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It's a Spooktacular Time of Year

A great opportunity to Surprise and Delight!

Your Team, Customers, or Partners...

Happy Halloween Couple Dressed for Day of the Dead

When else is it acceptable to waltz into the office dressed up in costume and stuff your face with inexcusable amounts of sweets and chocolate?

Celebrating Halloween in the workplace is more than just fun and games, it’s an opportunity to improve employee dynamics:

1. Team spirit: Motivate your employees to form teams. Whether costumes, a potluck, or workspace decorations, teamwork will translate into future office projects, no matter how serious.

2. Collaboration:  Party planning doesn’t require structured leadership. Assign new leaders, encourage team costume collaboration and group workspace decorations. A little fun-centric collaboration goes a long way to improving daily cooperation. 

3. Creativity: Let Halloween be an opportunity for team members show their creativity… you might be surprised!

4. Fun: Office life is more fun when everyone shows up in costume. Add a dash of cheeky (but harmless) pranks then you have the perfect atmosphere for building lasting bonds. This also helps build company loyalty by displaying your organization’s values on workplace friendships.

5. Morale: Give employees a break from deadlines and other pressures. Organizing a Halloween party is a team effort that can help shore up collective morale.

Don't forget to  Surprise and Delight

Best Costume!

Treat your team to lunch!

Best Pumpkin!

Scariest Workspace!

AND ... we make it easy!

  • In less than 60 minutes we’ll work with you to:
  • Choose and personalize your template
  • Edit your message & logo
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Here are some fun ideas to get your teams engaged

Templates to get your started!

Scary Halloween Template
Scary Halloween Template

Create Your own Gift Theme

Example: Halloween Movie Night

Old Fashion Shake Machine
Popcorn Machine
Fandango Card
Hulu Gift Card
Amazon Gift Card
Packs of Popcorn and Butter

Test your Halloween and scary movie knowledge with 50+ Halloween trivia questions and answers for kids and families:

Question: Where does the term “jack-o’l-antern” come from?
Answer: The term “jack o’lantern” originates from an Irish folktale about a cheap man named “Stingy Jack” who made a deal with the devil.

The Legend of “Stingy Jack”


People have been making jack-o’-lanterns at Halloween for centuries. The practice originated from an Irish myth about a man nicknamed “Stingy Jack.” According to the story, Stingy Jack invited the Devil to have a drink with him. True to his name, Stingy Jack didn’t want to pay for his drink, so he convinced the Devil to turn himself into a coin that Jack could use to buy their drinks. Once the Devil did so, Jack decided to keep the money and put it into his pocket next to a silver cross, which prevented the Devil from changing back into his original form.

Jack eventually freed the Devil, under the condition that he would not bother Jack for one year and that, should Jack die, he would not claim his soul. The next year, Jack again tricked the Devil into climbing into a tree to pick a piece of fruit. While he was up in the tree, Jack carved a sign of the cross into the tree’s bark so that the Devil could not come down until the Devil promised Jack not to bother him for ten more years.


Soon after, Jack died. As the legend goes, God would not allow such an unsavory figure into heaven. The Devil, upset by the trick Jack had played on him and keeping his word not to claim his soul, would not allow Jack into hell. He sent Jack off into the dark night with only a burning coal to light his way. Jack put the coal into a carved-out turnip and has been roaming the Earth ever since. The Irish began to refer to this ghostly figure as “Jack of the Lantern,” and then, simply “Jack O’Lantern.”


In Ireland and Scotland, people began to make their own versions of Jack’s lanterns by carving scary faces into turnips or potatoes and placing them into windows or near doors to frighten away Stingy Jack and other wandering evil spirits. In England, large beets are used. Immigrants from these countries brought the jack-o’-lantern tradition with them when they came to the United States. They soon found that pumpkins, a fruit native to America, make perfect jack-o’-lanterns.

Question: Where is the world’s longest haunted house?
Answer: The Haunted Cave in Lewisburg, Ohio, is a whopping 3,564 feet long and located 80 feet underground!

Question: Which film in the Paranormal Activity franchise was the most commercially successful?
Answer: Paranormal Activity 3.

Question: Why did women look in mirrors while walking downstairs at midnight on Halloween?
Answer: To see their boyfriends.

Question: What sort of mask does Michael Myers wear in the original Halloween?
Answer: Because the studio had such a small budget, they had to use the cheapest mask they could find. It was a $2 William Shatner mask that they spray-painted white.

Question: How many pounds of candy corn are produced each year?
Answer: A whopping 35 million pounds of candy corn is made every year—amounting to about 9 billion pieces.

Question: What vegetable is part of a tradition on the night before Halloween?
Answer: Cabbage is often used in pranks on Mischief Night, sometimes referred to as Cabbage Night. People would sometimes leave stinky, rotten cabbage near neighbors’ doors.

Question: How much did Americans spend on Halloween in 2021?
Answer: $10.4 billion.

Question: What was the original title for Disney’s Hocus Pocus?
Answer: Hocus Pocus was initially called Halloween House—and it was more horror than comedy.

Question: Only one holiday surpasses Halloween in annual consumer sales. What is it?
Answer: Christmas actually takes the cake!

Question: Why are black cats associated with Halloween (and bad luck)?
Answer: The Puritans associated black cats with witchcraft, leading to the onyx-colored felines’ association with Halloween. In many other cultures, black cats are actually signs of good luck and are revered!

Question: When was Trick or Treat for UNICEF founded?
Answer: 1950.

Question: What was candy corn originally called?
Answer: Chicken Feed.

Question: Why did people start dressing up in Halloween costumes?
Answer: Many Europeans, including the Celtics, dressed in costumes to repel spirits that they believed came back to Earth on what we now know as Halloween.

Question: What medieval English tradition inspired trick-or-treating?
Answer: On All Souls Day, the poor would go “souling,” knocking on doors and offering prayers for residents’ deceased loved ones in exchange for food.

Question: What did Scottish women hang to see their future husbands on Halloween?
Answer: Wet sheets in front of a fire.

Question: What is Des Moines, Iowa’s pre-Halloween festivity called?
Answer: In Des Moines, the night before Halloween is called Beggar’s Night, in which kids go door-to-door telling jokes, reciting poems or dancing in exchange for sweets.

Question: Who was the first First Lady to decorate the White House for Halloween?
Answer: Mamie Eisenhower in 1958.

Question: What famous magician died on Halloween?
Answer: Harry Houdini.

Question: Why do some people wear clothes inside out on Halloween?
Answer: Some superstitions state that if you wear your clothes inside out and walk backward on Halloween, you’ll see a witch at midnight.

Question: Why did some women throw apple peels behind them on Halloween?
Answer: Because they believed it would land in the shape of the first letter of their future husband’s name.

Question: When is Halloween thought to have originated?
Answer: 4000 B.C.

Question: What Celtic tradition led to modern-day trick-or-treating?
Answer: For the celebration of Samhain, people would put treats or food out to pacify evil spirits.

Question: What is Hong Kong’s Festival of Hungry Ghosts called?
Answer: Yue Lan

Question: When was Halloween first celebrated in the United States?
Answer: Around the 1840s when there was a flood of Irish immigrants fleeing from the potato famine.

Question: Where was the first city-wide Halloween celebration in the United States?
Answer: Anoka, Minnesota.

Question: What is the most commercially successful horror movie of all time?
Answer: It.

Question: What was used before pumpkins to make jack o’lanterns?
Answer: The Irish, who started the tradition, first used potatoes and turnips for jack o’lanterns before finding that pumpkins were actually much easier to carve. In England, large beets were sometimes used.

Question: Who sang the original “Monster Mash?”
Answer: Bobby Pickett.

Question: Where did the real Ichabod Crane live?
Answer: Believe it or not, it wasn’t Sleepy Hollow, New York, but actually Staten Island.

Question: What was The Munsters’ address?
Answer: 1313 Mockingbird Lane.

Question: What candy was given to soldiers in battle in the Korean War?
Answer: Tootsie Rolls.

Question: What is the most commercially successful horror franchise of all time?
Answer: Godzilla.

Question: What connection does Christianity have with Halloween?
Answer: All Saints Day (November 1) and All Souls Day (November 2) were created to integrate sacred pagan traditions that usually took place on or around October 31 into Christianity in hopes of getting pagans to convert.

Question: What was the original Halloween movie’s working title?
Answer: The Babysitter Murders.

Question: What was Count Dracula’s original name in the Bram Stoker classic?
Answer: Count Wampyr.

Question: How many calories are in an average trick-or-treater’s Halloween stash?
Answer: About 11,000.

Question: What classic horror movie creature’s shape was based on the Oscar statuette?
Answer: The Creature From the Black Lagoon.

Question: What item is banned in California on Halloween?
Answer: Silly String.

Question: What is the “correct” spelling of Halloween?
Answer: Halloween was originally spelled “Hallowe’en,” a contraction of “All Hallows Even.”

Question: What two countries popularized Halloween costumes for trick-or-treating?
Answer: Scotland and Ireland.

Question: How many pieces of candy does the average house give to each trick-or-treater?
Answer: Two pieces.

Question: What horror movie was the first American film ever to show a toilet on screen?
Answer: Psycho.

Question: In what American state is it illegal to be a priest or nun for Halloween?
Answer: Alabama doesn’t take clergy costumes lightly: According to Section 13A-14-4, “Whoever, being in a public place, fraudulently pretends by garb or outward array to be a minister of any religion, or nun, priest, rabbi or another member of the clergy, is guilty of a misdemeanor and, upon conviction, shall be punished by a fine not exceeding $500.00 or confinement in the county jail for not more than one year, or by both such fine and imprisonment.”

Question: One particular serial killer inspired Texas Chainsaw Massacre, Psycho, and Silence of the Lambs. Who was it?
Answer: Ed Gein.

Question: What was the first horror movie to be nominated for an Academy Award?
Answer: The Exorcist earned a whopping 10 Oscar nominations in 1974, including a Best Supporting Actress nod for then-15-year-old Linda Blair.

Question: What is the most popular Halloween candy in America?
Answer: Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups.

Question: Who was Wes Craven’s first choice to play Freddy Krueger in A Nightmare on Elm Street?
Answer: David Warner.

Question: What were the first-ever fun-size candy bars?
Answer: Snickers and Milky Way.

12 Best Kids' Halloween Movies on Amazon Prime

1. Corpse Bride (PG)
Victor (Johnny Depp) is set to marry Victoria (Emily Watson) in this Tim Burton film, but a grave misunderstanding leads him to the Land of the Dead with a new, well, corpse bride, voiced by Helena Bonham Carter.

2. The Haunted Mansion (PG)
The comedy based on Disney World’s theme park attraction of the same name stars Eddie Murphy as real estate agent Jim Evers. The dad of two decides to make a detour before a family vacation to check out a property that turns out to be haunted. Jim and his family will have to break a curse in order to escape Gracey Manor.

3. Hotel Transylvania (PG)
Dracula (Adam Sandler) is an overprotective father to daughter Mavis (Selena Gomez) and the owner of Hotel Transylvania, a destination for monsters to go and rest in peace away from the humans. When Jonathan (Andy Samberg), a human, stumbles upon the resort, Dracula has to hide him from the guests, while his daughter falls for the newcomer.

4. Casper (PG)
Who doesn’t love Casper? He is, after all, the friendly ghost. Casper and his uncles haunt Whipstaff Manor. Dr. James Harvey (Bill Pullman), a ghost therapist, is tasked with removing them from the mansion. After moving into the property with his daughter Kat (Christina Ricci), Casper builds a friendship with the teen.

5. Arthur and the Haunted Tree House (G)
HEY! What a wonderful—err, we mean, spooky kind of day. On Halloween, Arthur hosts a sleepover with Buster and Ladonna, but he thinks his tree house is haunted by a ghost coming for them.

6. The Nightmare Before Christmas (PG)
The “Pumpkin King” of Halloween Town, a.k.a Jack Skellington, is tired of the same old scary routine. After he comes across Christmas Town, Jack has Santa kidnapped so he can take over the holiday—which, as you can imagine, turns into a nightmare.

7. Double Double Toil and Trouble (TV-Y7)
Throwback to Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen’s acting days! The young Farmer twins, played by the Full House alums, try to break a spell in an effort to help their family.

8. Hocus Pocus (PG)
This cult-favorite Halloween staple stars Bette Midler, Sarah Jessica Parker, and Kathy Najimy as the Sanderson Sisters. On All Hallows’ Eve, the witches are brought back to life 300 years later and are running amuck in the 20th century on their quest to become immortal.

9. The Cat in the Hat Knows a Lot About Halloween! (G)
The Cat in the Hat is back for a spooktacular Halloween adventure taking Nick and Sally to the Ooky-ma-kooky Closet, where they discover the best Halloween costumes.

10. The Little Vampire (PG)
Tony’s (Jonathan Lipnicki) dreams about vampires come to life after he befriends Rudolph (Rollo Weeks), a kid vampire. Tony helps the family of vampires try to end a curse that can make them human again.

11. Scooby-Doo: The Movie (PG)
Two years after the gang split up, Mystery, Inc.—Scooby-Doo, Fred (Freddie Prinze Jr.), Daphne (Sarah Michelle Gellar), Shaggy (Matthew Lillard), and Velma (Linda Cardellini)—reunites on Spooky Island to solve a new mystery. (The latest Scooby-Doo movie, Scoob (2020)

12. Halloweentown (G)
After learning that she is a witch, Marnie (Kimberly J. Brown) and her siblings follow their grandmother Aggie Cromwell (Debbie Reynolds), back to her home of Halloweentown, where the trouble is brewing!

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