9 Spooky Halloween Events Worth Traveling For

Halloween is becoming a bigger holiday every year—Americans are expected to spend $8.4 billion on spooky loot this year alone. And though you’ll find haunted houses, parties, parades, and costume contests almost everywhere, some places go the extra mile to celebrate Halloween in extraordinary fashion. These huge celebrations are a great excuse for an autumn road trip or vacation.

1. THE LOUISVILLE JACK-O-LANTERN SPECTACULAR // LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY

The city of Louisville hosts an illuminated nighttime fantasy land featuring thousands of jack-o’-lanterns. The Louisville Jack-O-Lantern Spectacular is open every night through November 6, where you can enjoy a quarter-mile walking trail in Iroquois Park with 5000 pumpkins—some carved with elaborate scenes from movies or faces of celebrities, others with classic jack-o’-lantern grins—arranged in artful tableaus.

2. HALLOWEEN IN SLEEPY HOLLOW // SLEEPY HOLLOW, NEW YORK

Visit Sleepy Hollow via Facebook

What better place to celebrate Halloween than in the town Washington Irving made famous with his tale of the Headless Horseman? Sleepy Hollow celebrates the legend for tourists all year, and makes Halloween a month-long celebration. Take a tour of the Sleepy Hollow Cemetery. Try the haunted house known as the Horseman’s Hollow Tour, or see a performances of Irving’s Legend on October weekends. Take the Haunted Hayride through town on October 28 and 29. And there are several spooky historical events to attend in nearby Tarrytown. Find out more about the events of Halloween in Sleepy Hollow here.

3. EMMA CRAWFORD FESTIVAL // MANITOU SPRINGS, COLORADO

Manitou Springs Emma Crawford Coffin Races via Facebook

Manitou Springs, Colorado, is famous for their healing hot springs, but for 20 years now, the town has staged a festival revolving around Emma Crawford, who came to the springs to treat her tuberculosis in 1889. Crawford died two years later and was buried on top of the mountain. Legend has it that her coffin was unearthed by torrential rains and washed down the mountain in 1929. Now Crawford is the centerpiece of the town’s annual Emma Crawford Festival. On Friday, October 28, you can attend a wake for Crawford and see her laid out at Miramont Castle, with dinner included. Saturday, October 29 is the day for the annual Emma Crawford Coffin Races and Parade in downtown Manitou Springs. The festival itself ends with ghost tours Saturday evening, but on Halloween night, the town will stage a paranormal investigation ghost hunt.

4. SALEM WITCHES’ HALLOWEEN BALL // SALEM, MASSACHUSETTS

The witches and warlocks of this famed town (and all over) will come together for the annual Salem Witches’ Halloween Ball at the Hawthorne Hotel on Friday, October 28. The theme for this year is “Over the Rainbow: The Magical World of Oz.” In addition to live music, dancing, and food, you can get a psychic reading during the party, and there’s a $1000 cash prize up for grabs in the costume contest. The Witches’ Ball is one of the many activities scheduled for the Festival of the Dead in Salem this month.

5. “THE WORLD’S LARGEST HALLOWEEN PARTY!” // LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY

The Louisville Zoo throws a kid-friendly Halloween party every Thursday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday night in October called “The World’s Largest Halloween Party!” And since the event is aimed at children 11 and under, it’s cheery, not eerie. Children trick-or-treat through areas of the zoo dedicated to princesses, superheroes, dinosaurs, pirates, toy land, the sea, and more. Familiar costumed characters are there to greet them with treats, and there are plenty of animals to meet. The event is a fundraiser that helps to support the Louisville Zoo year-round.

6. THE GREAT JACK O’LANTERN BLAZE // CROTON-ON-HUDSON, NEW YORK

The Great Jack O’Lantern Blaze via Facebook

The Great Jack O’Lantern Blaze is a walk-through event held every October in which you can see over 7000 illuminated, hand-carved jack-o’-lanterns lining the town’s Pumpkin Promenade. Pumpkins are carved, stacked, and transformed into elaborate sculptures and dioramas, each more breathtaking than the previous one. The Blaze is operating every night through Halloween, and on weekends in November. Consult the calendar and plan ahead—tickets sell out quickly.

7. WEST HOLLYWOOD HALLOWEEN CARNAVAL // HOLLYWOOD, CALIFORNIA

Half a million people are expected to attend the West Hollywood Halloween Carnaval on October 31, which the organizers describe as expected to be “a bit on the naughty side.” The street party on Santa Monica Boulevard—which is alcohol-free—will last from 6 p.m. to 11 p.m., but will then continue into participating bars and venues. Music, both live and recorded, will be provided on several stages. Wear your best costume; other revelers will be going all out.

8. NORTHALSTED HALLOWEEN PARADE // CHICAGO

Chris Bentley via Flickr // CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

The 20th annual Northalsted Halloween Parade will march through Chicago on October 31. The parade—whose theme this year is the fantastic “Scream, Queen!”—begins at 7:30 p.m. at the corner of Halsted and Belmont, and for three hours, thousands of floats, performers, and costumed participants will be on hand to march through Boystown and participate in the costume contest.

9. VILLAGE HALLOWEEN PARADE // NEW YORK CITY

If you’ve planned a spectacular costume and want all eyes on your look, New York’s 43rd annual Village Halloween Parade is the place to party. The parade begins at 7 p.m. on Halloween night, and it shimmies and shakes up Sixth Avenue from Canal Street. Anyone can join in the parade, but you must wear a costume (some 50,000 people participate each year). And if you want to watch the revelry from the sidewalk, you’ll get views of dancers, puppets, and 53 different bands. Better get there early to stake out a spot to see it all.


October 25, 2016 – 12:00pm

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Tuesday, October 25, 2016 – 11:54

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103

Uber’s Self-Driving Truck Delivered 50,000 Beers for Its Maiden Voyage

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Otto

The day may not be far away when autonomous vehicles shuttle us to and from work, airports, and other appointments. But the self-driving revolution also has more ambitious goals—like delivering gallons of alcohol.

Otto, a technology start-up owned by Uber, recently outfitted an 18-wheel delivery truck with self-driving equipment and sent it on its maiden voyage to make the first delivery by a sentient truck: 50,000 cans of Budweiser.

Otto launched the truck from a brewery in Fort Collins, Colorado and had a human operator navigate it to Interstate 25 before engaging the autonomous driving option at a steady speed of 55 miles per hour. Escorted by a Colorado state police vehicle, the truck then traveled 120 miles to Colorado Springs, where it idled as humans scurried to unload its contents.

The pilot test was part of an increasing paradigm shift in the trucking industry, which is burdened both by concerns over operator fatigue causing accidents and an incredible shortage of workers—it might find itself lacking 175,000 drivers in just a few years.

To help resolve each of those issues, Otto will have to navigate federal regulation that’s likely to be tough on safety expectations. And while highways pose fewer obstacle issues than populated areas with crosswalks and slowed traffic, it’s likely drivers will still be needed to shepherd them on and off freeways.

But that gets ahead of the fact that a self-driving truck just deposited a plentiful supply of beer to an entire town. To commemorate the occasion, Budweiser manufactured the cans with a label running along the bottom: “First delivery by self-driving truck.”

[h/t WIRED]


October 25, 2016 – 11:00am

Newsletter Item for (87818): The Foods Responsible for the Smelliest Farts

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The Foods Responsible for the Smelliest Farts

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If you’re looking to avoid smelly farts, try easing up on the eggs and instead opt for some carbs. A recent study finds the foods responsible for the smelliest farts—and, no, it’s not fiber you have to worry about!

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The Foods Responsible for the Smelliest Farts

Newsletter Item for (87737): 14 Slimy Facts About ‘Double Dare’

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14 Slimy Facts About Double Dare

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Nickelodeon’s Double Dare had its own on-set sewage system, built specifically to accommodate the overflow of waste material created by the production. Here are 13 other facts you might not have known about the never-dull game show, which turned 30 this year.

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14 Slimy Facts About 'Double Dare'

Newsletter Item for (87820): 9 Unexpected Reuses for Coffins

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9 Unexpected Reuses for Coffins
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Coffins don’t have to be single-purpose. From pool tables to flower planters, these nine reinventions prove that you can do much more with the box than bury the dead.

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9 Unexpected Reuses for Coffins