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By Jessica Vander Velde, St.Peterburg Time

TAMPA — Grab your coat and step right up — the Florida State Fair is here. Today, the midway will light up, and country songs will blare as a man with a microphone promises to guess your weight.

There are 90 rides and more than 100 food stands, but expect to see fewer games this year because of the economy, fair spokeswoman Denise Shreaves said.

Scott Smith hangs stuffed animal prizes at a midway game being set up at the Florida State Fair on Wednesday.

Scott Smith hangs stuffed animal prizes at a midway game being set up at the Florida State Fair on Wednesday.

The games are hurting because visitors consider them optional at the fair, where stomach-turning rides, greasy food and free entertainment rule.

“They look at games as a luxury,” Shreaves said.

On Wednesday, colorful flags frantically flapped overhead as the clanking of metal rang out. Workers hurriedly set up stands in hopes that Floridians will brave the cold today.

Food stands with airbrushed pictures of gooey pizza, cotton candy and caramel apples sit in neat rows. This week, visitors can try the now infamous chocolate-dipped bacon.
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Mark Hornbeck and Charlie Cain / Detroit News Lansing Bureau

LANSING — Gov. Jennifer Granholm wants to eliminate state funding for the 160-year-old Michigan State Fair, slash elected officials’ pay by 10 percent and slim down state government from 18 departments to eight.

The proposals, to be outlined in her seventh State of the State address Tuesday, underscore the gravity of Michigan’s budget crisis, and the impact of the national recession on this state.

“The governor will say state government can no longer be all things to all people,” Liz Boyd, spokeswoman for Granholm, told The Detroit News. “When the governor says these cuts will be painful, that comes from the heart.”

Lt. Gov. John Cherry will lead a year-long commission charged with reducing the number of state departments in future years, but Granholm will propose scrapping the 226-employee, $52.2 million Department of History, Arts and Libraries this year.

The state faces a $1.6 billion deficit for the budget year beginning Oct. 1, as state revenues dwindle due to the limping economy and a jobless rate of more than 10 percent.

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By BRENDAN KIRBY – Al.Com

DAUPHIN ISLAND — It was 15 minutes until 1 p.m. Saturday, and the Island Mystics Mardi Gras parade was about to begin.

For Lee Morrison and other vendors, though, the day was about to end.

She’d been working Bienville Boulevard since about 10 a.m., selling bags of pink cotton candy out of a shopping cart. With the floats about to roll, Morrison was trying to get in a few last sales before she would have to get out of the way.

Morrison, of Morrison Show Fronts, said she has been working Carnival parades for about 15 years, but her roots as an event vendor stretch much further back than that. She is a fifth-generation carnival worker and has traveled from Miami to New York for parades and fairs.

“My life’s in carnival,” the Mobile native said. “We’ve traveled all over. I’ve been traveling my whole life.”

Morrison said her family owns Diamond State Amusements, which sets up rides at state fairs. Of all the events, though, she said Carnival season is her favorite.

The family business might not live to a sixth generation, however. Her 17-year-old daughter, Ashley, was helping out Saturday. But she said her ambitions lie with nursing.

“I’ll at least go to college, and then I’ll know I have something,” she said.

The weather for Dauphin Island’s second parade of the year could not have been better, and hundreds of folks seemed to enjoy the captain-themed procession, with pirate floats and other boat floats passing by.

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A headless lady, a moving mummy and a girl in a goldfish bowl are among the spectacles brought to life as part of a new exhibition charting Britain’s seaside sideshows.

By Alastair Jamieson – Telegraph.co.uk

Cleo, the girl in the goldfish bowl

"Cleo", the girl in the goldfish bowl


The illusions, once a common feature of piers and promenades, have been recreated for the first time since falling out of fashion in the 1960s.

The eccentric performances will be shown alongside never-before-seen colour photographs of post-war British fairground entertainment and a waxwork model of ‘professional freak’ Horace Ridler whose extensive tattoos earned him a living as The Zebra Man.

The disquieting creations are part of Showzam, a 10-day festival of variety performances taking place in Blackpool next month.

The festival’s main attraction is the Circus of Wonders exhibition of sideshows and images curated by Professor Vanessa Toulmin, the niece of a professional contortionist who is now research director of the National Fairground Archive at Sheffield University.

“They were the popular entertainment of their age,” she explained. “Before everyone could afford cars or foreign holidays they were at the seaside and wanted to be entertained. This is part of our history.

“These were very tricky live performances yet cheap to watch – sometimes only a penny – so they were affordable and open to the whole family. There has been a return to live performances as people recognise the skill that goes into them.”

She said the colour photographs, taken by fairground enthusiast Lionel Bathe, demonstrated the popularity of steam shows and events such as the Festival of Britain.

“These pictures have never been on public display and their rare colour makes them very special,” she said.

Five “magic” sideshows dating from as early as 1937 will be used in public for the first time since being restored by enthusiasts.

They include Cleo: The Girl in the Goldfish Bowl, Gloria: The Living Half-Lady and The Mummy in which a woman appears to turn into a walking corpse.

They have been recreated by touring theatre company Sideshow Illusions with original equipment used by 1930s and 1940s Blackpool fire-eater showman Jon Gresham.

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Crowds are coming, but vendors say they are spending less
By C. Ron Allen | South Florida Sun-Sentinel

With two days remaining for the South Florida Fair, people are attending the 17-day event despite the stormy economy, fair officials said. “Last year we had some big numbers so anything close to last year or two years ago is a real success story,” said spokesman John Picano. “What we will do is wait until it is all over; but up to this point, we’re having a solid fair.” The South Florida Fair drew 586,550 people in 2007 and more than 590,000 in 2008.

Several of the fair’s commercial and food vendors said fairgoers have been guarded about spending their money. Some midway vendors said revenue has plummeted compared with last year, though none could provide specific numbers. “Maybe they’re coming in, but they’re not spending money,” said Nadine Turner, a cotton candy vendor from Spartanburg, S.C. “Everybody I’ve talked to say business is down,” said Turner, who has been operating a cotton candy and soda booth since 1990. Some said the $15 tickets for general admission and $10 fee for preferred parking are deterrents.

“If you have a family of six people, you’re going to blow $100 before you get in the gate,” said Harry Darlington, a food vendor from New York. He said he is in his 32nd year of state and county fair business. Picano said fair attendees could have saved as much as 38 percent by buying tickets in advance and using the available free parking. “Actually, a family of four, depending on the ages of their children, literally can get in here for $20 with free parking if they planned ahead,” Picano said.

Several vendors said they fared better at smaller fairs last year than at the larger events. “I think that people aren’t traveling as much,” said Priscilla Puckett, a Pennsylvania resident who has been selling roasted peanuts at state fairs for several years. “With the cost of gas last year, it seems people were going to the little neighborhood fairs and not the bigger ones.”

To Viola Fashaw and her sister, Odessa McDonald, the fair has been a family event for more than 40 years.
The sisters and several of their Delray Beach siblings take their children to the event. “I still enjoy it,” said McDonald, adding that she no longer goes on. “Now we look at the shows and we walk and eat.” Said Fashaw: “Not as much, but we’re still spending. We already caught three shows today.”

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