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My dying wish is for an owl/camel hybrid, which I call camowl.

Ghost Dots, Party Favors, Scary Places.

Okay, so these probably didn't deserve their own Countdown entry, but I just couldn't resist...they're too cute. As has been previously discussed in one of the comment threads, the Tootsie company is adding to its typical bunch of Halloween lollipops with an all-new offering: Ghost Dots! Glow-in-the-dark colored (but not actually glow-in-the-dark) fruity specters sent from Hades to satiate our need for candy imparted with the souls of the dead!

Went out to dinner a little while ago, and since the restaurant was two minutes from Wal-Mart, we dropped on by to see if they finally got their Halloween aisles up and running. They did. Nothing too mindblowing, but I did notice that there was a far larger scope of actual, honest "scary" costumes in the kiddy aisle than there have been in recent years. Vampires, wolfmen and the like were in much stronger numbers than the usual gamut of hot cartoon characters du jour, which is always nice to see. This is what we in the business call a filler paragraph.

Oh, and I found these:


On some really messy rack full of mostly uninteresting party favors, there were carded packs of the eight monstrous finger puppets seen above. (Click here to see 'em packaged.) While I have no tremendous use for finger puppets that only very narrowly avoid not being able to fit on any of my fingers, I think it's pretty obvious why I had to buy these. Check out that ghost! That slime-drooling ghost! I'm just in awe that such a cheap production of shoddy finger puppets would boast such a neat little touch. How cheap of a production? Click here to see the packaged version again, but this time, look closer. The skeleton finger puppet on the upper left was packaged backwards! Oh no!

I'm usually no fan of bodily fluids as an entertainment form (especially as it relates to things under "vomit" umbrella), but there's just something about a slime-drooling ghost finger puppet that makes me want to draw red roses while singing the one hit song Dido had before that giant bat swooped down and ate her to death.

Wal-Mart's collection of Halloween party favors has no official title, but if you're curious, just look for the pile of crap in orange/purple packaging with a little Frankenstein head in the upper left corner. That's them! There's all sorts of cheap & fun stuff -- everything from packs of twelve glowing vampire fangs (just one dollar!) to tiny flashlights with bat stickers on them, to a bag full of...


...twenty-five random rubber critters, which were obviously culled together from several other existing party favor collections to create a mix jussst goofy enough to write about.

Mixed in with the random bug rings, clip-on snakes and suction-cupped spiders was a totally out of place bunch of cheery, humanoid turtles, who are no doubt counting the minutes until Halloween is over, when they will be reassigned to their rightful spot in a bag of Christmas party favors, where they'll break bread with much friendlier Santa rings, clip-on reindeer and suction-cupped snowmen.

I don't have much faith that Ghost Dots or Wal-Mart's party favors will inspire much in the way of on-topic conversation, so let's wheel out our first blog survey of the Halloween season:

In the comments, talk about the spookiest places you've even been, even if they don't seem so scary in retrospect. Try to avoid the bad jokes that tend to fill one's head when such a question is poised.

I'll start: Grandma's basement. I grew up in a two-floor house, but it didn't have a basement. None of the other houses owned by people I knew well enough to snoop through their stuff had them, either....except for my grandparents. Basements are at least a little inherently scary, true, but I think my grandmother's passed a different kind of fear test.

Nevermind the ghost stories involving that basement that had become a part of my family's permanent culture....this place was awful. All of the pipes and tubes that kept the upper floors on the cutting edge of modern technology all ran to the basement, where they were finally exposed as the squealing, squeaking, creaky, ghoul-sounding motherfuckers that we all know them to be. You'd be down there, and haunted noises would come from every direction and in every style. 99 times out of 100, even a kid can recognize a pipe sound as a pipe sound. It's that hundredth time that gets ya. I couldn't begin to count the number of times I remember running up her stairs like an anthropomorphic rocket, all because somebody took a shit on the top floor and flushed.

There were only two ways to bring some illumination to the basement. The first was a lamp with a not-at-all-removable stained glass lampshade. The set theme for this particular stained glass lampshade was "blood red flowers," which caused nothing but hideous red light to beam out at every creepy corner of the basement the second you turned it on. So, I didn't.

The other way was with an overhead fluorescent "box" that gave off only enough light to just barely make out the hobgoblin creeping out at you from her seemingly perpetually-in-use washing machine.

Oh, and the decor! The basement was relatively sparse, but somewhere along the way in their great journey together, my grandparents became avid collectors of wood-carved, dark brown Native American statues and busts. They were all over the place, and every single one of them stared at me. There were also caricature-like statues of Laurel and Hardy, with such exaggerated and bloated facial features that they looked more like giant, peach ticks than people. It didn't help matters that I had no idea who Laurel and Hardy were at the time.

It was brutal, but I needed to go down there. The basement hosted the only television in Grandma's house. I had to either deal with the monsters and watch TV, or not deal with the monsters and sit on a metal folding chair in an upstairs room that had nothing at else in it but a grandfather clock.

Posted by Matt on 09/18/2007. E-mail me!



Discussion Thread: 122 comments

I was definitely the first person to mention Ghost Dots. I made an obnoxious post exclaiming “GHOST DOTS! GHOST DOTS! GHOST DOTS!

Chestnuts roasted by Somethin\' Funny @ 09/18/2007 6:07 PM


Scariest place to me? The abandoned hospital in town we went walking through once. Death just hung in the air….

oh, and this place:
http://library.thinkquest.org/06aug/02020/stories.htm

Yeah, I actually lived in the buidling for several summers. I swear Edwin Booth opened a door for me once….

Chestnuts roasted by Shuanfu @ 09/18/2007 6:25 PM


I may have to quit school. It is cutting into my XE time. I was planning on skimming the article, but it was oddly compelling. I had wondered about these candies when I first saw them. I thought they might be mint flavored and I too thought they would be glow in the dark. Yay for proving assumptions wrong!

Chestnuts roasted by kb @ 09/18/2007 6:30 PM


My local Walgreen’s has set up a nice little section of Halloween-related paraphernalia. Among other things, they have:

-Giant snow globes with swirling confetti inside and a ghost or skeleton who says spooky things over stormy winds

-A candy dish with a motion-activated hand that longes forward and says things like “Trick or treat!” or “Want some candy?”

-Hanging decorations of various whould with posable arms that cackle madly

-Pictures or normal-looking people that change into monstets when viewed at a different angle

-Inflatable lawn decorations of Snoopy and Tigger each coming out of pumpkins

And, of course, various masks and costume accessories. One which stood out: THE BURGER KING. Now’s THAT’S spooky.

Also, There’s a farm north of my house that sells pumpkins for Halloween and pine trees for Christmas. They’ve alreayd set up their Halloween display, a wooden cutout of a bunch of jack-o-lanterns stacked on top of each other.

Chestnuts roasted by TB Tabby @ 09/18/2007 7:28 PM


I’ve been in plenty of creepy places before like my great-grandma’s house (or outside the house) at night or a couple of years ago a friend showed me this graveyard (at night even though it’s just as creepy during the day) that dates back to before the Civil War. It was abandoned and far off the main road so not many people knew about it. I refused to get out of the car though. Way too creepy and overgrown for me. With my luck I would have been bitten by a snake!

Chestnuts roasted by Ladytink_534 @ 09/18/2007 7:31 PM


Ok, so what’s under the Ghost’s sheet, Matt?! You better show us by October’s end!

Chestnuts roasted by n8 @ 09/18/2007 7:44 PM


Ah, the Countdown. A yearly tradition. We’re generally too poor to really dress the place up, even with a bunch of Dollar Store schwag. So it’s nice having this madness around so I can live vicariously through it.

That out of the way… I dunno if I’ve ever been anywhere scary, per se. Nothing COOL, anyway. My parents are divorced, so when I was younger I’d go visit my dad from time to time. He moved around a fair bit, had a few girlfriends/wives, that kinda thing. Well, this one house was near a forest. And while I have no creepy memories of IT…

There was a demon bug colony in there. Ticks everywhere. Scorpions everywhere. And I woke up one night when dad came in to check on me before he went to bed (I was all of like 8). And apparently?

I had a scorpion dead center on my chest. I don’t remember much of it, thank god, but it still gives me the creeps.

Chestnuts roasted by ChibiSoma @ 09/18/2007 7:53 PM


I love that they didn’t funk up the flavors for the Ghost Dots. Just turned them all glo green, it’s perfect.
I don’t think I’ve been many scary places. I’m honestly not sure if I’ve even been in a basement. I’ve been close by some of the Manson family’s haunts my whole life, but I’ve always been too chickenshit to go.

Chestnuts roasted by squee4242 @ 09/18/2007 8:16 PM


I have not seen those Dots yet. Not surprising, since I haven’t been to many stores with large Halloween candy displays. I did try a Chocolate Mocha Kit-Kat from the Dollar Tree, though. Pretty good, with just the right amount of coffee flavor.

That’s not all I saw at the Dollar Tree. I picked up a straw broom-shaped door hanging, a fake white pumpkin (I have never seen REAL white pumpkins before, much less fake ones), and a small Maleficent action figure for the TV section of the living room. They had three other Disney villains (Cruella DeVille, Ursula the Sea Witch, and Scar of “The Lion King”), but I figured Maleficent was the scariest, and thus the most appropriate for Halloween. They had other Halloween and fall items, but I’m a bit limited in funds right now.

Chestnuts roasted by starwenn @ 09/18/2007 9:05 PM


As for scary places…for all the haunted houses in Cape May, NJ, where I grew up, my scariest house was in Rio Grande, about 10 minutes north of Cape May. I was babysitting late at night, and I made the mistake of watching the 1964 Bette Davis horror movie “Hush, Hush Sweet Charlotte” after the kids went to bed. The wind was blowing fiercely, and the house was noisier than the entire spectral cast of “Ghostbusters.”

In truth, nothing really happened. I let my imagination run away with me and with my sleep. I barely slept all night, though it turned out the kids were fine and the cold weather broke the next morning. I haven’t watched a horror movie alone since!

Chestnuts roasted by starwenn @ 09/18/2007 9:13 PM


The spookiest place I’ve ever been was also my grandma’s basement. I was fine until I saw Return of the Aliens: The Deadly Spawn. I watch it now as an AWESOME B-movie, but at ten years old it scared the shit out of me. Basically, a huge alien with a head made out of teeth grows exponentially in a farmhouse basement.

Said basement resembled my grandma’s, and I refused to go down there for at least a month. So I guess the place itself wasn’t spooky, but the circusmstances certainly were.

Chestnuts roasted by Bludge @ 09/18/2007 9:37 PM


Starwenn, I am curious as to where you live. I cannot imagine a place with out white pumpkins! You could grow some this coming year, and freak out all your friends for next Halloween!!!

Chestnuts roasted by crazy_mainer @ 09/18/2007 9:48 PM


Sorry for the double post, but can someone help me figure out how to play the juke box? The nero thingy wont load on my computer. I am usually pretty good with all this stuff, but I just cant figure this one out. Thanks guys. :)

Chestnuts roasted by crazy_mainer @ 09/18/2007 9:56 PM


For those who care: Super Smash Bros. is legit for oneline WiFi mulitplayer! Nice!

http://www.smashbros.com/en_us/index.html

Chestnuts roasted by Shuanfu @ 09/18/2007 10:01 PM


That would be ‘online’ not oneline

Chestnuts roasted by Shuanfu @ 09/18/2007 10:02 PM


crazy_mainer: Do you have an expired trial version of Nero on your computer? That program is notoriously hard to clean out of your system. What browser are you using?

I’m using Firefox, and when I click the jukebox a download dialog appears that lets me choose what program I want to open it with. See if you can find Windows Media Player in that list and using it instead of Nero. Let me know at which point in the procedure things start to go hellishly wrong.

Chestnuts roasted by Jedoc @ 09/18/2007 10:04 PM


Man, it’s hard to think of a place. But then I remembered my friends downstairs level. It was about as messy as K-Mart’s Halloween isle. Only worce. I had to SLEEP down there, and I swear I saw a rat in his underware that he left in the floor. I lost my hat there, and I didn’t even want to find it. Trash and crusty clothes everyware. However, that was the only place to play his game systems. The worst part… I can’t go into his room because it was only described as 10 times worse. Lord help me.

Chestnuts roasted by Aaron @ 09/18/2007 10:10 PM


OMG I dont even know how, but the damn thing is working now. Thank you so much Jedoc for your help!!! I wish there was a way we could go back and delete/edit our posts. This is my 3rd post in like the last 5 minutes…lol. YEA FOR SUPER SWEET HALLOWEEN JUKE-BOX-Y-NESS!!!!

I keep wracking my brain for scary experiences I have had, but they have been mild compared to a lot of the experiences other people have posted here! I have been to so many historical places in New England, in Maine, hell, in my town. Everything in New England is so old, you get used to the idea of ancient ghosts walking around and hanging out where they did when they were alive. Native Americans, English pilgrims, Irish/Scottish/French settlers, they all had settlements and homes all over the place in Maine. I dont know…its like you just get used to feeling like there are ghosts hanging out everywhere. I dont feel that way here in Denver, everything is shiney and new right here in the city. I miss the feeling of spirits lingering in my town, at my friends houses and in their barns, in the woods, in lighthouses, ect.

Scariest place I have ever been- my friend’s basement in Norridgewock, ME. Her house was one of the first houses built in the town (early 1700s), it was used as the town meeting house/school. You get down to the basement via a set of wobbly stairs, that are so small, that when you step on them, half your foot hangs over the edge of the step, there is no railing. You get down there, and there is one naked bulb that is ancient itself, and it reveals the cellar in all its dirt floor glory. There is about 5 ft between the dirt floor and the ceiling (1st floor), so you would have to crouch if you wanted to actually get down there for anything. No windows of course. You can just about make out the naked timbers that make up the foundation of the house, it looks like a log cabin in the cellar, just naked half logs, held together by crude large, hand made metal bolts. They dont use it for anything, and I dont blame them. It looks like the house could cave in at any moment, but its been 300 years, and the logs and 300 year old bolts have held together this long….

Chestnuts roasted by crazy_mainer @ 09/18/2007 10:34 PM


Well, scariest place…

I used to live in this big old 3 story 150-year old house on the campus of Eastern Michigan University back many years ago… We moved into this house, only to find out later when we talked to the city that our “landlord” didn’t own the house, it had been condemned back in the 70s, it was somewhat of a flop house for hippies, and a girl had hung herself in the bedroom in the attic, nobody had lived in the house for some 20 years before us. So we live in this house that had this mysterious room boarded up/chained off in the attic , so curiousity gets us… we pry the door open. Creepy thing is , all her stuff was still in the room, books still open, clothes and such laying around covered in 20 years of dust and spiderwebs and mouse poops. And a hook in the ceiling where she had hung herself…. Seriously im not making this crap up. Someone actually threw all her stuff out, and moved into the room. I lived there for 6 months and every night you would hear weird noises (probably the noises of a 150 year old house settling and such) upstairs, scary as hell. It was one of those weird old houses with strange hidden rooms, doors that led to a wall behind it, stairs that led to nothing – either a wall or ceiling.

Chestnuts roasted by djspaceace @ 09/18/2007 10:37 PM


For everyone wondering what was under the sheet in Ghost with the Most, keep looking for the other link. It’s there. Click, click, click.

Chestnuts roasted by Matt(#2?) @ 09/18/2007 10:43 PM


Oh, one place I forgot to mention which I think would be the scariest. That would be Mount St. Helens. There was an extremely thick fog when we drove up there, and we could just barely see all the dead trees by the road, which made one think of floating down the River Styx. Anyway, there’s this visitor center there, and inside there was a ranger giving a lecture on the forest regenerating.

And then her face disappeared, literally.

It turned out it was actually just a projection, but given the atmosphere of the place, and the fact that I was just 11 and didn’t know they could do that sort of thing, I ran away and didn’t want to go back in there without the rest of my family. I think that’s what I’d do if I actually did see a ghost.

Chestnuts roasted by Andrew @ 09/18/2007 10:51 PM


djspaceace – You win. That’s the creepiest thing I’ve ever heard.

Chestnuts roasted by Jessica Marie @ 09/18/2007 11:02 PM


dont know about any of above stuff. couldnt find dots,and have been married(scary enough) but at cvs they have jolly rancher creepy pops . and they are good…..

Chestnuts roasted by leo @ 09/18/2007 11:14 PM


I think its a tie between Magic Toy and Djspaceace!!!! Should we have a vote? ;)

Chestnuts roasted by crazy_mainer @ 09/18/2007 11:15 PM


I don’t know if it is a state law or federal law, but in Georgia, if someone dies an unnatural death in a house it must be in writing to anyone who buys it in the future. Friends of mine bought a house where someone asphyxiated themselves in the garage. Makes one wonder.

Chestnuts roasted by Bill @ 09/18/2007 11:15 PM


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