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At his rural home in northern Ohio, master mask-maker David Lady has made all things scary his specialty.
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Ohio music experts weigh in on why certain songs send chills down our spine.
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In the farm fields of Fairfield County, about 30 minutes southeast of Columbus, the scariest creatures around arent ghosts or goblins. Theyre scarecrows.
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R.L. Stine, the author who gives us Goosebumps, grew up in Central Ohio. He says he draws influence from his hometown in each of his scary stories.
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Ancient mounds and burial sites across Ohio played important roles in Indigenous cultures. But rumors about burial sites being haunted abound ideas that are both misinformed and harmful.
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Waynesville's ghosts provide "an extra layer of hospitality [to the southeast Ohio town] that you just can't see," according to one resident.
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Ohio is the unassuming backdrop of many classic horror films. Hope Madden, a Columbus film critic, breaks down what makes the state such a scary setting.
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Moonville is an abandoned railroad town in Hocking Hills. Nobody lives there anymore, but its stories live on.
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No hayrides, haunted houses or Halloween parties. Those are some of the recommendations in the newest coronavirus guidelines from the Ohio Department of