MySpiritHalloween, the website that promoted a Halloween parade in Dublin that never existed, says it is “ashamed” and blamed human error.
Deceived by an AI-generated Pakistan-based website that quickly spread online, thousands of people turned up in Dublin ...
The website, he said, compiled information from about 1,400 Halloween events from all over the world. The nonexistent parade ...
Attendees said they felt hornswoggled by the happening, a la the notorious Fyre Festival, a so-called luxury musical event ...
Thousands of people gathered in Dublin, Ireland on Thursday night for a Halloween parade that was never going to happen. Videos and photos posted on social media showed large crowds gathered in ...
“We were very embarrassed,” the website owner told 'The New York Times' Guven Ozdemire/Getty/Stock Image Thousands of people in Dublin ... in the city center waiting for the parade to start ...
DUBLIN (WKRC) - Thousands of people were disappointed and confused when they learned the Halloween parade they were crowding around for never actually existed. After a Halloween parade was ...
Gardai intervened to disperse a large crowd that had gathered on Dublin’s main thoroughfare for a non-existent Halloween parade. Groups congregated on O’Connell Street on Halloween night after ...
Days after the Halloween parade prank at Dublin's O’Connell Street went wrong, Pakistan-based website creator – that advertised a non-existent Halloween parade – has publicly apologised to ...
Thousands of people gathered on Dublin’s O’Connell Street on October 31, in hope of attending a Halloween parade that would never come. Footage filmed by X user @liam_B02 shows people lined up along O ...
The owner of a Pakistan-based website which shared details of a non-existent Halloween parade in Dublin says it was "a mistake, it was a not a joke, it was not a scam". On Thursday, hundreds of ...