Don39t worry in the world Gypsy Rose spins in her

Don't worry in the world! Gypsy Rose spins in her husband's arms in Central Park with a camera crew in tow, while real crime tourists descend on her small Massachusetts town, where she murdered her Munchausen mother

  • Gypsy Rose Blanchard, 32, looked giddy as her husband Ryan Anderson spun her around like a princess in New York's Central Park on Friday
  • The couple arrived in the Big Apple after their release from prison last Thursday and were followed everywhere by a camera crew
  • Dozens of true crime tourists have stopped by her former home in Springfield, Missouri, to get a glimpse of where her mother Dee Dee Blanchard's murder took place in June 2015

Gypsy Rose Blanchard looked giddy as her husband Ryan Anderson spun her around like a princess in New York's Central Park while a camera crew captured the sweet moment on Friday.

The 32-year-old was on a whirlwind trip through New York City to explore the media and attend some swanky events with her husband Ryan Anderson, whom she married in a prison wedding in July 2022.

The former ex-convict was released last week after serving an eight-year sentence for the June 2015 murder of her mother, Dee Dee Blanchard.

One person who saw the happy couple in the park shouted: “Gypsy, we love you!” as she waved and smiled.

Meanwhile, thousands of miles away in the picturesque town of Springfield, Missouri, hordes of true crime tourists have descended on Gypsy's former home to get a glimpse of the pink-shingled house where the murder took place.

Gypsy Rose Blanchard, 32, smiles as her husband Ryan Anderson twirls her during a visit to Central Park on Friday

Gypsy Rose Blanchard, 32, smiles as her husband Ryan Anderson twirls her during a visit to Central Park on Friday

The pink-shingled house where Gypsy lived with her Munchausen stand-in Dee Dee and where the murder took place in June 2015.  The home, built by Habitat for Humanity, was donated to Dee Dee after she falsely claimed she lost her home during Hurricane Katrina

The pink-shingled house where Gypsy lived with her Munchausen stand-in Dee Dee and where the murder took place in June 2015. The home, built by Habitat for Humanity, was donated to Dee Dee after she falsely claimed she lost her home during Hurricane Katrina

A photo of Gypsy with her mentally ill mother DeeDee, who was accused of abusing her daughter for years while in her care

A photo of Gypsy with her mentally ill mother DeeDee, who was accused of abusing her daughter for years while in her care

Some disturb neighbors by driving quickly down the residential street at all hours of the day or night or asking them where the house is since the wheelchair ramp has been removed and the house has been painted blue.

A neighbor, identified as Tonia, told TMZ that she did not want to share any information with the tourists to protect the mother and daughter who currently live in the house.

Others on the block were unhappy with the traffic and chaos that has turned their once-quiet street into a media circus.

Local man Thomas Pengilly described the ordeal as stressful and told the celebrity publication that the house should have been demolished.

He urged others to find better things in life than reliving someone's trauma and pain.

Gypsy was a victim of Munchausen syndrome by proxy, a form of abuse in which a guardian or caretaker typically harms their child or greatly exaggerates medical problems to gain sympathy.

She moved into the house with her mentally ill mother after it was donated by Habitat for Humanity after DeeDee falsely claimed that they had lost their home during Hurricane Katrina.

Dee Dee Blanchard was found stabbed to death in her home in the summer of 2015 by Gypsy's then-boyfriend Nicholas Godejohn.

Godejohn committed the murder while Gypsy Rose was reportedly hiding in the bathroom.

He is serving a life sentence.

Gypsy (pictured) was a victim of Munchausen syndrome by proxy, a form of abuse in which a guardian or carer typically harms their child or greatly exaggerates medical problems to gain sympathy

Gypsy (pictured) was a victim of Munchausen syndrome by proxy, a form of abuse in which a guardian or carer typically harms their child or greatly exaggerates medical problems to gain sympathy

She is pictured in a wheelchair next to her mentally ill mother

She is pictured in a wheelchair next to her mentally ill mother

Gypsy was released from prison early and placed on probation.

Earlier this week, she appeared on “The View” and “Good Morning America,” where she admitted she didn't want to kill her mother but believed it was “the only way out” of her situation.

Wearing a low-cut black minidress, Gypsy and her husband walked the red carpet during the premiere of their new Lifetime show “The Prison Confessions of Gypsy Rose Blanchard” and looked happy.