee and cakes, but not the presence of ghosts.
— By Laurie Kellman in London
Indonesia: Ghosts of the Bintaro train tragedy
The Bintaro train tragedy of October 1987 is well known in Indonesia. The head-on collision between two commuter trains in the southern area of Jakarta is considered one of the deadliest train accidents in the country’s history.
The collision killed 139 passengers, giving rise to many mystical stories around the railway.
In the 37 years since the crash, many local residents and railway workers have reported seeing apparitions of people dressed in old, bloodstained clothing, wandering near the tracks where the tragedy took place. As the local urban legend goes, these ghostly figures are believed to be the spirits of those who perished in the accident and remain unable to move on to the afterlife. Some people also say there was a figure wandering around and looking for his body parts.
In 2013, another train accident happened at the same track, only 200 meters (yards) from the 1987 accident. The commuter train hit a petrol truck in the crossing gate, killing seven people, including the train engineer.
— By Edna Tarigan in Jakarta, Indonesia
Japan: Yotsuya Kaidan
One of Japan’s most famous kaidan, or ghost stories, is named after the area in Tokyo where the tragic story takes place. Called Yotsuya Kaidan, it’s an unforgettable tale of that archetypal powerless woman whose only recourse for revenge against the man who betrays her love is to become a ghost.
Oiwa, a beautiful woman and wife of the handsome but heartless samurai Iemon, is weak after giving birth to their baby. Iemon is having an affair, and the other woman, seeking to make sure Iemon dumps Oiwa, tricks her into taking poison, thinking it’s medicine, so her face becomes disfigured.
Written in the 19th century and staged as various Kabuki plays and made into dozens of movies, a particularly scary scene is that moment when Oiwa discovers her horrible transformation, a telling moment that speaks volumes about human vanity and frailty. When she combs her hair before a mirror, it falls out in clumps. She sees her twisted, discolored face and cries out: “Is this my face? Is this my face?”
After Oiwa dies, she haunts Iemon, appearing everywhere — perhaps merely his delusion. Iemon is eventually driven to madness.
— By Yuri Kageyama in Tokyo
Kenya: The legend of Ngong Hills
In Kenya, a Maasai folktale about an ogre who used to raid villages for food is told to children. It goes like this:
The ogre lived deep in the forest and would raid neighboring villages to kill cattle — the Maasai community’s symbol of wealth — despite many warriors keeping guard.
The ogre fell in love with a beautiful Maasai woman named Sanayian and he transformed into a Maasai warrior to win her heart. He then revealed his real identity to Sanayian — who then told the warriors. The warriors, using Sanayian as a bait, speared the ogre while he was meeting with his love.
Even after he transformed back into an ogre, he could not survive. He fell and died. His five fingers, it is said, formed the five peaks that are the present-day Ngong Hills, in the outskirts of the capital, Nairobi, and a popular hiking destination.
— By Evelyne Musambi in Nairobi, Kenya
The Philippines: The ghost on Balete Drive
Ask anyone in Manila about Balete Drive and many will associate it with the mysterious “white lady” who appears at night.
The street, named after trees that used to line its sidewalks in suburban Quezon city, has been the subject of scary stories that have been told and retold since the 1950s. There are claims that a beautiful woman with long hair dressed in white would sometimes suddenly appear at night — then just disappear without a trace.
It is said that the sightings were reported by taxi drivers working on late-night shifts. Some claim she would appear asking for a ride and then suddenly disappear from the passenger seat as the vehicle moves. Others say her image would appear at the rearview mirror of drivers driving alone and vanish just as quickly.
“I haven’t seen her,” says 53-year-old Roberto Perez, who works part-time near Balete Drive, “but when I pass there between midnight to about 1:30, I get goosebumps, so I just quickly turn to another street.”
The tale’s origins are unknown. There are varying accounts why the ghost appears along Balete Drive, but the most common story is that decades ago, a girl died due to a car accident along the street. Horror movies in the Philippines have been produced based on this urban legend.
— By Celine Rosario in Bangkok and Aaron Favila in Manila, Philippines
Hungary: The marble bride
Through the branches of stately trees on a leafy avenue in Hungary’s capital, passersby can spot an unusual figure keeping solemn watch from above: the statue of a woman with a mournful expression peering from a stone balcony.
The sculpture, known as the “marble bride,” is unlike any of the other frescoes on surrounding buildings in Budapest, and the mystery of its presence has produced legends going back nearly a century.
In one, a young couple shared an apartment in the building when the husband was called to fight in World War I. The wife waited patiently on the balcony each day for his return, and when a letter arrived with news of his death on the front, the woman died of a broken heart.
But the letter had been mistaken. When the husband returned home and found his wife had died, he had a sculpture carved in her honor and placed where she had spent so many days faithfully waiting.
Another legend says that the husband never returned from the war and, unable to accept his death, the woman stayed waiting on the balcony and eventually turned to stone, and still waits today for a reunion that will never come.
— By Justin Spike in Budapest, Hungary
Thailand: Lady Nak of Phra Khanong
Bangkok is home to one of Thailand’s most famous pieces of folklore: the tragic love of Mae Nak, or the Lady Nak of Phra Khanong.
The young and pregnant Nak was waiting for her husband, Mak, to come back from war to their home on the banks of Phra Khanong canal. Nak and her baby died during childbirth, but Mak still came home to see them waiting. With his unwavering love, Mak rejected warnings that Nak was a ghost until he saw her stretching her arm from the upper-floor porch to the ground to pick up a lime. He fled, and Nak started terrorizing the town in grief and fury.
In one variation of the story’s ending, Nak was stopped either by a shaman who captured her in a clay jar, or a powerful Buddhist monk who performed a rite to rest her spirit in peace.
The story has been reinterpreted into dozens of movies, with the critically acclaimed 1999 version becoming the first Thai movie to gross over 100 million baht — about $2.7 million at the time. The shrine dedicated to Nak at Wat Mahabut, the temple where her body is believed to be buried, is famous for worshippers seeing their prayers about love and children being answered.
The beauty mogul bared (almost) all in an Instagram post on Thursday, October 31, that showed her as Demi Moore from the 1996 film, Striptease, replete with a movie poster recreation and not so much as a stitch of clothing.
When Jenner, 27, posed for the camera, her hair was windblown and styled long and straight (with bangs!) to mirror the look made famous by Moore, 61. She completed the ’90s beauty moment by donning a matte nude lip, tawny blush and a fresh spray tan for a bronze finish.
The barely-there makeup was in line with Jenner’s more natural approach to glam as of late — however, by stripping down, she may have been making a statement in support of Moore.
During a discussion on The New York Times’ “The Interview” podcast in September 2024, Moore recalled people trying to tear her down not just because the role was provocative but because of the accompanying payday. She became the highest-earning female actor when she landed the part in Striptease for $12.5 million – and that’s when the backlash started.
Demi Moore.Columbia Pictures/Getty Images
“Well, with Striptease, it was as if I had betrayed women, and with G.I. Jane, it was as if I had betrayed men,” Moore said on the podcast. “But I think the interesting piece is that when I became the highest-paid actress — why is it that, at that moment, the choice was to bring me down?”
She continued: “I don’t take this personally. I think anyone who had been in the position that was the first to get that kind of equality of pay would probably have taken a hit. But because I did a film that was dealing with the world of stripping and the body, I was extremely shamed.”
During a recent cover story for Variety, Moore said landing her record-breaking Striptease salary was “so powerful for me because it wasn’t just about me; it was about changing the playing field for all women. But because I was portraying a stripper, I betrayed women.”
“The narrative quickly became, ‘Well, she’s only getting paid that number because she’s playing a stripper.’ It hit me really hard,” Moore told the publication at the time. “But at the same time, I understood that anybody who steps out first is going to take the hit. That goes for anybody challenging the status quo.”
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In paying homage to Moore’s career-defining role, Jenner seemed to be taking a stand for equal pay for women in Hollywood and beyond. After all, Jenner knows a thing or two about making headlines for financial success — she was named the youngest billionaire by Forbes in 2019.
Some criticized the publication’s decision to call Jenner “self-made,” saying she was born into wealth and privilege. At the time, Jenner responded to the negative backlash, claiming that her parents financially “cut [her] off at the age of 15.”
Judging by her latest Halloween costume, it seems Jenner is continuing to do things her way.
TAB. SO FAR THIS YEAR, 23 PEOPLE HAVE DIED IN PEDESTRIAN CRASHES ACROSS IOWA IN THE IOWA DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION TELLS US THAT SLIGHTLY HIGHER THAN THIS TIME LAST YEAR, THERE WILL SOON BE A LOT MORE PEOPLE ON THE STREETS TRICK OR TREATING. KCCI MARCUS MCINTOSH HAS A LOOK AT WAYS TO KEEP YOURSELF AND YOUR KIDS SAFE. MARCUS. BEN, WE’RE OUT IN DES MOINES WHERE TRICK OR TREATING IS NEXT WEDNESDAY, BEGGARS NIGHT. THE NIGHT BEFORE HALLOWEEN. BUT THERE ARE ABOUT A HALF DOZEN COMMUNITIES WHERE TRICK OR TREATING WILL TAKE PLACE ON SATURDAY NIGHT. SO WE HAVE SOME TIPS FOR YOU TO AVOID TRAFFIC TROUBLE. WHILE TRICK OR TREATING. AT COLBY PARK IN WINDSOR HEIGHTS. THE SOUNDS OF KIDS HAVING FUN WILL RING LOUD AND STRONG AS THEY GO DOOR TO DOOR SATURDAY EVENING TO TRICK OR TREAT PARENTS, NO MATTER WHERE THEY LIVE. WANT TO MAKE SURE IT IS DONE SAFELY? IT’S REALLY IMPORTANT WE TRY TO WALK AROUND WITH GLOW STICKS OR HAVE SOME SORT OF GLOWING THING ON THE KIDS SO THAT NOT ONLY WE CAN KEEP TRACK OF THEM, BUT ANYBODY THAT’S THAT MAY BE DRIVING IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD CAN ALSO SEE THEM. ALYSSA CONOR SAYS THAT IS HER NUMBER ONE RULE. SHE AND HER HUSBAND WILL BE WITH THE KIDS EVERY STEP OF THE WAY AS THEY GO DOOR TO DOOR FOR CANDY. THAT’S KIND OF HOW I GREW UP, WAS MAKING SURE THAT WE HAD THE SAFETY THINGS IN PLACE, HICKMAN ROAD GETS A LOT OF HIGH SPEED DRIVERS. LIEUTENANT MIKE AHLBECK WITH THE WINDSOR HEIGHTS POLICE DEPARTMENT OFFERS A TIP FOR DRIVERS WHEN THEY SEE THE TRICK OR TREATERS. I WANT TO BE CAUTIOUS BECAUSE KIDS DO TEND TO DART OUT. THEY’RE VERY EXCITED. THERE ARE CHALLENGES IN WINDSOR HEIGHTS THAT SOME COMMUNITIES DON’T HAVE, AND THAT IS HOW TRICK OR TREATERS AND THEIR PARENTS NAVIGATE STREETS WITHOUT SIDEWALKS. NOT EVERY STREET AROUND THE METRO HAS A SIDEWALK, SO IF YOU ARE GOING TO BE WALKING ON THE STREET, WALK AS FAR LEFT AS YOU CAN, PREFERABLY ON THE GRASS. NOW, LIEUTENANT URBIK ALSO ADVISES PEOPLE TO PUT THIS AWAY. WHETHER YOU’RE A TRICK OR TREATER, YOUR PARENT AND ESPECIALLY DRIVERS PUT AWAY THE CELL PHONE FOR A FEW HOURS AND HAVE FUN TRICK OR TREATING. WE’RE LIVE IN DES MOINE
In a first since 1938, Des Moines, Iowa, kids will trick-or-treat on Halloween
Updated: 3:17 PM EDT Oct 31, 2024
For the first time since 1938, children in Des Moines, Iowa, will go trick-or-treating on Halloween.Video above: Parents and community leaders share trick-or-treating safety tipsGoing door-to-door for candy on All Hallows’ Eve has long been commonplace throughout the country. But not in Des Moines, where Iowa’s capital city took a different approach more than seven decades ago in hopes of tamping down on hooliganism.Instead, Des Moines children don their costumes on Beggars’ Night, typically the day before Halloween. And besides screaming, “Trick-or-Treat,” children are expected to tell a joke before receiving a treat.This year, Beggars’ Night was set for Wednesday, but because of expected heavy rain and thunderstorms, officials delayed trick-or-treating until Thursday, which to the rest of the country is the normal Halloween.”To my knowledge, it has never been moved or canceled since it was established after Halloween in 1938,” Assistant City Manager Jen Schulte said. “However, the safety of our residents, families and children is always our top priority and led to the change in this year’s scheduled Beggars’ Night.”The city began its unusual custom at the suggestion of a former city parks director as a way to reduce vandalism and promote more wholesome fun for kids. Initially, children were encouraged to sing a song, recite poetry and offer some other kind of entertainment, but over time a joke became the most common offering.Beggar’s Night also has limited hours, typically running from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.Many of Des Moines’ suburbs also adopted the Beggars’ Night tradition and chose to shift the celebration to Halloween this year.”I didn’t realize we were that much of an anomaly because for us, this is normal,” said Debbie Westphal Swander, who owns a costume shop in West Des Moines. “We’re going to be in sync at least for this year with the way the event is celebrated everywhere else.”The big picture for me is, it’s absolutely about the kids. That’s the most important thing.”
DES MOINES, Iowa —
For the first time since 1938, children in Des Moines, Iowa, will go trick-or-treating on Halloween.
Video above: Parents and community leaders share trick-or-treating safety tips
Going door-to-door for candy on All Hallows’ Eve has long been commonplace throughout the country. But not in Des Moines, where Iowa’s capital city took a different approach more than seven decades ago in hopes of tamping down on hooliganism.
Instead, Des Moines children don their costumes on Beggars’ Night, typically the day before Halloween. And besides screaming, “Trick-or-Treat,” children are expected to tell a joke before receiving a treat.
This year, Beggars’ Night was set for Wednesday, but because of expected heavy rain and thunderstorms, officials delayed trick-or-treating until Thursday, which to the rest of the country is the normal Halloween.
“To my knowledge, it has never been moved or canceled since it was established after Halloween in 1938,” Assistant City Manager Jen Schulte said. “However, the safety of our residents, families and children is always our top priority and led to the change in this year’s scheduled Beggars’ Night.”
The city began its unusual custom at the suggestion of a former city parks director as a way to reduce vandalism and promote more wholesome fun for kids. Initially, children were encouraged to sing a song, recite poetry and offer some other kind of entertainment, but over time a joke became the most common offering.
Beggar’s Night also has limited hours, typically running from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Many of Des Moines’ suburbs also adopted the Beggars’ Night tradition and chose to shift the celebration to Halloween this year.
“I didn’t realize we were that much of an anomaly because for us, this is normal,” said Debbie Westphal Swander, who owns a costume shop in West Des Moines. “We’re going to be in sync at least for this year with the way the event is celebrated everywhere else.
“The big picture for me is, it’s absolutely about the kids. That’s the most important thing.”
Halloween seems like the perfect opportunity to give the lovely and talented, Jody Steel her flowers. The makeup artist and cosplay icon has partnered with CBS and has also been featured on Freeform’s ’25 Days of Christmas.’
Her shadowing techniques are next-level, and it’s as if she thinks of her face as a blank canvas for any given character.
Steel’s skill and beauty have us geeking out. Give her a follow HERE.
It’s unclear what compels him to do so, but President Biden continued a longstanding tradition of pretending to bite a baby during a Halloween event at the White House on Wednesday.
Whereas some people might find it endearing, Biden’s little Chompfest usually sends social media into an uproar for it’s creepy factor.
Not to mention, with his mental faculties diminished to the point where Democrats were forced to undemocratically remove him from his reelection bid, one has to wonder if he was even aware the baby wasn’t an actual chicken.
Anyway, a mother at the event brought her baby up to the President. He was adorable in his little chicken costume.
Bden proceeded to provide the world with an image that will go down in infamy.
Joe Biden decided to bite a child dressed as a chicken during a Halloween celebration at the White House tonight.
Now, let’s circle back to my original comment here that maybe he was just confused. Perhaps he thought the mother was carrying a big ol’ Purdue chicken.
But alas, that theory kind of goes out the window when you realize ol’ Joe Biden was pictured pretending to take a bite out of not just one baby … but four babies!
And only one of them was dressed as a chicken.
Joe Biden ‘bites’ baby dressed as chicken for Halloween at White House
As US President #JoeBiden and his wife, Jill, hosted their last trick-or-treaters for #Halloween at the #WhiteHouse on Wednesday, the 81-year-old went viral for taking a “bite” of a baby dressed as a chicken… pic.twitter.com/GmEnAUaJlc
You’ve gotta love the state of presidential politics these days. Biden spent the day biting babies yesterday while Donald Trump was giving a speech wearing an orange vest after having driven in a garbage truck.
Trump has completely derailed my evening. I have spent 90 minutes laughing at this man’s genius.
Again, hate em if ya want, but our 45th president just showed up in a garbage truck and is now speaking at his rally in an orange garbage man vest. I can’t even. ❤️🤣🗑️ #MAGApic.twitter.com/FN1oFORjyJ
As noted, President Biden has a history of doing this with the biting and the babies. It’s like nobody on his team took the time to pull him aside and explain that politicians for years have kissed babies for photo ops, not nibbled on them.
Here he is absolutely terrifying a small girl during a trip to Finland just last year.
During his departure from Finland, President Joe Biden bizarrely sniffed and bit at the shoulder of a frightened little girl. pic.twitter.com/Lx23QeGmfD
— Conservative War Machine (@WarMachineRR) July 14, 2023
On a much more serious note, Biden’s inappropriate behavior isn’t limited to the young folk. Several women have come forward to accuse the President of inappropriately touching them and making them feel uncomfortable over the years.
Former Nevada Assemblywoman Lucy Flores wrote a column alleging Biden inappropriately kissed her and smelled her hair.
He even has a history of making female Secret Service agents uncomfortable by skinny dipping or walking around the house without clothes.
Tara Reade, a former Senate staffer, accused President Biden of sexual assault.
But this baby biting thing. Man, is it any wonder Kamala Harris doesn’t want him anywhere near the campaign trail right now?
Listings may be sent to: Goings On, Gloucester Daily Times, 36 Whittemore St.,Gloucester, MA 01930, or emailed to Joann Mackenzie at jomackenzie@gloucestertimes.com, at least two weeks prior to an event.
Science writing contest
High school students interested in astronomy and space exploration are invited to enter a new astronomical science writing contest. Accepted genres for entries include research reports, news stories, essays, biographical profiles, book reviews, speculative fiction, dramatic scripts, poems, and musical lyrics. Submitted pieces should be 500 to 2,500 words in length, depending on the genre. Submission deadline is March 15.
Details about prizes and publishing opportunities may be found at https://bit.ly/4duz8AN.
More information on submissions including topical prompts may be found at https://bit.ly/3MXaD4x.
The contest is co-hosted by The Galactic Inquirer, a free online journal on diverse astronomical topics, the American Astronomical Society,vthe International Astronomical Union’s Office of Astronomy for Education, and the Slooh remote telescopes service.
Home upgrades
Essex County Habitat for Humanity’s Critical Home Repair/Aging in Place program can — by using volunteers, donated construction materials and flexible sources of funding — offer very affordable house repairs to help Gloucester seniors age in place. The projects typically take a week, and the homeowner can usually continue living in the home while the work is done. Upgrades include wheelchair ramps, weatherization, handicap features, repairing structural rotting, stairs, roofing, etc. The program is not limited to elder and/or disabled homeowners, and does repairs necessary to maintain sound condition of the home, weatherization and energy efficiency, those needed to alleviate critical health, life and safety issues or code violations, and those that will help older adults age safely in their homes. Habitat staff inspects the property and determines financial qualifications based on total household income. If physically able, the homeowner must contribute sweat equity hours and the home must be owner-occupied. Learn more at https://www.essexcountyhabitat.org/critical-home-repair-program/.
Teen task force
High school students of all faiths are invited to join Lappin Foundation’s Teen Antisemitism Task Force. Students will hear from experts about ways they can combat antisemitism and all forms of hate, as well as put into action what they learn. There will be opportunities for teens to share their experiences and ideas as well. Meetings will be held Tuesdays from 7:30-8:30 p.m., once a month. For the complete calendar and list of speakers, visit LappinFoundation.org. There is no cost to join the task force and students can attend meetings as their schedules allow. For more information email dcoltin@lappinfoundation.org. The Teen Antisemitism Task Force is supported by CJP and the Jewish Teen Initiative.
For job seekers
If you need help with your resume, cover letter, or some job searching advice, contact jobseeker@sawyerfreelibrary.org or call 978-325-5500 to make an appointment for in-person resume and cover letter assistance with a librarian. Computers, Chromebooks, tablets, Wi-Fi Hotspots, printing, photocopying, scanning, and saving via email and flash drive are all free at the Sawyer Free Library at 21 Main St. Questions? Visit sawyerfreelibrary.org or 978-325-5500.
ClamFest
ESSEX — The 39th Annual Essex ClamFest and Arts & Crafts Festival is 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 26, at Shepard Memorial Park, 24 Martin St, Essex. While the events are free, for $15 festival goes can sample tastes of Cape Ann’s finest chowders from noon to 1 p.m. and vote for their favorites. Tasting only while supplies last. Lots of fun activities, arts and crafts vendors, live entertainment and plenty of food vendors on-site. Visit capeannchamber.com
At Halibut Point
ROCKPORT — Rockport’s Halibut Point State Park is a coastal gem of the state Department of Conservation and Recreation, with free programs offered to the public. Fall is a particularly beautiful time to visit this singular seascape at 4 Gott Ave., Rockport, just off Route 127. An adult must accompany children. To book guided group tours please call 978-546-2997, visit or halibut.point@mass.gov Follow the park at @massdcr X (Twitter) and Instagram. ADA/reasonable accommodations.
Halibut Rocks! Geology at the Point, Sundays, Oct. 27, 10 a.m. to noon. Meet at visitors center, billions of years of geological evolution under your feet at this extraordinary seascape. Ages 8-plus. Rain cancels.
Atlantic Path trek, Sunday, Nov. 17, 11:30 a.m. to 3 p.m., meet at parking area. Great bird watching, curious geology, incredible views. Advisory: gorgeous but uneven rocky coastline. Prepare accordingly. Bring snacks/water. No amenities along the way. Rain Cancels. Ages 12 and older.
Halibut Point Tower Talk, Saturday, Dec. 7, noon to 2 p.m. During World War II, Halibut Point’s tower provided valuable coastal defense. Learn its history. Ages 12 and older, all abilities.
Halloween Mass
On Sunday, Oct. 27, at 11:45 a.m., Our Lady of Good Voyage Church, 142 Prospect St., welcomes all parents, grandparents, and children to join Father Jim for its third annual Halloween Faith & Family Mass, followed by treats on the lawn. Halloween is often described as a pagan holiday, but this is contrary to its true meaning and authentic origins. The word hallow actually means holy. All Hallows Eve is really a Catholic holiday with roots in both celebrating the lives of the saints and praying for the souls of our departed brothers and sisters. Following the mass, there will be treats on the lawn.
Drug Take-back Day
Monday, Oct. 26, is National Drug Take-Back Day and here in Gloucester, from 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., the Rose Baker Senior Center will host a collection site in its back lot at 6 Manual F. Lewis Street. The event will also serve to educate people on drug prevention strategies. All drug drop-offs are anonymous; no information is required. The service is free. Items accepted include prescription and over-the-counter medication, medication samples, vitamins, narcotics and liquid medication. Please note: Needles, thermometers, intravenous bags, infected or bloody material or inhalers will not be accepted.
Pancake Breakfast
ROCKPORT — Bring your appetite to Pigeon Cove Circle’s “all-you-can-eat” pancake breakfast Saturday, Oct. 26, from 8 to 11 a.m., 6 Breakwater Road, Rockport. On the menu are buttermilk, blueberry and buckwheat pancakes with sausage a real maple syrup. All for just $12. And at the bake table, everyone’s favorite Nisu.
Archaeological dig
Archaeologists from the Fiske Center for Archaeological Research at University of Massachusetts Boston will excavate land around the Babson-Alling House on Cape Ann Museum Green. (CAM Green) From 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., on Oct. 25, 26, and 31, the public is invited to observe the excavations which promise to uncover new information about the history of the site. The Georgian house was built by William Allen in 1740 and acquired by the Cape Ann Museum in 2019. The findings will be discussed on Nov. 23 at 3:30 p.m., as part of the CAMTalk: History Series, with Christa Beranek and Laura Paisley of the Fiske Center for Archaeological Research at UMass Boston. Admission is free at CAM Green, 13 Poplar St., Gloucester. Please note: parking is limited..
‘Tell-tale Heart’
From Oct. 24 to 27, the Gloucester Stage Company, 267 East Main St., Gloucester, presents an Edgar Allan Poe Double Header to put you in the mood for Halloween. Created and performed by Livy Scanlon and presented in partnership with The Hanover Theatre Reparatory, this imaginative one-person retelling of “The Tell-Tale Heart” and “The Cask of Amontillado” is staged as a seance, inviting audiences to conjure two of Poe’s darkest tales. This production runs for one hour with no intermission and is best best for adults and ages 13-plus. For tickets and information, and for schools interested in student matinees, visit gloucesterstage.com oremail Natascha Tretter at natascha@gloucesterstage.com.
At Manchester library
MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA — Fall is underway and with it, new programs and events at Manchester Public Library, 15 Union St., and new Sunday hours, 1-4 p.m. through April. Check out the schedule below and save the dates. Unless otherwise noted, all events will take place at the library. To register, visit www.manchesterpl.org, or call the library at 978-526-7711.
Lego Time, Mondays, 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. Drop-in, unstructured Lego building fun for kids ages 6 and older.
Cookbook Club, Saturday, Oct. 26, noon to 1 p.m., meets once a month to share recipes from a cookbook off our library shelves. October’s pick is “Diasporican : A Puerto Rican Cookbook” by Illyanna Maisonet. This month we are celebrating Hispanic Heritage Month with recipes. Questions? Call 978-526-7711.
Job search help, Monday, Oct. 28, 2 to 3 p.m. 10 Essential Ways To Avoid Job Scams & Conduct A Productive Modern Search (Virtual. Register on our website or by calling 978-526-7711.
Dungeons and Dragons for Adults (Virtual), Monday, Oct. 28, 7 to 9 p.m. Whatever your level, MBTS’s Head of Adult and Reference Services — Maddy — will be your Game Master.
Talent Show
Spaulding Education Fund’s “Night of Stars” talent show is all set for Saturday, Nov. 2, in the Manchester Essex Regional High School auditorium from 4-7 p.m. The entire North Shore community is invited. Performers of all ages may audition — details can be found at https://www.spauldingeducationfund.org/events. Special early-bird pricing is available until Oct. 25.
Blood drives
The American Red Cross urges blood and platelet donors, especially those with type O blood and donors giving platelets, to make and keep donation appointments now to help hospitals restock blood products for patients. As a thank-you, all who give through Oct. 31 will receive a $10 Amazon.com Gift Card by email, plus be automatically entered for a chance to win one of three $5,000 gift cards. For full details, visit RedCrossBlood.org/Treat.
Wednesday, Oct. 30: 2-7 p.m., Magnolia Library & Community Center, 1 Lexington Ave., Gloucester.
Tuesday, Nov. 12: 2-7 p.m., Magnolia Library & Community Center, 1 Lexington Ave., Gloucester.
Thursday, Nov. 14: 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., Ipswich Community Center, 25 Green St., Ipswich.
Friday, Nov. 15: Noon to 5 p.m., Our Lady of Good Voyage, 142 Prospect St., Gloucester.
Monday, Nov. 18: 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., True North Ale Company, 116 County Road, Ipswich.
Appointments also are available at other locations and at the Danvers Blood Donation Center, 99 Rosewood Drive in Danvers, and by calling 800-733-2767, visiting redcrossblood.org or using the Red Cross Blood Donor App.
Exchange open
The Annisquam Exchange opens its doors Wednesday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Saturday, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., through October. Offering Folly Cove designs, silver, collectibles, estate pieces, linens, fine jewelry, kitchenware, cards, Annisquam apparel from Annisquam Sewing Circle, artworks, toys, candy, and more, at 32 Leonard St. in Gloucester. To learn more, visit www.annisquamexchange.com or email annisquamexchange@gmail.com.
Now is not the time to spend hours in the stores shopping for festive Halloween decorations – and besides, with everything going on, who has the time?! So, here are 7 ways to make your house Halloween-ready in 10 minutes or less.
Ghosts outside
Put a plastic or styrofam ball on top of a bamboo gardening stake, then cover with a white plastic tablecloth or sheet. Stick into the ground.
Tattered garbage bags
Take black garbage bags and shred them. They can be hung around exterior doorways and overhands, or along roof eaves, to give a haunted, billowing effect.
Spiderwebs
Spiderwebs scream Halloween – spread them across corners of rooms and doorways inside, and along bushes and small trees outside. A few plastic spiders will make them uber-creepy.
Lightbulbs
Change up the lightbulbs on your front porch or in your backyard to purple, green or black.
Music
Go on YouTube and crank up the classics: Monster Mash, Time Warp, and Thriller. Don’t forget the spooky soundtracks too.
Games
Set up a big bowl of water and apples for some bobbing fun (you can also thread donuts onto a string and hang the string up). Stack toilet paper rolls that have ghost faces drawn on them and see how many you can knock down with a ball. You can also find slews of easy minute-to-win-it games on Pinterest.
Pumpkin carving station
Stock up on some pumpkins and let everyone’s creativity run wild. You can carve the pumpkins, draw on them with Sharpies, or paint them. Stuff some clothes with newspaper and make a pumpkin-headed man for the yard. Display them on social media. And, if you want to get competitive, invite friends to vote on their favourite.
A full-time work-from-home mom, Jennifer Cox (our “Supermom in Training”) loves dabbling in healthy cooking, craft projects, family outings, and more, sharing with readers everything she knows about being an (almost) superhero mommy.
In a special Halloween episode of “Matt About Town,” WTOP’s Matt Kaufax risked life and limb to find out the truth behind the Bunny Man in the small town of Clifton.
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Do you know the Halloween urban legend of Northern Virginia’s Bunny Man?
Have you heard of the Bunny Man?
It’s one of Northern Virginia’s scariest and most haunting urban legends, with a horrifying character at its core. In today’s special Halloween episode of “Matt About Town,” WTOP’s Matt Kaufax risked life and limb to find out the truth behind this horror story, nestled in the small town of Clifton, Virginia.
Making his first appearance in 1904, the legend goes that “the Bunny Man” was an escaped patient from an asylum that existed near Clifton. Spooked by the presence of the nearby asylum, the story says, residents successfully got the building shut down.
That’s where things went wrong.
According to legend, there was an accident, where the bus transporting dangerous asylum patients, including the future Bunny Man, to a Lorton prison crashed near a rural railroad overpass on Colchester Road. In the aftermath, police were allegedly able to account for all patients — all but one.
It’s a myth Matt found has been passed down from generation to generation in Clifton, and reported sightings over the years keep the story alive — to the point where it’s still thought that the Bunny Man makes an appearance at midnight every Halloween.
But beware if you seek him out, you may not live to tell the tale (pun intended).
Come along with Matt on one of his wildest adventures yet, where everyone has their own theory, and things aren’t quite what they seem.
Hear “Matt About Town” first every Tuesday and Thursday on 103.5 FM!
If you have a story idea you’d like Matt to cover, email him, or chat with him on Instagram and TikTok.
No need to carry around a heavy coat to cover up festive Halloween costumes this year, a warm front has left temperatures incredibly pleasant for trick-or-treaters Thursday night.
The National Weather Service says that “Halloween will be reminiscent of summer in the East, with temperatures 20-30 degrees above normal,” and that is especially true in the D.C. area. Highs will climb up to 84 degrees Thursday afternoon, with evening temperatures in the 70s or upper 60s in the outer suburbs.
7News First Alert Senior Meteorologist Brian van de Graaff said it could actually be “the warmest Halloween in 50 years” in D.C.
“You go back to 1974 it was 80 degrees. It’s been as warm as 85, looking back at the history of Halloweens,” he said. “It’s going to definitely be one of the warmest ones we’ve had in a long time.”
The weather will still be nice for trick-or-treaters, so kids can stay out late collecting candy without catching a cold.
“As far as when you go trick-or-treating this evening, just a few scattered clouds,” Van de Graaff said. “Don’t forget the sun goes down at 6:08 p.m., so it’ll be getting very dark, watch out for those kiddos this evening.”
The weather will also be unseasonably warm on Friday, with one or two morning showers in the forecast.
“Maybe a few light showers tomorrow morning,” Van de Graaff said. “Which would break our streak of 30 plus dry days in a row.”
This weekend will be more seasonable, with highs dropping back into the 60s.
Daylight savings ends on Sunday, so you should set your clock back one hour before bed. For some, that means an extra hour to sleep in after a weekend full of fun, spooky activities.
Forecast
HALLOWEEN Partly to mostly sunny Highs: 79-85 Winds: Southwest 5-10 mph Wow! This will likely be the warmest Halloween in 50 years (the high was 80 degrees on Halloween in 1974)! Plan for a sunny and warm day with highs in the low to mid 80s. We’ll likely fall short of the record high of 85 degrees at DCA that was set in 1950. It’s more likely we will tie or break the current record at Dulles, which is 81 degrees that we reached in 2004. Southerly winds will increase late in the afternoon, so plan for a breezy and warm evening for trick-or-treating with the sun setting at 6:08 p.m.
HALLOWEEN NIGHT Partly to mostly cloudy, breezy Lows: 64-69 Winds: Southwest 10-15+ mph An approaching cold front will bring an increase in clouds during the overnight hours. The bigger story overnight will be how mild it will be! Overnight temperatures will fall into the 60s, which is where our high temperatures should be for this time of year. FRIDAY Morning clouds, shower chance. Then partly cloudy and warm. Highs: 75-80 Winds: Northwest 5-10 mph Clouds are likely to win the day with shower chances between 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. as a cold front moves to the east. SATURDAY Mostly Sunny Highs: 58-64 Winds: Northeast 5-10 mph The weekend is set to start on a cool note with a mix of sun and clouds and highs around 60. SUNDAY Mostly sunny Highs: near 65 Winds: South 5-10 mph Daylight saving time ends early Sunday morning. With the return of standard time, the sun will rise Sunday morning at 6:38 a.m. and set at 5:05 p.m. Highs for the day will be near average for this time of year, mainly in the middle 60s.
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MINNEAPOLIS — When it comes to Halloween in Minnesota, you can expect to hear the sounds of ghosts and goblins. You can also expect the sound of lifelong Minnesotans (Gen X or older) collectively reminding the never-not-reminded rest of Minnesota about that one time it snowed a lot on Halloween.
The Halloween Blizzard of 1991 is a story that is brought up year after year as a badge of honor for those who lived through it. Blustery winds and plummeting temperatures on Halloween night made going house-to-house for trick-or-treaters or just about anywhere a challenge.
But Halloween night was just the start.
On the spooky night itself, Minneapolis-St. Paul got just over eight inches of snow. And on the next day? Another 18.5 inches. The day after that another inch fell. And on Nov. 3, a few more tenths of an inch, bringing a whopping 28.4 inches of snow, the biggest single storm still on record.
Former WCCO Meteorologist Paul Huttner remembers the around-the-clock updates on a blustery Nov. 1 morning.
“It came fast and was a shock,” Huttner recalled. “We’re saying that’s going to be more than 20 inches of snow! That’s not really going to happen, right?”
As the Twin Cities woke up, the snow picked up, at times falling two inches an hour. The wet, heavy snow collapsed rooftops and stranded firefighters. Police swapped their squads for snowmobiles to navigate the roads while others used skis to get down the street.
“As a meteorologist, you always want to work the big storm,” Huttner said. “As I saw there that morning, I knew it was huge. I had no idea this would stand as the biggest snowstorm in Twin Cities history as I sit here 30 years later.”
That blizzard left mountains snow on the ground. It melted away about a week later, but we picked up another 14 inches over Thanksgiving. And that snow stuck around until early March.
It used to be that horror on television was tame. It was PG-ish stuff like Scooby-Doo and The Twilight Zone. Good fare, but these shows all held horror at arm’s length, like it was a subgenre or something shameful. Now, with streaming, TV horror shows can be just as creepy and scary as their movie brethren. They’ve shed some of their sci-fi and mystery armor to be fully grown-up, unashamed gore that’s perfect for Halloween bingeing. Below are some of our faves. If you like them, you may also want to check out our lists for the best horror movies or scary Halloween tech.
Updated October 2024: We added What We Do in the Shadows, Grotesquerie, Them, The Fall of the House of Usher, and Yellowjackets.
Stranger Things
A spiritual successor to many of the shows and movies Gen Xers and Millennials loved growing up, Stranger Things serves horror tropes with a nostalgic glow. The fourth season (the best so far) leans heavily into ’80s horror, with the villainous Vecna reaching his fleshy tentacles into his victim’s dreams to exploit their worst fears. The show reverently acknowledges its debt to Wes Craven’s A Nightmare on Elm Street series, with Freddy Krueger (Robert Englund) himself popping up as Vecna victim Victor Creel.
What We Do in the Shadows
Spun off from the wonderful movie of the same name by Jemaine Clement and Taika Waititi, this show about a group of vampire roommates living on Staten Island is comedy perfection. Nandor, Laszlo, and Nadja have been vampires for centuries and struggle to fit into the modern world. They live with energy vampire Colin Robinson and Nandor’s familiar Guillermo. It’s a comedy with a horror backdrop, beautifully made and acted by all concerned, and its sixth and final season is airing now.
Castle Rock
The eponymous depression town (in more ways than one) is a kind of nexus for Stephen King’s characters, and Castle Rock is a treasure trove of references for fans, but it also works as a captivating standalone story. Season 1 focuses on a mysterious inmate at Shawshank, and Season 2 introduces a young Annie Wilkes (pre-Misery). If someone built a King theme park, it would surely look like Castle Rock. This fictional Maine town first appeared in The Dead Zone, served as the setting for Needful Things, and has popped up repeatedly like a bad penny in King’s work over the years. With Hulu’s show, it gets a tale all its own.
Archive 81
When archivist Dan (Mamoudou Athie) is hired to restore some old video tapes, he soon becomes engrossed in the work of a woman named Melody (Dina Shihabi) who was investigating a demonic cult in a Lower Manhattan apartment building. This claustrophobic series is permeated with a growing sense of dread and relies heavily on an excellent performance from Athie. Though the show was sadly canceled after a single season, you can still listen to the podcast that inspired it if you want to dig even further into the tale.
The Haunting of Hill House
This ghost story centers on five adult siblings haunted by paranormal experiences that caused them to flee the family mansion years before. Loosely based on Shirley Jackson’s gothic horror novel of the same name, this creepy tale is skillfully directed by Mike Flanagan (Doctor Sleep), ably assisted by a strong cast that includes Carla Gugino, Timothy Hutton, and Victoria Pedretti. It is a complex and terrifying family drama, packed with spine-chilling imagery, that builds to a frightening climax. If you enjoy this, Flanagan’s Midnight Mass is also worth a look.
Grotesquerie
This fever dream of a show sees hard-boiled alcoholic detective Lois Tryon, brilliantly played by Niecy Nash, trying to track down a twisted killer with a penchant for gory religious tableaus. She enlists the help of a true-crime-obsessed journalist nun, played ably by Micaela Diamond. There are also notable turns from Lesley Manville as a Ratched-reminiscent nurse, Nicholas Chavez (Monsters) as a crazy priest, Courtney B. Vance as Tryon’s husband in a coma, and Travis Kelce making his acting debut.
Ash vs. Evil Dead
Rumored for years, fans of the Evil Dead movies finally got what they wanted when star Bruce Campbell reunited with director Sam Raimi to revive the ultimate horror anti-hero. Campbell was born to play wisecracking idiot Ash as he wades into deadites and demons to save humanity with a chainsaw and a boomstick. Raimi directs the first episode, Campbell stars throughout, and this is slapstick gore at its finest. The supporting cast has plenty of chemistry, and includes a fun turn from Lucy Lawless. And, while the frenetic action is mostly played for laughs, the gross-out gore hits impressive highs, or should that be lows?
Hannibal
Set years before The Silence of the Lambs, this atmospheric show follows FBI special agent Will Graham as he tries to track down Hannibal Lecter without losing his sanity. Bryan Fuller’s blood-soaked show is gorgeously cinematic with plenty of tension, haunting visuals, and an ambient score that immerses you, but Mads Mikkelsen’s tightrope act as he veers from charismatic to cannibal is what makes this essential viewing. The supporting cast, which includes Gillian Anderson and Laurence Fishburne, is not bad either.
American Horror Story
I have a love/hate relationship with the anthology series American Horror Story, but with 10 self-contained seasons spanning classic horror scenarios, not to mention a stellar cast that includes Jessica Lange, it demands a place here. For me, it peaked early with the asylum in the second season, and subsequent seasons have been hit-or-miss. It’s fun for horror fans playing spot-the-trope, and the campy thrills come thick and fast, but it’s a guilty pleasure that can occasionally feel glib and exploitative, especially when it attempts to tie in real-life history. If you enjoy AHS, check out the sorority slasherScream Queens, starring Emma Roberts as a loathsome mean girl and Jamie Lee Curtis as the school dean.
From
The residents of this small town in middle America find they cannot leave, and something evil comes out to hunt them when the sun goes down. While exactly where this spooky slow-burner is headed remains to be seen, it’s creepy enough to be worth a look. Harold Perrineau grounds the show with a compelling turn as Sheriff Boyd, struggling to hold his community together. Two seasons in, it’s light on answers, but I’m excited to see where they go with season three, which is airing now.
Bates Motel
Another horror prequel, Bates Motel is set in a time long before Psycho when Norman Bates is just a young lad who comes to an Oregon town with his mother to fix up a dilapidated motel. Despite their best efforts to start a new life, everything seems to conspire against them, and the seams begin to show quite quickly as Norman struggles to maintain his mental health. Anthony Perkins is a hard act to follow, but Freddie Highmore is convincing as a young Norman, and Vera Farmiga is excellent as his mother Norma. Their relationship is the heart of this suspenseful show. Unlike many listed here, Bates Motel got five seasons to build to a satisfying conclusion.
Them
The Emory family relocates from the rural South to East Compton, but as the first Black family in the neighborhood, they are not welcomed with open arms. The deeply unpleasant Betty (Alison Pill) makes it her mission to drive them out, and there’s a depressing lack of dissent to her rabid racism. The supernatural element feels thin, as each family member is haunted by their own ghost because it all pales in comparison to the real horrors they encounter in ’50s America. Deborah Ayorinde and Ashley Thomas are excellent as the Emorys. The second season focuses on a homicide detective and an entirely new story, and is even better than the first.
Marianne
A famous horror writer is lured back to her hometown by the death of a childhood friend and must take on an evil spirit who has been haunting her nightmares for years. This French show starts strong with a foreboding atmosphere and some chilling sequences. While it plays with familiar horror tropes, it is stylish and slick with a touch of humor, and leaning into witchcraft works perfectly in the old coastal town setting. Mireille Herbstmeyer makes the series work thanks to a truly unnerving performance as Madame Daugeron. It lost its way a little toward the end, it still shouldn’t have been canceled.
The Fall of the House of Usher
This fresh take on Edgar Allan Poe’s famous work casts the cursed Usher clan as opiate-peddling billionaires. The sordid tale is told by Roderick Usher (Bruce Greenwood) as he sits swilling whiskey in a dilapidated mansion, recounting the untimely demise of his family members to detective Auguste Dupin (Carl Lumbly) with a growing sense of dread. This grisly, gothic, and engrossing tale is Mike Flanagan’s final flourish for Netflix, and it comes closest to his previous best (Hill House).
Lovecraft Country
Atticus Freeman travels across 1950s America to find his father, but the horrors awaiting this young Black man reach beyond Jim Crow into Lovecraft’s twisted imagination. Beautifully crafted and daringly subversive, Lovecraft Country marries the real American horror of racism with Lovecraftian cults and monsters, as both step from the shadows to scare us. The much-missed Michael K. Williams and the wonderful Wunmi Mosaku stand out in this excellent cast.
The Outsider
When the mutilated corpse of a young boy is discovered in the woods of a small town in Oklahoma, detectives think they have a clear culprit, but an ironclad alibi throws a spanner in the works. This show is based on a Stephen King novel, though it doesn’t feel like one. Instead, it comes off as a Scandi crime drama at first, with a glacial pace that painstakingly builds a growing sense of dread. Ben Mendelsohn steers us through the gloom, and there are solid performances from Cynthia Erivo, Paddy Considine, and Jason Bateman (who directs a couple of episodes). King fans hungry for another detective show should also check out Mr. Mercedes, where a broken-down retired detective played by Brendan Gleeson hunts a psychopathic killer.
Yellowjackets
A high school girls’ soccer team is stranded in the wilderness of Canada after a plane crash, and as temperatures plummet and supplies dwindle, they are forced to take desperate measures to survive. There’s a nostalgic tinge to this for kids of the ’90s, and the action flicks between the 1996 crash and the survivors coming together again 25 years later. Things get unspeakably messed up throughout the first two seasons as we jump around in time, and a third season is due to land next year. An excellent cast boasts Juliette Lewis, Christina Ricci, and Lauren Ambrose.
A Halloween celebration wouldn’t be complete without the right spooky music. Here are 13 tunes you need on your Halloween soundtrack to keep the frightful fun going all night long.
Thriller
Monster Mash
Time Warp
Little Red Riding Hood
Ghostbusters theme song
I Put A Spell On You
Superstition
The Adams Family theme song
Hells Bells/Highway To Hell
Bad Moon Rising
Sympathy for the Devil
Zombie
Black Magic Woman
A full-time work-from-home mom, Jennifer Cox (our “Supermom in Training”) loves dabbling in healthy cooking, craft projects, family outings, and more, sharing with readers everything she knows about being an (almost) superhero mommy.
In honor of Halloween: houseplants that show off twisty tendrils, scary leaves, and macabre colors that can lend your home a moody ambiance. Here are five favorites that celebrate the dark side. Featured image above by Geoff McKay via Flickr. Begonia ‘Hallow’s Eve’ Appropriately named for the season, this rhizomatous begonia sports very dark leaves […]
In Bay Village, Ohio, two officers responded to an unusual call about an inflatable pumpkin that had blown off a nearby lawn and was blocking traffic. One of the officers was then swallowed up by the runaway gourd before managing to move it out of the way.
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It’s the Halloween attraction you never knew you needed. A brand new Haunted House meets escape room at The Sunken Manor! We had the chance to go and were blown away. Thank you to the Sunken Manor for inviting us to their terrifying attraction!
The Sunken Manor is a brand new Haunted House, started by a local family who have created a complex Halloween attraction. Complete with a sinister backstory linked to the very house that the scares happen in! If you love Halloween, jumpscares, or have teens who are ready to tackle bigger scares, this place is for you! Plus, they have scare-themed events throughout the year!
About The Sunken Manor
The Sunken Manor was started in 2024 by a local family, and this is its very first Halloween season! The family has owned the house since December and has been making this haunted house a reality since then.
Located in Travelers Rest, this manor is uniquely built directly into the side of a hill. (Hence the “Sunken” name). Parking, entrance, and check-in are all on the property. And as you check in you actually are standing on the roof of the manor! Super trippy, super spooky, and a perfect way to begin the whole experience.
The Backstory
The creators of The Sunken Manor have created a complex backstory for the haunted attraction and for the house itself, and some elements are inspired by true events! They have a QR code at the entrance that will take you to a video on their website that tells the chilling tale of the Sunken Manor, and what may hide beneath its depths.
We won’t give anything away, but the backstory adds so much depth to the whole experience, and there may even be some easter eggs in the video to look out for once you enter the attraction 😉
It’s also a great activity to kill time while waiting in line! That is, if you’re not being terrorized by the scare actors who join you as you wait.
The Details About the Haunted House
Sunken Manor begins before you even enter the attraction. As you buy your tickets scare actors are wandering the parking lot. I personally got followed by a spooky bat. As you wait in line there is a scary clown, a spooky scarecrow, and one of those scarers who slide on knee pads to scare you. And this is all before you even enter the house.
Once you enter the house you are sat down in a creepy dining room that transports you back into a time gone by. The host explains some of the backstory and the escape room aspect of the whole experience. Then before you know it, you are ushered out, and into the terrifying depths of the Sunken Manor.
In the attraction, you have to navigate through a series of rooms, each with its own unique theme and interactive scare actors. There are over a dozen, but here are some of the standouts:
An old-timey living room where you have to search for the clue to escape.
A dark maze where you have only a flashlight to try and catch a hidden scare actor (we had to SPRINT to catch him)
A dining room full of cannibals, and YOU have to free their next victim
A clown lair with puzzles and games you must complete to escape
A circus tent where you get chased by a chainsaw-wielding clown
A little girl’s bedroom where you have to read her a bedtime story that slowly comes to LIFE.
And more! But we don’t want to give too many spoilers. But that is what to expect when you enter the depths of The Sunken Manor! From the time that we entered the Manor, to the time we sprinted out, took about 25-30 minutes!
Best Ages
This is definitely an attraction geared towards teenagers and adults because of the in-your-face scare actors. As an adult, I was scared. There are loud noises, fog machines, strobe lights, scare actors yelling at you, and even a section where you have to chase a scare actor through a dark room.
But, you may have an especially brave 8-year-old who is ready to tackle all of these things. So it is up to your judgment and knowledge of your own child. But I will give you all the heads-ups and warnings you need to make an informed decision!
So what is a good age? It is best suited for teenagers and adults, but you know your kids better than I do! It totally depends on your kid.
Tips for enjoying The Sunken Manor
Here are a few things we’d suggest before going to the Sunken Manor!
Wear closed-toe, sturdy shoes.
The line to enter The Sunken Manor is outside, so wear layers!
Arrive early to avoid long lines.
There are lots of strobe lights and flashing lights, so be prepared for that.
Prepare for enclosed spaces. If you are claustrophobic or uncomfortable with that, then this may not be the attraction for you!
The actors will get VERY close to you. You will also be trapped in rooms with them.
This is a high scare attraction and is inside a house versus an outdoor trail with many exits. We would only advise taking older children who have completed other scary attractions successfully.
Ticket prices range from $25 – $35 (if you want the express lane ticket).
Upcoming Events at the Sunken Manor
The Sunken Manor will open to host other events during the year. They plan to host a scary Valentine’s Day event and a family-friendly (non-scary) Easter event and Holiday event in 2025. We will add additional information as it’s available.
Our Overall Review
We thought Sunken Manor was one of the most unique and scary attractions we have experienced in the Upstate. The underground set up of the original house combined with the puzzles and unique themes of each room kept the suspense running. We highly recommend you check it out this year if you enjoy intense haunted attractions.
The Underground Farm The Sunken Manor 2185a Keeler Mill Rd. Greenville SC 29617
With leaves turning, autumn sweaters out and Halloween approaching, the question arises: How does one take a data-driven approach to their fall plans?
The CBS News Data Team asked Yelp for data on businesses with corn mazes, and they provided data where business reviews mention corn mazes.
While not a comprehensive list of all the nation’s corn mazes, the user reviews allowed the Data Team to map out corn mazes with satellite photography, offering a bird’s eye view of the nation’s most elaborate corn mazes.
There were more than 500 businesses where corn mazes were mentioned in user reviews in the U.S., according to Yelp data.
California, New York and Washington lead the nation with businesses with corn maze mentions, but when adjusted for population, Oregon leads the nation with about five corn mazes per one million people.
The businesses likely to have corn mazes range from farms, festivals, and petting zoos to haunted houses and wineries.
Corn mazes fall under other so-called agritourism activities such as apple-picking, hayrides and wine-tasting at vineyards. And while farmers can attempt to shuck their own labyrinths, there are companies that pave a-maize-ing patterns.
Companies such as The Maize and Maze Play can use tractors to paint pictures of sports teams, celebrities and cartoon characters in corn. Some corn mazes even support local causes, cancer awareness or milestones such as the 50th anniversary of Star Trek.
We also grazed through Google Earth satellite imagery, digging into the most “a-maize-ing” and unique corn mazes from the past few years, based on the data provided by Yelp.
One standout was a Dolly Parton-themed maze at Honeysuckle Hill Farms in Tennessee.
Another maze depicted a Wonka Golden Ticket at Dull’s Tree Farm in Indiana.
Say “Hey Google, get spooky,” and you’ll get some sound effects and spooky music on any Google speakers or smart displays you have. You can also ask Alexa, Google Assistant, or Siri for costume ideas or to tell you a scary story.
Ring, Nest, and some other smart doorbells offer Halloween sounds and chimes that can replace your regular ringtone. Take a look at your app and see if you have seasonal options. Here’s how to set Halloween doorbell chimes for a couple of the main doorbell makers:
In the Ring app, choose your device and tap Audio Settings and Chime Tones to find Halloween chimes like Dracula Theme and Creepy Laugh. If you are off out trick and treating, you can also tap the Smart Responses tile to toggle Quick Replies on. Tap Enable Feature on the next screen and Quick Reply Message and choose something like Ghostly Greetings.
For Nest doorbells, open the Google Home app, choose your doorbell and tap the three vertical dots at the top right to find Settings, then Doorbell and Doorbell Theme to select Halloween.
For best results, create a trigger that sets off lighting and sound effects when someone approaches. You can use IFTTT to link devices together and create a terrifying sequence. When someone presses the doorbell, for example, you could turn off all your front lights for a second, have them come back on in red, and then play a blood-curdling scream.
Scary Scenes
Photograph: AtmosFX
Serious Halloween fans looking to take things to the next level should check out digital decorations. Atmos FX sells MP4 files that you can play on a monitor or stick on a USB drive to play on your TV, but they work best with projectors. You can play ghostly apparitions, shambling zombies, and many more things that go bump in the night. You just need a white projection screen you can set up in your window (although a cheap white shower curtain works well, too).
Many come with or without backgrounds and in a horizontal or vertical format to suit your setup. The talking jack-o’-lanterns are great for younger kids and can even be projected onto real pumpkins. To scare older kids and adults, try the Night Stalkers collection. The animations are top quality, with sound effects and music included. Set this up in your front window, with a fog machine underneath, and you are sure to attract a horde of trick-and-treaters.
Babies in a Los Angeles neonatal intensive care unit were dressed in adorable costumes based on children’s book characters to celebrate Halloween in style.
The fun-sized costumes, made with velcro adhesive to allow parents to safely and easily dress their babies, handsewn by a group of volunteers at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.
Parents love the tradition, according to Bevin Merideth, the associate director of the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit.
“It allows them to celebrate their child’s first Halloween,” Meredith said. “They take the costumes home as a keepsake to show their babies how much they’ve grown.”
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
The spooky lineup featured a tiger, Supergirl, Dr. Suess characters and even a tiny gymnast with a medal.
“I’m trying not to cry, honestly,” said Merry Doerning, NICU mother. “Having the holidays be made just as special being in the NICU is unforgettable. This is something we’ll cherish forever.”