We require that these parties agree to process any such information based on our instructions and in compliance with this Privacy Policy and any other appropriate confidentiality and security measures.At Bonnier Corporation, your privacy is important to us.
This Privacy Policy applies to all of the products, services, and websites offered by Bonnier Corporation and its subsidiaries or affiliated companies (collectively, "Bonnier").If we receive a complaint from you, we will contact you in an attempt to address your concerns.
If we are not able to resolve a complaint, we will participate in appropriate independent recourse mechanisms as necessary.We may also use, transfer, sell, and share aggregated, anonymous data about our users for any legal purpose, such as analyzing usage trends and seeking compatible advertisers and partners.
Updated 2/10/2020 – Let’s face it – nothing is as terrifying as the haunted forests in Florida.
Transfers of personally-identifying information may also be made where necessary for the establishment, exercise, or defense of legal claims.
Jenkins argues that the Florida and New Jersey cryptids are “intelligent” and operate as part of hidden communities that hunt together.Contrary to Christian burial customs and unlike most of the graves in the cemetery, Elizabeth’s gravestone faces west. A year later, the woman saw a “blackish figure standing under some cypress trees” that emitted odd sounds and moved in such a way that the eyewitness was scared for her life.Other paranormal phenomena include ghost cars that are seen briefly before disappearing, fogs that appear without warning, phantom hitchhikers, and hurricanes that either upset local graveyards or follow the exact same path of destruction as previous hurricanes.Even in Cassadaga, the Devil’s Chair stands out as unsettling. Sharkey has run for the highest political office in the United States three times since 2004 to become the first vampire president, according to CBS News. It is believed to be a bigfoot-like creature that has an awful smell and is rather shy. To inquire about personally identifiable information that Bonnier has collected about you, or about other ways to correct factual errors in that information, please send us an e-mail at privacy@bonniercorp.com. Because here there be monsters — and over there, too. By virtue of their sponsorship, these third parties may obtain personally-identifying information that visitors voluntarily submit to them in order to participate in the contest, sweepstakes, or promotion. Pixel tags also allow us to send you email in a format that you can read, and let us know when you have opened an email message from us. However, if you elect to provide us with personally-identifying information during your visit, that information may be linked to your IP address, or to your email address where we may have that on file through other Bonnier Corp. products or services.Sometimes, we need personally-identifying information in order to provide you with the products and services that you request. We will provide notice if we become aware of any security breach that may affect any sensitive personal information pertaining to you that we have stored on our systems.Many Bonnier websites include community features, such as online forums and message boards. Many people have claimed over the years that the Dead Zone is a place where cell phones, radios, and even CBs abruptly stop working.
In addition, your personal data will be transferred to other Bonnier offices where necessary for the performance or conclusion of our contractual obligations to you or for your benefit. Indeed, some argue that the bridge got its gruesome moniker thanks to a bar called the Bloody Bucket, which existed in Wauchula back in the 1930s and 1940s.In Linda S. Godfrey’s “American Monsters,” a college student living near St. Johns River reported seeing the Gatorman twice between 2010 and 2011.
The bugs escaped the facility and reproduced at an alarming rate, making our lives hell and ruining our cars' paint jobs.
Updated 2/10/2020 – From spooky trees to blood-filled rivers and all the way to flesh-eating clouds, the Sunshine State has its fair share of urban legends. Meet the "Love Bug", Florida's most annoying resident (after Janet Reno).©2020 Miami New Times, LLC. Because here there be monsters — and over there, too. During the Spanish conquest, the Mayaca tribe that lived in the region died out due to diseases caused by European contact.
Most browsers are initially set up to accept cookies, but you can configure your browser to warn you when cookies are sent, or to refuse all cookies. Florida is rife with urban legends, creepy stories, and real-life horrors.