"After the 1939 World's Fair in New York, my grandfather asked the people who owned the Ferris wheel there what they were going to do with it once the fair was over," Vivona told me. Vivona says the company's roots in providing traveling amusement dates back nearly 80 years. stretches from across the eastern seaboard and Midwestern United States from Miami to New York, Ohio to Tennessee, and the Carolinas South," and if you've gone to a fair anywhere in this area, there's an extremely good chance it was facilitated by Amusements of America. According to the company's site, its route ". Alongside a caravan of petting zoos, food stands, midway games (that simply must be rigged, there's no way I'm that bad), and other diversions, Amusements of America owns hundreds of mobile rides, which it schleps across the country at a rapid clip. While there are other companies - such as the more Midwestern-centric North American Midway and the New England-localized Fanelli's - that specialize in providing mobile rides for state and local fairs, Amusements of America is the largest and most prominent in the country. Where do these rides come from originally? The Strawberry Fair in Oceanport, NJ | Cole Saladino/Thrillist But there are more than a few things you should know before you get on another mobile amusement park ride - whether this summer or beyond. ![]() With peak carnival season in full swing, and in the wake of the tragedy, it's worth asking: Are these rides actually safe? Was the Ohio State Fair a horrific, "freak" accident, or a dire warning that indicates a larger problem? The simple answer is that there is no simple answer. Perhaps one day, we'll look back on the hydraulic-powered, LED-bedazzled mobile rides that entice thousands of fairgoers to climb aboard every summer in the same way we marvel at old cars without seat belts, and ask ourselves, "How the hell did we ever think this was safe?" State and local fairs, and by extension, rides like the Fire Ball, do seem like a remnant of another era. But the machine itself was brought to the Ohio State Fair by Amusements of America, the same company that facilitates the miniscule-by-comparison Strawberry Fair in Oceanport, as well as hundreds of other state fairs and local carnivals all over the Eastern United States.Ī mere 10 days before this incident, Dominic Vivona Jr., the CFO of Amusements of America, granted Thrillist an interview about the enduring allure of their traveling amusement park rides, and why these quaint mechanical diversions continue to appeal to the masses. The incident was determined to have been the result of "excessive corrosion on the interior of the gondola support beam," according to the ride's manufacturer, the Netherlands-based KMG. Several victims remain in critical condition. ![]() Then, as most of you probably know, a ride called the Fire Ball malfunctioned on July 27 at the Ohio State Fair, injuring seven people, and killing one man, Tyler Jarrell. After eating my weight in funnel cake, failing to win any jumbo Rasta bananas, and getting a scenic view of the beachy sprawl from the ubiquitous Ferris wheel, I finished my reporting and was set to publish my personal, sentimental look into this enduring summer tradition. The Strawberry Fair's rides are schlepped around the States via Amusements of America, the world's largest purveyor of mobile rides. ![]() I'd made this jaunt back to my old stomping, riding, and eating grounds in June to research a story about the current state of traveling amusement parks - a dreamy slice of Americana that's still surprisingly thriving in New Jersey and fairgrounds across the country. Every summer growing up, I'd spend several nights here, breaking the rules on the Gravitron (riding upside-down is not encouraged), climbing aboard nausea-incubators like the Ring of Fire, and trying (unsuccessfully) to get carnies to buy me beer. The Strawberry Fair is an annual tradition in Oceanport, New Jersey. Nothing much had changed at the Strawberry Fair since I was a kid - except for the addition of a booth selling fidget spinners in the center of the fairgrounds.
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