Do Not Disturb: The Clown Motel and Tonopah Cemetery


February 22, 2015 — It’s become Internet-infamous. A clown-themed motel out in the Nevada desert next door to an old graveyard. “God-damn terrifying” I believe is the consensus. And certainly, it sounds like a versatile setting for every possible kind of nightmare. So when I recently discovered I’d be driving through the town where it’s located, I of course wanted to stay the night there. Of course.

And it would only have cost me $40 and my marriage.

My wife has stayed overnight with me at murder scenes, tromped with me into eccentric stranger’s houses on thin pretenses, has gone with me into graveyards at night and right up to the dizzying edges of precipices without guardrails. After eight years of the macabre, the strange, and the outrĂ©, this is where she finally drew the line—the Clown Motel. In her defense, I’m not sure if it was the clown theme by itself or the as-scary dive-motel price of $40 a night. Fortunately for our relationship, it turned out to be a non-issue, as timing had us blowing through town during the middle of the day, with many miles to go before we slept. Still, I had to stop. Had to.


The Clown Motel is in the town of Tonopah, 200 miles northwest of Las Vegas and not too far above the also-infamous Area 51. It started out as a mining town back in the earliest of 1900s, and these days maintains a population of about 2,500 thanks to a nearby bomb testing range and, I assume, such treasures as a clown-themed motel.

But the place was pleasant. A bit sand-scoured, sure, as every desert town is, but Tonopah didn’t seem at all desolate or depressing. It was a refreshing break from the road for us. And the Clown Motel was nestled right there on the main street at the northern edge of town.

And that breaks the first law of spooky motels, as clearly argued in Psycho vs. the People. It has to be secluded, remote. You shouldn’t be able to just run down the street to the local Subway if you’re being chased by the ghost of a serial killer alien clown. That’s poor plot planning.


But, man, it was certainly clowned up. That was no Internet-exaggeration. Every sign from the one denoting the name of the place to the one offering the room rates to the one welcoming bikers to the one topping the office itself had at least one cartoony clown on it. And every door to every room bore identical, colorful clowns. Parking in its lot placed us at the center of a vortex of red noses and fluffy wigs.


But, again, I found it—not at all scary. Bear in mind, I’ve never been coulrophobic. I mean, I’ve definitely seen some pretty scary clowns in my day, but I’ve also seen some silly ones and some bland ones and some sad ones and maybe even—although I’d have to think deep about it—some funny ones. They’re like everything else in that way. So merely surrounding me with clowns isn’t going to freak me out. Unless they’re asking for audience participation.

The parking lot was empty, and I got out with my five-year-old. My wife stayed in the car. Because the baby was sleeping, she said. We entered the office and, well, I learned what it really was like to be at the center of a vortex of clowns. And I realize I’m not using “vortex” correctly. But I’m trying to describe a singular thing, here.

The office was small and ancient-seeming and lined with shelves crowded with clowns. But before I could assimilate that cacophony of clowns (and I realize I’m not using that term correctly either—see above), I was greeted by the desk clerk.


I regret that I didn’t get her name, because she was the nicest person, even after I explained that I was there out of curiosity and not as a paying customer (or I might, might, might have hid behind my kid’s curiosity). Once she found out I was there to gawk, she invited me to take pictures, answered my questions, and helped me with the pronunciation of the town name (TOE-no-pah).

There must’ve been hundreds of clowns in that small space, from little ceramic figurines to plush toys to paintings. Even a life-sized bloke sitting in a plastic patio chair. He looked high and was missing two fingers on what were disconcertingly human-like hands. I asked my kid if she wanted her picture taken with the clowns to continue my cover as an indulgent father. She vehemently declined, pointing out that a couple of the clowns were indeed of the scary sort, with pointy teeth and John Wayne Gacy eyes. I’m paraphrasing her.



The clerk told me that the motel had been clowned-themed before the current owners bought the place and that most of the clowns that were beaming their red-outlined smiles at me were donations and gifts. I neglected to ask her the age of the motel. On Yelp, it says it was established in 1990, but it seems much older. That year could have been when the hotel changed hands. Or it could be that 1990 is a lot further in the past than I want to admit.

“Are the rooms clown-themed?” I asked.

“Not really. They have a few pictures on the wall, that’s about it. Do you want to see one?”

“Would love to.”

She summoned a young girl to take to me to a room across the parking lot from the office. This girl also turned out to be one of the nicest people ever.

Inside, the room looked merely like an extremely outdated, beat-up, although surprisingly clean, motel room. The only trace of clowns were three small pictures on the wall. It was so non-clowny that I didn’t even bother to take a photo.


“Don’t forget to check out the cemetery next door. It’s 100 years old.” That was the last thing that the woman at the desk had said to me before I exited the office. So, after leaving both of my impromptu tour guides tips, we took off for the motel’s neighbor, just a few steps away.

Tonopah Cemetery was established in 1901 and was used as an active burial ground for only a decade. According to a metal placard at its gates, many of the town’s “pioneer residents” are buried there, including the victims of a mine fire in 1911 and more victims, this time in 1902, of a disease called simply the “Tonopah Plague.”

The cemetery definitely felt like a pioneer cemetery, with all the “stones” made of wood, some of which had epitaphs carved directly into them and others punched into tin plates and affixed to the wood. Many of them listed the cause of death. Besides the mine fire, I also saw pneumonia, blood poisoning, and inflammation of the bowels in the end credits of the town’s founders.


On the way back to the car, I took a few more pictures of the hotel, more disappointed than ever that I wasn’t staying there for the night. While I was doing that a maid came by and asked if I’d like to see inside a room. I’ve never seen this helpful of a hotel staff, even in the few times I’ve 5-starred it.

So maybe at midnight, this place is terrifying. Maybe the amazing staff was just a ruse to pull us into a nightmare trap of face paint and massive shoes. But I’ve got say, its Internet reputation seems undeserved. The biggest testimony to that, I think, was that as we left for our next adventure, my wife told me, “Now that I’ve seen it, I totally could have stayed here.”

Next time we’re in Nevada, I’m calling that bluff.





Driving the Desert: Our Southwest Road Trip


February 5, 2015 — Before January’s Southwest road trip, I had a vague, blurry image of the region as cacti and canyons, tumbleweed and teepees. Now, after a nine-day, ~1,800-mile road trip through Nevada, a tiny piece of California, Arizona, and a sliver of Utah, it’s a relatively more defined blur of cacti and canyons, tumbleweed and teepees.

Our route started in Vegas and ended in Vegas, a vast lasso loop that encircled the greatest natural wonder of North America and hit all the desert tropes I’ve always wanted to see: western ghost towns, Native American petroglyphs and cliff dwellings, UFO shenanigans, uh…clown-themed motels. I have about two dozen OTIS adventures to write as a result of this trip, but here it is in overview.

Day 1: Las Vegas, Kind Of


We landed in Las Vegas at about 2 pm. Our first stop? In-and-Out Burger. Second? Super Wal-Mart. That might not seem like an auspicious start to a road trip, especially in a city like Las Vegas, but our location was incidental. Just an easy to city to fly in and out of. And we needed to prep. I was about to take my family—wife, five-year-old, infant—into the unforgiving desert in a rented mini-van of questionable lineage. That meant we needed to stock up on water, baby food, turkey jerky, and bargain-bin DVDs.

Day 2: Yeah, Though I Walk Through Death Valley


Death Valley was amazing and unreal. Winter is an ideal time to see the desolation of the desert in general, but especially a place like Death Valley since summer temperatures average as high as 116 degrees. Our weather was more like Autumn. We spent the entire day hanging out below sea level and above, seeing all manner of baked wonders. We stayed at a hotel inside the park and ventured out late into the painfully silent night to get the clearest view of the universe I’ve ever seen. That OTIS entry will be a two-parter. Also saw my first roadrunner in the wild. Meep. Meep.

Day 3: Ghosts and Clowns and Aliens


This was my favorite day of the trip, oddity-wise. We woke early enough to catch the sunrise on the Mesquite Flat Sand Dunes and then left Death Valley for a day-long, seven-hour loop north of Vegas that took us through the ghost town of Rhyolite, an art installation of cars buried end-on in the dirt, a pioneer cemetery, a clown-themed motel, and the Extraterrestrial Highway—a boyhood dream that had us standing on the edge of Area 51 in front of “Danger: No Trespassing” signs while security trucks parked atop hills surveilled us. Props to the minivan for taking 25 miles worth of dirt roads on this day without blowing a tire. Those vehicles need to make a comeback.

Day 4: Mars and Dinosaurs and Ghosts


This day started in Nevada, but represented our only foray into Utah. We began in Valley of Fire State Park, a fantastic place near Las Vegas that looks like a movie set for the planet Mars, all red and rocky with pink sand and ancient petroglyphs…which is one of things it was used for in the many movies that have filmed there. Next, we crossed the Mormon border, stopping to see dinosaur footprints at the St. George Dinosaur Discovery Site and then hitting Grafton, another ghost town, before accidentally crossing through a vertiginous bit of Mt. Zion National Park en route to our hotel in Arizona.

Day 5: Horseshoes and Antelopes


We started out at Horseshoe Bend, that famous twist in the Colorado River that you can view from 4,000 feet up at the edge of a cliff without a guardrail. From there we visited another famous geological feature, Antelope Canyon, where we paid a lot of money for a Navajo guide to drive us three miles across packed sand to this cave-like slit canyon with its gracefully water-carved orange walls. He told us about skinwalkers and portals to other worlds and how to hold the camera to make the rocks look like George Washington. We ended the day at the southern rim of the Grand Canyon, catching it right at sunset for our first ever view of the gigantic crevice.

Day 6: Canyons and Craters and Soft Rock


The Grand Canyon was fan-tas-tic. As expected. And visiting it in January meant that the crowds were fractional, and we had quite a few scenic views all to ourselves. Even better, we inadvertently timed it to witness a rare natural phenomenon: a cloud inversion, where much of the canyon was filled with a trapped cloud making it look like some alien ocean beneath us. From there, it was on to Meteor Crater, a surprisingly well-preserved and extraordinarily massive meteor impact crater that’s about 50,000 years old. Heady. That night, before the sound of our own wheels drove us crazy, we bunked up in Winslow, Arizona, home to a statue and mural depicting a single verse in that one Eagles song from the 1970s that mentions the town.

Day 7: Petrified with Awe


We spent most of this day in the Petrified Forest, the furthest point east on our loop, wandering the desolation of a landscape dotted with the fallen trunks of ancient stone trees out in the Painted Desert. Then we headed back west, where we spent the night in Flagstaff, although not before checking out the Walnut Canyon cliff dwellings. There, we descended 240 vertiginous steps to walk through ancient stone houses not much more than clefts in the rock and then ascended the same 240 steps. As was true of so many of the sites we visited, guardrails were a rarity.

Day 8: Animals and Altered Plans


It actually rained all day, but the weather was perfectly timed for our itinerary. We first checked out the mass grave of some of the more than 100 victims of a mid-air collision over the Grand Canyon in 1956. Then we headed to Bearizona, a drive-through safari where we were within inches of uncaged wolves and bears, but were only molested by a white bison who raced to cut off our van and a Rocky Mountain Elk that tried to pull off our antenna.

From there we took Route 66 to randomly see some of the strange sites that still survive there. We were supposed to end this day near the Grand Canyon Skywalk, that glass horseshoe bridge suspended over the canyon, so that we could try it out the next day, but we read such universally terrible reviews the night before that we ditched that plan and replaced it with a day in Vegas. We let our five-year-old choose the hotel, which naturally landed us at the castle-themed Excalibur, where we officially finished the night by taking the tram to Mandalay Bay to see an aquarium with a shark tank and a Komodo dragon. Unofficially, later that night, I tried my first slot machine. And my second. And my third.

Day 9: National Lampoon’s Vegas Vacation


We did Vegas the family way, which was only awkward during the walk from the check-in desk to the elevators as we had to slide through the ranks of bleary-eyed slot machine riders. Once we were outside, the place was an amusement park, the highlights of which was the Fall of Atlantis robot show at the Forums Shops at Ceasers and Siegfried and Roy’s Secret Garden and Dolphin Habitat at the Mirage, where I have never seen such beautifully well-groomed and obviously show-biz lions and tigers.

We had plans to see more, but around 3 pm we got an emergency email from Virgin Atlantic cancelling our flight the next day due to the latest impending New England snowstorm. So instead of waiting the day or two until they resumed flights, we jumped directly on an overnight, making it home by Day 10, which turned out for the best anyway for all kinds of reasons.

Although trading desert rock for drifts of snow as big as our rental van was a bit of a system shock.

As always, a hugely enjoyable part of the trip was sharing it in-situ with all of you on Facebook, Instagram, and Tumblr, or here on OTIS. Thanks to everyone who followed along (we reserved the back seat of the minivan for you), and I promise I will get to actual posts on these oddities at some point before I die.