General
Inside Bali’s Saddest, Most Abandoned Theme Park

“Have you ever seen a ghost?” I asked the gatekeeper. “Everyday,” he replied nonchalantly, gesturing to the bench he was sitting on. “Sometimes the kid ghost sits with me.”
If Disneyland and Stranger Things had a child, the result would be Taman Festival: an abandoned Balinese theme park that nature has beaten into dilapidation since its closure in 2000. With a fake volcano, a pit full of crocodiles, and the world’s first entirely inverted roller coaster, the park was constructed at a cost of around $100 million and was anticipated to change the face of Balinese tourism.
Sadly, it didn’t. Today, jungle vines lock the crumbling buildings in a chokehold. The crocodile pit has run dry under the sun, and the wedding chapel is…
-
General13 hours ago
Ivan Cleary says Panthers trainer Corey Bocking ‘struggling’ after receiving five-match suspension
-
General23 hours ago
Flash floods in India wash away village, kill four and leave over 50 missing
-
Noosa News22 hours ago
Floored by the flu
-
Noosa News22 hours ago
SXSW Sydney Is Hosting a 14-Hour All-Day ‘Freaks and Geeks’ Marathon as Part of Its 2025 Paul Feig Retrospective