Ghosts Finally Gives Sasappis a New Love Interest — But Is He Over [Spoiler]?
Creators Joe Port and Joe Wiseman first teased that Sasappis would get another chance at romance at San Diego Comic-Con back in July 2024, and eight months later, the mystery woman arrived in the form of snappy 1940s screenwriter ghost Joan (played by Welcome to Flatch's Taylor Ortega).
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During his travels beyond Woodstone B&B, Pete found another spirit with the ability to roam and brought her to the property to meet Sas. (Doesn't it feel like the show jumped a step by not showing us Pete and Joan's initial conversation about Sas? Also, where was Pete and what was he doing when he found Joan? And why and how can Joan roam? But I digress…)
Despite the extremely random circumstances of their match, Sas and Joan immediately hit it off. He shares that car ghost Jessica left him for roast beef, but Joan wonders how he can be so unlucky in love. 'Witty, great hair — a girl could do worse,' Joan remarks.
'Maybe I just haven't met the right girl yet,' Sas says, to which Joan not-so-subtly replies that maybe the right girl has been there since that morning. And if Sas wasn't won over enough, Joan then roasted Trevor, remarking that 'with twigs like those' for legs, 'you must be the bravest man I ever met.'
Sas and Joan's random blind date almost seems too perfect to be true. Joan doesn't even need to leave soon for fear of vanishing like Pete if she sticks around Woodstone too long. 'The longer you roam, the more you build up your tolerance. You don't have to go back as much,' she reveals, which is certainly interesting information for Pete, potentially.
Alas, Sas seems a bit iffy on Joan, even though she's his only option at the moment, which prompts Hetty to suggest that Sas has a thing for unavailable ghosts. But unlike with Jessica, Sas had real feelings for Lenape spirit Shiki when he was alive… and maybe he still does, which is why he's self-sabotaging himself, romantically, he realizes.
So matchmaker/'cuckold' Pete visits Shiki to get Sas some closure and find out, once and for all, if she has any interest in Sas. She does not — until she learns that Sas killed a dear and left it outside her home when they were alive as a courting gesture. That changes everything for Shiki, but Hetty, Pete and Sam decide to keep that piece of information secret from Sas so he can finally move on. However, the truth comes out when Jay walks into the room and comments about Shiki liking Sas, not knowing that Sas is there and listening. (Poor Jay vows not to enter a room while talking from now on.)
Even though Joan is crushing on Sas, she helps him through his 'all is lost moment' to realize he needs to think outside the box when it comes to being with Shiki, who 'lives' at a newspaper office. To get to the woman he loves, Sas will go inside the ghost trap in the hopes of crossing the Woodstone boundary. He has no idea if this crazy plan will work, but 'talk about a cliffhanger!' Joan declares.
fans, what did you think of Joan? Are you rooting for her and Sas, or Sas and Shiki? Hit the comments!
Ghosts Powers, Ranked: Whose Special Ability Is Best? And Which One Stinks?
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"The dolls are actually his wife's," said Jerry Jewels, who services all the engines, boxcars, and tenders that run along Northlandz's eight miles of track. "The detail and the sheer size of the place is what really gets people," Jewels said. "At first you're like, OK, it's just one room, and then there's another room, and another," he said. "And then you walk out into the canyons and it just blows your mind. It's almost like you become part of it." What he's talking about is the vast spaces, three stories high, where bridges criss-cross over ravines, and model trains at various scales (mostly H-O and G gauge) trundle past miniature villages, amusement parks, cities, strip mines, and "the world's largest toothpick farm." That's the kind of detail that makes you wonder what the founder was thinking. Also, the mysterious "grandma" who seems to be a recurring character in the Northlandz display. "The story goes that they were doing a strip mine and grandma didn't want to sell her house, so they built the strip mine around grandma's house," Jewels said. Along with the indoor displays, Northlandz also has a narrow-gauge railroad on the ground that kids can ride. Kids are, of course, who electric trains were originally intended for — though model railroading, these days, is usually thought of as a senior-citizen hobby. That may be changing — not least because of attractions like Northlandz. Perhaps, Jewels said, electric trains simply skipped a generation. "I have a bunch of friends who are into it, who are my age and younger," said Jewels, who is 30. "It's thrilling to see younger people who are into it. The hobby isn't dying." Northlandz is at 495 Route 202, Flemington. $32.50 for kids, $40 for adults, group packages and senior discounts available. Take them to the wizard's tower Wizards have towers. This was clearly established in "The Lord of the Rings" — though even J.R.R. Tolkien himself could never say whether the two towers in "The Two Towers" were Orthanc, Barad-dûr, or Minas Morgul. What's true of Middle Earth is also true of Middle Jersey. Our Wizard — the Wizard of Menlo Park — also has a tower. It can be found at the Thomas Edison Center at Menlo Park, located in — where else? — Edison. It's 131 feet high, and surmounted by a light bulb. Anyway, a representation of one. "Part of the tour is going to the base of the tower to see the eternal light," said Kathleen Carlucci, director of the center. "We try to keep it always lit. As long as we don't lose power." But the tower, dedicated in 1938, is not really the main attraction of the site (you can't climb it in any case). Though it is impressive. And it does commemorate the amazing work done on this spot from 1876 to 1887, when Thomas Alva Edison perfected the incandescent electric light, the phonograph, and dozens of other inventions that made his name. The real interest of this site is a small museum, only 800 square feet, that houses some of Edison's most marvelous gizmos. It's much smaller than the Thomas Edison National Historic Park in West Orange — the site of his latter-day house and factory. But the Menlo Park site (a non-profit) packs a lot into a little space. There are electric batteries, telegraph equipment, electric pens, generators, and of course, some of the earliest lightbulbs. There are five working phonographs — from the first tinfoil-cylinder models, to more sophisticated disc players that Carlucci or others will be happy to demonstrate for you. "Everyone's Home Except My Wife," Scott Joplin's "The Entertainer," and "I Scream, You Scream, We All Scream for Ice Cream" are some top discs on the Edison hit parade. If you're very well-behaved, they might even show you the little toy "limberjack" man who dances a little jig when you attach him to the phonograph spindle. "Of course he does the same dance no matter what's playing," Carlucci said. When you tire of all this, you and the family can take a stroll around the grounds — there are 36 acres of nature trails — and contemplate Edison's genius. "People come away with a better understanding of the incredible work and brilliance of Thomas Edison," Carlucci said. "His brilliance is that he doesn't just create one thing at a time. He has many irons on the fire. This is the birthplace of research and development." Thomas Edison Center at Menlo Park, 37 Christie Street, Edison. Public hours Thursday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. $5 for kids, $7 for adults. menlopark Have a picnic in the poles New Jersey — the Garden State — is famous for its crops. Tomatoes, blueberries, cranberries are to be found at any farmer's market. But have you seen where they grow telephone poles? Some 700 can be viewed, high as an elephant's eye, at Chester's Highland Ridge Park. They've been growing there since 1928, when AT&T set up the land as a testing ground. You might think there's nothing to being a telephone pole. Standing up straight is the full job description. But it is, as The Big Lebowski would say, an activity with a lot of ins and outs. The weather in the northeast is highly variable — freezing at times, broiling at others. Some kinds of wood, some kinds of chemical treatments, are more effective against the elements. AT&T was going to discover just which ones. By the 1980s, they'd had enough. They abandoned the site, which in 2004 it was incorporated into the town. You can visit them in their parkland setting and wonder. You can have a picnic in the poles. And when you're done, you can visit nearby Chester, a quaint old town full of stores with names like Comfortably Chic, Perfect Treasure, Better With Tyme, and Main Street Misfits Toys & Collectables. What better way to end a polar expedition? Highland Ridge Park, County Road 510, This article originally appeared on Have the summer doldrums? Here are five offbeat day trips. Solve the daily Crossword