By RYAN S. CLARK – Beaumont Enterprise
November, 5, 2008

Veteran carnival employee, Lyle Rush works on removing a truck axle during a routine maintenance day at Wagners Carnival. Rush has worked over 10-years with Wagners keeping the mechanics of the operation running smooth. Valentino Mauricio/The Enterprise

Veteran carnival employee, Lyle Rush works on removing a truck axle during a routine maintenance day at Wagners Carnival. Rush has worked over 10-years with Wagners keeping the mechanics of the operation running smooth. Valentino Mauricio/The Enterprise

Doing this job means sleeping in the same bed but not necessarily in the same city.

It means having to please screaming children and some of their short-tempered parents.

Furthermore, working at a carnival means there’s a good chance you will end up cleaning vomit off multiple rides.

“Yeah, I had 10 pukers in one day,” said Zach Brown, who works for Wagner’s Carnival, an operation that has been set up in the Central Mall parking lot in Port Arthur since last week.

“It was everywhere. There were chunks of hot dog and other stuff. I had to end up get a big bucket of water to clean everything up.”

And even with that not-so-pleasant experience, Brown, 18, said Monday he’s enjoying being a carnival worker. He started two months ago, as his father and mother also work for Wagner’s Carnival.

Brown said he came interested in the job through his family and by the fact it allows him to meet interesting people on a daily basis.

Albert Wagner, the carnival owner, like Brown, got started in the business because his father started the carnival in 1964.

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Cordele DispatchBy BECKY CRISSMAN

CORDELE — Everybody loves to see the fair come to town. All these giant trucks pull in their favorite rides, games, and concessions. Then the next thing you know the midway is filled and the lights dance across the sky.

In the next blink, however, it is all gone and nothing is left but an empty field. Do you ever wonder how it gets there and how it leaves? Do you wonder where it goes?

Amanda Macaroni, 28, lives in Quitman, with her husband and small son, Cole. Their second home, however, is the open road and the Family Attraction Carnival. Amanda’s husband Josh is a third generation carnival worker.

“Josh’s grandfather worked in the carnival business and so did his father Dominic, so he grew up around the midway,” said Amanda. “They have been in the business for the better part of 50 years. They have owned Family Attractions for about 14 years. It is a family affair.”

Macaroni and his wife Ruby own the rides and concessions portion of the carnival, while Amanda and Josh own the games. Even Josh’s sister and husband own a game. Amanda says that she has been a lot of places and seen a lot of things on her travels with the carnival.

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About the same time that Nevada became a state on October 31, 1864, American carnivals were coming into their own as the newest and most exciting entertainment around using horse-powered ‘ups and downs’ (four-seated Ferris wheel type rides), and merry-go-rounds, plus offering side shows and games of chance.

Since that time both Nevada and carnivals have grown proportionately so that it is fitting they share the spotlight together for this coming Nevada Days Birthday Celebration with the RSVP Nevada Days Fair open today through Sunday at Mills Park in Carson City.

This will be the 23rd year that RSVP has joined in the Nevada Days festivities, and they will again bring the Davis Shows Northwest Carnival with their newest rides.

This year’s rides include the Drop Zone, Pharaohs Furry, Octopus, Ghost Party, Ferris Wheel, Hurrican, and Tornado. There will also be plenty of kiddie rides for the little ones like the Berry go Round, Mini Jets, ‘Bulgy the Whale and Go Gator.

The carnival opens at noon on Friday, Saturday and Sunday. All-day ride passes are $23, but with a $5 Super Carnival Discount Coupon, the all-day ride pass is only $18. The coupon can be downloaded at www.davisshowsnw.com by clicking on “coupon.”

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Published: October 31, 2008

TAMPA – The Florida State Fair Authority wants six more days of rides, fried food on a stick, roller derby, Elvis impersonators and livestock exhibits.

The authority voted this month to extend the annual fair from 12 to 18 days, starting in 2010, to finance $70 million in upgrades at the state fairgrounds in East Tampa.

Those improvements include building a 90,000-square-foot addition to the Expo Hall, gutting and rehabbing the existing 1976 hall, moving lakes, adding a waterfall and expanding the midway by at least 50 percent. Executive Director Chuck Pesano said the fair authority also wants to build a 200-unit RV park, add hotels and rework the entrance road from Interstate 4. But the fair, which receives no state or county subsidies, needs greater attendance to bring in enough revenue to finance the 15-year improvement plan.

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KOB.Com – SE New Mexico
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) – New Mexico State Fair officials are blaming a 17.5 percent drop in attendance for a $620,300 decline in revenues from this year’s fair.

A preliminary report by Expo New Mexico chief financial officer Joe McIntyre shows that total revenue for the fair, which ran from Sept. 5-21 at Expo New Mexico, was more than $5.4 million – more than 10 percent below the previous year’s revenues.

Attendance for this year’s event was 602,504, down from 730,529 the previous year.  Fair officials have blamed tough economic times and high gasoline prices for the drop in attendance and revenues.

The report shows that carnival ride revenues fell by more than a quarter, while admission sales and art sales both fell by more than 5 percent.

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