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A similar urban legend is The Clown Statue or The Clown Doll. [6] [7] [8] A babysitter is unnerved by what she assumes is a hideous life-sized statue of a clown in the corner of the room. When the mother or father of the children she is caring for calls home to check in, the babysitter asks if she can cover the clown statue with a blanket.
The film is based on Stephen King’s 1986 novel of the same name, following a group of kids who band together to stop an evil clown named Pennywise (Bill Skarsgård) from terrorizing their ...
A person in clown attire was spotted in a cemetery in Chicago in July 2015. This occurrence involved two residents who spotted the "creepy clown" scaling the gate at the Rosehill Cemetery late at night. After the clown entered the cemetery, they turned to face the residents and began waving slowly as they made a video recording.
Wrinkles the Clown is a character created by an unidentified performance artist living in Naples, Florida, United States, as part of an elaborate art project. Wrinkles is a curmudgeonly homeless man who dresses as a clown and hires himself out to parents to scare kids for "a few hundred dollars," offering to come to their homes and frighten ...
Outside of the clown outfit, "Trash the Clown," a stay-at-home mom of two kids who has been with her partner since high school, is just a normal neighbor. She noticed garbage piling up around her ...
However, Benjamin Radford, author of Bad Clowns, told AP News that the fear of clowns came long before clown-centered horror movies and before King’s creepy clown Pennywise sparked fear in ...
Image credits: LittlleMommys #6. I was a summer camp director for a few years before Covid made the camp go out of business. I ran the programming for the older kids & teens, my peer ran the ...
When his work began garnering attention from the press, Oblong began wearing "thick clown makeup and a bulbous, red plastic nose" in public places and by now was referring to himself as "Angus Oblong" (namesake of a shape and his mother's maiden name), a practice he has continued into 2010, when LA Weekly named him one of the L.A. People 2009.