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Tag: south philly

  • Girard Point Bridge to get $261 million in repairs over the next five years

    PennDOT is beginning a $261 million project to repair the Girard Point Bridge on I-95 over the Schuylkill River. Work starts Jan. 12 and will take five years.

    Michael Tanenbaum

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  • Company that cans White Claw, Monster Energy and others to open at former South Philly refinery site

    DrinkPAK, which cans White Claw, High Noon and Monster Energy, is investing $195 million in a facility at the Bellwether District. It’s the first tenant at the redeveloped refinery.

    Michael Tanenbaum

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  • Wrestling legend Rob Van Dam reflects on Philly’s ECW legacy and losing his best friend

    One night in 1997, after an Extreme Championship Wrestling show in South Philly at what’s now known as the 2300 Arena, a young Rob Van Dam was sitting at the bar of the old Holiday Inn at the Sports Complex, and he felt a rumble in his stomach.

    Van Dam, an acrobatic rising star known as the “Whole F’n Show,” got an offer from an ECW fan sitting next to him to ride over to Geno’s for a cheesesteak. None of the other wrestlers wanted to leave the hotel. Van Dam took the invitation and buckled up for a quintessential Philly experience he’s never forgotten.


    MORE: As Dock Street turns 40, here’s how it grew from a countercultural idea into the oldest craft brewery in Philly


    “I got in the car with this guy I didn’t know, and that motherf***er ran every single stop sign,” Van Dam said. “I don’t mean like he slowed down and looked. He kept the gas pedal on and treated the entire thing as if he had the right of way. He said, ‘You know what the good thing about four-way stops is? The other guys always gotta’ stop.’”

    Van Dam reminisced about Philly and ECW while discussing the new documentary he produced with director Joe Clarke on the life of Terry “Sabu” Brunk, who died in May just three weeks after winning his final match in Las Vegas. Brunk was 60 years old. The documentary, which had been in the making for well over a year, presents a raw and personal look at the life of a retiring wrestler who seemed to be emotionally preparing for his death.

    “He was one of the closest people to me, and I don’t have very many people close to me,” said Van Dam, 54. “There’s a whole lifetime of memories and inside jokes – s*** that’s just gone. I didn’t know there was that much foreshadowing in the documentary until after the fact. When I got the call, I can’t say I was that surprised because I had been expecting it for 30 years. It’s really eerie.”

    Months after Brunk’s death, loved ones are still awaiting a toxicology report to pinpoint an exact cause. In the documentary, Brunk alludes to heart problems and difficulties carrying on with his life after his partner and longtime manager, Melissa Coates, died of complications from COVID-19 in 2021.

    “Everyone has their own theory,” Van Dam said. “Most of it has to do with his lifestyle – that he lived himself to death Sabu-style.”

    Fittingly, a memorial service for Sabu was held in June at the renovated 2300 Arena – still used as a venue for professional fights – where Van Dam spoke to a tight-knit family of mourners who had been touched by Brunk inside and outside the ring.

    “He was a big part of the man that I became,” said Van Dam, who occasionally still wrestles for AEW and makes sporadic appearances at WWE events.

    Van Dam joined ECW in the mid-1990’s with help from Sabu, a fellow Michigan native. They were both trained by Sabu’s uncle, a wrestling industry veteran who fought as the Sheikh, using makeshift rings set up in garages and backyards.

    ECW’s arena in South Philly, near the corner of Ritner and Swanson streets, became the epicenter of hardcore wrestling in the United States in the early 1990s. While promotions like WWE and WCW were duking it out for mainstream market share in an eventual multibillion dollar industry, ECW existed as a reckless talent incubator with an underground edge.

    “It was a pivotal platform for the wrestling business to go in a whole different direction, where instead of worrying about (being) politically correct and entertaining kids, it was adult entertainment,” Van Dam said. “It was unapologetic. The storylines were crazy. It was a full circus with completely different styles of wrestling, but altogether we were this family that was so grateful for what we had.”

    Sabu, who donned a turban as part of his extremist persona, became an innovator of brutality in ECW. He was among the first U.S. wrestlers to popularize plowing through tables, rolling around in barbed wire and wielding various weapons in his offensive repertoire.

    Van Dam remembers nights at Philly hotels filming promos for upcoming matches. ECW owner Paul Heyman would keep his wrestlers waiting all night to get paid, leaving hours for them to get drunk and high before hopping on flights to the next venue.

    It was an exhilarating lifestyle for muscled young people full of ambition, Van Dam said, but Sabu was a hardcore wrestling purist and a deep believer in karma being a reward system. He struggled with the entertainment side of the business as he got older and his WWE career plateaued, landing him back on the independent circuit.

    “He should have been a much bigger star,” Van Dam said.

    ECW shut down in 2001 after a failed national TV deal and financial struggles led to its bankruptcy. Looking back, Van Dam thinks the writing was on the wall in 1995 when a flaming object used during a match ended up in the stands and – legend has it – burned a fan.

    “The very nature of the product limited its success and its exposure because you can’t light fans on fire and not have consequences for it,” Van Dam said.


    “Sabu” can be streamed on the film distribution platform Kinema, where it’s available to be rented for $5.99.

    Michael Tanenbaum

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  • East Passyunk’s new weekly happy hour and sidewalk market starts Thursday

    East Passyunk’s new weekly happy hour and sidewalk market starts Thursday

    A new happy hour and sidewalk market with a cosmopolitan name is coming to South Philadelphia this summer.

    Starting Thursday, businesses along East Passyunk Avenue will offer weekly discounts and other promotions from 5-7 p.m. The so-called Passyunk Passeggiata, inspired by the Italian tradition of strolling the town after work to socialize, will run through Aug. 31.


    MORE: Northern Liberties Night Market returns July 24 with food trucks and beer


    Participating bars will hawk $5 beers, $6 wines and $7 cocktails and appetizers. Other food specials include $4 tacos at Juana Tamale, $1 snacks at Cartesian Brewing and $5 smash burgers at P’unk Burger. The full list of happy hour destinations includes:

    • Barcelona Wine Bar
    • The Bottle Shop
    • Cartesian Brewing
    • Ember and Ash
    • Human Robot Süd
    • Juana Tamale
    • Flannel
    • Laurel
    • Le Virtu
    • Marra’s
    • Noir Restaurant and Bar
    • Nutmeg Bar and Market
    • P’unk Burger
    • Pistolas Del Sur
    • Pizzata Pizzeria & Birreria
    • POPE
    • River Twice
    • Stogie Joe’s
    • Townsend EPX

    Passeggiata pedestrians can also shop sidewalk sales and in-store promotions from stores along the avenue. Eastern Pass Tattoo Co. and Tat215ive will offer tattoo flash specials, while all dogs who visit Doggie Style Pets (hopefully with their owner) will get a free pup cup.

    Over 40 restaurants, shops and salons have signed onto the summer program — and they’re enlisting a few musicians to soundtrack the stroll. Pistolas Del Sur will welcome Casey Parker and Mia Johnson, respectively, for the first two weeks of Passyunk Passeggiata. Mike Carney will also play the newly restored Singing Fountain on Aug. 1, and a DJ will spin new releases at Latchkey every week.


    Passyunk Passeggiata

    Thursdays, July 11 – Aug. 31
    5-7 p.m.
    East Passyunk Avenue


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    Kristin Hunt

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  • Queen & Rook set to move to South Street, opening largest board game cafe on East Coast

    Queen & Rook set to move to South Street, opening largest board game cafe on East Coast

    Queen & Rook, the board game cafe in Queen Village, is preparing to level up with a new location that features three floors, two bars and a vintage video game arcade.

    At 123 South St., the new building is mere feet away from the original spot at 607 S. Second St. The cafe closed its original location on Sunday, and there will be a grand opening to welcome gamers to the new Queen & Rook on Saturday at 12 p.m. Owners Edward Garcia and Jeannie Wong are promising a stark difference. 


    MORE: Before Eastern State Penitentiary closed, music by the prison’s inmate band delighted radio audiences


    For starters, there’s the scale. Queen & Rook claims the new 6,000-square-foot location will make it the largest board game cafe not only in Pennsylvania but on the East Coast. (The old space was 2,000 square feet.) It will span three floors with indoor, outdoor and private event spaces and two places to order drinks: the Green Dragon Bar and Silver Dragon Bar. The cafe will also upgrade its current library of 1,300-plus board games to more than 2,000.

    A wood-and-brick cafe space with A-frame beams, chandeliers, booths, tables and chairs.Provided image/Kscope Philly

    The new Queen & Rook at 123 South St. will include much more seating across three floors.

    With the extra space comes new perks, like two outdoor seating areas and a new video game arcade. The arcade will have over 30 machines with hundreds of retro titles like Ms. Pacman, Street Fighter and Dance Dance Revolution. In between knockouts, players can order canned cocktails or beers from Yards’ 8-Bit series at the nearby bar.

    Queen & Rook arcadeQueen & Rook arcadeProvided image/Kscope Philly

    The arcade will include hundreds of classic video game titles and newer games like ‘Stranger Things’ pinball.

    The menu is also getting a makeover, as Queen & Rook plans to add wood-fired pizza, housemade soft-serve and other bonus desserts this spring. The cafe has teased more vegetarian and vegan options on its Instagram.

    Queen & Rook outdoorQueen & Rook outdoorProvided image/Kscope Philly

    This shows one of two outdoor seating areas at the new Queen & Rook game cafe on South Street.

    As for Queen & Rook’s adjacent retail shop The Keep, currently at 613 S. Second St., it will move next door to the new space in June. Garcia and Wong announced their plans to relocate the cafe in 2023, taking over the space formerly occupied by Pietro’s Coal Oven Pizzeria, and teased more game options and events programming. Queen & Rook hosts frequent Dungeons & Dragons sessions for kids and teens, as well as a board game and RPG after-school program. It also offers gaming camps scheduled around the School District of Philadelphia’s summer and spring breaks and other closures.

    When Queen & Rook opened in 2019, it was one of the only board game cafes in Philadelphia, though not the first — that title is held by Thirsty Dice in Fairmount. Since then, the scene has expanded to University City (The Board and Brew) and Ardmore (Twenty One Pips). 

    This story has been updated with the square footage of the new and old Queen & Rook locations.


    Follow Kristin & PhillyVoice on Twitter: @kristin_hunt
    | @thePhillyVoice
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    Kristin Hunt

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