Wednesday, October 22, 2025

πŸŽƒ 43 Years of Halloween III: Season of the Witch – A Love Letter from Dr. Klopek 🦴

Greetings, goblins and ghouls!

Dr. Klopek here — resident bone bag, pumpkin spice connoisseur and chief historian of the Halloweeniacs. Today, we’re digging deep into the crypt (and I do mean deep) to unearth a misunderstood classic that first bewitched audiences 43 years ago today"Halloween III: Season of the Witch,” which slithered into U.S. theaters on Friday, October 22, 1982.

Now, I know what you're thinking: “Wait, wait, WAIT … isn't that the weird one? The one without Michael Myers?” To which I say: “YES. AND THAT’S WHY IT’S AMAZING.” πŸ’€

Let’s crack open this skull of cinema and take a closer look ...

πŸ§ͺ A Different Kind of Evil

When Tommy Lee Wallace, a longtime collaborator with “Halloween” creators John Carpenter and Debra Hill, stepped into the director’s chair, he and his fellow filmmakers were hoping to turn the “Halloween” franchise into an anthology series?

The pitch was devilishly simple: Every year, a new film, a new story, all tied to Halloween night. This first outing: A corporate Druid cult mass-murdering children through TV commercials! (Don't act like you haven’t thought about it.)

And so, “Halloween III: Season of the Witch” was born.

No Michael.
No Laurie Strode.
No Haddonfield.
Just Stonehenge, killer masks, subliminal signals and one of the most unsettling jingles ever composed:

🎢 “Eight more days ‘til Halloween, Halloween, Halloween ...”
🎢 “Eight more days ‘til Halloween … Silver Shamrock!”

🎭 Chilling, isn’t it?

🧠 Ahead of Its Time

When it premiered, audiences were confused, disappointed and frankly ticked off. Fans wanted Michael Myers to stab his way through another 90 minutes of scream queens and synths. They didn’t want a mask factory CEO named Conal Cochran quoting Celtic mythology and turning kids’ heads into bug piΓ±atas.

But over time, this film, much like yours truly, refused to die.

Now, decades later, “Halloween III” is a cult classic. A Halloween-season staple. A cautionary tale about technology, mass media, and how NOT to combine ancient pagan rituals with late-night infomercials. You know … the usual.

πŸ•―️ Sinister Silver Shamrock Facts

Here are some wickedly delightful tidbits that make “Halloween III” worth celebrating:

·       🎬 Tommy Lee Wallace directed and wrote the screenplay (though Nigel Kneale of “Quatermass” fame was the original writer — Wallace revised it after Kneale had issues with the violence).

·       🎼 John Carpenter still provided the synth-heavy score with Alan Howarth, and it's SO good, it hurts. Like, face-melting good.

·       πŸ₯½ The film features Dan O'Herlihy as Conal Cochran, the charming and eerie villain. He later played the Old Man in “RoboCop.” (He didn’t turn any heads into bugs there, though.)

·       🐞 That infamous "Silver Shamrock" theme? It’s a spooky remix of “London Bridge is Falling Down.” Yep. Try un-hearing that next time it gets stuck in your skull.

·       πŸ§›‍♂️ Despite the backlash, “Halloween III” is one of the most daring studio horror films of the early ’80s. It wasn’t afraid to go completely off the rails and stay there.

🦴 Dr. Klopek’s Final Diagnosis

It’s taken 43 years, but “Halloween III: Season of the Witch” has finally gotten the love it deserves. It’s eerie. It’s weird. It’s original. And in a world of endless reboots and tired sequels, it stands as a glorious pumpkin-splattered middle finger to convention.

So, tonight, fellow Halloweeniacs, dust off your Silver Shamrock masks (just don’t wear them near a TV), light some black flame candles, and raise a goblet of cider to this spooky season oddball. Because if there’s one thing Dr. Klopek believes with every brittle bone in his calcium-deprived body, it’s this:

Halloween isn’t about who you’re afraid of — it’s about what. And “Halloween III” understood that better than anyone. And don’t forget:

🎢 “Nine more days ‘til Halloween, Halloween, Halloween ...”
🎢 “Nine more days ‘til Halloween … Silver Shamrock!”

Stay spooky, my witches. πŸ•Έ️

—Dr. Klopek
☠️
Chief Archivist of the Halloweeniacs and Official Mask Tester

Wednesday, October 8, 2025

A Bone-Chilling Birthday Salute to R.L. Stine, Master of Halloween Horrors

 

By Dr. Klopek, Skeleton Halloweeniac Extraordinaire

 

Happy HalloWednesday!

 

Today, October 8, we also rattle our bones in celebration of the 42nd birthday of the one and only R.L. Stine — a frightfully fantastic author whose tales have haunted our candy-corn dreams and lit up our jack-o'-lantern hearts for decades. My fellow Halloweeniacs talk more about his books in THIS VIDEOHERE.

 

Stine is best known for conjuring the eerie and iconic Goosebumps series, which has terrified (and delighted) generations of readers. But it’s his Halloween tales that really make my old bones quake with joy. This bony bibliophile would like to take a moment to highlight some of his most sinister October offerings.

 

Let’s start with a true Halloween classic: “The Haunted Mask.” In this tale, poor Carly Beth learns the hard way that the right costume can change your life ... and maybe even steal your face. This book perfectly captures the thrill — and the terror — of becoming someone (or something) else on All Hallows’ Eve. If you only read one Halloween story this season, let it be this one. But don’t blame me if you start checking your reflection twice.

 

Next up is “Attack of the Jack-o'-Lanterns,” in which trick-or-treating turns into a twisted tale of revenge, mystery and — yes — pumpkin-headed horrors. Nothing says Halloween like glowing gourds, and in Stine’s hands, they’re as menacing as they are magical.

 

Stine returned to Halloween terror in “Trick or Trap,” a later Goosebumps entry that mixes costumes, creepy challenges and a haunted house game that feels a little too real. Every time I read it, I swear I hear my coffin creak a little louder.

 

But Stine’s Halloween contributions aren’t just limited to the Goosebumps graveyard. In his chilling short story collection “The Haunting Hour,” he delivered “The Halloween Dance,” a tale that proves sometimes the most terrifying thing isn’t the ghost — it’s the invitation. Who knew a school dance could end in something other than mild embarrassment?

 

And from “Nightmare Hour,” there’s “Pumpkinhead,” a story that wraps Halloween dread in autumn leaves and orange grins. Let’s just say that after reading it, you might think twice before sticking your hand into any jack-o'-lantern without knocking first.

 

Other Stine stories that take place on Halloween include “The Haunted Mask II,” “Werewolf Skin,” “One Night in Payne House,” “The House of No Return,” “Headless Horseman,” “Full Moon Fever,” “Weirdo Halloween,” “The Five Masks of Dr. Scream,” “Zombie Halloween” and “The Haunter.”

 

These stories are more than just spooky yarns. They’re stitched into the very fabric of Halloween itself. R.L. Stine has given us monsters that live under our beds, masks that won’t come off and pumpkins that aren’t quite what they seem.

 

So, tonight, under the blood moon and beside the crackling fire in the pumpkin patch at the end of Mayfield Place, I raise a goblet of steaming cider to R.L. Stine. Happy 42nd, you devilish dreamweaver! May your typewriter never run out of ink, and may your monsters always have something new to scream about.

 

Stay spooky, my friends. Halloween is forever.

 

With skeletal sincerity,


Dr. Klopek

Wednesday, October 1, 2025

It’s October 1st … Let the Madness Begin!


πŸŽƒπŸ’€ FROM THE DESK OF DR. KLOPEK πŸ’€πŸŽƒ

Greetings, my ghoulish goblins and candy corn connoisseurs!


It is I, your bony broadcaster of all things batty and BOO-tiful, Dr. Klopek, the original Halloweeniac, skeleton scholar of the spooky season, and full-time resident of the creepiest cul-de-sac this side of the underworld.

 

Today … oh, today … is October 1st, one of the most sacred of days when the veil lifts, the pumpkins glow, and the air turns crisp with the scent of cinnamon, decay and dark delight. If you listen closely, you can hear the ghosts stirring and the monsters stretching after a long summer slumber. Halloween Season isn’t coming — it’s HERE, my frightful friends!

 

Now, pop on your favorite black cloak, light a pumpkin spice candle (or an actual jack-o’-lantern, if you prefer that OG autumn vibe), and let’s dig into some highlights for this first week of our glorious descent into the macabre …

 

☠️ OCTOBER 1 – THE UNHOLY TRINITY OF TERROR KICKS OFF ☠️

 

πŸ”ͺ AMC's FearFest 2025 Begins!
Hold on to your femurs, folks, because the juggernaut of horror programming is back. Slashers, scream queens, haunted houses and everything in between are invading your TV screens all month long. See the full schedule of films HERE.

 

🧟 "Night of the Living Dead" Turns 57
George A. Romero’s undead masterpiece shambled into our hearts (and nightmares) on this very day in 1968. Let us rise from our graves in tribute to the film that made zombies the pop-culture powerhouses they are today. They're coming to get you … and we wouldn’t have it any other way!

 

πŸ“Ί Freeform’s 31 Days of Halloween Begins!
Calling all cozy creepers and nostalgic nightcrawlers. “Hocus Pocus,” “Coraline,” and Tim Burton delights await. It’s comfort food for your eyeballs — the kind served with a side of ghastly giggles and family-friendly frights. See the full schedule of films HERE.

 

πŸŽƒ OCTOBER 2 – A TREE THAT STILL CASTS A SHADOW πŸŽƒ

 

πŸ“š "The Halloween Tree" Turns 32
Ray Bradbury's animated classic debuted in 1993, and I haven’t stopped weeping since. A tale of friendship, time travel and the many faces of Halloween. Required viewing, or I revoke your haunted house privileges.

 

πŸ“Ό OCTOBER 3 – FOUND FOOTAGE MEETS FOUND FEARS πŸ“Ό

 

πŸŽ₯ "V/H/S/Halloween" Premieres on Shudder
What’s that sound? Oh, just the unholy wailing of cursed VHS tapes unleashing their horrors on an unsuspecting streaming audience. This latest entry in the V/H/S anthology promises Halloween-themed twisted tales and blood-soaked nostalgia. Grab your snacks and scream responsibly.

 

🎩 OCTOBER 5 – HEADLESS HORSEMEN & HUMONGOUS GOURDS 🎩

 

πŸ‘» “The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad” Turns 76
Disney’s delightfully spooky retelling of “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow” still slaps. Bing Crosby’s narration? Iconic. The Headless Horseman chase? Still thrilling. Put it on, then ride your spectral steed through the October fog. Bonus points for watching with a hot cider and your favorite black cat.

 

πŸŽƒ The Giant Pumpkin Expo – Anoka, MN
Did someone say massive mutant pumpkins? The Halloween Capital of the World™ (yes, officially) is hosting a gourd-geous expo of titanic squashes. I once tried to live inside one. Long story. But if you’re in Minnesota, don’t miss the festivities. There’s pumpkin pride on parade!

 

🦴 So, there you have it, my dear denizens of dread. Some “things” to celebrate and check out this first week of October. Remember: Halloween isn’t a day. It’s a lifestyle. And the clock is ticking.

 

Until we meet again in the pumpkin patch at the end of Mayfield Place … Stay spooky! (Oh, and never trust a talking raven before sunrise.)

 

With skeletal affection,


🦴 Dr. Klopek 🦴
Keeper of the Pumpkin Pact
Curator of Cryptic Calendar Events
President of the HOA (Haunted Occupants Association)

Wednesday, September 24, 2025

Music for the Halloween Season?


By Dr. Klopek — THE Halloweeniac of Mayfield Place

 

Ahhh yes, my bony brethren and skeletal sisters! Gather ‘round! I’ve just dug up a titillating little tidbit from the living world — a Harvard study, no less! Those brainy fleshbags concluded that music improves one’s health and well-being. Heart rate down, spirits up, social bonds strengthened! Delightful!

 

But let me ask you this, dear ghouls and grave-crawlers: What if the music doesn’t soothe the soul … but summons it instead?

 

Enter: “Halloween Hootenanny”— the devilishly delightful 1998 compilation from Zombie A Go-Go Records! It doesn’t just tingle your spine. It yanks it out and tosses it on the dance floor! Featuring the ghastly greeting of horror host Zacherle himself, this album is a gateway to pandemonium most festive.

 

Yes! According to monsters everywhere (and believe me, we took a poll in the pumpkin patch at the end of Mayfield Place), “Halloween Hootenanny” is essential for assembling the local undead, banshee, and bog creatures for a raucous night of frightful frolic. It might very well be the perfect soundtrack for Halloween. That’s still up for debate.

 

Feast your ears on: Rob Zombie’s “Halloween (She’s So Mean)” – a howlin' anthem for your favorite scream queen; The Reverend Horton Heat’s “The Halloween Dance” — the only shuffle guaranteed to wake the dead; And the crucial public service announcement from The Swingin’ Neckbreakers: “No Costume, No Candy.” A rule, a warning, a lifestyle.

 

Now, if calming music reduces anxiety and makes you feel less alone, imagine what haunting tunes do! That’s right, they crank up the terror, summon the weirdos, and blast loneliness into another dimension.

 

In other words, it brings the monsters to YOU. (You're welcome.)

 

So, if you value your safety, your sanity and your solemn solitude, stay away.

 

Otherwise, crank up “Halloween Hootenanny.”

 

Find it on Spotify, YouTube or wherever mortals dare stream music. 

 

Monday, September 22, 2025

AMC FearFest Is Coming for You!

AMC’s FearFest celebration of Halloween is almost here. It’s the perfect thing to put on the tube in the background to keep the Halloween season pumping through your veins while working around the house or working in the office making those spreadsheets, sending emails or trying to sell aluminum siding to folks over the phone. 
 
There are a lot of cool marathons running, like “Halloween” marathons, a “creature feature” marathon, a “fear the ‘80s” marathon and more. Perhaps there are some movies here you haven’t seen. Maybe there are a few you want to catch again. And maybe there are favorites you just like to have running on the TV set to, as stated previously, keep you in the mood all October.
 
Below is AMC’s full FearFest schedule:
 
Wednesday, October 1 (FearFest Halloween Kickoff Marathon)
3 pm: Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers 

5 pm: Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers

7 pm: Halloween (1978)

9 pm: Halloween II (1981) 

11 pm: Halloween III: Season of the Witch
 
Thursday, October 2
6 pm: Trick 'r Treat

8 pm: Friday the 13th (2009)

10 pm: Jeepers Creepers
 
Friday, October 3

8 pm: It (2017)

Saturday, October 4 (Freddy vs. Jason Weekend)

8 am: Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter

10 am: Friday the 13th: A New Beginning 

12 pm: Friday the 13th Part VI: Jason Lives 

2 pm: Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood

4 pm: Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan 

6 pm: Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday

8 pm: Friday the 13th (1980)

10 pm: Friday the 13th Part 2

12 am: Friday the 13th Part III 

2 am: Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter

4 am: Friday the 13th: A New Beginning



Sunday, October 5 (Freddy vs. Jason Weekend Continues)

6 am: Freddy's Dead: The Final Nightmare

8 am: A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child

10 am: ; A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master

12:15 pm: A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors

2:30 pm: A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy's Revenge

4:30 pm: A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984)

6:45 pm: Freddy vs. Jason



Monday, October 6
5:30 pm: House of Wax (2005)
8 pm: Ghost Ship

10 pm: Thir13n Ghosts


Tuesday, October 7 (Creature Feature)
9 am: Eight Legged Freaks

11:30 am: Leprechaun

1:30 pm: Pumpkinhead

3:30 pm: The Thing
6 pm: Pet Sematary

8 pm: Lake Placid

10 pm: Tremors

12 am: Child’s Play

2 am: Cujo

4 am: Anaconda
 
Wednesday, October 8
8 pm: The Last Drive-in with Joe Bob Briggs: A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984)

10:55 pm: Freddy vs. Jason
 
Thursday, October 9
2:30 pm: Stephen King’s It Part 1

4:45 pm: Stephen King’s It Part 2
7 pm: Christine

9 pm: It (2017) 
 

Friday, October 10 (Run Michael Run Marathon)

2 pm: Halloween III: Season of the Witch

4 pm: Halloween (1978)

6 pm: Halloween II (1981)

8 pm: Halloween (2007)
10:30 pm: Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers 

12:30 am: Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers



Saturday, October 11 (Final Destination Marathon)

1 pm: Final Destination (2000)

3 pm: Final Destination 2

5 pm: Final Destination 3

7 pm: The Final Destination (2009)

9 pm: Final Destination 5

11 pm: Final Destination (2000)
 

Sunday, October 12 (Fear the ‘80s Marathon)

8 am: Fright Night (1985)

10:30 am: Poltergeist 

1 pm: Christine

3 pm: Silver Bullet

5 pm: Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers

7 pm: Friday the 13th (1980)
 

Monday, October 13 (Halloween Marathon)

2 pm: Halloween III: Season of the Witch

4 pm: Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers

6 pm: Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers

8 pm: Halloween (1978)

10 pm: Halloween II (1981)



Tuesday, October 14 (A Nightmare of Freddy Marathon)

11:30 am: Freddy's Dead: The Final Nightmare

1:30 pm: Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child 

3:30 pm: A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master

5:45 pm: A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors

8 pm: A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984) 

10:15 pm: A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy's Revenge
 
Wednesday, October 15
6 pm: Trick 'r Treat

8 pm: Jeepers Creepers

10 pm: I Know What You Did Last Summer
 
Thursday, October 16
7:15 pm: The Omen

9:45 pm: Carrie (2013)
 
Friday, October 17 (Friday the 13th Marathon)
11 am: Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday

1 pm: Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan

3 pm: Friday the 13th Part VI: Jason Lives

5 pm: Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood

7 pm: Freddy vs. Jason

9:15 pm: Friday the 13th (1980)

11:15 pm: Friday the 13th Part 2

1:15 am: Friday the 13th Part III
 

Saturday, October 18 (Stephen King Marathon)

8:45 am: Pet Sematary

10:45 am: Graveyard Shift

12:45 pm: Thinner

2:45 pm:  It (2017) 

5:45 pm: Carrie (2013) 

8 pm: Christine

10 pm: Misery 

12:30 am: Silver Bullet 

2:30 am: Cujo



Sunday, October 19 (Michael vs. Everyone Marathon)

8:30 am: Halloween III: Season of the Witch 

10:30 am: Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers

12:30 pm: Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers

2:30 pm: Halloween (2007)

5 pm: Halloween II (1981)

7 pm: Halloween (1978)



Monday, October 20
1:30 pm: Stephen King’s It Part 1

3:45 pm: Stephen King’s It Part 2

6 pm: Friday the 13th Part 2

8 pm: Friday the 13th (2009)

10 pm: Freddy vs. Jason
 
Tuesday, October 21
5 pm: Thir13en Ghosts

7 pm:  Final Destination (2000)
9 pm: Final Destination 2
 
Wednesday, October 22 (No Survivors Marathon)

4:30 pm: Jeepers Creepers

6:30 pm: Halloween (2007)

9 pm: Ghost Ship

11 pm: Friday the 13th (2009)



Thursday, October 23

6 pm: Trick 'r Treat

8 pm: I Know What You Did Last Summer

10:15 pm: Scream 4
 
Friday, October 24 (Supernatural Marathon)
11:30 am: The Exorcist

2:15 pm: The Shining

5:45 pm: Poltergeist

8:15 pm: The Conjuring

10:45 pm: The Omen (2006)

1:15 am: Insidious: The Last Key

 

Saturday, October 25 (Halloween Marathon)

1 pm: Halloween III: Season of the Witch

3 pm: Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers
5 pm: ; Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers

7 pm: Halloween (1978)
 
9:30 pm: Halloween (2007)

11:30 pm: Halloween II (1981)
 
Sunday, October 26 (Final Destination Marathon)

11 am: Final Destination (2000) 

1 pm: Final Destination 2

3 pm: Final Destination 3

5 pm: The Final Destination (2009)

7 pm: Final Destination 5 



Monday, October 27
7 pm: Thir13en Ghosts

9 pm: House of Wax (2005)

11:30 pm: Ghost Ship
 
Tuesday, October 28
6 pm: Final Destination 5

8 pm: Final Destination (2000)

10: pm: Trick 'r Treat
 
Wednesday, October 29
7 pm: Poltergeist
9:30 pm: A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984) 

11:45 pm: A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy's Revenge



Thursday, October 30 (Halloween on Halloween Marathon)

2 pm: Halloween III: Season of the Witch

4 pm: Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers

6 pm: Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers

8 pm: Halloween (2007)

10:30 pm: Halloween (1978)

12:30 am: Halloween II (1981)

2:30 am: Halloween III: Season of the Witch

4:30 am: Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers



Friday, October 31 (Halloween on Halloween Marathon Continues)

6:30 am: Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers
8:30 am: Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers

10:30 am: Halloween (1978)

12:30 pm: Halloween II (1981)

2:30 pm: Halloween III: Season of the Witch

4:30 pm: Halloween (2007)

7 pm: Halloween (1978) 

9 pm: Halloween II (1981)
11 pm: Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers

1 am: Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers 

3 am: Halloween (1978)

Thursday, September 18, 2025

This Week in Hauntings Across the Nation!

 
By Dr. Klopek — THE Halloweeniac of Mayfield Place

Ah, fiends and phantoms, the veil thins and the scream season awakens! Matt’s already got his die cuts up. Mike’s been watching movies that take place on Halloween. And Greg is, well, CrossFitting. But he’s wearing his Stay Spooky shirt while doing it.

If the scent of pumpkin spice and fog juice isn’t enough to raise your spirits, fear not, as I, Dr. Klopek (the real Halloweeniac), have stitched together some of the nation’s top terrors to visit. Here’s what’s rising from the grave this week in haunted houses, hayrides, infernal immersions and jack-o’-lantern jungles . . . 

πŸ”ͺ Opening This Week (Sept. 18 to 23)

πŸ•Έ Knott's Scary Farm (Buena Park, CA — Sept. 18 to Nov. 1)
 
The O.G. of haunts turns 52 this year! Mazes, monsters and mayhem await in what remains the gold standard of Halloween horror. Here’s a tidbit for the kids: Fifty years ago, radio personality and TV star Wolfman Jack (made even more famous as the radio DJ in the 1973 film “American Graffiti) had a show at Knott’s Scary Farm called “Wolfman Jack’s Shock and Rock Revue,” which took place at Knott’s Mystery Theatre. According to Ted Dougherty’s “The History of Knott’s Scary Farm” book, Wolfman was a howling success! 

πŸ‘» Six Flags Fright Fest (Valencia, CA — Sept. 19 to Nov. 2)

Step into cinematic nightmares with mazes themed to “Trick 'R Treat,” “The Conjuring” and “Saw.” Add coasters in the dark and you've got a recipe for pure panic.

πŸ§›‍♀️ Los Angeles Haunted Hayride (Griffith Park, CA — Sept. 19 to Nov. 2)

Climb aboard and descend into a haunted hamlet. This year features a zombie shooting gallery (with GellyBall!) and an Elvira-inspired maze (you know Greg’s all about this!). Spooky, campy, glorious. And did I mention Elvira-inspired maze? Also original Elvira merch!

πŸ”₯ Delusion: Harrowing of Hell (Downtown LA, CA — Sept. 18 to Nov. 9)

Not your average haunt. This is interactive horror theater at its finest. You play a role in a descent into a cult obsessed with Dante’s “Inferno.” May you survive your lines.

Queen Mary’s Dark Harbor (Long Beach, CA — Sept. 19 to Nov. 2)

The most haunted ship on Earth returns! Fog-filled corridors, cursed spirits, secret bars. Pack sea legs and holy water.

πŸŽƒ Magic of the Jack O' Lanterns (Palos Verdes, CA — Sept. 19 to Nov. 2)

Not into the gore? No worries. This serene stroll through thousands of glowing pumpkins delivers fall magic without the bloodshed.

🧟 13th Floor Haunted House (San Antonio, TX — Opened Sept. 13)

New attractions include “The Bloodshed” and “The Legend of the Donkey Lady.” Plus escape rooms, secret bars and a zombie shooting range. Let’s waste some zombies!

🎒 Six Flags Fiesta Texas — Fright Fest (San Antonio, TX — Open Now)

Features scream-worthy new haunts like “Saw: Legacy of Terror” and “Nosferatu.” Pair it with thrill rides and a Texas sunset. Yee-haw and AHHH!

πŸ‘Ώ Purgatory Scream Park (Kingwood, TX — Sept. 19 Opening)

This one's billed as "Houston's top-rated haunted house in Kingwood." Four intense haunted attractions with detailed production and relentless pacing. Even the screams are bigger in Texas.

πŸ•Έ Dark Hour Haunted House (Plano, TX — Sept. 19 Opening)

Nationally recognized for pro-level set design, costuming and fear factor. This one’s not for the faint of heart — or bladder.

🎭 The Thirteenth Hour (Indianapolis, IN — Sept. 20 Opening)

A cinematic, lore-heavy haunted experience with multiple chapters. Think immersive horror meets twisted bedtime stories.

πŸ’€ Nightmare on Edgewood (Indianapolis, IN — Sept. 20 Opening)

Indy’s most in-your-face haunt. Tightly packed, actor-driven and terrifying from the first step to the last scream.

πŸ‘Ή Brighton Asylum (Passaic, NJ — Sept. 26 Opening)

One of the East Coast’s most infamous extreme haunts. Industrial horror done right — metal, madness and malevolence.

πŸ§› Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights (Orlando, FL — Running Now to Nov. 2)

Ten haunted houses, massive scare zones and the debut of the “Jason Universe” maze. The budget is big, but so are the screams.

😱 Universal Studios Hollywood — Halloween Horror Nights (Hollywood, CA — Running Now to Nov. 2)

New houses include “Poltergeist,” “Terrifier” and “Five Nights at Freddy’s.” Oh, and a walk through an abandoned Depression-era farm in "Scarecrow: Music by Slash" maze. Hollywood horror at its finest.

🎭 Bob Baker’s Hallowe’en Spooktacular (Highland Park, CA — Running Now to Nov. 9)

Need something charming with a dash of creepy? This puppet-powered musical revue celebrates Halloween with vintage flair and over 100 quirky characters. This one’s just fun!

Now, these haunts might not be anywhere near you. So, if that’s the unfortunate case, then check out HauntWorld.com for a pretty comprehensive list of haunts, escapes and attractions, which you can search by city and state. You can also try out Haunts.com, which is a similar resource to find haunts by you. Let us know which gravesites (we mean websites) you dig most.

Whether you're a doom-driven dark tourist or just looking for a weekend fright fix, this week’s lineup has something for every monster and mortal. So, sharpen your claws, dust off your capes and … stay spooky!

Wednesday, September 17, 2025

Mad Haunts Halloween


By Dr. Klopek — THE Halloweeniac of Mayfield Place


Back in the 1980s and ‘90s, Cracked magazine kicked off the Halloween season (usually in the summer) with its Cracked Monster Party mag. It was chock full of Halloween- and monster-themed comics (some several pages, some single panels and others full two-page spreads).

That kind of thing is back! MAD magazine just recently dropped 96 pages of hilarious horror in a special edition mag called “MAD Haunts Halloween.” It offers up classic comics and drawings from the 1950s, ‘60s, ’70s, ‘80s, ‘90s . . . at this point, I should’ve just put “1950s to 2020.” 

The cover of this issue alone is enough to get you into the Halloween spirit with it’s orange and blue hues, carved pumpkins sitting on the porch of a presumed haunted house, Halloween treats strewn across the wood planks of the porch as if unsuspecting trick-or-treaters were chased off by some “thing” and dumped their pumpkin pails. There’s a spider and accompanying spiderweb, an approaching zombie, flittering bats, a glowing full moon . . . it’s all there to enjoy.

Within the pages are stories and art from MAD favorites like Sergio AragonΓ©s, Don Martin, Jack Davis, Antonio Proxies, Dick DeBartolo, Tom Bunk and one of our personal favorites, Don “Duck” Edwing. Monsters within run the gamut, with the likes of ghosts, Frankenstein’s Monster, the bride of Frankenstein, ghoulies, Svengoolie, Batman, Dracula (the original batman), the gill man, the wolf man, the mummy, the daddy, the devil and those who the devil made them do it.

The two-page spread of rejected monster cereals is a tasty treat. Hellog’s Sweet Succubus Crunch looks to die for. Vault-O-Meal’s Cinnamon Toastferatu is advertised as a necessary part of a balanced midnight snack, blehh! That box comes with a free toy inside — cinnamon fangs.

The piece on Possessed Barbie’s Nightmare House is cute. Oh, look, she comes with a refillable vomit spewing blaster bulb. Gotta get it!

There’s one particular cartoon that’s on “The Lighter Side of Halloween” that totally speaks my language — it’s regarding those “fun size” candy bars you get trick-or-treating. I, too, want to know what rascal deemed such a small size to be “fun.”

Anyway, “MAD Haunts Halloween” packs a pulverizing punch. If feels classic, yet new, and it brings back memories of those issues of Cracked Monster Party of yesteryear that really were perfect season-setters. While out on the town, I spotted copies of the mag at Barnes and Noble and Target. Not sure what’s going on with grocery stores near me — they dumped the mag aisle altogether, except for those little rag racks at the check-out stands. Boo! And I don’t mean that in a “scared you” kind of way.

Thursday, September 11, 2025

50 Days Till Halloween: Your Guide to the Season’s First Chilling Highlights

 
By Dr. Klopek — THE Halloweeniac of Mayfield Place

Greetings, goblins and ghouls! I’m Dr. Klopek, the bones of the operation here in the pumpkin patch at the end of Mayfield Place. Some call me a Halloween historian. Others, a Halloween hoarder. But you can call me "THE" Halloweeniac.

Now that we’re officially 50 days out from the big night, I say it’s high time to rattle the chains and open the crypt. There’s a terrifyingly tasty trail of Halloween happenings headed our way, and I’m here to guide you through them — from haunted anniversaries to blood-pumping book drops, ghostly grooves, and TV terror traditions.

So, grab a cider, sharpen your carving knife, and let’s get sinister...

πŸ•Έ️ SEPTEMBER 11 — 50 Days Until Halloween

"The Countdown Begins ..."

    •    Light your black flame candles and hang the pumpkin lights — Halloween is coming fast.

    •    The countdown begins here in the pumpkin patch. Are your costumes planned? Candy stocked? Skeletons arranged by height? You better get moving …

πŸ•·️ SEPTEMBER 14 — Spooky Little Halloween’s 10th Anniversary

"The Ghoul Behind the Blog"

    •    Raise your bat mugs to "Spooky Little Halloween," the heart-and-soul haunt blog run by the Mistress of the Macabre, Miranda. My fellow Halloweeniacs talked with her at Midsummer Scream last month. Be sure to hear the full interview and more on our podcast.

    •    Ten years of tricks, treats, playlists, party ideas and midnight mischief. Miranda is one of the few who really gets what it means to live Halloween 365.

    •    Go read her stuff or I’ll send the pumpkins after you.

πŸ“– SEPTEMBER 16 — “It’s Hall-Lore-Ween Again!” by Josh Spero Hits Shelves

"Folklore and Frights, Bound in a Book"

    •    A fresh grim grimoire called "It's Hall-Lore-Ween Again!" drops into our bony laps on this very day! Josh Spero's latest Halloween tome blends history, legend and good old-fashioned spooks. The Halloweeniacs met Josh, too. Cool dude. All about Halloween. He's in that same pod with Miranda. You still haven';t checked it out yet?

    •    If you're the type who reads by candlelight and collects weird facts like candy corn, this one’s for you.

    •    Add it to your coffin-table collection.

πŸŽ‚ SEPTEMBER 17 — Elvira’s Birthday

"Mistress of the Dark Turns Another Year More Fabulous"

    •    Cassandra Peterson, the eternal queen of campy horror and cleavage-powered comedy, celebrates another trip around the sun.

    •    Throw on "Elvira's Haunted Hills," paint your nails black, and say a toast: Long live the Queen of Halloween!

πŸ‘» SEPTEMBER 18 — First Night of Knott’s Scary Farm

"The Fog Rolls In ..."

    •    Knott’s opens its blood-stained gates again for the 2025 scare season.

    •    Haunted mazes, scare zones and monsters lurking behind every corner. If you’re within screaming distance of California, this is a must-scream.

    •    Dr. Klopek says: If you ain't screaming, you ain't doing it right.

⚰️ SEPTEMBER 22 — Salem Witch Trials: Final Executions, 1692

"We Remember the Witches"

    •    On this somber date, we honor the memory of the innocent lives taken during the Salem Witch Trials.

    •    A perfect night for reflection, perhaps a candlelit reading of "The Crucible," or a quiet visit to your own sacred Halloween shrine.

    •    The veil is thin, friends. Be kind to the spirits.

🧟 SEPTEMBER 26 — Midnight Syndicate’s "Darkened Corners" Album Drops

"Music to Raise the Dead By"

    •    Midnight Syndicate is back with a new album, "Darkened Corners." It's supposed to be an eight-track collection of lost tracks that were part of other projects, kind of a Frankenstein construction, perhaps. Here's to another haunting masterpiece (clink clink). If Halloween had a soundscape, these guys likely wrote it.

    •    Stream it. Blast it. Let your walls whisper.

πŸ“Ί SEPTEMBER 28 — AMC’s FearFest Begins

"1000 Hours of Screams. Yes, Please."

    •    It’s back! AMC's FearFest 2025 opens the coffin lid on weeks of horror movie marathons, interviews and classic scream-fests.

    •    Schedule? Who needs one? Just leave AMC on and let the ghouls take the wheel.

πŸŽƒ FINAL THOUGHTS FROM DR. KLOPEK

This is just the beginning, my frightful friends. The cauldron is bubbling, the fog is rolling in, and the moon is almost full. If you're not already in the Halloween spirit, well, maybe you need a friggin' exorcism.

Keep your pumpkin peeled, because I’ve got more ghastly goodness coming your way soon from the pumpkin pail: interviews, product reviews, vintage Halloween lore and more creepy curiosities than you can shake a broomstick at.

Until next time — stay spooky. Stay strange. Stay Halloween.

Dr. Klopek, signing off from the pumpkin patch at the end of Mayfield Place.

πŸŽƒ 43 Years of Halloween III: Season of the Witch – A Love Letter from Dr. Klopek 🦴

Greetings, goblins and ghouls! Dr. Klopek here — resident bone bag, pumpkin spice connoisseur and chief historian of the Halloweeniacs. To...