Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

■ “Ghost Adventures Live” will broadcast from Zak Bagans’ Haunted Museum on Halloween.

Bagans & Co. to explore Haunted Museum, infamous Dybbuk Box in live Halloween special

- By Christophe­r Lawrence •

ZAK Bagans is posing for photos in front of the Dybbuk Box, the wine cabinet with a reputation as one of the world’s most haunted objects, when he starts to feel uncomforta­ble in its presence.

Coming from a man who could have earned a doctorate in heebie-jeebies, it’s the sort of admission that should trigger alarms throughout his Haunted Museum. Heck, anyone in the vicinity of the 11,000-square-foot Tudor revival built in 1938, at 600 E. Charleston Blvd., should receive a emergency alert. The bottom line: When the lead investigat­or of “Ghost Adventures” doesn’t like the energy in a room, you get out of that room as fast as you can — preferably without leaving a writershap­ed hole in the wall.

‘More scared now’

“Yes, I still do get scared. I actually am more scared now than I was when

I first started, because I’ve developed such a hypersensi­tivity to this stuff now after all these experience­s.”

Bagans says this later, in one of the Haunted Museum’s 32 other rooms. The heavy door can’t quite block out the calliope music that echoes from another room. Funhousest­yle statues and dolls that could put Annabelle to shame threaten to overtake the small space. It’s as though the room were designed to be the last one that Mike and Frank would wander into in the terrifying final episode of “American Pickers.”

Bagans says the Halloween event is a great way to celebrate the 10th anniversar­y of “Ghost Adventures.”

The Dybbuk Box is one of the featured attraction­s of “Ghost Adventures Live,” a four-hour Travel Channel special scheduled to broadcast from the museum at 5 p.m. Wednesday.

According to a press release, “Bagans will attempt to open the Dybbuk Box, quite possibly evoking paranormal mayhem.”

But Bagans isn’t so sure about that considerin­g what happened the second — and, as of now, the last — time he touched it.

From perfectly normal to paranormal

Around 10:30 p.m. June 22, rapper Post Malone stopped by the Haunted Museum after his concert at the Park Theater.

“We’re just having fun, just a couple of buddies hanging out,” Bagans recalls. “Everything’s perfectly normal.”

Or at least as normal as could be expected inside an attraction that’s arranged like a sort of Planet Hollywood of the Damned.

The two decided to enter the room that houses the Dybbuk Box, but they ran back down the stairs as soon as they heard a little girl’s voice. They eventually went back and, for reasons he can’t explain, Bagans says he wanted to remove the box from its case. As soon as he touched the object, Post Malone put his hand on Bagans’ shoulder.

“It was like somebody put, like, a Taser of fear onto me,” the 41-yearold Bagans explains. “I began crying. I began screaming. I began hyperventi­lating.”

Security video from that moment plays on a loop in the antechambe­r of the Dybbuk Box room. The monitor hangs above the case displaying a costume that Matisyahu wore in “The Possession,” the 2012 horror movie that the box inspired.

After that, the two lost track of time. A check of the health app on Bagans’ phone revealed they went up and down those stairs 84 times that night.

The next day, Post Malone sent Bagans a photo of a massive bruise that he didn’t remember receiving. In the ensuing weeks, the rapper’s jet had to make an emergency landing when two of its tires blew out, his Rolls-Royce was T-boned by a Kia, and gunmen broke into his former home looking for him.

“I don’t know if I’m going to open the Dybbuk Box,” Bagans admits. “We’re going to see what happens and what progresses.”

Trying to ‘summon things’

He does, however, promise that “Ghost Adventures Live” will include a “multiple-event investigat­ion” involving his team, as well as electrical engineers, psychic mediums, an exorcist and Wendy Binks, aka Lady Snake, a “dark witch” from England.

“In a mansion full of paranormal charged artifacts, I wanna bring in people who are also charged,” Bagans says, “and bring in also some people that have the abilities to develop some really scientific based equipment.”

He’s also planning to re-create some of the dark rituals that were rumored to have taken place in the museum’s basement during the 1970s.

“We’re gonna take things out of their cases. We’re gonna touch them. We’re gonna try to summon things. And we’re gonna just investigat­e what’s already here at the mansion.”

Another live investigat­ion

“Ghost Adventures Live” is the franchise’s first special to air in real time since Oct. 30, 2009, when the Ghost Adventures Crew took part in a seven-hour live investigat­ion of West Virginia’s Trans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum.

Bagans acknowledg­es that the Halloween event is a great way to celebrate the 10th anniversar­y of “Ghost Adventures” — the new season begins at 9 p.m. Saturday — as well as the museum’s first year in business.

“The things that we’ve been experienci­ng in the last year — people, guests, things that I’ve experience­d, my staff — it was a nobrainer to just do something here live,” he says. “There’s just so many different elements of what can be contributi­ng to the hauntings here.”

Even so, he’s no fan of live investigat­ions.

For starters, Bagans is never sure how he’ll react, and he isn’t thrilled with the idea of his unedited emotions being broadcast around the world. He happened to be facing away from the security camera that captured the incident with Post Malone, otherwise the memes would have been enough to break a man.

“I’m not crazy about live, because when you do a proper paranormal investigat­ion, it takes a lot of time, and you don’t know when things are going to happen. When we do an investigat­ion on ‘Ghost Adventures,’ we could be there for 10 hours. So we’re showing you 20 minutes of the best parts.”

Still, Bagans is pulling out all the stops to try to ensure excitement during the special.

“I’m doing things to try to open those veils, to summon the spirits, and bringing in these people that I know have the abilities to do that. The best of the best.

“So there’s very, very good chances that some very crazy things are going to happen.”

 ?? Richard Brian Las Vegas Review-Journal @vegasphoto­graph ?? Zak Bagans with the Dybbuk Box, a wine cabinet that will have a starring role in a live Travel Channel special.
Richard Brian Las Vegas Review-Journal @vegasphoto­graph Zak Bagans with the Dybbuk Box, a wine cabinet that will have a starring role in a live Travel Channel special.
 ??  ?? “I don’t know if I’m going to open the Dybbuk Box,” Bagans says. “We’re going to see what happens.”
“I don’t know if I’m going to open the Dybbuk Box,” Bagans says. “We’re going to see what happens.”
 ?? Richard Brian Las Vegas Review-Journal @vegasphoto­graph ?? “Ghost Adventures Live,” a four-hour Travel Channel special, will broadcast live from Zak Bagans’ Haunted Museum on Halloween.
Richard Brian Las Vegas Review-Journal @vegasphoto­graph “Ghost Adventures Live,” a four-hour Travel Channel special, will broadcast live from Zak Bagans’ Haunted Museum on Halloween.
 ??  ?? A collection of artwork hangs in a stairwell at the museum.
A collection of artwork hangs in a stairwell at the museum.
 ??  ?? On the Halloween special, the Ghost Adventures Crew will explore some of the “paranormal-charged artifacts” in the museum.
On the Halloween special, the Ghost Adventures Crew will explore some of the “paranormal-charged artifacts” in the museum.

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