*THIS VIDEO CONTAINS COPYRIGHTED MUSIC*<br /><br />A couple has spent £24,000k ($30,000k) to turn their house into a spooky Halloween light show.<br /><br />The show includes spotlights that can be seen from miles and attracts thousands of visitors at the weekends. <br /><br />Kyle Bostick, 35, and his wife Christina Bostick, 36, even synced the light show to the tune of Taylor Swift's hit songs in light of her celebrated Eras Tour. <br /><br />The couple also used an extract from "Beetlejuice", horror-themed songs by Rob Zombie and tune by heavy metal band System of a Down.<br /><br />Kyle began the annual tradition in 2020 after his wife Christina saw a house with "perfect" Halloween decorations online. <br /><br />By Halloween 2022, the pair had spent £44,500 ($50,000) on decorations for their home and this year they have added £24,000k ($30,000) of new decorations. <br /><br />They new additions include a skeleton band, a stage, light beams, a screen that plays custom animations and vertical fog cannons. <br /><br />Kyle explained: "The beams we've added in - called moving-head lights - can be seen from miles away. <br /><br />"There's an extremely busy road about a mile away from here with lots of cars and street lights and you can see the house.<br /><br />"The screen, which has projection mapping, turns a whole part of the front of the house into a big screen for animations."<br /><br />He added: "The moving-head lights cost $20,000. The projection mapping cost $2,000 or so and the skeletons cost $2,500.<br /><br />"The fog machines cost about $1,000 a piece too. All in all the new additions cost about $30,000."<br /><br />Kyle, an IT technician, spent over a month setting up display. <br /><br />He built the stage, reprogrammed the skeletons and added motors.<br /><br />Kyle, who is Garden City, Michigan, USA, said: "The skeletons were pre-programmed so they did their own thing. <br /><br />"I took them apart, reprogrammed them and built them a stage so I could turn it into a concert."<br /><br />Kyle also mounted the rest of the decorations and programmed all the animation and movement himself. <br /><br />The popularity of the show means that the couple sometimes need to go outside to manage traffic in their neighborhood.<br /><br />The Bosticks use their lights for good and take charity donations from onlookers. <br /><br />They generate about $2,000 per show. <br /><br />This year they are donating to a breast cancer charity. <br /><br />Kyle said: "This year the show is pulling in the biggest crowd we've ever seen. <br /><br />"When we go outside to manage traffic we see kids screaming to the songs. <br /><br />"We get hundreds of cars and thousands of people on weekends. Our neighbours are still supportive so it's no problem."
