A report from Transworld
Written by Administrator on Wednesday, 12 May 2010 02:47   

Haunted House News Louisville Kentucky

 When we arrived in St. Louis for The Haunt Show, we stayed at the Drury Plaza Hotel a block away from the convention center. Our first experience with the staff was a breath of fresh air. Their staff made us feel welcome. All the other hotels were either full or unavailable. It was fortunate that the Drury had some availability and we really liked this hotel. The Drury offered 3 free drinks, free breakfast, free diner, a pool, hot tub, and a modest gym. We felt right at home after the long drive to St. Louis.

 It’s that time of year again, a time were all the venders gather to sell their wares and all  the ghouls and ghosts are drawn to pick and pull props, makeup, to take the rest of us to a fantasy world. The Haunt Show, a convention for the fun and pleasure of haunting, will really get your adrenaline pumping and make you feel alive

Not Everyone knows that for that short amount of time you spend in a haunted house, it takes months of work or more to prepare the scares. Those that prepare the haunts often spend part of the time visiting shows to either purchase props or to gather ideas that will later be put into the show. If they succeed, the people who end up visiting the haunts will either be scared stiff or at least feel the fun of being a kid again.

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Not only do you get the thrill of seeing the new and outrageous haunted ideas at a show like the St. Louis Haunt Show, you also tend to run into some interesting people there. Talking to these people about their haunts can be even more exciting. At the same time you are surrounded by the sights, sounds and sometimes smell of the whole business, you are hearing about their events. The important thing to remember here is that the owners of the haunts come in all shapes and sizes. Some of them look like your average business person while others are really enjoying the moment and can even come to the show dressed in costume.


Gus has been managing and acting in his own haunt house in Grafton, Ohio for the past two years. He was walking around the Haunt Show convention in a costume he created. He looked like something that had just stepped out of a swamp with eyes that seem to be missing. You could almost see the child inside him laughing, having fun and playing pretend. He carried a small spray bottle of Miracle Grow that he attempted to spray on people he thought needed a boost.

Matt Kemp started doing haunted houses at the age of nine. Nine years ago with the help of Phil Granger, he started 31 Ways To Terror which was located in Henryville, Indiana. Now, Matt is basically at The Haunt Show in St. Louis to work on ideas for his Psychomania haunt in Clarksville, IN and relax.

Chad Kern an actor and prop builder from Clarksville, IN. went to St. Louis to learn more about the behind the scenes aspect of  haunted house construction. He also tried on the latest masks at CFX. The silicone rubber masks they create form to your head and look much better then latex because they move with your mouth movements and expressions.

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bloody Mary, a.k.a. Bobbie Weiner is a make-up artesian and child at heart. You may have seen Bobbie’s work in the Oscar nominated film Titanic. She was the special effects make-up artist who transformed hundreds of actors into blue-lipped icicle covered corpses. She is more then welling to talk to a fan, and doesn’t mind autographing a comic book or two. Bloody Mary is also a huge name in the haunted industry, supplying make up to numerous haunted houses. In St. Louis, she is here to show off the company’s new line.

A group from Little Rock, Arkansas was also at the show to work on new ideas for their Haunted Cathedral. This is the second year they have attended the show in St. Louis and they were pleased with all that they saw at the convention as each turn brought new ideas for their haunted church.


The show floor was full of props of all shapes and sizes. Even with all this distraction however, you definitely can’t miss the larger than life props of The Scare Factory. A special section of the Haunt Show is left dark every year so you can see the props in an environment they are typically used in. This section is called The Dark Zone and Scare Factory loads this area up with their wares. Jeff, has worked for Scare Factory for 6 months doing tech and building pneumatics. At this show, he is handing out catalogs of the company’s new additions. One of neat things they have on display is a hearse that has pneumatics built into it. When activated, a grime reaper unexpectedly leaps out of the hearse roof top. They also have a shifting hall and a skeleton riding on a vacuum.


Those who attended St. Louis this year will definitely be back. Nick Fisher and Angie Hernandez from Dungeon of Doom in Zion, Illinois said they loved it and would return. The two dressed up like a nurse and patient from hell were dripping with blood and responded “it’s great, now would you like to come back to our hospital?”


Submitted by Tracy Thomas

For more information on The Haunt Show visit Transworld Hauntshow

  Section:  Articles - File Under:  Event Stuff  |   Last Updated on Saturday, 15 May 2010 20:31
 
A welcome from the publisher
Written by Administrator on Tuesday, 11 May 2010 04:34   

Night Mansion Magazine Haunted House and Halloween News Louisville Kentucky and Southern Indiana

 

I would like to personally thank everyone for tuning into the first edition of Night Mansion Magazine. I would also like to personally thank Tracy Thomas who has been behind the magazine 100% since it was rumored to launch, taking time out to get the little bits that add up and my wife Amy who gets to put up with me constantly at my computer. Well, it's not a rumor anymore.

Night Mansion is currently being published in it's basic skeleton form. Everyone involved with the magazine works long hours, the site is capable of a lot more than we are currently using it for. It it looks fairly bare, that's because I have pruned most the site away for launch. It's going to take a little time to get where I want to go with the magazine including podcast, video media, easy subscriber input, story submission and event system but we will start to get there in the coming months.

I'm sure we will have plenty of gaffs, bugs, problems, errors and general destruction along the way. But, that's the way things go in the online publishing business and I guess it's no different then having a prototype prop blow up in your face or having a newly constructed machine smash your fingers (No laughs from Matt or Chad -please). No one sets out to fail and I have every reason to believe that with the support we have received so far we will succeed in doing something that this area has needed for a long time, getting your haunts, your business, your stories and your events into the face of the readers. We are not going to be some out of place oddity that comes out only around Halloween, we are going to become the magnet in the Louisville area for everything related to Halloween, haunted houses and those off beat events that happen all year round (or at least every month or so).

You're probably going to see things moving around, additions and our formatting on the stories themselves should improve every month (we are getting there).

Please feel free to submit your press releases, ideas and stories to us via email. Once the site has been up for a while, there should be a submit news area available (among many other things). If you're reading this, we have passed the first hurdle in the whole horrible business which is to get the site up and "almost" working right.

Regards,

William N McHugh -Infinity Vision Digital Media

  Section:  Articles - File Under:  Event Stuff  |   Last Updated on Saturday, 15 May 2010 20:34
 
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