About 150 people are waiting for a 14-member crew to build the scaffolding needed to remove the 18 offending letters.
The atmosphere is festival-like: People have brought their dogs, their partners and their kids. They oohed as lightning spidered across the sky and ahhed at a double rainbow. They cheered when a one-wheel rider zipped through the center's horseshoe driveway in a rainbow crop top and shorts, waving a bisexual pride flag. The Foo Fighters' "My Hero" blasted, followed by a request from a guy shouting to the workers above.
"Remove the 'T' first!"
Orthodox Jewish New Yorkers are not playing around with Saturday night's Knicks game
My friend has his aufruf (Shabbat celebration before a wedding) and just called an audible to move Saturday night prayer services from the synagogue to his house in order to get the game on ASAP
WANTED FOR GANG ASSAULT: On Wednesday night after the Knicks game, a group approached a 17-year-old near 237 W 35th St and got into an argument. This individual punched and kicked the teen. He had a seizure and was in a coma. Any info? DM @NYPDTips or call 800-577-TIPS.
Perhaps the only stain on Thursday’s curtain-raiser were FIFA’s newly-mandated “hydration breaks.”
When FIFA announced the change, it said the breaks were for “player welfare,” but many fans saw through the spin and assumed the breaks would be used by broadcasters to show commercials.
On Thursday, Fox, which holds the English-language U.S. broadcast rights, confirmed those fears.
It not only cut away to advertisements; during the second half of Mexico-South Africa, its commercials ran long and caused viewers to miss several seconds of action after play resumed. The blunder sparked an uproar among longtime fans.
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New Jersey Transit has a pair of 600-person boats on standby to ferry soccer fans across the Hudson River in case of a transit meltdown at New York Penn Station during the FIFA 2026 World Cup matches at MetLife stadium, the agency announced today.
If necessary, the boats will get fans from New York City to Weehawken, New Jersey, and then onto buses bound for MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford.