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  • Flavor Flav offers U.S. women’s hockey ‘real celebration’ after declining Trump

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    American rapper and television personality Flavor Flav extended an offer to the U.S. women’s hockey team to celebrate its gold medal win in Milan Cortina.

    In a statement posted on social media Monday, Flav, real name William Jonathan Drayton Jr., invited the team to a “real celebration in Las Vegas.”

    “We saw the story about the men’s invite to the White House, and the not quite invite for the women’s team,” part of the statement read. “…[Flav] always stands behind everything he says and does. If there is an interest for the team to come to Las Vegas and celebrate with Flav – we will figure it out on our end and make it a lovely experience.”

    Flav’s offer came after the hockey team declined President Trump’s invitation to celebrate at the White House after beating Canada for gold, just like the men’s team.

    “We are sincerely grateful for the invitation extended to our gold medal–winning U.S. Women’s Hockey Team and deeply appreciate the recognition of their extraordinary achievement,” a USA Hockey spokesperson said via NBC News. “Due to the timing and previously scheduled academic and professional commitments following the Games, the athletes are unable to participate.”

    Trump invited the men’s team to the State of the Union set for Tuesday in a call posted on social media Sunday night, where he jokingly said he’d be impeached if he didn’t extend the invite to the women’s team.

    It’s not yet clear if the women’s team will accept Flav’s offer, though he said he is flexible for most dates except for March 14-16, which falls on the weekend of his 67th birthday.

    Flav was also an official sponsor and hype man for the U.S. bobsled and skeleton teams in Italy following a run with the water polo teams in Paris.

    “I think a lot of other celebrities like myself need to step up to the plate and sponsor some of these Olympic teams, because these Olympians are out there busting their butts to make us look good,” Flav said on his decision to fund more Olympic sports. “After the sport has been played, people have a tendency to forget about the sport until it’s played again. I want this sport to stick in your mind after the season is over.”

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    Sanjesh Singh

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  • Remembering Isaiah Zagar

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    Opinion

    A longtime friend and admirer reflects on Philly’s one-of-a-kind outsider artist, who died this week.


    Isaiah Zagar / Photograph courtesy of Philadelphia’s Magic Gardens

    Isaiah Zagar, arguably Philadelphia’s most prolific, inspired, daring, death-defying, adored and debated artist, died this week, just shy of his 87th birthday.

    He was one of the last and in many ways best personification of the spirit of peace, love and intercambio, interconnection, that made South Street in its heyday a truly unique cultural expressway and a national treasure.

    His death is a loss that the city should and will feel profoundly. Yet Isaiah did everything in his power, every day, to make sure that when his body was gone, his art never would be. One of the last things he said — as his extended family huddled around him in the South Street row home where nearly every surface, floor to ceiling, undulated with the explosively colorful art of the king of shards — was “I did it.”

    And he did.

    A skilled print-maker, painter, and sculptor inspired by the human form and the human condition and the meanings of words even when his dyslexia made him see them backwards, when he found that his work wasn’t being seen in traditional museums, he began recreating and combining the images on the display areas available to him — city walls.

    He began with the walls in the three buildings he and his wife, Julia, a wise and patient fellow New York native, bought on South Street after much of the Street was condemned for a highway that was never built (thank God). Hippies like them began squatting in the buildings, creating a neighborhood of be-ins, sit-ins (and lots of other “ins” which Isaiah sometimes attended near or buck naked, to make a point about fearlessness and freedom). They had a store at 402 South, next to Jim’s Steaks, a row home further up the street and a studio space on the 1000 block. And once those interior walls were covered — and his self-portraits and images of him and Julia had been incorporated into chair backs, throw rugs, decorative tiles and anything else Isaiah’s artisan mind dreamed up — he started seeking out any wall in and around his neighborhood in Queen Village, Bella Vista and South Philadelphia that nobody was paying attention to.

    He invented a way to reinvent these walls with a kind of psychedelic stucco — he Isaiah-ed them — creating uniquely textured murals with pieces of broken pottery and mirrors held together with grout in bold water-ice colors, encrusting even the most menacing surfaces until they appeared to have detonated with color and light, and then frozen in place forever.

    Philadelphians, and visitors from all over the world, have been discovering Isaiah’s work, and the unique place it holds in Philly’s visual and artistic history, for decades, primarily through the 3-D art environment he created at 1020 South — partly his studio space, partly land he artistically squatted on for years, coating the walls on either side in mosaic climbing like beautiful mold, until the owner was pressured to let the community buy it — now called “Philadelphia’s Magic Gardens.”

    Isaiah Zagar

    Isaiah Zagar in the Magic Gardens in 1980 / Photograph courtesy of Philadelphia’s Magic Gardens

    Some also watched, and then lamented, the recent destruction of his landmark commissions, the block-wide shell around the Painted Bride Arts Center in Old City, recently destroyed after a protracted, stupid neighborhood legal battle. Others of us have more personal relationships with individual Isaiah walls.

    My wife and I were lucky enough to meet Isaiah before his work reached critical mass, almost exactly 30 years ago, when we were a young married couple on tiny Mildred Street in South Philly. There was a cinderblock wall on our block, between Bainbridge and Fitzwater, which a neighbor had adorned with an American flag which then got tagged by graffiti artists. (Graffiti was a big problem citywide, and there were new ideas how to combat it; the Anti-Graffiti Network was being recast as the Mural Arts Program.) And then, one day in late winter 1996, a biblical-looking man in his 50s — wiry, with long hair and long graying beard — showed up on our street to turn our desecrated flag wall into a one-piece art gallery. Many days he arrived with an older gentleman, who we later learned was his father, in tow, and he had him sit down on our street’s one bench, which was across from the mural in progress.

    Until this point, Isaiah’s murals had been largely geometric in nature, swirling and spinning colors and shapes and letters. The wall on our street was shorter than most — only seven feet high — so Isaiah could easily reach the top of it, and he decided to try something different: among the swirls, he created glimpses of 10 figures, each with a face comprised of multiple ceramic tiles he painted and re-fired, sunk together into a blob of cement so they could be attached to the wall. Surrounding the heads were hundreds of pieces of mirror, floor tile, bathroom tile, pieces of glass — much of it left over from residential or industrial jobs and then willed to Isaiah. He first stuck all the hard pieces to the wall with glue, let them sit, then came back the next day with big white buckets filled with Day-Glo colored grout, and a couple of volunteers to help him spread it.

    The resulting mural danced a pachenga of deep greens and shocking pinks. From across the street, you looked at all the faces and shapes with fascination. When you walked close, you could also see yourself, broken into pieces of mirror (which, in an art-critic nutshell, is what Isaiah’s work was all about; it seemed endlessly self-referential until you approached and experienced yourself a new way). The colors changed with the day’s light, and while it may not have been to the artistic taste of everyone on my quiet block of South Philly immigrants, it was always something to behold and it never got graffitied. The taggers respected that they had been beaten.

    After the wall was done, Isaiah and his father, Asher, came every morning to sit on the bench, drink coffee, and look at it. My wife and I got to know them better partly because Asher often needed to use our bathroom.

    I wrote a piece about the wall for Philadelphia magazine, which introduced new people to Isaiah’s work. It also mentioned that my wife, Diane, and I had a very large, unpleasant green stucco wall on our house — on which someone had artlessly spray-painted “Oops Loves Linda” — and if Isaiah wanted to come by and do his king of shards thing on our place, we’d be thrilled. And one spring day, he arrived. Diane was walking home from the Wawa when she saw him standing on Pemberton in front of our wall, staring at it, with a piece of tile in his hand. He was deciding where to start.

    isaiah zagar

    Fried’s Philadelphia magazine story from March 1996

    Within days, he had created an intense, complex masterpiece, incorporating not only pieces of tile and mirror and a number of faces he had painted, but all kinds of found and donated objects. In talking to him while he worked, I realized just how much dumpster diving and scrounging for constructive scraps he did to keep his work lively, because there were only so many materials hard and hardy enough to be grouted into an exterior wall. He showed up each morning with everything from recycled marble letters to tiles with inverted Vishnus.

    Sometimes he had pieces of pottery and plates that he proceeded to break up with a hammer, until one afternoon his wife, Julia, came by the site and spied him doing it.

    Isaiah!” she yelled, like the wife on a TV sitcom about former hippies who now had a store and young kids, “we have to sell those!”

    One day Isaiah arrived with a series of dark clay “soul portraits” which had been created by elementary school students but rejected because they were too “ethnic.” (That was his version of the story, anyway, although he could be an artistically embellishing narrator — anything that would work to call attention to a piece.) In honor of the kids, he made one of the figures on the wall only three feet high, so a young person could engage with it. He finished on a Thursday, let the pieces set for a day, and then told us on Saturday we should bring the family for the grouting. It was a group event.

    Grouting day, 1996 / Photograph courtesy of Stephen Fried

    My father-in-law, Ed, and I stood on ladders and grouted the colors Isaiah told us to use. My four-year-old niece, Emma, in rubber gloves bigger than her whole arms, grouted around the small figure. I recall this as one of the happiest days of my life — WRTI jazz on the radio, the sun shining through colored grout pieces on our eyelashes. Until that moment of urban bliss, I never realized heaven would be so shiny.

    Grouting day, 1996 / Photograph courtesy of Stephen Fried

    We weren’t just getting a mural, we were collaborating with the artist — who every once in a while would chuckle when telling us where to put the grout and realize we were working for him. This was a great part of Isaiah’s charm: No matter how ambitious a piece, he considered it all a collaboration. With the people whom he got the tile from, with his coworkers, with people who walked by and engaged him in conversation, and the next day something one of them said might appear on the wall. We covered nine or 10 feet of the three-story wall — as high as his extension ladders would go — and then he just stopped.

    Isaiah had recently gotten his first major grant — the Pew Foundation was the first to recognize his personal form of urban renewal had merit — and he had just as quickly spent it all, covering as many walls as possible. He told us that if we wanted him to go the rest of the way to the roof, we would have to pay for the scaffolding to be put up (or rent or preferably buy him a small hydraulic scissor lift). And even though we were a young couple without a lot of money, we figured out a way to pay for it. Because we wanted to see him get to the top. He did, and just before he got there, we watched in surprise as he placed letters near the chimney: “House of the Two Writers.”

    We were so touched, even after a writer for the City Paper came by to do a story on the mural, and Isaiah jokingly told her that I forced him to put our names on it. After that, we were friends for life.

    Because we lived in the same neighborhood, our friendship played itself out mostly on chance meetings walking down the street or seeing him doing another local wall. He was extremely well-read, always knew what books Diane and I were working on (as well as my deadlines, including when I had missed them).

    Isaiah Zagar

    Isaiah Zagar in the 1990s / Photograph courtesy of Philadelphia Magic Gardens

    The Zagars would invite us to art openings and some family events, and they connected us with some of their South Street friends, many of whom had relocated to different parts of the city (as Rick and Ruth Snyderman, and their Snyderman Works Gallery, followed Painted Bride to Old City, and helped establish First Friday — very much in the South Street tradition.) He let us use his studio for a book party in 1998, which turned out to be one of the first times he put art pieces on the ground of the then-abandoned lot next to his studio and set up a little outdoor tour — an early iteration of what mushroomed in every direction and color into the Magic Gardens.

    We watched as Isaiah’s work proliferated (as did Mural Arts on many other walls all over the city, but fewer in Isaiah’s neighborhood). But we also saw his frustration, because he was still an outsider artist — just much better known — and many of the walls he had done were not necessarily his (or the city’s) to keep. He also had vast ambitions that drove him every morning of every day. He was endlessly artistically hungry for his own work, for work he could do collaboratively. He worked with an amazingly diverse group of artists, would-be artists, and devoted trainees in Philadelphia, and in cities all over the world where he and Julia travelled (and bought things for the shop). He believed — so much he wrote it everywhere, including in gold paint on the front door of his house — that “Art is the Center of the Real World” and “Philadelphia is the Center of the Art World.”

    Isaiah developed a grand idea — which likely started as a delusion, but he was good at making his delusions come to life — that he could turn his studio into a museum. But he didn’t really know how to do it. And in the process of trying to invent this museum, Isaiah apparently became over-involved with one of his volunteers.

    isaiah zagar

    Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Julia Zagar at the In a Dream premiere / Photograph courtesy of Stephen Fried

    We know all this, and so many other things about him, for a very Zagar family reason: Isaiah’s youngest son, Jeremiah, wanted to be a filmmaker, and Julia had also encouraged him to spend more time with his father, to see just how ambitious and challenging his life was. So, for years from high school through his early 20s, Jeremiah filmed his father and his family — at work, at play, and occasionally in love and war. The years of footage was edited into an amazing 2008 documentary, In A Dream, which introduced his father’s art, and his artistic struggles, to a wider international audience, showing at festivals and theaters and later on HBO (and launching Jeremiah’s career). It was also the first time many people in Isaiah’s life learned about his challenges with mental illness — he was hospitalized for bipolar disorder in his 20s after he and Julia returned from Peace Corps service in Peru, suffered periodic bouts of depression, and otherwise almost constant hypomania. (When I asked Julia and Jeremiah if Isaiah ever considered medication to help with any of this, they both pointed out that he would often say “I don’t need drugs, I AM drugs.”)

    Isaiah Zagar

    Isaiah Zagar working in 1981 / Photograph courtesy of Philadelphia’s Magic Gardens

    The film also documented his breakdown in the early 2000s, after the family learned he had developed a relationship with a mural helper, and the process of creating what became the Magic Gardens had gone awry. It’s one of the most powerful and honest pieces of filmmaking — loving and aching and beautiful — you’ll ever see.

    During and after the film, people close to Isaiah realized he needed a different kind of help to continue and preserve his work — and his life. After a separation, he and Julia got back together. A lawyer from local firm Ballard Spahr, Joanne Phillips, helped them work through the complicated issues of Isaiah having created an entire outdoor art exhibit on land he didn’t technically own, but had been taking care of for years. A nonprofit was created so that the growing number of people, from all over the world, who wanted to experience the indoor and outdoor environment Isaiah had curated at 1020 South Street could visit it. (They could occasionally visit with him when he was on-site, but after 2020 allegations that he had been sexually inappropriate, Isaiah always had to be chaperoned by staff.)

    And even as the epic battle to save the Painted Bride was lost, the bigger war to make sure Isaiah’s work would outlive him — which he wanted, so badly — has been won. Not only are the Magic Gardens thriving, but another of his studio and storage spaces, the stunning Magic Gardens Studio at 1002 Watkins, is now available for tours and public programs, as well as the work of cataloguing all of Isaiah’s art, and teaching his techniques.

    The family was even able to make the best of a 2022 fire at Jim’s Steaks that compromised their store, Eye’s Gallery. For ex-hippies, the Zagars were always pretty good with real estate. The insurance settlement for the fire allowed Jim’s to buy out the store and restore all the murals in it — many of Isaiah’s earliest — and now they will be seen by the thousands of people who pour in for cheesesteaks. When your art is so closely tied to a city — Julia and Jeremiah noted that Isaiah and his work was only possible in Philadelphia, outsider art in a city of outsiders — you just never know how people will experience it.

    julia isaiah zagar

    Isaiah and Julia Zagar / Photograph courtesy of Julia Zagar

    The Magic Gardens also has a mission (and they can always use more financial support) to maintain all of Isaiah’s existing walls, no matter who now owns the buildings they are on. I learned the extent of their work in an odd way. In 2003, Diane and I sold the “House of the Two Writers” because the two writers needed more space and moved around the corner. We have watched with interest as several people lived in our house, and were respectful of the mural. But there was always a small crack in the middle of the mural, where the two buildings that comprised our old house were joined. And, eventually, pieces of the mural started falling. It was our good fortune, and Isaiah’s, that the current owner of our old house had an association with the Gardens and they agreed to fix it for free. (In fact, they would have no matter what, that’s what the nonprofit does.) So, not long ago, they researched and then executed the necessary repair work to keep the crack from reopening, and with Isaiah’s direction (he was still working, sometimes just coming to a site and consulting, until days before his death) the wall was fixed, and you would never know it had ever cracked. It was one more Isaiah miracle.

    “House of the Two Writers” repair / Photographs courtesy of Stephen Fried

    The day after Isaiah died, I found myself sitting in the kitchen of the Zagar family house on South Street. The room was crowded with people who loved Isaiah, of all ages, colors and hairstyles — all munching on the perfect food for the occasion, rainbow-colored bagels for the man who saw and created permanent rainbows in so many of our city’s dank alleys and grey walkways.

    Inside Isaiah Zagar’s house after he died / Photograph courtesy of Stephen Fried

    Inside Isaiah Zagar’s house after he died / Photographs courtesy of Stephen Fried

    I didn’t get a chance to say a last goodbye to Isaiah, but I had bumped into him on the street several months before we lost him, and we hugged and reminisced. He asked if I had finished that book yet; he really wanted to read it. His helper — he needed assistance because of Parkinson’s disease — took a cellphone picture of us in which we both look like hell, but we look like ourselves.

    Stephen Fried (left) and Isaiah Zagar / Photograph courtesy of Stephen Fried

    A shot of us I like better was taken months before at his 85th birthday party, which was an amazing event, every person in his life still living was there — like the last big dance scene in O Lucky Man, a cast party for a life well lived, and an artist who got to see his work embraced and honored while he was still alive to appreciate it.

    Isaiah Zagar (left) and Stephen Fried on Zagar’s 85th birthday / Photograph courtesy of Stephen Fried

    Isaiah Zagar

    Isaiah Zagar and his Magic Gardens at his 85th birthday celebration / Photographs courtesy of Stephen Fried

    Contributing editor Stephen Fried is an award-winning journalist and bestselling author who teaches at Penn and Columbia. He thanks poet Daisy Fried (no relation) for digging up her old City Paper story about the mural on his old house.

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    Stephen Fried

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  • Phillies spring training roundup: Opening weekend begins with a bloop and a blast

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    Justin Crawford enjoyed a (Grape)fruitful opener, Kyle Schwarber has already gone yard, and some pitchers stood out for the Phillies over the weekend.

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    Geoff Mosher

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  • Family traps cat-killing mountain lion, but officials let it go: 'Weren't really happy about that'

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    The decision to release the animal surprised and frustrated the family, who had expected it would be relocated far from their rural neighborhood.

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    Tony Shin

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  • The 25 Most Philly Athletes of All Time

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    Who are the most Philly athletes of all time? / Photo-illustration by Neil Jamieson

    On May 20, 1871, the Athletic Base Ball Club of Philadelphia took to the field in front of 2,500 fans for the very first professional sports game ever played in Philadelphia. They lost 1–0; it’s unknown how many fans called WIP after the game to complain.

    Ever since that first game, this city has had a love affair with the pitchers, running backs, middleweights, goalies, point guards, and thoroughbreds who have called Philadelphia their home. We have a parasocial relationship with our athletes, one born of years — decades — of frustration that occasionally combusts into parades down Broad Street.

    But what does it mean to be not just a Philadelphia athlete, but a Philly athlete? There’s no single definition. There’s an underdog aspect to it for sure. Blue-collar. Gritty — the adjective, not the orange blob (though we love them, too). Most Philly athletes aren’t from here but manage to feel of here, pulled to this city as if by fate. They’re not always the biggest names or the brightest stars — though many are — but they’re the names that first come to mind when you think about all those attributes.

    In fact, if you think about it, some of the biggest names in Philly sports history don’t really check those boxes, do they? In the end, we had to settle for the fact that, sometimes, you just get a feeling about someone.

    So here it is: The 25 Most Philly Athletes of All Time. We’re revealing five picks a day, starting at #25 and working our way to the top spot — so settle in and return each day as the countdown builds.

    And stay tuned next week for a few other tidbits honoring the world of sports: the Philly-est moments in history, the off-the-field personalities who have helped fuel our fandom, and the list of the players we fought (and fought and fought) over who didn’t quite make the cut.

    Photograph via Getty Images

    Vince Papale

    Football

    Let’s ignore the pabulum that was Invincible and just focus on the subject. On Vince. Is there anywhere other than Philly in the ‘70s where a teacher with no college football experience could wind up not only playing for the Eagles, but playing 41 games? Where a former high school pole vaulter can step into the league at 30 goddamned years of age and become a captain? The answer, of course, is no. Papale is a cipher through which we can view the whole city. If you understand him, and why he’s so special, you immediately get Philly. If not? Maybe just head back up 95 to New York. — Bradford Pearson

    philly athletes

    Photograph via Getty Images

    Tyrese Maxey

    Basketball

    Is it premature to slot Maxey here? Maybe. But here’s what we know six years into his career: Maxey’s the truth. He’s exactly what Philly yearns for in a franchise player. Overlooked. (He slipped to 21st in the NBA Draft.) A grinder. (How many players can you think of who have gotten better every season they’ve been a pro?) Tough. (As of press time he was averaging a combined 2.9 steals and blocks per game, and could become the first point guard since Gary Payton in 1996–97 to average more than three. Oh and he’s dropping 30 points a game.) Beloved. (Just look at that smile.) Yeah, he’s still pretty young, and yeah, this could all still go sideways. But we bet that when you reread this in 20 years you’ll wonder why he was so low on the list. — B.P.

    philly athletes

    Photograph via Getty Images

    Richie Ashburn

    Baseball

    On July 30, 1995, Ashburn stood at a lectern in Cooperstown, New York, and stared out at the crowd — tens of thousands of people clad in Phillies red, the largest crowd ever to attend a National Baseball Hall of Fame induction. The lightning-fast center fielder and longtime announcer, who’d waited 28 long years for the honor (fans had taken to plastering “Richie Ashburn: Why the hall not?” bumper stickers on their cars), addressed the throng with the self-effacing wit that had endeared him to Philadelphians for nearly five decades: “Well, they didn’t exactly carry me in here in a sedan chair with blazing and blaring trumpets.” Two years later, when Ashburn unexpectedly died of a heart attack, thousands of fans waited hours in the September mugginess to touch his cherry casket and pay their respects; his body lay in state in Fairmount Park’s Memorial Hall, a tribute typically reserved for presidents and senators, but this time paid to the closest version Philly had to that — Richie Ashburn. — B.P.

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    Photograph via Getty Images

    Carli Lloyd

    Soccer

    “I operated like an emotionless machine,” Lloyd said on May 3, 2025, in a speech during her induction into the National Soccer Hall of Fame. “I was intense, and I truly believed that the only way for me to survive in such a cutthroat environment was to be that way.” And this was during an apology, to her teammates, coaches, and all of us, really, for her attitude during her 17-year soccer career. It’s true, the Delran native was all of those things. She also demanded excellence from herself — after every Women’s National Team game, Lloyd would return to the pitch for sprints and push-ups. And when she blasted a hat trick in just 16 minutes during the 2015 World Cup final? When she hoisted that trophy not once but twice? When she scored the gold medal– winning goals in two (two!) Olympics? We all saw the reward. — B.P.

    philly athletes

    Photograph via Getty Images

    Randall “Tex” Cobb

    Boxing

    Whether you knew him as the bouncer at Doc Watson’s Pub, the “Warthog From Hell” in Raising Arizona, or the heavyweight contender with the granite chin, Cobb was a Philly legend. A native Texan, Cobb moved here in 1975 after hearing he could get paid for getting hit in the face. Soon he was the only white boy taking daily punishment at Joe Frazier’s North Philly gym.

    That was Cobb’s great talent: taking a punch. He’d lead with that scarred mug of his until opponents grew tired of hitting it. Though he beat heavyweights like Earnie Shavers and Leon Spinks, he is best remembered for losing 15 of 15 rounds in a 1981 title loss to Larry Holmes. The beating was so brutal it drove Howard Cosell to quit announcing the sport. “Unless I cure cancer,” Cobb quipped, “retiring Howard will be my gift to mankind.”

    His toughness extended beyond the ring to Philly’s most infamous street brawl. In Grays Ferry, Cobb — a karate black belt — defended Daily News columnist Pete Dexter against a mob of some 30 men armed with bats and tire irons. Later, when friends funded his religious studies at Temple University, the fighter and sometime movie actor remained unsentimental and witty: “Listen, sunshine, you’d be looking for God too if you’d spent 50 years getting hit in the mouth.” — Larry Platt

    The list only gets tougher from here — so check back tomorrow for the next five.

    Published as “The 25 Most Philly Athletes of All Time” in the March 2026 issue of Philadelphia magazine.

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    Bradford Pearson

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  • Trees fall from weight of heavy snow, high winds in Philadelphia’s Rittenhouse neighborhood

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    Action News reporter Cheyenne Corin reports from Philadelphia’s Rittenhouse Square, where trees fell into the roadway under the weight of heavy snow.

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    WPVI

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  • U.K.’s ex-ambassador to the U.S. arrested after Epstein files release

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    British police have arrested the country’s former ambassador to the United States following weeks of revelations over his relationship with the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

    Peter Mandelson was detained amid an intensifying scandal after the Justice Department released millions of Epstein-related documents, some of which appear to show him leaking sensitive political and market information to the financier.

    Video on Sky News showed Mandelson being led from his home in north London wearing a gray sweater and black coat.

    London’s Metropolitan Police said in a news release that it was an update on an investigation into misconduct in public office offenses “relating to a former government minister.”

    “Officers have arrested a 72-year-old man on suspicion of misconduct in public office,” the force said in a statement, adding that he had been taken to be interviewed at a London police station. The statement did not name Mandelson, as is standard practice under British law.

    “This follows search warrants at two addresses in the Wiltshire and Camden areas,” it said, referring to a county around 100 miles to the west of London and an area in the north of the United Kingdom’s capital.

    Mandelson has denied any wrongdoing related to Epstein.

    As part of the Epstein files, emails from 2009 appear to show him passing on an assessment of potential policy measures. He also appeared to discuss a planned tax on bankers’ bonuses and confirm an imminent bailout package for the euro before it was announced.

    On Feb. 6, police searched two properties linked to Mandelson, who served as Britain’s ambassador to the U.S. between February and September 2025. Days earlier, the longtime political grandee who had a reputation as a ruthless political fixer, had stepped down as a member of the House of Lords.

    The Justice Department’s release of files relating to its investigation into Epstein have shaken the upper echelons of power across the globe, with high-profile figures being fired and resigning, and a number of active criminal investigations launched overseas.

    Mandelson’s arrest comes less than a week after the former Prince Andrew was arrested on the same offense. The royal was later released “under investigation,” meaning he was neither charged nor exonerated.

    Stripped of his royal titles and now known as Andrew Mountbatten Windsor, he was later pictured as he was driven away from Aylsham Police Station in Norfolk, roughly 50 miles from the Sandringham estate where he lives.

    Mountbatten-Windsor, who turned 66 on Thursday, the day of his arrest, has always denied any wrongdoing in connection with Epstein.

    Mandelson began working for Britain’s Labour Party in the 1980s and rose to become a major figure, playing a key role in Tony Blair’s landslide election victory in 1997.

    He was forced to resign from Blair’s Cabinet twice, first over an undeclared bank loan and then after he intervened in a passport application by a foreign businessman.

    Mandelson was later made business secretary by Blair’s successor Gordon Brown, who would go on to appoint him to the House of Lords in 2008.

    It was known that he had a friendship with Epstein prior to the U.S. ambassadorial appointment by the current prime minister. Keir Starmer.

    After Mandelson was accused of passing sensitive information to the disgraced financier, the scandal ramped up the pressure on Starmer’s government, already weakened by record-low approval ratings, policy U-turns and cost-of-living pressures.

    Earlier this month, Starmer said Mandelson had “lied repeatedly” about the extent of his past contact with Epstein.

    An earlier release of some of the Epstein files showed Mandelson called Epstein “my best pal” in a 2003 birthday book.

    They also appear to show that the well-connected financier gave $75,000 in three payments to accounts linked to Mandelson or his then-partner in 2003 and 2004. Mandelson previously told the BBC that he had no record or recollection of receiving the sums and did not know whether the documents were authentic.

    The files also appear to confirm their friendship remained intact after Epstein pled guilty in June 2008 to charges of solicitation of prostitution and of solicitation of prostitution with a minor under the age of 18 — and was sentenced to 18 months in a minimum-security facility.

    Mandelson’s arrest is not related to these charges or any other sex offenses.

    The list of powerful people caught up in the widening Epstein files drama includes Thorbjørn Jagland, who was prime minister of Norway and went on to head the Nobel Committee and the Council of Europe; Tom Pritzker, executive chairman of Hyatt Hotels Corp., and former White House counsel in the Obama administration Kathy Ruemmler, among others.

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    Henry Austin and Camille Behnke | NBC News

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  • Charles Barkley’s Philadelphia Black History Month All-Stars: Part 4

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    News

    A closer look at Black Philadelphians whose ideas, work, and courage left a lasting mark on our city


    Philadelphia’s Black history is vast, visionary … and too often reduced to a handful of familiar names. So, a few years ago, The Philadelphia Citizen asked none other than Charles Barkley to help widen that lens: to spotlight Philadelphians whose influence reshaped science, culture, politics, and more, even if their names never made the textbooks.

    See past installments:

    This month, we’ve be shared a group of Barkley’s “Philadelphia Black History Month All-Stars” each week. Consider it a reminder, maybe — and an invitation — to keep expanding the story of who shaped this city.


    Dr. Walter P. Lomax Jr.

    Physician
    July 31, 1932 – October 10, 2013

    Walter Lomax opened his first South Philly medical practice in 1958, where 10 years later he treated Martin Luther King Jr. for a respiratory infection.

    He expanded to six health clinics, with over 20 doctors, and Correctional Healthcare Solutions, which sent doctors to 70 prisons in 10 states.

    He also founded Lomax Companies, an umbrella for several businesses, including radio station WURD. He contributed to various African and African American causes, both personally and through his Lomax Family Foundation.

    In 1994, he bought the plantation in Virginia where his great-grandmother and hundreds of others had been enslaved — what Michael Coard in Philly Mag rightly described as an “expression of real Black power.”

    As part of WURD’s Founders Day in 2022, the city of Philadelphia renamed the 1800 block on Wharton Street “Walter P. Lomax, Jr., M.D. Way,” on the site of the first medical center he opened.


    Cecil B. Moore

    Civil Rights Activist
    April 2, 1915 – February 13, 1979

    I said to hell with the club, let’s fight the damn system. I don’t want no more than the white man got, but I won’t take no less”

    An activist, lawyer, councilmember and sergeant, Moore lived a never-ending fight — one often for social justice and civil rights. “After nine years in the Marine Corps, I don’t intend to take another order from any son of a bitch that walks,” he once said. And that he didn’t.

    Most famously, he led a group of protesters at Girard College in 1965 to push for the school’s integration.

    In May of 1963, Moore organized a several weeklong picket line at the Municipal Services Building to fight for desegregated trade unions. Soon after, he picketed against the Trailways Bus Terminal, demanding that they hire Black workers.

    Meanwhile, he advocated for more civic engagement from African Americans and held his own voter-registration drives. Though sometimes controversial for his unrelenting style, Moore was a force for change in civil society.


    Nathan Francis Mossell

    Physician
    July 27, 1856 – October 27, 1946

    One may wonder how a physician can find so much time to champion the cause of his people. I have been no less spared from the indignities of segregation and discrimination than the non-professional colored person. In waging a fight to help free others from the infringements of Jim Crowism, I also help free myself.”

    Nathan Francis Mossell was a pioneer physician who established the first Black private hospital in Philadelphia, the Frederick Douglass Memorial Hospital and Training School, that both treated African Americans and trained Black nurses and doctors.

    Uncle to Sadie Mossell Alexander, he was the first African American to graduate from the University of Pennsylvania medical school, and the first to join the Philadelphia County Medical Society.

    Mossell was also an activist, founding the Philadelphia chapter of the NAACP, and joining W.E.B. DuBois’ Niagara Movement.


    Leon Sullivan

    Civil Rights Leader
    October 16, 1922- April 24, 2001

    It is not un-American to take a stand against what we believe to be wrong, for America was born of struggle and nurtured on protest and demonstrations.”

    Rev. Leon Sullivan — the “lion of Zion” — used his pulpit and his position as longtime pastor of North Philly’s Zion Baptist Church to organize for local African American causes, particularly in employment.

    From 1959 to 1963, he led area Black preachers in organizing “selective patronage” boycotts of local companies — Tasty Baking, Sun Oil, Gulf — deemed to discriminate against African Americans in their hiring, urging Black consumers with the slogan “Don’t buy where you don’t work.” The movement opened up several thousand jobs to Black workers and drew national attention, including that of Martin Luther King Jr, who adopted Sullivan’s techniques in his Operation Breadbasket.

    In 1964, Sullivan opened the first Opportunity Industrial Center, a job-service training program to teach manufacturing skills to Black Philadelphians. Sullivan led Zion for 40 years, growing it from 600 congregants to 6,000, and turning it into a community hub.

    Throughout, he also spent time in South Africa helping to fight and dismantle apartheid and creating a set of rules — now dubbed the ‘Sullivan Principles’ — that serve as guidelines for American corporations doing business in South Africa.


    Henry Ossawa Tanner

    Painter
    June 21, 1859 – May 25, 1937

    I will preach with my brush.”

    Henry Ossawa Tanner was the first African American artist to gain recognition on the world stage.

    Noted for his depiction of landscapes and biblical themes, Tanner’s work caught the eye of many, including Thomas Eakins, another famous 19th-century painter from Philadelphia.

    Oddly, Tanner thanked his poor health early in his life for giving him the time to hone his artistic skills. He trained at the renowned Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts and Robert Vaux School before moving to Paris and settling there.

    Nicodemus Visiting Jesus is believed to be his most famous work.


    Clara Ward

    Gospel singer / songwriter
    April 21, 1924 – January 16, 1973

    I know the Lord. And I never have a lonely moment. I really kind of think, as far as my personal life is concerned, I got it made.”

    Considered one of the greatest soloists in gospel history, Clara Ward and her Famous Ward Singers — a group started by her mother, Gertrude — toured their signature rollicking gospel sound around the country, in churches, arenas and even, quite controversially, nightclubs. Ward became the group’s musical arranger at the height of their success, including when they toured with the Rev. C.L. Franklin, whose daughter — Aretha — considered Ward a mentor.

    Ward, who went on to lead the Clara Ward Singers, featured in the Hollywood movie A Time to Sing, with Hank Williams Jr., and was inducted posthumously into the Songwriters Hall of Fame.


    Ora Mae Washington

    Athlete
    January 23, 1899 – December 21, 1971

    It’s the struggle to be one that counts. Once you’ve arrived, everybody wants to take it away from you.”

    Ora Mae Washington started playing tennis at the Germantown YMCA and went on to become the first African American athlete to dominate not one, but two sports — both of which were segregated at the time.

    Washington won her first national tennis championship just a year after picking up a racket. Then she found a calling on another kind of court: basketball.

    She earned a spot on the Philadelphia Tribunes, one of the most dominant women’s basketball teams in history, in 1932. She helped them win 10 straight Women’s Colored Basketball World Championships.

    Through all of the glass ceilings she shattered as a female African American athlete, she still had to work as a domestic worker cleaning homes to support herself after her athletics career ended.

    She was inducted into the Black Athletes Hall of Fame in 1976, into Temple University’s Sports Hall of Fame in 1986, and in 2009 she was elected to the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame.

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    Laura Swartz

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  • Amid a rise in antisemitism, Josh Shapiro turns toward his Jewish faith

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    Thousands of teenagers from more than a dozen countries, many standing on their chairs in a cavernous convention hall, screamed and cheered as Josh Shapiro took the stage.

    Pennsylvania’s Democratic governor still may be unknown among many Americans outside his home state, but here at BBYO, the world’s largest conference of young Jewish leaders, Shapiro is a rock star.

    “We’re facing some challenges out there,” he said. He didn’t mention the arson attack his family escaped in the middle of the night last year, or the antisemitism that he says he faces regularly.

    “And this is a moment,” he went on as the crowd waved Israeli flags, “where I lean on my faith. I am proud of my faith.”

    Shapiro may be the nation’s most prominent Jewish politician as antisemitism surges across America, and he’s made his religion central to his political identity — what he calls living his faith “out loud.” At this pivotal moment, as he marches toward a dominant reelection this fall that is expected to propel him into the next presidential campaign, the 52-year-old governor is attempting to straddle an almost impossible chasm as both a Jewish progressive and a Zionist.

    Perhaps more than any other issue, Shapiro’s ability to navigate personal and political risks related to his faith will ultimately determine how far he can rise in an evolving Democratic Party.

    He is already among his party’s top White House prospects, powered by a broad political coalition he’s assembled in one of the nation’s most important swing states. He’s also one of the leaders most vilified by progressive activists, largely because of his staunch support for Israel.

    Leaning on his faith

    Shapiro has defended Israel’s right to defend itself after Hamas’ attack on Oct. 7, 2023, while also voicing concern for Palestinian civilians and criticizing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as a “dangerous and destructive force.” At home, the governor was critical of pro-Palestinian campus protests that he said were hostile toward Jewish students.

    His positioning did not sit well among some critics, who still refer to him as “Genocide Josh.” Tensions were reopened with Shapiro’s recent book, in which he recalled a senior aide to Kamala Harris asking if Shapiro had ever been an agent of the Israeli government while he was being vetted as a potential vice president.

    There’s never been a Jewish president or vice president, and few leading Democrats lean into their faith as openly as Shapiro. He observes Shabbat every Friday night with his family. He keeps Kosher. His kids go to Jewish day school. And on the campaign trail, he speaks openly about his spiritual values and quotes the Bible at virtually every stop.

    Shapiro’s allies acknowledge the risks, but they ultimately believe his faith will help him connect with more Americans as he takes the next step in his political career.

    “He is intentionally choosing to go a different route and to be a different person, and it’s authentic to who he is and also what he believes,” said Baptist Pastor Marshall Mitchell, a close friend and spiritual adviser to Shapiro. “Great elected officials, great Americans, great thinkers, never discount the influence and impact of faith.”

    ‘A very real problem’ with antisemitism

    Shapiro said in an interview with The Associated Press that antisemitism is “a very real problem” among both Democrats and Republicans.

    “I think anyone who’s trying to lead this country, anyone who’s trying to lead a state, lead a community, has a responsibility to call it out no matter which side of the aisle it’s on,” he said.

    The governor said he and his family face new incidents of antisemitism on a regular basis, citing most recently the February arrest of a man near Harrisburg charged with making terroristic threats and stalking.

    Anti-Defamation League leader Jonathan Greenblatt, a Shapiro ally, said he’s currently seeing the highest levels of antisemitic hate crimes and harassment nationwide since his organization began tracking such data more than a half century ago.

    Greenblatt criticized extremists and leaders from both political parties, but he was quick to praise President Donald Trump for opposing anti-Israel protests on college campuses, even if the president’s approach was “heavy handed.”

    “I think we need to recognize that on the far left, in progressive circles, being anti-Zionist has become very permissible,” Greenblatt said.

    Zionism is the belief that the Jewish people have a right to establish a Jewish nation-state in their ancestral homeland in the Middle East.

    Divisions over war in Gaza

    Hamas’ attack on Israel and Israel’s subsequent war in Gaza became a dividing line in American politics as Shapiro’s clout was rising.

    As protests against Israel spread, Shapiro said universities should not tolerate antisemitic intimidation any more than they would allow white supremacy, a comparison that inflamed critics on the left.

    “Gov. Shapiro has a damning history regarding U.S. policy toward Israel, including his failure to call for an end to U.S. complicity in the Israeli genocide in Gaza, and his smearing and attacks against those speaking out for Palestinian rights,” said Beth Miller, the political director for the anti-Zionist group Jewish Voice for Peace Action.

    Shapiro’s leadership, Miller said, “is sharply out of line with his constituency — including American Jews.”

    Polling shows that views on Israel are complex. About six in 10 American Jews said Israel has committed war crimes against Palestinians in Gaza, according to a Washington Post survey conducted in September. About four in 10 described Israel’s actions as genocide.

    However, about three-quarters said Israel’s existence is vital for the long-term future of the Jewish people.

    In his new book “Where We Keep the Light,” which was released last month, Shapiro opened up about the vetting process as Harris considered the governor as her running mate two years ago.

    He wrote that one of Harris’ advisers asked, “Have you ever been an agent of the Israeli government?”

    “Had I been a double agent for Israel? Was she kidding? I told her how offensive the question was,” Shapiro wrote. He added that the episode “said a lot about some of the people around the VP.”

    In his interview with the AP, Shapiro declined to expand on what the question said about Harris’ team, and he declined to say whether it was an example of antisemitism.

    He said “we should all be able to agree that antisemitism is wrong” while having “honest disagreements” about U.S. foreign policy.

    “When I analyze Middle East policy, I’m focused on what is in the best interest of the United States of America, what advances our national security, what advances our economic interests, what creates more stability in the globe,” he said. “And in my opinion, that’s having a safe and secure Israel, side by side with a safe and secure Palestinian state, where Palestinian leadership recognizes Israel’s right to exist, and where kids growing up on both sides of the border have an opportunity to grow up with promise and prosperity in their future.”

    An attack while they slept

    Shapiro, his children and some extended family were sleeping inside the Pennsylvania governor’s mansion after celebrating Passover on April 13, 2025, when a stranger broke into the house and exploded multiple Molotov cocktails.

    Cody Allen Balmer, 38, then called 911 and denounced what Shapiro “wants to do to the Palestinian people.” He later told police he would have beaten the governor with a hammer if he had found him.

    Balmer pleaded guilty to attempted murder, terrorism and 22 counts of arson, among other charges.

    Shapiro said the incident still haunts him today.

    “I’m one of the fortunate ones in that I wasn’t killed the way Melissa Hortman was or Charlie Kirk was. I wasn’t injured the way Gabby Giffords or Steve Scalise were physically,” he told AP, referring to Democratic and Republican leaders who suffered political attacks. “But I think we also walk around with the emotional scars of it.”

    Shapiro said he struggles with the idea that “this work that I love” has also “brought my family close to death.”

    “That’s a hard thing to work through as a as a dad,” he added. “I’m still working through it candidly.”

    Rev. Jerome Fordham, who leads the Pennsylvania chapter of the National Action Network, said Shapiro’s challenges have allowed him to relate to people on a deeper level.

    “He’s doing a fantastic job despite the fact that they tried to kill him and his family,” said Fordham, who was in the audience at a recent NAACP gala where Shapiro spoke. ”As a Jew, he can connect with everybody. He understands struggle, just as the Black community understands struggle.”

    Shapiro told the AP that he would not back away from his faith.

    “I refuse to live in fear, I refuse to back down,” Shapiro said. “Even though the threats are increasing, the light I see and the joy I find in others is also increasing. And that allows me to frankly ignore the noise and ignore the hate and focus on the goodness in people.”

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    Steve Peoples | The Associated Press

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  • Latest snow totals as winter storm slams Philadelphia region

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    Monday, February 23, 2026 5:06AM

    6abc Philadelphia 24/7 Live Stream

    PHILADELPHIA (WPVI) — The snow is starting to pile up across the region.

    Here’s the latest snowfall reports as of 11:30 p.m. Sunday from the National Weather Service:

    DELAWARE

    Dover – 6 inches (9:55 p.m.)
    Harrington – 5 inches (7:09 p.m.)
    Hockessin – 7 inches (9:30 p.m.)

    NEW JERSEY

    Ashland – 5 inches (7:50 p.m.)
    Atlantic City – 6 inches ( 9 p.m.)
    Blackwood – 9 inches ( 9:49 p.m.)
    Brigantine – 7.5 inches (7:04 p.m.)
    Buena Vista Twp. – 3 inches (6:20 p.m.)
    Camden – 2.8 inches (6:57 p.m.)
    Cherry Hill – 10 inches (11:30 p.m.)
    Collingswood – 7 inches (9:09 p.m.)
    Ewing – 4 inches (7:40 p.m.)
    Haddonfield – 5 inches
    Hainesport – 9 inches (8:05 p.m.)
    Lumberton – 7.5 inches (9:41 p.m.)
    Mount Holly – 9.5 inches (11:30 p.m.)
    Pennsville – 4 inches (8:24 p.m.)
    Toms River – 3 inches (7 p.m.)
    Ventnor – 7.6 inches (9:33 p.m.)
    Williamstown – 3.5 inches (7:56 p.m.)

    PENNSYLVANIA

    Berwyn – 6.5 inches (9:15 p.m.)
    Bryn Mawr – 5 inches (9:45 p.m.)
    Bustleton – 5 inches (9:48 p.m.)
    East Coventry Township – 4 inches (9:36 p.m.)
    East Norriton – 4.5 inches (8:34 p.m.)
    Exton 4.4 inches (8:21 p.m.)
    Jennersville – 5.1 inches (9:13 p.m.)
    Mount Pocono – 3.3 inches (7 p.m.)
    New Hanover Twp. – 4 inches (7:50 p.m.)
    Skippack – 6.5 inches (11:30 p.m.)
    Thornton – 4.4 inches (8:19 p.m.)
    Trumbauersville – 4 inches (8 p.m.)
    Whitehall Twp. – 3.8 inches (8:27 p.m.)

    Get live updates on the winter storm here.

    Copyright © 2026 WPVI-TV. All Rights Reserved.

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    6abc Digital Staff

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  • Tracking snowfall in the region for February 2026 snowstorm

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    (WPHL) — Sunday’s winter storm is beginning to bring heavy snowfall across the tri-state area. Here are the latest snowfall totals from the National Weather Service, as of 10:01 p.m. Sunday: Jump to section: Pennsylvania Berks County Bucks County Chester County Delaware County Lehigh County Montgomery County Northampton County Philadelphia County New Jersey Atlantic County […]

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    Sean Reitze

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  • Instant observations: Sixers finally find flow, snap losing streak with emphatic win over Timberwolves

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    After their worst loss of the season, the Sixers went wire to wire as the better team in Minneapolis on Sunday night. Their dynamic backcourt dominated to stop the bleeding without Joel Embiid.

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    Adam Aaronson

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  • Vehicle restrictions in effect on Pa. and NJ highways due to winter storm

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    PHILADELPHIA (WPVI) — Local officials put vehicle restrictions into place on Sunday as a major nor’easter is set to bring high winds and heavy snow to the area.

    PENNSYLVANIA:

    Officials from PennDOT and the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission implemented vehicle restrictions in anticipation of a winter storm that could bring up to a foot of snow to parts of the state.

    The Tier 1 restrictions went into effect at 3 p.m. Sunday for the Turnpike and the following highways:

    -I-76 entire length.

    -I-78 entire length.

    -I-80 from I-81 to New Jersey.

    -I-81 entire length.

    -I-83 entire length.

    -I-84 entire length.

    -I-95 entire length.

    -I-283 entire length.

    -I-295 entire length.

    -I-380 entire length.

    -I-476 entire length.

    -I-676 entire length.

    -Route 33 entire length.

    -U.S. 22 from I-78 to New Jersey.

    -PA Turnpike I-76 from Carlisle (Exit 226) to PA Turnpike I-276.

    -PA Turnpike I-276 entire length.

    -PA Turnpike Northeast Extension I-476 entire length

    UnderTier 1 restrictions, the following vehicles arenot permittedon affected roadways:

    -Tractors without trailers.

    -Tractors towing unloaded or lightly loaded enclosed trailers, open trailers or tank trailers.

    -Tractors towing unloaded or lightly loaded tandem trailers.

    -Enclosed unloaded or lightly loaded cargo delivery trucks/box trucks that meet the definition of a CMV.

    -Passenger vehicles (cars, SUV’s, pickup trucks, etc.) towing trailers.

    -Recreational vehicles/motorhomes.

    -School buses, commercial buses and motor coaches.

    -Motorcycles.

    Speed limits may be restricted to 45 mph on these roadways for all vehicles while the vehicle restrictions are in place, and commercial vehicles not affected by the restrictions must move to the right lane, state officials said.

    Additional speed restrictions on other interstates could be added depending on changing conditions.

    At 6 p.m., the following vehicle restrictions are planned to go into effect in accordance with Tier 4 of the commonwealth’s weather event vehicle restriction plan.
    -I-76 (Schuylkill Expressway section) entire length.
    -I-78 entire length.
    -I-80 from I-81 to New Jersey.
    -I-84 entire length.
    -I-95 entire length.
    -I-295 entire length.
    -I-380 entire length.
    -I-476 entire length.
    -I-676 entire length.
    -Route 33 entire length.
    -U.S. 22 from I-78 to New Jersey.
    -PA Turnpike I-95 entire length
    -PA Turnpike I-276 entire length.
    -PA Turnpike Northeast Extension I-476 entire length.

    On roadways with Tier 4 restrictions in place, no commercial vehicles are permitted. All school buses, commercial buses, motor coaches, motorcycles, RVs/motorhomes and passenger vehicles (cars, SUVs, pickup trucks, etc.) towing trailers are also not permitted on affected roadways while restrictions are in place.

    The following roads will be under Tier 1 restrictions starting at 6 p.m.:
    -I-81 entire length.
    -I-83 entire length.
    -I-283 entire length.
    -I-99 entire length.
    -PA Turnpike I-76 from Carlisle (Exit 226) to PA Turnpike I-276.

    NEW JERSEY

    The New Jersey Department of Transportation has temporarily lowered all posted speed limits to 35 miles per hour on Interstate and State highways in New Jersey.

    The speed limit reduction applies to all Interstate highways in New Jersey, all U.S. and State highways in New Jersey, the New Jersey Turnpike, the Garden State Parkway and the Atlantic City Expressway

    Commercial vehicle restrictions also went into effect at 3 p.m. Sunday.

    The restriction will be in place until further notice for the following highways in both directions:

    -I-76 (entire length)

    -I-78 (entire length)

    -I-80 (entire length)

    -I-195 (entire length)

    -I-280 (entire length)

    -I-287 (entire length)

    -I-295 (entire length)

    -I-676 (entire length)

    -NJ Route 440 (both directions from the Outerbridge Crossing to I-287)

    The commercial vehicle travel restriction applies to:

    -All tractor trailers (exceptions as listed in the Administrative Order)

    -Empty straight CDL-weighted trucks

    -Passenger vehicles pulling trailers

    -Recreational vehicles

    -Motorcycles

    Copyright © 2026 WPVI-TV. All Rights Reserved.

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  • Truck crashes on AC Expressway during Sunday blizzard

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    A tractor trailer crashed on the highway at the Jersey Shore on Sunday evening.

    Léelo en español aquí

    NBC10’s Ted Greenberg was there when he saw that a tractor trailer appeared to have crashed into a guardrail along the Atlantic City Expressway on Feb. 22.

    NBC10 Philadelphia

    NBC10 Philadelphia

    The crash happened some time after 8:30 p.m. on the eastbound side of the roadway just east of exit two in Atlantic City.

    No word yet on if anyone was hurt or if any other vehicles were involved in this crash.

    This crash comes after New Jersey issued a mandatory travel restriction that lasts until 7 a.m. on Monday, Feb. 23.

    For the latest on Sunday’s blizzard, click here.

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    Emily Rose Grassi

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  • Mexican army kills leader of powerful Jalisco New Generation Cartel during operation to capture him

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    The Mexican army killed the leader of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, Nemesio Rubén Oseguera Cervantes, “El Mencho, ” on Sunday.

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  • Joel Embiid out for Sixers-Timberwolves on Sunday

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    Joel Embiid has missed four consecutive games, and the Sixers are 0-4 in those contests.

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    Adam Aaronson

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  • Phillies have 16 players playing in World Baseball Classic, is that good or bad?

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    Spring training will be a little different this year. The Phillies have a remarkable 16 players appearing in the World Baseball Classic, with 10 of them are likely to be on the team’s 26-man roster.

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    Evan Macy

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  • TSA says PreCheck still operational after previous announcement of suspension during funding fight

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    “As staffing constraints arise, TSA will evaluate on a case by case basis and adjust operations accordingly,” the agency said.

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    The Associated Press

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  • Man accused of fatally shooting his wife while she was driving in Montgomery County

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    Sunday, February 22, 2026 3:42PM

    Man accused of fatally shooting his wife while she was driving in Montgomery County

    ROCKLEDGE, Pa. (WPVI) — A man is in custody after allegedly shooting and killing his wife while she was driving in Montgomery County.

    It happened along the 200 block of Huntingdon Pike in Rockledge around 10 p.m. Saturday.

    According to investigators, the 48-year-old woman was behind the wheel of the SUV when the passenger, who was identified as her husband, opened fire.

    He got out of the vehicle and ran.

    Police arrested him a block away behind a 7-Eleven.

    The identity of the suspect has not yet been released.

    A motive for the shooting is still unclear.

    Copyright © 2026 WPVI-TV. All Rights Reserved.

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    6abc Digital Staff

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  • Pa. Gov. Shapiro signs declaration of emergency ahead of Sunday’s winter storm

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    Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro joined state officials on Sunday to discuss the state’s preparation efforts ahead of a major winter storm that is set to hit the region on Sunday afternoon.

    And, he announced that he has signed a declaration of emergency to help state agencies respond to the coming winter weather.

    In a statement, Shapiro’s office said that officials wanted to provide an update on preparations across the state as a “significant” winter storm is expected to move across the region from Sunday afternoon through Monday.

    Shapiro, his office said, wanted to use the event to “outline the state’s ongoing preparedness efforts, including coordination between the Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency, Pennsylvania Department of Transportation, Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission, Pennsylvania State Police, Pennsylvania National Guard, and county emergency management teams to ensure resources are in place and ready to respond.”

    For more details on Sunday’s major winter storm, follow the liveblog, here.

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    Hayden Mitman

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