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I miss Castle Dracula. :(

Loads of new Two new things for you. First up, my long overdue tribute to the Castle Dracula ride of Wildwood, New Jersey. The legendary amusement went down in a 2002 fire, souring a million memories for a million people. Regardless, it's the best damn ride of 'em all, and though I'd planned to hold off on writing this until the Halloween season, I couldn't help myself. Now that I have closure on the Castle Dracula issue, maybe someday I can go back there.

Also, Strawberry-Falls Punch, a very rare flavor from 1986, has been added to the Kool-Aid Section. This packet isn't quite like the others -- check out why.

I don't want it to be Monday tomorrow. I'd be more okay with Monday being the day after tomorrow. One of you, snap some fingers.

Monday Edit: Click "more" for a bunch of e-mails I've received today in response to the Castle Dracula tribute.

Wednesday Edit: Now with even more Dracula-related e-mail.

Gene: First time I had ever been in it was after my Senior Prom. The girl I was
with freaked out during the beheading. I forgot all about that place. Thanks! Brought back some great memories.

Ian: Great site, really. I spent half my work day just going through all your blogs and the random 80's nostalgia postings. This is some funny shit. The Atlantic City story is good, and the Castle Dracula really brought back memories. I especially enjoyed the Upstate article and the piece about the "Gizmos & Gadgets" shop. You've really got something here, keep it up.

Tim: This is to inform you that, contrary to your opinion, the Castle Dracula "awful music" is none other than J.S. Bach's Toccata and fugue in D Minor BWV565. This organ work is considered by most to be one of the most compelling and substantive works for organ, almost unique in Bach's known compositions. Not to mention it has had continual popular success in our contemporary times. It is also mildly controversial, in that it's unique stylistic elements might suggest that Bach was not the sole author. But if not Bach, who?

Awful music? If you really think it's awful, what original musical work could you consider sublime? I don't even want to know...that contaminated Jersey Shore Aire must have shorted out the last functioning musical appreciation neuron in your noodle. All the best...

(Note from Matt: I know what song it is -- the article names it. And by "awful" music, I mean "scary." Yeah.)

Melissa: I LOVED your tribute to Castle Dracula. The place was a mecca of my church youth group trips in the 1970-80s and I have so many fond memories. It was so great to have photos and the "awful music" to add to the sensory experience. Thanks so much.

Johnstarr: I just read your X-E article on the Castle Dracula ride in Wildwood New Jersey and I just had to tell you how close to home it hit. I, too, went to Wildwood every year since I was a baby with the family but have not been able to go for the past four years. I also feared that ride before going on it, but my fear was even more intense. See, we always stayed at the Midtown Hotel which was right next to the pier housing Castle Dracula. So not only did I worry about it when we walked passed it every day on the way to Snow White, but every night when I went to bed I looked out the tiny hotel room windows and stared at the red glowing windows. A cousin of mine walked through the thing each year as a tradition and I admired her so much for it. Finally, one year, my mom and dad decided me and my sister were old enough and we all rode through it on the boat together. They figured that would be less intense than walking through it, and after riding it, I didn't want to believe them. I never got to walk through the upper areas of the ride but wish that I did. That boat ride scared the piss out of me and reading your article brought back all of those old memories.

Of course, it also brought back a lot of good memories of Wildwood and the boardwalk and makes me pine to go back and waste even more money at Bobby Dee's Casino Arcade not even a block from where we stayed. It really hurts to read that the place was burned down, but that seems to be a trend in Wildwood. When I was young, the first ride I ever rode was the Keystone Cops. That whole pier burned down much the same way Castle Dracula did. I remember the same burning hate for those fuckers you have when I was only 5. How dare they destroy something, even unintentionally, that brought so much joy and was so pure.

Sorry for the rambling letter, but I had to tell you just how much that article meant to me, and I think it does Castle Dracula justice just to be remembered by the people who loved it like you and me.

Stacey: hey matt - just wanted to say how much i appreciated the castle dracula article! reading it felt like something coming from my own head. my family took us every year, except for that one year we got to go to Disney like all the other kids.. (whooo hooo, we're going OUT OF STATE for a vacation!). I remember my dad saying "come on, let's go in this year!" when i was young, but there was no way! finally going in was like conquering the great beast of NJ, it was extremely surreal and such an incredible memory, i'm just glad i have it.

now that i'm 8 months pregnant, i am really sad that i won't ever be able to experience it with my own kids. my husband is from north jersey, spending summers in LBI, so he never went as a kid either. of course, i drug him there when we started dating, but it's not the same when you are older...

anyway, if you ever find the asses that torched it, let me know. seriously. something should be done! thanks for the memories!

Brad: Dude, I have been a huge fan of this site for many years now. You never cease to put a smile on my face with your articles dealing my favorite, cartoons, commercials and games from my youth. But I have to say your most recently article is the one that sealed the deal and put you in the category of my favorite website of all time.

I am from and still live in Baltimore, MD. Which is to say that when you went on vacation you were taught to go to Ocean City, MD. But thank goodness I had parents that broke from the norm. They never liked the big city feel of OC so they decided very early on in my life that our family would vacation in Wildwood, NJ. And I thank them every chance I get for introducing me to Morey's Pier, Hunt's Pier, Mariner's Landing, Ed's Funcade, Mack's Pizza and countless other Wildwood favorites. But one thing stood above all others. Castle Dracula.

I think I was 24 before I actually stepped foot in the castle and certainly after learning of its demise I'm glad I did. The castle was unlike anything I had ever since before, or since. It was Wildwood for me in a nutshell. Nothing effected me greater than that structure. I was terrified of it.

There is a great story that every now and again my cousins and me force my mom and aunt to spin of the time they went into Castle Dracula the second year it opened. I'll spare you the details but I will say it is the funniest story I've ever heard the tell.

Or course like most family traditions, they end eventually and we stopped going to Wildwood when I was around 14 years old. Since then the old boardwalk had just lived in my memory until 2001 when we decided to round up the family and head to Wildwood. Thank god we did since it would be a year later that the Castle would be destroyed. But it was great re-living all those memories.

I know this e-mail is rambling but as you know things like this tend to get you so excited you do know how to express it. What upsets me the most is not being able to scare the crap out of my daughter just like my parents did me when they walked me past the entrance many years ago.

PS - The internet is a wonderful place. I'm sure you have found these other sites since you yourself loved Wildwood as a destination. but here are two sites that have some great pics of the old rides that haunted the boards many years ago. I only wish I was older and had a chance to ride the Star Wars ride that used to occupy a spot on Morey's Pier back in the late 70s. I was only like 3 or 4 years old and actually thought I had made it up until I saw pictures of the ride on these sites below. That ride will forever remain a mystery to me.

http://www.mrboardwalk.net/
http://www.funchase.com

Matt: I was so sad to hear it burned down when my sister told me after it happened. We would go to Wildwood every summer, just as your described also. We would dare each other to go on when we were little and make up scary stories about what was inside. I would go on as I got older and make up stories about what was really in the castle to them. Man, those were good times!! Thanks for the article! WATCH THE TRAM-CAR PLEASE!

Greg: I just came across your article on Castle Dracula. I must say that I wa moved by what you wrote. No, I never visited Castle Dracula. Nor did I ever hear anything about I burning down, until tonight. I guess you can probably guess that I didn’t even live in New Jersey, either.

I grew up near Cleveland, Ohio. But like yourself, there were attractions that were very magical to me when I was young. I loved the cheesy haunted rides at carnivals and fairs, no matter how fake the "monsters" were that inhabited the inside or how poorly applied the greasepaint was on the people that ran it from the outside. Those places helped to make our childhoods truly memorable.

One place that I remember was an old "pirate" ride at Cedar Point Amusement Park in Sandusky, Ohio. If you haven’t been there, I’m sure you’ve heard of it as they are touted as having the most and some of the fastest roller coasters on the planet (yawn, who cares...). Anyway, I remember in very vivid detail that there was this old one-story attraction that had a pirate theme going on. Not much more than a poor man’s Pirates of the Carribean ride, I still loved it. You basically got in these little guided carts (complete with a skull and crossbones ornament) that took you through these small, but fun little scenes. Pirate mannequins with limited movement would swing swords at you, chase wenches around a tavern, and fire cannon balls directly at you (nothing more than a red bulb flashing inside of the cannon muzzle, of course).

There was even some really great touches which the Disney ride never had. One scene had the cart riding through complete darkness until you came across several items "bobbing" in the water with gaunt-looking pirate survivors clinging to them - obviously their ship had capsized. Whistling wind sound effects blasted out of hidden speakers as a pirate yelled, "Watch out for the whale!" The cart then swerved toward a huge outstretched whale mouth, complete with giant teeth. The cart would then plunge right into the mouth and darkness ensued. On your dimly-lit journey through the whale, you would encounter swallowed pirates playing cards on a large piece of smashed deck and you would also get to see the large, red heart of the whale as a deep "THUMP-THUMP" echoed throughout the darkness. The ending of this ride was a gruesome sight. A pirate was strung up on the gallows with a noose around his neck. As your cart approached this scene, the pirate’s body fell away from his head, leaving little tattered pieces of flesh hanging from his neck. The cart would then burst out through heavy, hinged doors and that was it. End of ride. Ten to fifteen minutes of damn good fun.

This ride didn’t climb to heights of 300 feet. Nor did it reach speeds in excess of 60mph. But, it didn’t matter. I absolutely loved it. It was the first ride that I wanted to jump on whenever my family made the three hour trip to Sandusky (which wasn’t often). I never really enjoyed roller coasters, either. I just didn’t enjoy standing in a line in the blazing summer sun for over a half hour and then spending a mere two minutes having your intestines pushed up your throat. I didn’t get it and I didn’t like it. I enjoyed the pirate ride because I knew that, every single time, I would never be disappointed.

Unfortunately, the pirate ride was demolished to make way for more "extreme" thrills. I believe there is 800 tons of roller coaster track that looms over where the little pirate ride used to be. No, the pirate ride’s fate isn’t nearly as tragic as Castle Dracula's, but the two rides share much in common. They were bits of history of an era that is quickly becoming extinct.

Theses rides also challenged our imaginations as kids. The big budget corporate rides spare nothing. Everything’s been designed to a flawless tee. There are no spaces to fill using a child’s imagination. It’s all there. Every penny, every dollar. The old rides were cheesy, but that was part of their appeal to us. That whale’s mouth in the old Cedar Point pirate ride didn’t move. It didn’t rise out of the water. It didn't do anything. But, I could swear that, as a kid, that whale was swimming right at me and it swallowed our entire cart, track and all.

I will miss that little pirate ride and I am sorry to hear what happened to Castle Dracula. I am sorry if this letter seems a bit overblown, but I can certainly appreciate how you feel and I just wanted you to know that there others that feel the same way. Thanks for your time Matt and keep remembering the good old days. They are one of the few things in today’s world that are worth remembering.

Paul: I enjoyed the Castle Dracula article very much! I always love it when you do those kind of articles; so don't worry about not pleasing the masses. :)

More added Wednesday...

Tara: I just read your article on Castle Dracula and Wildwood, and I loved it.  I spent some time every summer "down the shore" and had many of the same feelings you had about the Boardwalk.  I didn't actually get to go into the Castle until I was much older - there was no way my Mom was going in with me!  But I was glad I have some memory of it too.  I used to spend at least a week down there but now I can only squeeze a long weekend out of my husband as he does not share the feelings I have for Wildwood but he is a good sport and humors me for a while.  A lot has changed down there.  Sadly hotels are being knocked down left and right for condos.  But I still get the same feelings I did when I was younger when I see the Boardwalk.
I hope I didn't bother you with this email just wanted to tell you how much I enjoyed your article. Thanks!

Alicia:
I don't normally do this sort of thing, but I  absolutely had to send you kudos on your Castle Dracula article because I feel  the same way about haunted house dark rides, and so few other people do.

My family had a similar tradition, except that  since we live in Utah, our destination each summer was always Lagoon amusement  park--which boasts two haunted house dark rides!  They're both the type  that send you through in cars, on a track, and have mechanical monsters that  lean out through the windows on the outside of the ride, or tell cheesy jokes to  people waiting in line. Of course, they were always the pinnacle of any  trip to Lagoon, even when I was really young and too afraid to open my eyes once we were inside.

So, when I as a teenager went with my  family to visit a grandparent in New York and he took us down to his summer home  in Wildwood (and therefore the boardwalk). Just like you, I was drawn in  by the music and *had* to go into Castle Dracula.  Unfortunately, only the  walkthrough bit was open; apparently, they were doing repairs on the boat  ride.  But at least, I told myself, I can come back some other time.

Then some asshole kids burned it down.  I  don't think I have to tell you how disappointed I was when I read about  that.  I'm pretty sure that it was almost directly after we left New  Jersey, too, and that made it all the worse.  I think that, in the same  article that talked about the fire, I also read that Castle Dracula was the  country's longest-running dark ride.  It was hard to think that I'd been  that close and still never seen the *real* Castle Dracula--the boat ride--when I considered myself such a huge fan of dark rides.

That's why I'm so appreciative of your article, the  pictures, and the links to the Castle's page on Dark in the Park.  So few  people appreciate dark rides, anymore.  It's a dying art, and it's really  sad to think that when all of these places get too old or get vandalized like  Castle Dracula, nobody's going to feel that repairing or rebuilding them is worth the effort.

In the meantime, if you ever find yourself in Utah  (well...  pray that you don't), stop by Farmington and check out  Lagoon.  Admission is about $40, but all rides except  for a free-fall thrill ride and a racetrack ride are free after  that, and like I said, we've got two dark rides--which the park seems to keep in  pretty good repair, and even adds new displays amongst the original ones.

Anyway, thanks again for the article, and I'll keep  reading them so long as you keep writing them.

Dead Dave: hey, matt! first off let me say thanks for the article on the castle, it brings back so many memories of my home for 6 years. I worked inside castle dracula from 1989-1994 and I loved every minute of it. I had very similar feelings about the two teenage boys who set it on fire. I wanted them punished severly and slowly so they could feel the pain they caused all of us. in your artcle you have a picture of one of the family members in the bloody squeeze chamber, that's my friend charlie snow from high school. any way I can go on forever. thanks drop me a line sometime.

Doug: Thanks for such a great tribute to Castle Dracula!  Your experiences
with the Castle and Wildwood in general were so similar to mine.  If I had the money, I'd invest to rebuild the place, or something with a similar experience (improved, of course and a dungeon not smelling like castle employee piss).  I'm sure you know that The Nickels thought ofre-building it, but will cost too much as they only got $75k for it.  Oh well.  They're probably still in court with the water park people that hate them.

I'll be down there in August to pay respects, as I have for almost each year since.  I can't stay away from the tackiness of Wildwood.  If they can only re-hab the Golden Nugget mine ride, at least something from years past may be saved.

Len: I just wanted to thank you for the great article on Castle Dracula! I
have very similar childhood memories of the place, and of Wildwood in general.  While I miss the ol' joint, seeing the article and the pictures especially was a breath of fresh air.  Here's hoping that someday they'll build something that once again looms over the entire beach and haunts children for years.

Posted by Matt on 07/24/2005. E-mail me!



Discussion Thread: 137 comments

Kneg, my nig…

They are both pretty easy targets, eh?
Although, I was being serious! I’m not a big Matrix fan, but Bill and Ted were high up on my list when I was in elementary/junior high! And I am kind of dissappointed by "Minding the Store" so far. Sigh.

The Dracula article made me sad too, just because it’s such a sad thought losing an old landmark like that. If it weren’t for those damned kids and their pesky torches!!

I wonder if anyone was ever apprehended or turned in for it?

Chestnuts roasted by kidneyboy @ 07/25/2005 1:57 AM


damn, I went to the site Matt thanked for the pics, and they have all the info there!

Kids lit rags and aerosol cans on fire for torches….what the hell?!?!

The Kool-Aid is nice too, but I’m off on a Wildwood Web Hunt!

Chestnuts roasted by kidneyboy @ 07/25/2005 2:08 AM


Tomorrow is my birthday. I need something interesting to happen. Suggestions?

Chestnuts roasted by DarkPrimus @ 07/25/2005 2:58 AM


Kidney, I only sought to confirm the unique, beautiful situation we share: To love someone/something, in spite of the world. :) Revel in it. I do.

Matt, I adored the article. It really brought tears to my eyes: http://www.theataris.com" target="_blank"> ‘nostalgia wave goodbye, I think time for me to go’

Chestnuts roasted by Knegative @ 07/25/2005 3:04 AM


Hey DarkPrimus,

Go see The Wedding Crashers because Vince Vaughn is a comedic genius, and could quite possibly be God. And then, go get some ice cream (mint, maybe?) and break a lot of stuff..

Chestnuts roasted by Review the World @ 07/25/2005 3:49 AM


Matt,

Don’t know why you are apologizing about doing a Castle Dracula article. You’ve said all along this site is about everything you love. If it’s turned into something else where you don’t feel like you can do what you want, that sucks.

Chestnuts roasted by Jimbalaya @ 07/25/2005 8:25 AM


god…i miss Dracula’s Castle. i was crushed beyond belief when i heard about it being burned down. i went to the burned wreckage and my heart just sank. i also wanted to find these kids who were to blame and bash their heads into the pavement.
not too long before the fire, they built this hideous water slide that looped above the main gate of the dungeon ride. water would constantly splash from overhead, making waiting in line for the dungeon boat ride..well..not much fun. i loved that boat ride, probably far more than the castle tour.

a lot of things are gone now from Wildwood…do you remember the Golden Nugget ride? that was soooooo much fun!!

at least Dante’s Inferno is still there. sigh.

thank you for posting the Dracula’s Castle billboard. i haven’t seen that in such a long time.

Chestnuts roasted by kevinperson @ 07/25/2005 8:52 AM


I am glad some other children who went to Wildwood every year with their parents felt the same way I did… Scared out of our minds the first time we gathered up enough courage to go in to the Castle. I only vaguly remember going in… I only did it once because I always had a limit on how much money I could spend on rides per night, and I think that was one of the most expesive ones there at the time. I have only been to Wildwood once since I was 19 (I’m almost 30 now) and that was a year or two ago with a girlfriend… I noticed that the Castle was not there anymore, but I didn’t know why… Now I am pissed at those kids too.

Chestnuts roasted by Speak @ 07/25/2005 8:54 AM


Sadly, I have never known the pleasures of Wildwood NJ. I do, however, live in Ohio: the self-proclaimed "roller-coaster capitol of the universe", so I’m never too far removed from the good times that only a day spent meandering around an amusement park and paying eight dollars for six ounces of Cherry Coke can provide. Cedar Point and King’s Island do have some dandy rides, but I’ll be goddamned if Castle Dracula doesn’t look like a heap o’ fun. To everyone whose world was rocked by the loss of this undoubtedly one-of-a-kind ride, you have my sympathies.

Chestnuts roasted by The Yeti @ 07/25/2005 9:41 AM


When I started bringing friends along on the family trips, the Golden Nugget (or as we called it, "Mine Shaft") was traditionally the first ride we’d go on. Such a hidden gem — the ride never had a line. It was sort of a Western-themed haunted house with a lot of goofy, out of nowhere elements. (Wasn’t there a part where the carts went through a spinning tunnel?) Miss that one terribly.

And Cory: You’re right, I should’ve mentioned the bloody boat ride water. :)

Anyone remember the "Condor?"

Chestnuts roasted by Matt @ 07/25/2005 10:17 AM


The Yeti,
Where in OH are you? I grew up near Cleveland and all my childhood amusement park memories are of Cedar Point.

My first coaster was the Blue Streak and my uncle laughed hysterically at my white-knuckled deathgrip on the grab bar in front of me and other signs of sheer terror. I would have issued death threats through my clenched teeth if I could have said anything it all. Terrified silence was all I could manage. Of course once I got off I was on top of the world and cocky about my death-defying feat. That is, until my uncle asked me if I’d like to do it again.

Chestnuts roasted by Jimbalaya @ 07/25/2005 10:18 AM


I’m not being facetious when I say that kids today have too much time on their hands. Hell, I was born in 1972 and I was too bushed from chores to go out and burn down local landmarks.
Where are parents now that they dont teach their kids about modern conveniences like FLASHLIGHTS!

I love the article!!! One of my strongest memories in my childhood is a dungeon walk through very much like what you describe. I’ll have to ask my parents where it was. Maybe it is still standing and I can refer you to it.

Chestnuts roasted by Shawn B. @ 07/25/2005 10:19 AM


Living on the west coast, the closest thing I’ve had to a Castle Dracula is the Haunted Mansion at Disneyland. Pretty tame when you compare it to Mr. Blood River here, but it literally scared the pee out of me when I first went on it at the age of five.

Chestnuts roasted by Mr. Mr. Mr. @ 07/25/2005 11:07 AM


Jimbalaya,
I live in the far southern tip of the buckeye state near Portsmouth. Sadly, whenever I need a roller-coaster fix, I must endure a 2-5 hour drive to either Cincinnati or Sandusky. But with rides like the Magnum, Raptor and Mantis, it’s well worth the trip.

Chestnuts roasted by The Yeti @ 07/25/2005 11:13 AM


Haunted Mansion in Disneyworld WAS pretty tame, but I ate it up anyways…for awhile my friend REFUSED to enter, saying she would be too scared- it was getting annoying so finally I hit her and said "It’s DISNEYworld for Christ’s sakes! It WON’T be scary!"

I went to Lotte World the other day- Korea’s version of Disneyworld…kind of small, but not bad.

Chestnuts roasted by Muppet Baby @ 07/25/2005 11:14 AM


Matt,
Great article on Wildwood!! Just like you, my Family’s vacation to Wildwood was the highlight of the summer season and your article brought back so many memories. Every year we would stay at the Malibu Motel on 19th street right next door to the Buccaneer (and if we were lucky, we would bring 4-5 of my aunt/uncle’s families and run the hotel/pool) and it was some of the best experiences of my childhood.

And I totally remember the Golden Nugget on Hunt’s Pier and the revovling Tunnel(which was oddly lit-up by Black-lights to appear Green/Yellow/Orangey Neon) And the Condor on Morey’s Pier was also a great ride, but the Zoom Phloom was the ride I will always cherish since it was always the last ride of the night because you would essentially get soaked to the bone and that would be it.

Anyway, Matt, I have a few questions since you brought me so many memories again:

1) do you remember the hotel you use to stay at?

2) do you remember the heckler on the boardwalk outside that pier which was always closed (since I have been born anyway)? That guy was freaking hillarious!!

3) How about Sam’s or Mack’s Pizza? There was always the fued of who was better (I am more of a Mack’s fan myself, especially since they have Pennslyvania Dutch Birch Beer on "Tap")

4) And did you have a favorite arcade? (I always loved "Ed’s Funcade" and still have my points card for a prize, but some people were more partial towards "Gateway 26")

Thanks,
Tim

(Also, the best Boardwalk Game was the Wheel on Mariner’s Landing where the Prizes were boxes of candy)

Chestnuts roasted by Tim @ 07/25/2005 11:55 AM


Tim: Throughout childhood my family always stayed in the Crest — usually rotating between Bristol Plaza and Nassau Inn — I preferred Bristol. We’ve been to all of the other beachfront ones around there. Waikiki was great. Used to have breakfast at that shitty floor-level diner at the Olympic even if we weren’t staying there.

With friends on my "own" trips as an adult, we obviously wanted to be near the boardwalk, because who wants to drive when they’re crocked? I’ve stayed at the Bolero, Premiere and a couple of others closer to the boardwalk. Hotels there generally aren’t as nice, but so what.

Favorite arcade was Gateway 26. We were in there every year, but eventually progressed to that big ass one that was at the entrance to one of Morey’s Piers. (Was that Ed’s? Possibly.)

Chestnuts roasted by Matt @ 07/25/2005 12:00 PM


Also, old school Wildwood vacationers should remember this: Zaberer’s Restaurant. God damn was that place awesome.

Chestnuts roasted by Matt @ 07/25/2005 12:02 PM


Castle Dracula was so much fun. It was, like playing skee ball and getting the unlimited-ride bracelet for Morey’s Pier and Mariner’s Landing, an annual summer ritual. It is sorely missed.

Chestnuts roasted by farkerjulie @ 07/25/2005 12:05 PM


Ed’s Funcade was further north on the boardwalk past Morey’s, but was closer to where we stayed. So it became my arcade of choice (I have won a-many prizes there, including a Cat Coookie Jar, which my Mom continues to use to this day storing things like buttons and keys found and lightbulbs and sits on top of our fridge — which i saved points for three years to get)

But, it is funny because we used to stay in the Crest, until my uncle convinced our family to stay closer to the boardwalk since you essentially get a better deal with the more people you get to stay… and you are right that the hotels are not as nice as other areas, but they do have their charm in that retro 50s sense of style

Chestnuts roasted by Tim @ 07/25/2005 12:23 PM


Thank you, thank you, oh, thank you for the article! Let others have their cliched "Cristmas in July" thing, You have brought a ghoulish grin to my mug with this early taste of Hallowe’en. And tossing in the Tocatta had cackling like a maniac in feather longjohns through most of it. There used to be a cowboy-themed amusement park in San Jose, Ca. called Frontier Village. The only ride that ever scared my single-digit aged self was called The Lost Duchman’s Mine. The usual ride-along with pneumatic zombies and skeletons popping out at you in their UV-lit Day-glo glory. That too is gone now, replaced with a condo complex. If I ever win a big time sweepstakes, or lotto, or whatever, I might just build a duplicate of Dracula’s Castle to live in. And include the crappy "Dracula’s Grave" tent from ATHF. "The D stands for me. Dra-koo-lah!"

Chestnuts roasted by kingklash @ 07/25/2005 12:29 PM


awesome article matt! i’ve never been there but your writing makes me miss that old castle anyways. long live nathan bitner.

Chestnuts roasted by wack0 @ 07/25/2005 12:56 PM


Thanks for this Castle Dracula article. I was always too afraid to go inside (I really wish I had, now). I didn’t know it burned down. I always planned on going back someday and finally facing the fear. Curses.

Chestnuts roasted by Jeff @ 07/25/2005 1:13 PM


Clearly I’m in the minority here, but I totally understand the Kool-Aid magnet thing. I picture this scenario: Almost as quickly as you discover your love for Strawberry-Falls Punch, it starts disappearing off of the shelves. You fear that this little piece of your life will slip into oblivion forevermore when [cue angelic choir] there it is on the shelf. You thought you’d never see it again. You could take it home and drink it, but then in a matter of minutes it would be, once again, gone forever. The only option is to keep the packet, but you can’t just keep a packet. It isn’t practical. Besides, it’s only a matter of time before someone less enlightened finds it and drinks it like it was so much Orange. Your conclusion? To laminate the crap out of that puppy so you can immortalize the Kool-Aid jewel that was Strawberry-Falls Punch. Your only mistake? Not actually using the drink mix first. Sure the magnet wouldn’t have looked as cool, but it was your last opportunity to savor the flavor. Alas, hindsight is 20/20.

I would totally do something like that.

Chestnuts roasted by Lori @ 07/25/2005 1:18 PM


First, I must say, I wasn’t so sure about this Kool-Aid thing Matt was up to, but it’s starting to grow on me. Now, on with the Kool News:

A packet of 20 year old kool-aid has to be the strangest thing bought at a garage sale ever.

In other juicy news, I bought some latin Kool-Aid called "Mandarina-Tangerine" that’s part of the "Aguas Frescas" series. I just noticed there’s a warning on the back "Do no store in metal container". I wonder why. Matt?

Chestnuts roasted by Kennef @ 07/25/2005 1:20 PM


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