The buyer of a Pennsylvania home that served as a filming location for Buffalo Bill s house in 1991 movie "Silence of the Lambs" is now being converted into a bed and breakfast.
Though perhaps not the kind of tourist destination that will draw crowds like the steps from The Exorcist, one intrepid horror fan has taken it upon themselves to purchase the house used in The Silence of the Lambs as Buffalo Bill s home and is planning to turn it into a place where you can spend [.]
Buffalo Bill s Silence of the Lambs House Is Now a Very Creepy Bed & Breakfast
Buffalo Bill s Silence of the Lambs House Is Now a Very Creepy Bed & Breakfast
Horror fan Chris Rowan purchased The Silence of the Lambs home in Perryopolis, Pennsylvania.
Horror fans can now stay overnight at Buffalo Bill s house from The Silence of the Lambs. The home was on the market last year, and horror fan Chris Rowan decided to purchase it. Rowan intends on making the Perryopolis, Pennsylvania home a travel destination for horror fans from all over the world in the coming months. The exterior of the home is instantly recognizable to any fans of the Academy Award-winning 1991 movie, along with parts of the interior, which seem to have been left untouched over the years.
The reaction of lawmakers in the region to Gov. Tom Wolfâs $40 billion budget proposal was about as cold as the temperature outside this time of year.
State Rep. Josh Kail, a Beaver County Republican whose district includes part of Washington County, summed up the negative response when he described it as âtaxes, taxes and more taxes.â
âUnfortunately, instead of advancing pro-worker and pro-growth policies, we still have the same problems that we had when the governor was elected in 2014, and heâs still trying to use the same failed tax policy in response.â
Wolf, a Democrat, and the Republican-majority General Assembly locking horns over the budget has been an annual rite for most of the governorâs time in office. In his budget address Wednesday, Wolf called for an increase in personal income taxes in the 2021-22 fiscal year, a severance tax on the natural gas industry and a 17% increase in spending overall to boost public schools and job trainin