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Gov. Murphy and other New Jersey Democrats call on Sen. Menendez to resign over bribery charges – Yahoo News

Democratic officials in New Jersey wasted little time Friday in calling for Sen. Bob Menendez to resign following his indictment earlier in the day on allegations that he and his wife had accepted bribes from three New Jersey businessmen.

The powerful head of the SenateForeign Relations Committee, Menendez announced Friday that he would temporarily step down from that post after the indictment revealed that prosecutors alleged he had received cash, gold bars, payments toward a home mortgage, a luxury vehicle and other bribes in exchange for his influence in Washington.

More from Yahoo News: Read the indictment against Sen. Bob Menendez and his wife

But he also issued a statement Friday evening making clear that he would not resign from the Senate.

It is not lost on me how quickly some are rushing to judge a Latino and push him out of his seat. I am not going anywhere, Menendez said in the statement.

While Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer praised Menendezs decision to temporarily step down from the Foreign Relations Committee as his case was decided in court, other Democrats pushed the New Jersey senator to step down immediately.

Former Attorney General Eric Holder said in a social media post that it was in the interest of the nation for Menendez to resign.

Prominent New Jersey Democrats agreed with Holder. Heres a roundup.

The allegations in the indictment against Senator Menendez and four other defendants are deeply disturbing, Murphy said in a statement Friday, HuffPost reported. These are serious charges that implicate national security and the integrity of our criminal justice system. Under our legal system, Senator Menendez and the other defendants have not been found guilty and will have the ability to present evidence disputing these charges, and we must respect the process. However, the alleged facts are so serious that they compromise the ability of Senator Menendez to effectively represent the people of our state. Therefore, I am calling for his immediate resignation.

In a statement posted to X, the platform formerly known as Twitter, Sherrill added her voice to those calling for Menendez to resign.

Read more on Yahoo News: Menendez charges cost Biden key foreign policy ally, from Reuters

I dont have confidence that the Senator has the ability to properly focus on our state and its people while addressing such a significant legal matter, Kim said in a statement, Insider reported. He should step down.

I do not believe that Senator Menendez can continue to carry out the important duties of his office for our state, Pascrell said in a statement, Axios reported.

In a statement, Jones said Menendez should resign to make sure that our party is able to keep its focus on the critical upcoming state legislative elections in November, Politico reported.

The allegations laid out in todays indictment are alarming, and they raise serious questions about the Senators ability to continue to serve, Scutari said in a statement reported by ABC News. I strongly believe that all Americans deserve the presumption of innocence and the ability to fully defend themselves. Due to the severity of the charges brought against him today, I believe Senator Menendez must resign from office to pursue his defense and allow our state and our nation to move forward.

One of Menendezs staunch defenders in 2015, when Menendez was indicted on separate bribery allegations, Booker remained silent Friday about the latest charges to be filed against his fellow New Jersey senator.

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Gov. Murphy and other New Jersey Democrats call on Sen. Menendez to resign over bribery charges - Yahoo News

March on Washington Film Festival tells untold stories of Civil … – WTOP

Next week, the March on Washington Film Festival is marking 60 years since the historic D.C. march where Martin Luther King famously delivered his "I Have A Dream" speech.

WTOP's Jason Fraley previews the March on Washington Film Festival (Part 1)

The March on Washington Film Festival is marking 60 years since the historic D.C. march where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. famously delivered his I Have A Dream speech.

The festival returns to the District on Sunday, Sept. 24 to Oct. 1.

It all started around a decade ago in a church across from the Capitol.

We screened 4 Little Girls, Spike Lees documentary, and we were overwhelmed with joy at the audience turnout, founder Robert Raben told WTOP. We literally had to turn people away because of the hunger and the thirst to learn about our history.

But today, we have capacity crowds at most events. People all over the world are seeing the films.

While the festival turns another year older, the mission remains the same as its always been.

The mission is about telling the untold and the mistold stories of the Civil Rights Movement, executive director Joanne Irby told WTOP. The thing thats interesting about the festival is that we use the arts to engage people in those stories, so its certainly film, but its also the visual arts, its performing arts, so we engage a wide range of audiences into stories that we think we knew, as well as stories that no one knew in terms of the movement.

The festival unofficially kicks off Sunday, Sept. 24, with a sneak peek at Jon-Sesrie Goffs After Sherman, which examines South Carolinas Gullah Geechee community shown prior in Julie Dashs Daughters of the Dust (1991).

Direct descendants of West African enslaved people here in the states have an island community in South Carolina, Irby said. Theyre challenged now with gentrification issues, systemic racism issues, climate change. Immediately after the screening were having what were calling an afternoon soiree where there will be a DJ, dancing, conversations about the Gullah community, and there will be a signature cocktail for the festival.

After taking a day off on Monday, the official opening night is Tuesday, Sept. 26, with a kickoff screening of Silver Dollar Road directed by Raoul Peck (I Am Not Your Negro) in partnership with Amazon Prime Video.

This is certainly a film about gentrification that will be happening in partnership with the Motion Picture Association, Irby said. At the same time, we have another event happening at the Jewish Community Center. Were screening the first produced film from the March on Washington Film Festival Studios. Its called One Struggle, and it really does a nice deep dive into the complexities of the Black community and Jewish community.

Wednesday, Sept. 27, brings the awards gala at Union Market to present the John Lewis Lifetime Legacy Award.

This year, the recipient of the award will be Sen. Raphael Warnock [of Georgia], Raben said. Well also have a presentation of an award to Rev. [Al] Sharpton for his years of leadership, but this is the traditional time that people come together for an elegant and inspiring evening held at Union Market to honor the triumphs and the history of the Civil Rights Movement with the people who are currently doing that work.

Thursday, Sept. 28, brings Dinner and a Movie Under the Stars with an outdoor presentation at Union Market with a screening of the documentary Little Richard: I Am Everything directed by Lisa Corts.

It really does a great exploration of the roots of rock n roll in this country and looks at some of the challenges that [Little Richard] faced both as a Black man but also a queer man performing in the 1950s, so its really fascinating, Irby said. We will have another March on Washington Film Festival signature cocktail as well, so people are welcome to come out, bring your lawn chairs, bring your family and hang out outside for the screening.

Friday, Sept. 29, returns to Union Market as artist and activist Michelle Browder will receive the Vivian Malone Courage Award presented by former Attorney General Eric Holder and Dr. Sharon Malone, Vivians sister.

[Vivian] is the young woman who integrated the University of Alabama, Raben said. Many people have strong memories of [Gov.] George Wallace standing in the schoolhouse door; the woman he is blocking is Vivian. This year, the recipient is artist Michelle Browder from Montgomery, Alabama, who has drawn attention to a tragic experience of enslaved women who were operated upon involuntarily so that America could invent gynecology.

Closing night is Saturday, Sept. 30, with Pulpits, Protests and Power at the Duke Ellington School of the Arts.

It is an examination of the role of the Black church in the Civil Rights Movement, Irby said. It will be discussions, it will be performances, including gospel legend Yolanda Adams, the Duke Ellington School of the Arts Choir, so it will really be the crescendo night of the festival.

It all wraps with a bonus day on Sunday, Oct. 1, with Space Race also directed by Lisa Corts at the Eaton Hotel.

Its about the journey and challenges of Black astronauts and scientists as they crossed that final frontier through NASA, Irby said. Its a really interesting look at the path they walked and the challenges they experienced.

WTOP fittingly conducted the interview amid the symbolic construction crews currently renovating the Lincoln Memorial where Dr. King famously delivered his I Have a Dream speech during the iconic march in 1963.

For us to be here on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial where we just acknowledged the 60th anniversary of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom is really significant for us, Irby said. Theres construction going on, theres noise, its busy, but its a great analogy because theres construction, theres work to be done in our country.

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WTOP's Jason Fraley previews the March on Washington Film Festival (Part 2)

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Yom Kippur: Forgive Us For Forgetting – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

The teshuva process can be very vague and elusive. Unwilling to confront our own flaws and face the unpleasant truths of our past, we often spin false narratives, in a futile attempt to justify our botched behavior. For teshuva to be successful we must cut through numerous layers of self-denial. We must also summon the courage to stare at ourselves in the mirror and confront the ugliness looking back at us, without photoshopping it. Authentic teshuva is a difficult journey through the dark recesses of self and the deepest crevices of our psyche.

Viduy or verbal confession is instrumental in helping us pierce the emotional barriers blocking authentic teshuva. Judaism rejects any form of vicarious atonement, and therefore, confession alone can never provide absolution. Verbal confession is merely one step in a larger process of heartfelt and sincere teshuva. Verbalizing sin helps concretize the painful realities which we would rather not consider. Articulating a sin makes it harder to deny or to explain away. Additionally, enunciating sins makes them more vivid and more disturbing. Without distress and remorse, repentance becomes artificial and formulaic. By lending verbal imagery to sin, confessions assure that our past behavior is painful, and that repentance is genuine. Through confession we clarify, quantify and vivify our religious failures.

Registries of Sin

Though, ideally, confession should be personal, throughout history, a rich liturgy of confessions developed. Lists of sins were compiled into ritual confessions which were then incorporated into tefillah. Generally, the lists were structured upon the Hebrew aleph bet, with each letter addressing a particular sin or a specific character trait which triggers multiple sins. The two most famous lists are the confessionals recited on Yom Kippur, known as Ashamnu and Al chet.

While these lists provide a common registry of sin, they ignore other important areas of self-improvement. By definition, each of the entries of a viduy list addresses a very specific sin or a very specific area of human behavior. The alphabetized entries are very targeted and narrow, and they do not address deeper or broader character flaws. These foundational character flaws or super flaws are responsible for our systemic and large-scale religious failure and underperformance.

Every sin is rooted in a deep-seated character flaw. Ignoring these flaws and focusing our teshuva solely upon actions or behavior increases the likelihood of recidivism. Addressing symptoms of sin and ignoring the root almost assures that we will slip back into old habits and to familiar behavior. Telescopic viduy lists fail to address seminal character flaws or basic behavioral issues. Though the lists facilitate micro-teshuva they arent as helpful for macro-transformation.

Forgetting

One example of a broader behavioral tendency which causes extensive religious breakdown is our forgetting basic ideas and values of religion. Typically, we trace our sins to the overpowering desires which conquer our will and shatter our discipline. We possess a clear sense of right and wrong but are overcome by powerful needs and wants.

Often, however, sin doesnt stem from desire but from apathy or neglect. We allow important values to slowly slip out of consciousness and we push important religious principles out of our minds view. Often, sins are caused by religious inattentiveness rather than by religious weakness. For teshuva to be holistic and foundational we must repent for the sin of inattentiveness and forgetfulness. To accomplish that we must first ask: what do we forget and why do we forget it?

Forgetting Hashem

Sadly, we live in a secular era, in which much of humanity has completely forgotten that Hashem exists. Even believers though, in their own way, sometimes forget Hashem. We dont deny His existence or His authority, but we become so engrossed in our own lives and our own pursuits that Hashem becomes a sideshow. Instead of fixing Hashem as the epicenter of our lives, we think about Him from time to time, pray to Him when we need Him, but relegate Him to the margins of our consciousness. We dont deny Him, nor do we even devalue Him, but we do decentralize Him. We dont forget Him, but we also dont remember Him often enough.

Additionally, we sometimes forget Hashem by not sufficiently attributing our success to Him. Repeatedly, the Torah warns us that success will morally fatten us, making us arrogant, ungrateful, and religiously insensitive. The scenes dont portray atheism or the crime of marginalizing Hashem, but a scenario in which we are hypnotized by success and slip into ingratitude. As a gateway to numerous other moral failures arrogance is inherently harmful. In additional, too much self-confidence obscures human frailty and human dependence upon Hashem. Success blurs our vision of Hashem. We know He exists, but we dont trace our success back to Him, so, in effect, we forget him.

We ask forgiveness for the various ways by which we forgot Hashem.

Forgetting Immortality

Sin also emerges when we confuse eternity with transience. Wrapped up in the present, we lose perspective of human immortality. A very famous dictum of the mishna, recited at funerals, urges us to consider from where we came, where we are headed to, and in front of Whom we will be held accountable. By reminding us of human mortality on Earth, this reductive advice prevents us from being trapped in the present. Often this world captivates us with its glamorous pizzazz, and we ignore duty, mission, responsibility and, of course, eternity. We get stuck in the immediate and lose track of the long term. Every sin is a tragic exchange of eternity for immediate needs, which quickly fade. Endlessly executing these sad transactions of sin, we become stuck in the needs of the present, which often leads us to sin.

We ask forgiveness for forgetting the eternity of Man.

Forgetting Jewish History

A third vision we often forget is the trajectory of Jewish history. We forget that we live as part of a large intergenerational community of people who stand for Hashem in this world. We are all miracles, the product of great sacrifice on behalf of Jewish destiny. Viewing our lives as part of something larger than ourselves amplifies our experience. Forgetting our common Jewish narrative shrinks us into lonely individuals. Sin is always a triumph of small mindedness over large mindedness.

Over the past year, too many Israelis forgetting our common heritage have sinned. Independent of whatever political opinion we believe in, we have spewed too much hate and have generated too much polarization. Eighty years ago, a murderer named Joseph Mengele divided us into left and right, horrific designations which decided life and death. Today we glibly use the terms left and right to cluster people into clumsy political groupings. Once we group them they are easier to assail or to insult.

We ask for forgiveness for forgetting our common past and our common future? How could we?

Hopefully, this Yom Kippur, in addition to repenting for specific sins, we will ask Hashem to forgive us for forgetting. Too often we forgot Him, or forgot to think of Him correctly. Too often, we forgot eternity by tragically exchanging it for the passing needs of transience. Too often, we forgot Jewish history and sank into the dark doctrines of radicalized politics and culture wars.

Forgive us Hashem, for we have forgotten.

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Yom Kippur: Forgive Us For Forgetting - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein can illuminate the debate over … – Big Think

In January 1818, Mary Shelley anonymously published a strange little novel that would eventually make her world-famous. Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus is the story of a scientist, Victor Frankenstein, who is driven by an unrelenting thirst for knowledge, an ambition to penetrate the secrets of nature, heaven, and Earth. He works tirelessly to engineer a sentient being who, upon coming alive, is hideous to him.Realizing with horror that his plan has gone awry, Frankenstein flees his creature who in turn angrily chases him to the end of the Earth and finally destroys him at the novels end.

Shelleys dystopian tale has managed to stay relevant since its publication.It has a riddling, Zen koan-like quality that has edified and entertained readers for centuries, inspiring a range of interpretations.Recently, it has been making appearances in the heated debates over generative artificial intelligence, where it often is evoked as a cautionary tale about the dangers of scientific overreach.Some worry that in pursuing technologies like AI, we are recklessly consigning our species to Victor Frankensteins tragic fate.Our wonderchildren, our miraculous machines, might ultimately destroy us. This fear is an expression of what science fiction writer Isaac Asimov once called the Frankenstein complex, a Luddite fear of robots.

Strangely, its not only Luddites expressing such fears today; it is also some of the people who are most aggressively at the forefront of technological innovation.Elon Musk seemed to have had Mary Shelleys story in mind when he warned a World Government Summit in Dubai in 2017 that sometimes a scientist will get so engrossed in their work that they dont really realize the ramifications of what theyre doing.

But Frankenstein, thankfully, offers much more than a warning about robots.It is a rich and sober account of human error, a testament to lifes mystery, and a dramatic illustration of the redeeming roles of humility and affection.It encourages us to awaken to and love the small piece of reality we inhabit To see, as William Blake put it, a World in a Grain of Sand.As the AI revolutionary tide carries us along into what may be a transhuman future, it can continue to show us who we are, have been, and might be in an unfolding reality that always surprises and exceeds human designs.

Shelley wrote Frankenstein in response to a challenge issued by her friend the poet Lord Byron after a late-night discussion about the principle of life.The Scientific Revolution was well underway by then, and her group of friends had gathered around a fire one summer night by the shores of Lake Geneva, as rain pummeled the rooftops and lightning electrified the skies, to probe the mysterious nature of this thing they and we call life.What is its principle, they wondered?Can life be manufactured out of nothing, or even, say, out of a corpse?Could humans be lifes creators?

The men talked and Shelley, still a teenage girl, sat and quietly listened.She had an important perspective to contribute to the conversation, however, a knowledge about the origins of life that bore directly on their discussions.She had, after all, given birth to a child who had died a couple of weeks after birth, and, a year later, she had birthed a second child who survived.Her mother, the Enlightenment thinker Mary Wollstonecraft, had died of puerperal fever shortly after her own birth, and that death had long haunted her. The principle of life was for her more than an abstract philosophical topic. It had been intimately, powerfully, and tenuously experienced in her own physical body.To gestate a new life was empowering; to lose a child, or to struggle to sustain one, was humbling.

Unfortunately, the men did not enlist her opinion on such a weighty topic.She remained a mere fly on the wall during their discussions, but the wheels in her head were turning.In the days, weeks, and months that followed, she responded to Byrons prompt by writing her Gothic novel.Frankenstein would eclipse in popularity, enduring relevance, and prescience anything those men ever wrote.

Shelley was a believing Christian, and she begins the novel with an assertion which reads at first like a religious rejection of science: Supremely frightful would be the effect of any human endeavor to mock the stupendous mechanism of the Creator of the world.But she also understood that science is not the only ways humans have tried to play God.Childbirth is also a God-like activity, undertaken without God-like powers.Childbirth is divine, but it is also marred by human hubris and failure.

This was not an entirely novel interpretation; it was rooted, in fact, in Scripture. In Genesis, Eve had been enticed by the serpents tantalizing promise: When you eat of [the fruit] your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God,knowing good and evil.God in turn retaliated: In pain you shall bring forth children, he tells Eve.Childbirth is the cursed consequence of Eves quest for God-like knowledge, and it is only possible after the fall.Eves descendants learn to live with this curse, to even see in it a hopeful promise of fruitful multiplication.

This storys contradictions riddle her characterizations.Many interpreters have condemned Frankenstein as more villainous than his murderous monster, but Shelleys narrative resists such unilateral assignments of blame. If Frankenstein is a villain, then so is Eve, so is she, and so was her mother; they had all, despite their best intentions, failed the vulnerable lives they had made. In an 1831 introduction, Shelley called the novel itself her own hideous progeny. In writing it, she had also over-reached, had tried to create a universe out of her own small grain of sand. She confessed, however, an abiding affection for the book, and she bid it to go forth and prosper, just as God had done with his fallen creatures.

Her exploration of the ethics of Frankensteins scientific experiment is similarly complex and subtle.Her scientist, to begin with, is not exactly a scientist.Victor Frankenstein is an occultist who, in his teens, had stumbled upon the work of a German Renaissance soldier and polymath who was influenced by Kabbalah, Hermeticism, and Neo-Platonism.His father and a professor advise him that he is foolishly burdening his memory with exploded systems and useless names.But he ignores them, preferring the forgotten alchemists chimeras of boundless grandeur, their dreams of immortality and power, to the modern natural philosophers more limited ambitions.

The problem, he confesses, was that his reading of modern philosophers had left him feeling unsatisfied.In reading them, he felt like Isaac Newton who once avowed that he felt like a child picking up shells beside the great and unexplored ocean of truth. He wanted to wrap his arms around that whole, great ocean.Is that really such a bad thing? Havent we all felt that desire for wholeness? But his ambition pushed him further.A new species, he dreams as he labors in his workshop, would bless me as its creator.

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Its not this hubris alone that seals his fate, however.It is also his denial of human community.In committing himself to his ambitious goals, he isolates himself, losing physical touch with the people that had once populated his world.The happy man, he admits, is one who believes his native town is the world.But Frankenstein was intent on forsaking that native town for the world. That forsaking is echoed in his abandonment of his monster and in his negative response when his creature begs him to make him a female companion. Fearing that he will end up with two monsters and double the trouble, Frankenstein says no, again denying the claims of human affection.

He could, of course, have embraced his failure, accepting that he had lost control, and committing himself to make the most of it, to even love the monstrosity he had made.Mary Shelley seems to have done just that when she bid her hideous progeny to go forth and prosper. Frankenstein reminded her of the people she had loved and lived among reminded her too, perhaps, of how she had once herself been a child picking up shells beside the great and unexplored ocean of truth.

As the debates about generative AI roil our societies, we might remember what Shelley revealed: how the secrets of nature have always eluded our dominion and defied our best intentions.Everything, she wrote, must have a beginning The Hindus give the world an elephant to support it, but they make the elephant stand upon a tortoise.Invention, it must be humbly admitted, does not consist in creating out of void, but out of chaos.It is tortoises the strange and unruly secrets of life all the way down.

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Mary Shelley's Frankenstein can illuminate the debate over ... - Big Think

Universal: 5 Halloween Horror Nights burning questions answered – Yahoo News

ORLANDO, Fla. During the first week of Universals Halloween Horror Nights, we learned a lot about the creatures and stories involved in the 2023 houses and zones. We met blues musician Pinestraw Spruce, encountered Vecna of Stranger Things fame plus yeti out the wazoo and even were reunited with a couple of Dueling Dragons.

Still, there were lingering, burning HHN questions, which Lora Sauls, assistant director of creative development and show direction, agreed to field. We chatted about the age of Dr. Oddfellow, the marching Megans and the whereabouts of Carey, Ohio, which in real life is Sauls hometown.

Q: Are adjustments made after the first weekend of HHN?

A: Halloween Horror Nights is an ever-evolving, live event. We want to make it perfect for our guests, so after that first weekend, we listen to what our guests are loving, were seeing what our guests just want more of and were trying to make sure were doing the best and putting the best out there for our guests. So what I can say is Halloween Horror Nights is a living and breathing event. And there are always ways that we can better our scares for our guests.

Q: The proximity of the scare actors makes us wonder Are we back to prepandemic closeness?

A: We do not touch our guests. Thats one thing we pride ourselves in. But we want to get as close to our guests to give them that startle scare. So yes, Halloween Horror Nights is back. Its our 32nd year, and were doing bigger and better things. And were focused on really getting that amazing scare in our scare zones and in our haunted houses.

Q: Whats the deal with Dr. Oddfellow, who has a hand in the Twisted Origins haunted house and all five scare zones, which are set in different time periods? Is he, like, really old or what?

A: He is timeless. He has gained immortality through stealing the souls of humans, and he really, truly gained that immortality in Dr. Oddfellows Twisted Origins in his circus. In the 1920s, he was an adventurer. He was a collector of sorts. And so he went to this jungle, and he had heard about this skull that would give you power. He found this skull, which would then become the top of the cane of souls. As soon as he found the skull, he felt the skull talking to him and giving him this power that he had never felt before. He also felt the skull giving him the power to manipulate things and beings into his own doing.

He felt the power of the skull He knew he had to collect the souls of human beings in order to gain more immortality from this skull. While in the Dust Bowl, he affixed it to his cane, and thats where you got the cane of souls. And thats why in the circus, in Twisted Origins, he is inviting these murderers to be a part of his twisted carnival act, so that they can murder for him, so he is just collecting their souls within this carnival. That is where, in the 1930s, Dr. Oddfellow gains his immortality. And then he lives with this for several decades. In about the 1960s he realizes he wants more, hes not done with this.

So Dr. Oddfellow has been collecting things and becoming so immortal that hes kind of been waiting in the shadows. He allowed Jack (the Clown) to have his time at Halloween Horror Nights. And this year, he felt like it was his time. He collects the souls of those who enjoy fear and enjoy the chaos and enjoy deceit and so he is here because if he collects every soul that comes in to Halloween Horror Nights, he will become the most powerful immortal in the universe.

Q: Where can we see the dancing Megans in action?

A: Well, its a bit of a pop up. We want you to stumble upon them, not search them out. We are calling them our Megan flash mob. They come out and they do in Megans true form our Megans do this dance that is very kindred to what you might have seen in the M3GAN film, and then they kind of spread out and do a really short photo opportunity. But it is very short, and then they disappear. They will pop up at a couple of various locations around the park. Thats going to vary even days and times may vary. We want it to be a surprise and delight for our fans.

Q: Did we overlook where Carey, Ohio, fits into things this year?

A: Carey, Ohio, was a part of the event for a very long time. And Im not going to say that Careys never going to come back. But we wanted to step away from Carey, Ohio, for a few years and see what we could create without leaning on that fictional town.

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Universal: 5 Halloween Horror Nights burning questions answered - Yahoo News