Top 5 anticipated media stories about the Halloween block party
Each year, the Halloween block party draws thousands of costumed festival goers to uptown Athens. Along with yearly traditions such as closing down Court Street, townies fleeing for the weekend in droves and the harassment of police horses, comes the typical assortment of media reports about the event.
We’re proud to say that our coverage of Halloween weekend starts now, with our Top 5 list of anticipated stories about the chaos that is Athens’ Halloween:
- Number of arrests over the weekend: This is the staple of any news outlet’s Halloween weekend coverage. News editors and reporters can count on at least a couple dozen arrests every year. And a percentage of those ending up in the weekend slammer will be non-Ohio U students, guaranteeing a few mentions outside Athens’ readership area.
- The weather/What OU and Athens police are doing: Because either of these topics can be standalone stories or segments of a larger piece, both are rated as a tie. Will the weather be warm and inviting, drawing thousands of drunken party-goers to Court Street? Or will there be a downpour or an unseasonable freeze, resulting in thousands of wet, cold drunken party-goers on Court Street? And no pre-Halloween surmise is complete without at least one quotation from local law enforcement officials or OU administrators about this year’s efforts to anticipate arrests/keep arrests to a minimum.
- Quashing event: Every year, at least one local official or opinionated resident is eager to share his or her plan for dissolving the Halloween block party. Whether this sentiment can be developed into a full-blown news story depends on whether the individual states his or her view at a public forum, such as a City Council meeting. But the topic is good for at least an editorial, given its controversial nature and the likelihood of its appearing as reader/viewer feedback.
- Injuries and assaults: This is the “nitty-gritty” Halloween angle, and makes a good sidebar to the “Quashing event” piece (see above). Though serious incidents are thankfully few, it’s the crime reporter’s yearly opportunity to be on call. Cramming 30,000 questionably functioning people into two city blocks over the course of one night — what could possibly go wrong?
- Costumes: Patrons pushing the legal definition of decency notwithstanding, the sheer creativity displayed by costume-makers at the event is enough to draw media attention.
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“Cramming 30,000 questionably functioning people into two city blocks over the course of one night — what could possibly go wrong?”
fantastic.
Yes, the last two years I have been in Athens, local media have run the same exact stories! It’s funny that you can predict what they are going to be!
It seems like some of the street-themed spring festivals fall under this umbrella (ella, ella) as well.