Crying inside? Creepy craze no joke for real clowns
NEW YORK — Send in the frowns.
This year’s nationwide creepy clown craze has become a nightmare before Halloween for actual, working clowns, who say their bookings at parties and other events have dropped sharply, even after many of the social media-fueled scary clown sightings have turned out to be hoaxes.
Some fear going out with their greasepaint makeup and red noses will make them a target of police or even marauding mobs who take to the streets on so-called clown hunts.
“It’s definitely a scary feeling leaving your house, and you fear you are going to get jumped because you’re dressed as a clown,” says Cyrus Zavieh, a New York City hospital administrator who also performs professionally as Cido the Clown.