The Haunted Open HouseIn this classic real estate sitcom setup, an ambitious but struggling property agent accidentally lists a notoriously haunted Victorian mansion for sale. Instead of scaring away potential buyers, the resident ghosts decide they want to help the agent sell the house so they can finally have new people to prank. The pilot episode kicks off on Halloween night during a high-stakes open house. The ghosts try to use their supernatural powers to fix creaking floorboards and hide structural damage, but their spectral interventions look wildly chaotic to the living guests. Slapstick comedy ensues as the agent tries to track down a rogue floating tea set while convincing a wealthy couple that the house just has incredible character and automated smart features.
Tech Support for TerrorModern horror monsters face modern technical difficulties in this workplace comedy. The show centers on a specialized information technology helpdesk located deep in the basement of a global villain syndicate. On Halloween, their busiest night of the year, the IT team has to deal with a flurry of ridiculous tech emergencies from traditional monsters. Dracula cannot log into his blood-delivery app because the facial recognition software does not detect his reflection. A werewolf keeps accidentally ordering bulk chew toys on a corporate credit card during a full moon. Meanwhile, a high-tech haunted house experience suffers a server crash, forcing the tech support crew to manually puppet mechanical skeletons. The humor stems from treating supernatural threats like mundane, annoying office tickets.
The Pumpkin Patch SyndicateThis mockumentary-style sitcom follows the intense, cutthroat world of competitive autumn farming. The series centers on a multigenerational family business running a local pumpkin patch that is losing customers to a corporate mega-farm down the road. To save their business on Halloween weekend, the family decides to build the ultimate, terrifying corn maze. However, internal rivalries threaten to ruin the plan. The grandfather wants a traditional, wholesome hayride, while the teenage kids try to turn the maze into a cyberpunk zombie wasteland using stolen theater equipment. When a local news crew arrives to broadcast live, the family must scramble to hide their structural mishaps, resulting in a chaotic, heartwarming disaster that accidentally becomes a massive local hit.
Spooky Season SuburbiaThis neighborhood ensemble comedy focuses on the extreme politics of a suburban homeowners association during the competitive trick-or-treating season. Two rival neighbors engage in a massive psychological war to see who can build the most popular Halloween display on the block. One neighbor goes all-in on expensive, cinematic animatronics, while the other relies on homemade, deeply disturbing psychological horror props. As the neighborhood kids act as judges, the parents resort to petty sabotage, including rerouting the local candy supply lines and bribing the mail carrier for intel. The comedy highlights the absurd lengths suburban adults will go to for neighborhood validation, culminating in an accidental power outage that plunges the entire street into darkness on Halloween night.
Witches of the Corporate LadderA trio of centuries-old witches attempts to hide in plain sight by working at a trendy fashion marketing firm in a major city. Halloween is the one day of the year they can actually dress in their true attire without anyone batting an eye, but it also brings a massive corporate crisis. A rival marketing agency threatens a hostile takeover during the annual office costume party. To save their jobs, the witches decide to discreetly use minor workplace magic, like brewing a literal “creativity potion” in the breakroom coffee maker and casting a compliance charm on the board of directors. The comedy blends corporate jargon with ancient mysticism, showcasing the absurdity of navigating modern office politics when you possess cosmic, reality-bending powers. AI responses may include mistakes. Learn more
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