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  • There are many ways to celebrate the new year in Philly, from the Parkway fireworks show to the Mummers Parade

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    Philadelphia is ready for a big 2026 and it plans to start the new year off with a bang — literally. 

    Three firework shows, including one capping a free concert by LL Cool J on the Benjamin Franklin Parkway, are scheduled for Wednesday night. New Year’s Day brings the 125th annual Mummers Parade. 


    MORELooking back at 2025: Philly said bon voyage to the SS United States


    To accommodate the New Year’s revelers, SEPTA plans to operate additional late-night service on its subway and Regional Rail lines. But there’s no need to wait until midnight to celebrate. For people who prefer to be asleep when 2026 begins, there are plenty of afternoon and evening parties taking place. 

    Here is a guide to the biggest celebrations this week, including the best viewing spots. 

    New Year’s Eve Concert 

    LL Cool JPeter Yang/City of Philadelphia

    LL Cool J will play a free New Year’s Eve concert at Eakins Oval on Dec. 31.

    Rapper LL Cool J is headlining a New Year’s Eve show on the Benjamin Franklin Parkway that also includes performances from DJ Jazzy Jeff, Adam Blackstone, Dorothy and Technician The DJ. Eakins Oval opens at 6 p.m., with the concert starting at 8 p.m. A fireworks show follows the concert’s conclusion at midnight. 

    The Parkway and nearby roads will be closed before and during the event. Concertgoers must pass through metal detectors. Sanitation trucks will block roads near the Parkway, and police will use drones, helicopters and a marine unit to ensure safety.

    Looking to avoid the crowds on the Parkway? Here are some other recommended viewing spots to check out the fireworks. 

    • Paine’s Park, along the Schuylkill River Trail
    • Sister Cities Park, 210 N. 18th St.
    • Belmont Plateau, 1800 Belmont Mansion Dr.
    • Lemon Hill Mansion, 1 Lemon Hill Dr.
    • Along the Schuylkill Banks 
    • Girard Avenue Bridge, 123 W. Girard Ave.
    • Drexel Park, 3100 Powelton Ave. 

    Delaware Riverfront Events 

    Delaware Riverfront FireworksDelaware Riverfront FireworksJ. Fusco/Visit Philadelphia

    The Delaware Riverfront will expand its New Year’s Eve fireworks show to ring in 2026.

    Two fireworks shows take place along the Delaware River on New Year’s Eve. The first begins at 6 p.m. and the latter rings in the new year at midnight. 

    The fireworks will be shot off from three vessels positioned from Port Richmond to Pennsport, and can be viewed from various spots along the Delaware Riverfront. 

    The New Year’s Eve party at Independence Blue Cross RiverRink Winterfest offers the opportunity to see the fireworks while ice skating, dancing, riding the ferris wheel or enjoying festive food and drinks. Two ticketed time slots are available. The first runs from 5-8 p.m. The latter goes from 10 p.m. to 1 a.m.

    At Cherry Street Pier, the National Liberty Museum will ring its replica Liberty Bell to mark the new year at a ticketed party that includes music, food and drinks. The party is open to people 21 and older. 

    NBC10 and Telemundo 62 will broadcast the 6 p.m. fireworks show. KYW Newsradio will simulcast the sounds from each show on 1060 AM and 103.9 FM. 

    Afternoon New Year’s Celebrations

    Several family-friendly celebrations taking place Wednesday afternoon are geared toward children who will be asleep when the clock strikes midnight and for adults who desire a well-rested New Year’s Day. 

    Cherry Street Pier is hosting a Kids Countdown with PopUpPlay from 5-7 p.m. It includes views of the 6 p.m. fireworks show, crafts, music, activities and a balloon drop to conclude the party. Tickets can be purchased online.

    Smith Memorial Playground & Playhouse is hosting a free Noon Year’s Eve event from 10 a.m. until noon. It includes games, activities, snacks, giveaways, a kid-friendly D and a countdown to noon. 

    Franklin Square Park has a free Kids New Year’s Eve celebration that includes a “square drop” countdown. There will be crafts from 5-6 p.m., in addition to mini golf, food and drinks. The Delaware Riverfront’s 6 p.m. fireworks show can be seen from the square. Franklin Square closes at 8 p.m. 

    Mummers Parade

    Mummers ParadeMummers ParadeColleen Claggett/For PhillyVoice

    The 125th annual Mummers Parade will kick off New Year’s Day 2026 at City Hall starting at 9 a.m.

    The Mummers Parade, recently named the best holiday parade in the country, takes place Thursday on South Broad Street. 

    From 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., the Mummers’ four divisions — fancies, comics, wenches and string bands — will march 1 1/2 miles from City Hall to Broad Street and Washington Avenue. Spectators can catch performances at three intersections along Broad Street — Sansom, Pine and Carpenter streets. 

    The string bands will perform at a special viewing area at 17th and Market streets before making their way to City Hall. They will begin setting up at 11 a.m. on Market Street between 17th and 21st streets, and on John F. Kennedy Boulevard between 17th and 20th streets.

    Reserved bleacher seating is set up at City Hall, where the judges are stationed, but tickets are sold out. The 28th annual Fancy Brigade Finale — a pair of performances at the Pennsylvania Convention Center — also is sold out.

    Various road closures and parking restrictions will begin taking effect on New Year’s Eve and continue until the parade concludes. 

    The parade is being broadcast on WDPN-TV (MeTV2) and simulcast on WFMZ-TV Channel 69.

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    Molly McVety

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  • Philly is planning an expanded ‘Rocky’ festival to drive global tourism

    Philly is planning an expanded ‘Rocky’ festival to drive global tourism

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    Devoted fans of the “Rocky” franchise stunned Philadelphia planners in December when the city held its first Rocky Day outside the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

    Sylvester Stallone, the writer and star of the classic films, was greeted by.thousands of people – including some from distant countries – who had come to celebrate boxing’s greatest fictional hero. They took pictures in front of the Rocky statue at the foot of the museum’s iconic steps and bought merchandise from the new Rocky Shop, a shipping container adjoined to the nearby visitor center.

    The success of Rocky Day so far exceeded the city’s expectations that there are now plans taking shape for a larger Rocky festival later this year, one that likely will become an annual tradition.

    “It was bonkers,” said Kathryn Ott Lovell, president and CEO of the Philadelphia Visitors Center Corp., the nonprofit that markets the city and connects tourists with local experiences.

    The Dec. 3 event — held on the 47th anniversary of the original film’s release — wasn’t expected to be much more than a press conference and a ribbon-cutting for the Rocky Shop. Even factoring in the appearance from Stallone, who had also visited in 2018 to promote “Creed II,” Ott Lovell and her colleagues think they downplayed the potential for “Rocky” to generate more tourism in Philly. There was a downpour on Rocky Day, but that didn’t stop people from showing up.

    “I think ‘Rocky’ has always been sort of a marketing gimmick for us in the tourism industry,” Ott Lovell said. “It’s like cheesesteaks and Ben Franklin, but I think Rocky Day helped demonstrate that ‘Rocky’ is actually a draw for tourism. People are coming to the city to have a ‘Rocky’ experience.”

    The story of Rocky Balboa is generally beloved in Philly — it encapsulates the city’s underdog ethos — but the lore attached to the film’s backdrop isn’t necessarily enthralling to the average resident. The bronze Rocky statue, made as a prop that first appeared in “Rocky III,” even generated some controversy over where it should be kept when the city accepted it as a gift from Stallone. It spent some time outside the former Spectrum in South Philly before it was permanently placed outside the art museum in 2006.

    Since then, the statue has been a year-round magnet for tourists. Its pop culture appeal contrasts somewhat oddly with the more elevated art museum, whose leaders have only recently warmed to leveraging Rocky’s mystique as a way to increase visitation.

    Many of the Rocky Day attendees in December traveled internationally from places including Venezuela, Chile, France and Germany. Ott Lovell said Philly is “a mythical place” to “Rocky” fans who identify the city with the Oscar-winning film and its five sequels. For some, Rocky Day showed that scenes from movies are pilgrimage sites. 

    “I think what we don’t understand is that what Sylvester Stallone created was a fairy tale — a fable,” she said. “He wrote an allegory and that’s what this is to the rest of the world. It’s not just a Hollywood movie. It holds a much deeper meaning and it is symbolic of what the American dream is.”

    On Wednesday, PVCC held its first meeting to begin planning this year’s Rocky festival, which could be held over several days or weeks. A date has not yet been set, but it will overlap with Rocky Day. Specifics need to be ironed out, but the event could involve developing organized tours at notable locations from the movies.

    “What we hear from visitors is that (the art museum) is just one stop on their ‘Rocky’ tour,” Ott Lovell said. “People are actually creating their own tour to go to Mighty Mick’s Gym, to go the Victor Cafe, to go see Adrian’s grave at Laurel Hill Cemetery or go to the Italian Market. People are doing this on their own.”

    The festival also could involve participation from Philly businesses that embrace “Rocky” themes and promotions for travelers. Ott Lovell expects the next two years to build up to a huge occasion celebrating the 50th anniversary of “Rocky” in 2026, which will be a banner year for tourism in Philadelphia with the nation’s 250th birthday celebration and the FIFA World Cup coming to town.

    Ott Lovell joined PVCC last July after previously serving as director of Philadelphia Parks & Recreation and working with the Fairmount Park Conservancy before that. She played an instrumental role in developing the project — now in its early stages — to redesign the Benjamin Franklin Parkway into a greener, more walkable public space in the years ahead. The current plan would connect Eakins Oval to the Parkway and art museum to create one giant, landscaped park capable of hosting future events like the Rocky festival.

    Ott Lovell said she wants to take a more parks-centric approach to cultivating tourist attractions in Philly. 

    “What we’re doing with the visitor center and Rocky Shop at the base of the art museum steps is just a proof of concept,” she said. “We definitely need to think more ambitiously about a much larger visitor center that can provide the important resources and amenities for all the people who want to have that experience. There’s a much larger conversation and narrative that we need to shift here around the value and the power of public space in terms of attracting visitation and tourism.”

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    Michael Tanenbaum

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