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Des supporters des Philadelphia Eagles montent sur la devanture d’un hôtel… et qu’elle s…
Dimanche soir, des supporters des Philadelphia Eagles sont montés sur la devanture de l’hôtel Ritz-Carlton pour fêter la victoire au Super Bowl mais celle-ci a fini par s’effondrer.
Madness Ensued at the Philadelphia Eagles Super Bowl Victory Parade Check out what happened. The Eagles defeated the New England Patriots 41-33 in Super Bowl LII.
Philadelphia police were looking for a group of fans who damaged a woman’s car by jumping on it during the Eagles’ Super Bowl parade on February 8. Police released video of the incident on Tuesday, February 13.
Police said a 22-year-old woman parked her vehicle on the street while she attended the parade. When she returned, she found extensive body damage to the hood and roof of the car. Video and photographs later surfaced and showed numerous people standing and jumping on the vehicle, police said.
Two people were arrested the day of the parade in unrelated assault incidents, a news report said.
The Eagles won the team’s first Super Bowl title on February 4, prompting celebrations in the city. Three people had been arrested that night, but police warned there would be more arrests as officers reviewed surveillance footage, social media posts and other evidence. Credit: Philadelphia Police Department via Storyful
A Philadelphia judge has ruled that an Amtrak engineer must face a trial for a fatal derailment in 2015.
According to Judge Kathryn Streeter Lewis, charges of involuntary manslaughter and reckless endangerment have been reinstituted against Brandon Bostian.
Prosecutors added that a previous judge had dismissed the criminal charges.
Judge Thomas Gehret made that decision last September, citing evidence which suggested the derailment was not caused by a criminal act.
The Patriots may not be in Foxborough this Sunday, but it isn’t stopping Pats nation from cheering them on.
As thousands of Philadelphia Eagles fans flooded the city in the wake of the Eagles’ historic Super Bowl victory on February 4, the city’s rapid-transit system struggled to cope with passenger numbers.
According to the Port Authority Transit Company (PATCO), the volume of people traveling westbound towards Philadelphia delayed service on a number of trains. Speaking to local media,, PATCO spokesman Kyle Anderson said that a doorway jammed on a crowded Philadelphia-bound train causing the mechanism to lock for safety reasons.
In a separate incident, a train heading east had to shut down its power and stop because people were jumping on the line’s tracks, Anderson said.
Philadelphia resident Catherine Smith shared two clips of passengers stuck on a disabled train to Twitter. Smith said that around ‘200’ Eagles fans were stuck on the train for up to two hours.
PATCO said they later dispatched a second train to evacuate the affected passengers, but that the process was complicated by people jumping on and off of the tracks. Credit: BagsWerePacked via Storyful
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Imagining Philadelphia: Edmund Bacon and the Future of the City
Best , of , Black Friday , 2017 , USA Funny moments , people buying , on Black Friday sales
Black Friday 2017: A Run on Sneakers in L.A., and a Frenzy Online
By THE NEW YORK TIMESUPDATED 4:11 PM
Sneaker shoppers were lined up outside Cool Kicks on Melrose Avenue in Los Angeles well before it opened Friday. Ivan Kashinsky for The New York Times
The unofficial start of the holiday shopping season was this week, when many national retailers opened their doors and offered major sales. Now it’s Black Friday, traditionally the big day of the week. We’re capturing what it looks and feels like at American shopping malls, retailers and discount stores.
Here, you’ll also find:
• Shopping deals from The Wirecutter, a product review and recommendation site owned by The New York Times.
• Sneaker sales drew lines in Los Angeles; in Dallas, there were few early crowds to battle.
• History and facts about Black Friday. (Did you know it started in Philadelphia in the 1960s?)
Outside Cool Kicks, a group of friends who resell hot sneakers waited for the store to open. Many of those in line were planning to resell their purchases. Ivan Kashinsky for The New York Times
Sneakers worth waiting for.
In front of Cool Kicks, a sneaker boutique on Melrose Avenue in Los Angeles, Jonathan Lindsey reclined in a lawn chair, hoodie drawn snug over a custom fitted cap. About 100 people waited in a line behind him, stretching around the corner.
Mr. Lindsey, 28, said there were around 15 people ahead of him when he arrived at 9 p.m. Thursday — 12 hours before the store would open. But he paid $60 dollars to move up to second. Like most of the people near the front of the line, he was here not for personal shopping, but for business.
So the Gray Zebra Yeezy Boosts he was there to buy would never grace Mr. Lindsey’s feet. Instead, he had sold the pair in advance to a woman who had driven by earlier in a Mercedes, offering him $550 dollars for a pair that would cost him $320.
“She had her son on FaceTime,” Mr. Lindsey recalled. “She’s like, ‘His birthday is tomorrow, and he wants the shoes.’ They’re sold. Baby boy’s birthday. They’re sold.”
Though patrons would be limited to buying just one pair each — with some pairs marked down to just a dollar, only one of the first 15 people in line at Cool Kicks was planning on keeping his purchase. The rest — mostly teenagers, and all male but one — would be immediately relisting their new rare sneakers on the secondary market, where some pairs fetch more than $1,000. — LOUIS KEENE
Not a good day for ‘Our Website Is Down.’
Friday is on track to become perhaps the busiest day in history for online shopping, according to salesforce.com, which makes it a spectacularly bad time for a retailer’s website to go on the fritz.