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By Kristen Morales – Gainesville Times

Six-year-old Mary Jean Sanders lives a life other kids might envy.

She’s surrounded by stuffed animals, games, cotton candy machines and loop-de-loop rides, all handed out or operated by her friends who will let her sample the fun at the drop of a hat.

But to Mary, it’s all part of life on the midway. And when you ask her what she does when the lights of the carnival turn on at its latest stop on its summer tour, her mind goes straight to work.

“I do my letters,” said the home-schooled daughter of Geren Rides employees Ben and Theresa Sanders. She also said she likes to hang out around “the fishies,” the Fish Jumper ride operated by her mother.

Such is the life of a carnival worker, where the traveling troupe of mechanics, magicians and popcorn poppers are your extended family during the nine months or so you’re on the road. The Geren family is in its fourth generation of operating a carnival, which is set up until Sunday behind Lakeshore Mall in Gainesville.

Jerry and Joanna Geren run the operation, leaving their home in Valdosta each spring, a few weeks before Easter, traveling around the Southeast and returning home in time for Thanksgiving. Joanna Geren, 73, said her son Glen, now grown and married, along with her granddaughter Hillary, now in college, also grew up watching the midway’s lights.

“Carnival kids are rather unusual kids because they are around so many people and they, well, when Glen started school, his teacher said she really couldn’t keep him busy,” Geren said. “He would do his work and then just stare out the window. They see so much on their travels, and they’re working, too.”

She said by the time her granddaughter was old enough to be in elementary school, she was already counting out change while sitting on Geren’s lap in the ticket booth.

“Out here, families are very close because we’re together 24 hours a day,” she added. “You and your husband, you get up and go to your separate jobs and you don’t see each other for many hours. Out here you’re together all the time.”

Randy Scales, a supervisor with the Geren carnival, said he has been traveling with the family about 22 years. Originally from Michigan, he started working at carnivals when he was 13 and said he can’t see life any other way.

“It’s a life. This is not a job, this is a lifestyle,” he said, adding that there is a certain amount of customer service involved when doing the job, too. “You gotta want to just see people smile.”

“Popper” Jenny Russell, who has been working with the carnival for about five or six years, said she enjoys the travel. Born and raised in North Carolina, she’s planning to travel to New York, where a separate Geren crew sets up for the summer on Coney Island, right next to Nathan’s Hot Dogs.

Most of the time, customers to her cotton candy and popcorn trailer are nice, she said. But not all of the time.

And that’s just part of the job, Geren said.

“Honey, you wouldn’t believe. Just when you think you’ve seen it all,” she said when asked about some not-so-nice people she’s seen during her 50-plus years in the carnival business. “Yes, I have, but on the other hand, it’s so rewarding.”

She recounted the story of a phone call she got on her son’s phone from a woman, a caregiver, thanking him for the extra care he took in letting her wheelchair-bound friend ride on the merry-go-round. After moving some of the chariots and securing her wheelchair so she could ride, he took pictures and printed them out before they left.

“Things like that, it just goes straight to your heart, and that’s what’s really rewarding,” Geren said. “We try to make memories for the families – good memories – because when you take a child on the merry-go-round, that’s a memory for the parents, and then the child remembers at a certain age.

“So, it’s a lot of memories.”

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After being out on the road for the last 3 weeks and the data card getting broke, It took me longer then planned to add the new links. They are KISSEL ENTERTAINMENT ,IMPERIAL SHOWS GOLD MEDAL SHOWS and C & N AMUSEMENTS .

Also on a side note, if submitting a site submit the url. If they don’t have a url, please don’t submit them.

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By TRAVINA COLEMAN – Tahlequah Daily Press

Many in the area took advantage from a break in the rain to enjoy the event.

The aroma of fried everything wafted through the crowds, of carnival goers Friday night: Popcorn, cotton candy, hot dogs, corn dogs, and funnel cakes, with powdered sugar generously sprinkled on them.

But that’s all a part of being at a spring carnival.

There is nothing like eating too much and getting sick on the Tilt-a-Whirl. Or rolling back and forth clutching your stomach in pain in the middle of the night.

Sam’s Amusements, a company that brings a carnival out of Okemah, has set up on the west side of Fourth Street, in the grass lot on the south side of Domino’s.

Short-tugging, excited children were hassling grandparents and older siblings as they made their way down the fairway at an early in the evening.

George Sheldon said most of the carnival goers come out around 6:30 to 7 p.m.

“The heat keeps them away” he said. “Then the sun goes down and you can’t turn around.”

New arrivals to Tahlequah, Roger Acoya and his 7-year-old son, Kunu just moved to the area after living in Los Angeles.

“Just wanted to get out and about,” he said.

Sallie Lepfer was bringing her grandchildren out to play.

Fiona, Rya, and Summer were cluthing their grandma’s hand, pulling her to another game.

“It’s been raining so much, I can’t keep them in anymore,” she said. “I thought why not.”

It’s true, the rains may have subsided momentarily, but carnival-goers with a wealth of humidity with which to deal.

Lepfer said she remembered going to carnivals when she was a child.

“They still have the Tilt-a-Whirl,” she said. “I guess some things don’t change. Even the corn dogs still taste the same.”

Roger Hingen, a carnival worker, said that even adults act like children at carnivals.

“It brings out the fun,” he said. “It’s nice to be a part of that.”

Stacy Halpern said she likes to go to the carnival every time she sees it.

“I just ask my mom to take me,” she said. “And she does.”

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Wilmington WECT-6/Reported by Gavin Johnson/Posted by Laura Sinacori

CAROLINA BEACH, NC (WECT) – After months of speculation the town of Carolina Beach is finally getting amusement rides.

Workers with the company Hildebrand Rides began setting up rides Friday. Many rides are already set up, but a ferris wheel and other attractions will be set up this week next to the boardwalk. Many say adults say it’ll give kids something to do.

“I think it’s good for the area,” said Charles Prescott a Carolina Beach resident. “I’m from Atlantic Beach and growing up as a kid we had a lot of golf courses and amusement rides. But then all of a sudden they tore them down and put a bunch of condos up and now there’s nothing for kids to do.”

Some business owners are hoping the rides will bring in more revenue.
“I think it’s going to bring a lot of business to the area,” said Amy Nealey who owns Sandbarz Surf and Skate shop. “A lot of locals that don’t visit Carolina Beach will bring them down as well as tourists.”

The amusement rides will be open 7 days a week, 3 months a year. The rides will officially open next weekend.

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By Mike Taylor – Calaveras Enterprise

Almost a year after an incident sent riders crashing to the ground when the Yo-Yo ride collapsed at the Calaveras County Fair, the carnival operator is suing the state of California over its response to the incident.

The Enterprise learned of the lawsuit in a phone conversation with representatives of the California Department of Industrial Relations Division of Occupational Safety and Health Amusement Ride Unit about specifics in the unit’s report on the ride collapse issued March 13 of this year.

Questions concerning conclusions made in the report were asked because some of them did not appear to match the body of the report, which laid blame for the May 16, 2008, Yo-Yo collapse on the failure of a locking mechanism for the ride’s lift arms. Other conclusions suggest the carnival operator, Harry Mason, owner of Mid-way of Fun, doing business as Brass Ring Amusements, kept poor records on employee training and the ride’s operation and maintenance.

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