Think Halloween, and most of us associate it with the hedonistic, multi-billion-dollar event that is seen in the US. Yet, its ...
Large crowds that gathered in central Dublin for a Halloween parade were tricked, not treated, by an apparent online hoax.
Deceived by an AI-generated Pakistan-based website that quickly spread online, thousands of people turned up in Dublin, ...
AI slop sites — also known as AI chum — are websites that owners fill with AI-produced content (typically of poor or no ...
The website, he said, compiled information from about 1,400 Halloween events from all over the world. The nonexistent parade ...
Thousands of people who gathered together for a parade on the streets of Dublin were left confused when they discovered the ...
When thousands gathered at the mentioned address then they realised that there was no event and they'd been fooled.
Thousands of people in Dublin received a rude awakening when they showed up to the city for a Halloween parade that never happened.
Attendees said they felt hornswoggled by the happening, a la the notorious Fyre Festival, a so-called luxury musical event ...
X A Pakistan-based firm had to issue an apology after it mistakenly advertised a nonexistent Halloween parade in Dublin, ...
MySpiritHalloween, the website that promoted a Halloween parade in Dublin that never existed, says it is “ashamed” and blamed human error.
Halloween is nearly upon us, and a new study from Virgin Media Ireland has uncovered the definitive list of Ireland’s most-loved horror films.