Central Florida firefighter Jordan Allen dedicates his career to helping people. Then, every Halloween, he scares the heck out of them.
Allen has moonlit as a scare actor at Orlando’s theme parks for years. The veteran Halloween performer dresses as a skeleton and slides across the ground — sparks flying! — at this year’s SeaWorld Orlando’s Howl-O-Scream, which runs through Nov. 1.
For Allen, the joy of Halloween and the adrenaline of making others jump takes his mind off his normal career filled with late-night emergency calls and seeing people going through devastating moments in fires or car accidents.
“I love being a firefighter. I will be a firefighter until I retire,” Allen said as he talks about the teamwork in the Department and how every day is different.
But being a scare actor has helped him focus on his mental health and find a healthy outlet to deal with the hard days on the job. (Allen works for a government Fire Department that declined to be named for this story.)
Jordan Allen working as a firefighter in California before he moved to Florida. Image via Jordan Allen.
“You’ve got to find your outlet whether that’s through therapy, whether that’s through going to the beach and taking a walk,” Allen said. “Finding something that makes you happy and brings you back to Earth, I think is very important.”
And for Allen, a Halloween fan since a kid, that outlet is working as a scare actor.
The rush fuels him. So does the laughter after he successfully surprises someone.
“You never know how someone’s going to react when they get scared,” Allen said. “Most people that come to these things, they enjoy Halloween and you’re giving them what they want. They get scared and then normally you get a laugh afterwards.”
Allen isn’t the only person from an unexpected background becoming a scare actor either. Allen said he has worked with Disney World princesses off the clock before at Howl-O-Scream.
SeaWorld is the only major Central Florida theme park with sliders, whose costumes include knee pads and metal pieces on their hands and toes with flint to make sparks and generate a loud, terrible noise.
Walking around Howl-O-Scream, it’s common to be looking straight ahead and not see a slider coming for you down low. One woman sure didn’t, as she bravely ate a chili cheese dog in the scare zone. She took a look at Allen and dropped her meal, making a complete mess on her shirt. (SeaWorld gave her a free T-shirt from a souvenir shop and a complimentary replacement hotdog, so the story ends well.)
Allen found his passion at a young age.
Growing up in Hunting Beach, California, Allen hid and jumped out at kids trick-or-treating or at homemade haunted houses in the neighborhood.
As a teenager, his first gig was holding a chainsaw and being a slider in a scare zone at Universal Studios Hollywood’s Halloween Horror Nights.
Following his two older brothers — who are also Central Florida firefighters — Allen moved to Florida in 2013 where he landed a role in HHN’s Walking Dead haunted house that year at Universal Orlando.
For 10 years, he worked at HHN until SeaWorld Orlando started its own haunted house special ticketed event five years ago, where he’s been ever since.
Image via SeaWorld Orlando.
Being a scare actor means thinking fast on your feet and not being afraid to go all in.
Sliders spend two weeks training in the Summer, using cones to practice their timing and control.
With the grand finale of Halloween night coming soon, Allen is busier than ever finishing his shifts as a firefighter/paramedic — where he is known as the “Halloween guy” around the station — and then going out to the theme park.
“Watching him slide across the pavement, hearing that metal spark and seeing guests jump a mile high never gets old,” said Kyle Smith, SeaWorld’s creative show manager. “He’s one of the best at what he does.”
Early voting is underway in Miami Beach ahead of a Dec. 9 runoff that will decide the city’s only open Commission seat — a head-to-head contest between Monica Matteo-Salinas and Monique Pardo Pope for the Group 1 seat.
Matteo-Salinas, a Democrat and longtime City Hall aide, finished first last month with 23.2% of the vote. Pardo Pope, a Republican lawyer, advanced with 20.1%.
They outpaced four other candidates competing to succeed outgoing Commissioner Kristen Rosen Gonzalez last month, but neither captured a large enough share of the vote — more than 50% — to win outright.
The runoff has sharpened into a choice between two contrasting résumés, platforms and campaign narratives along with a late-cycle revelation about Pardo Pope that has drawn national headlines.
Matteo-Salinas, 46, has consolidated establishment support for her campaign, which centers on a promise to work on expanding trolley service, increasing the city’s affordable housing index and establishing a new “water czar” position in the city, paid by resort taxes.
She’s earned endorsements from several local pols, including Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava, Miami Beach Commissioners Alex Fernandez, Laura Dominguez and Tanya Bhatt; and former Miami Beach Dan Gelber.
Groups backing her bid include the Miami Beach Fraternal Order of Police, LGBTQ groups SAVE Action PAC and Equality Florida Action PAC, and the public-safety-focused neighborhood group SOBESafe.
Pardo Pope, 45, has centered her messaging on public safety, investing in mental health, backing school choice initiatives, supporting homelessness services, encouraging “smart, thoughtful development” that preserves Miami Beach’s character while addressing flooding and roadway congestion, and alleviating cost-of-living issues for longtime residents and first-time homebuyers through “fair taxation.”
Though she has touted her guardian ad litem work as evidence of her temperament and commitment to service, that part of her record has drawn renewed scrutiny in recent weeks. A review of Pardo Pope’s case records with the Miami-Dade Clerk’s Office shows her listed as a guardian ad litem on just three cases — one of which she was discharged from after trying to get the mother in the case jailed.
She’s also been the subject of negative attention for omitting that her father was the convicted, Nazi-adoring serial killer Manuel Pardo, to whom she wrote several loving social media posts.
Pardo Pope has said that she forgave him in order to move forward with her life and asked voters to judge her on her own life and work.
Her backing includes the Miami-Dade Republican Party, Miami-Dade Commissioner René García, state Rep. Alex Rizo, former Miami Beach City Attorney Jose Smith, Miami Realtors PAC, the Venezuelan American Republican Club and Teach Florida PAC, a Jewish education group.
Two of her former Group 1 opponents, Daniel Ciraldo and Omar Gimenez, are also backing her.
Matteo-Salinas raised about $133,000 and spent $82,000 by Dec. 4. Pardo Pope raised about $190,000 — of which 29% was self-given — and spent close to $170,000.
Early voting runs through Sunday at four locations citywide. Election Day is Monday, Dec. 9.
A Senate district that leans heavily Republican plus a Special Election just weeks before Christmas — Marwah acknowledges it adds up to a likely Tuesday victory for Ralph Massullo.
The Senate District 11 Special Election is Tuesday to fill the void created when Blaise Ingoglia became Chief Financial Officer.
It pits Republican Massullo, a dermatologist and Republican former four-term House member from Lecanto, against Democrat Marwah, a civil engineer from The Villages.
Early voter turnout was light, as would be expected in a low-key standalone Special Election: At 10% or under for Hernando and Pasco counties, 19% in Sumter and 15% in Citrus.
Massullo has eyed this Senate seat since 2022 when he originally planned to leave the House after six years for the SD 11 run. His campaign ended prematurely when Gov. Ron DeSantis backed Ingoglia, leaving Massullo with a final two years in office before term limits ended his House career.
When the SD 11 seat opened up with Ingoglia’s CFO appointment, Massullo jumped in and a host of big-name endorsements followed, including from DeSantis, Ingoglia, Agriculture Commissioner Wilton Simpson, U.S. Sens. Ashley Moody and Rick Scott, four GOP Congressmen, county Sheriffs in the district, and the Florida Chamber of Commerce.
Marwah ran for HD 52 in 2024, garnering just 24% of the vote against Republican John Temple.
Massullo has raised $249,950 to Marwah’s $12,125. Massullo’s $108,000 in spending includes consulting, events and mail pieces. One of those mail pieces reminded voters there’s an election.
The two opponents had few opportunities for head-to-head debate. TheLeague of Women Voters of Citrus County conducted a SD 11 forum on Zoom in late October, when the two candidates clashed over the state’s direction.
Marwah said DeSantis and Republicans are “playing games” in their attempts to redraw congressional district boundaries.
“No need to go through this expense,” he said. “It will really ruin decades of progress in civil rights. We should honor the rule of law that we agreed on that it’ll be done every 10 years. I’m not sure why the game is being played at this point.”
Massullo said congressional districts should reflect population shifts.
“The people of our state deserve to be adequately represented based on population,” he said. “I personally do not believe we should use race as a means to justify particular areas. I’m one that believes we should be blind to race, blind to creed, blind to sex, in everything that we do, particularly looking at population.”
Senate District 11 covers all of Citrus, Hernando and Sumter counties, plus a portion of northern Pasco County. It is safely Republican — Ingoglia won 69% of the vote there in November, and Donald Trump carried the district by the same margin in 2024.
The Associated Industries of Florida (AIF) will spend Session advocating for a legislative slate that includes support for affordable housing, private property rights and a regulatory framework for artificial intelligence.
The pro-business group outlined those and other goals in its recently released 2026 Session Priorities publication, which serves as a detailed guide to the policies AIF supports as well as those it will lobby against.
“As the 2026 Session approaches, AIF is proud to present our priorities, reflecting the collective voice of Florida’s diverse business community,” said Brewster Bevis, the organization’s President and CEO. “Florida remains a national model for economic opportunity, and AIF will work diligently to protect the business climate, encourage investment, and foster job creation across the state.”
AIF’s priorities reflect the interests of a broad set of industries, honed by its many policy councils and coalitions, including the Community Growth Council; Environmental Sustainability & Agriculture Council; Energy Council; Financial Services Council; Transportation & Maritime Council; Information Technology Council; Manufacturing, Aerospace & Defense Council; Taxation Council; Health Care Council; and the H2O Coalition.
The priority list also details its support for “the lawful, strategic use of state preemption” on “unnecessary, inconsistent” local government regulations, an “all-of-the-above” approach to energy, full funding for the state’s Fresh From Florida marketing program, and efforts to increase the number of graduate medical education slots across Florida’s health care institutions.
AIF said preserving the tort reforms from 2022 and 2023 also remains a top priority. The 2023 bill made sweeping changes to Florida’s torts laws that AIF and other pro-business groups argue are integral to stabilizing the cost of insurance premiums.
“Housing affordability, the rise of artificial intelligence, and efforts to roll back Florida’s historic tort reforms all have major implications for the strength of our business climate. AIF will continue to champion policies that support employers, protect consumers and residents, and ensure Florida remains one of the most competitive states in the nation to live, work, and do business,” Bevis said.
The 2026 Session Priorities publication will be delivered to all members of the Legislature and Cabinet, as well as state agency heads.