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  • ⚾ All-Star Week comes to Philly | Things to do

    ⚾ All-Star Week comes to Philly | Things to do

    The wait is finally over.

    More than seven years after MLB announced the All-Star Game would come to Philadelphia for the nation’s 250th birthday, baseball’s midsummer classic is nearly here.

    All-Star Week kicks off Friday at Citizens Bank Park and continues through Tuesday, with the HBCU Swingman Classic, MLB draft, All-Star Village, Futures Game, Home Run Derby, red carpet, and the All-Star Game itself.

    I’m Sam Ruland, filling in or Earl this week. Let’s dive in.

    Also in this week’s edition:

    — Sam Ruland (Email me at thingstodo@inquirer.com)

    If someone forwarded you this email, sign up for free here.

    Your MLB All-Star Week playbook

    The Schmitter sandwich displayed at the All Star Games Media Preview to showcase All-Star Week Events, New Food, and Commemorative Bell at the Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia, Pa., on Wednesday, July 8, 2026.

    Citizens Bank Park is about to become the center of the baseball world.

    Matt Breen has everything you need to know about All-Star Week, from Friday’s HBCU Swingman Classic to Tuesday’s All-Star Game. There’s also All-Star Village at the Pennsylvania Convention Center, the Futures Game, MLBx All-Star 3-on-3, and Monday’s Home Run Derby.

    And because this is Philadelphia, food matters, too. Michael Klein reports that McNally’s Tavern’s signature Schmitter is returning to Citizens Bank Park for All-Star festivities after a decade away, joining exclusive ballpark food, local chef collaborations, and limited-edition merch.

    Read our complete MLB All-Star Week guide and food preview here.

    The best things to do this week

    🍿 Get weird in Phoenixville: Blobfest returns this weekend with movie scene recreations, stage shows, competitions, costumes, and plenty of love for the 1958 cult classic The Blob. Tickets are required, so plan ahead.

    🫐 Berry good summer fun: Blueberry season is in full swing at Linvilla Orchards, where Saturday’s festival includes berry picking, magic shows, a pie-eating contest, treats, and more.

    🎨 Graffiti goes underground: A new exhibit in Suburban Station brings together 250 graffiti artists responding to the semiquincentennial.

    💃 Celebrate Mantua: Miles Mack Playground comes alive Saturday with dance performances, lessons, drill teams, PHILADANCO, food trucks, vendors, and giveaways.

    📅 My calendar picks this week: Blobfest, getting my hands on a Schmitter, and strolling the Ben Franklin Bridge. Here’s our full list of calendar picks for the week.

    A birthday party for the Ben Franklin Bridge

    As seen from Camden’s Pyne Poynt Park, fireworks light up the skies, behind the Ben Franklin Bridge, on Saturday, June 27, 2026.

    Fourth of July may be over, but there’s still one big celebration left. The Benjamin Franklin Bridge turns 100 this month, and Saturday’s free celebration will close the span to vehicle traffic while opening the roadway to pedestrians.

    Expect food trucks, live entertainment, family activities, historical displays, and a rare chance to walk across one of the region’s most iconic landmarks.

    Before you go, read our guide to road closures, parking, and transit options. And if you need another reason to appreciate the bridge, Stephanie Farr makes the case that the Ben Franklin is more than just a way to get from Point A to Point B — it’s one of the region’s most underrated destinations.

    Read our complete bridge guide and Stephanie’s column here.

    Summer fun this week and beyond

    🏮 Lanterns light up Franklin Square: The Philadelphia Chinese Lantern Festival is back with dozens of handcrafted displays, including soccer-themed lanterns honoring the World Cup.

    🍹 Sip the summeriest Philly cocktail: The water ice martini has gone from South Philly secret to full-blown summer drink trend. Here’s where to find boozy water ice around town.

    🌊 Eat down the shore: Craig LaBan’s latest Shore dining guide runs from LBI to Margate, with sub shops, upscale cocktails, pizza, soul food, and sweet BYOBs.

    🎢 Plan a shore field trip: Ocean City and Somers Point make an ideal summer pairing: boardwalk nostalgia, Castaway Cove rides, homemade ice cream, bayside bars, speedboat rides, and some of the best pizza in New Jersey.

    🪩 Hit the waterfront: Spruce Street Harbor Park and Summerfest are both open for the season with hammocks, games, roller skating, mini golf, carnival rides, and plenty of ways to cool off by the river.

    Staffer picks

    Here’s a list of the best concerts happening this week from our music critic Dan DeLuca.

    🎤 Thursday: Patti LaBelle brings the America 250 celebration to the Dell Music Center with Avery Sunshine, Jeff Bradshaw, and Pieces of a Dream.

    🎸 Friday: Dave Matthews Band returns to Camden for its annual two-night summer stand. Reminder: The Ben Franklin Bridge closure is Saturday, so check your route if you’re heading to night two.

    🎶 Friday: Philly bands Hurry and Sad13 celebrate new releases at Johnny Brenda’s.

    🤠 Saturday: Megan Moroney brings her country-pop hits to Xfinity Mobile Arena.

    🎻 Saturday: Rick Ross marks the 20th anniversary of Port of Miami with the Renaissance Orchestra at the Met Philly.

    🎸 Tuesday: Bob Dylan comes to TD Pavilion at the Mann with Jimmie Vaughan & the Tilt-a-Whirl Band and Brittney Spencer.

    ❓Pop quiz

    The Schmitter is returning to Citizens Bank Park for MLB All-Star Week. What Chestnut Hill tavern created the signature Philly sandwich?

    a) McNally’s Tavern

    b) McGillin’s Olde Ale House

    c) Triangle Tavern

    d) Dirty Frank’s

    Here’s the answer to last week’s question: What year did the first Independence Day celebration take place in Philadelphia? Answer: 1777

    Ask Earl anything (when he returns)

    Earl’s starting something new for the newsletter, and he wants your participation.

    Many of you have questions about each week’s listings, and others about Philly’s arts, culture, and entertainment scene.

    He has you covered. Have a question? Email him for a chance to have it answered in an upcoming newsletter.

    All right, folks! That’s all for this week’s edition of Things to Do. Whether you’re headed to the ballpark, the bridge, the Shore, or just somewhere with cold water ice, enjoy the weekend.

    — Sam Ruland

    By submitting your written, visual, and/or audio contributions, you agree to The Inquirer’s Terms of Use, including the grant of rights in Section 10.

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  • In its second season, HBO’s ‘Task’ will see a crossover with ‘Mare of Easttown’

    In its second season, HBO’s ‘Task’ will see a crossover with ‘Mare of Easttown’

    Big news for Philly TV fans: A crossover of Task and Mare of Easttown is in the works.

    Task, the crime thriller starring Mark Ruffalo that just received six Emmy nominations for its debut season this week, has cast Julianne Nicholson to reprise her Mare of Easttown role as Lori Ross, Variety reported on Thursday.

    Playing the best friend to Kate Winslet’s titular Mare Sheehan character, Nicholson won an Emmy in 2021 for her heartwrenching performance as the mother of (spoiler alert!) the young boy revealed as the killer Sheehan was investigating.

    More details about how her character will factor into Task are under wraps. But we know that the new season follows Ruffalo’s ex-priest-turned-FBI agent — a performance that earned him an Emmy nod — as he leads another task force that will clash with the DEA.

    Mark Ruffalo plays FBI agent Tom Brandis in the HBO series “Task.”

    It’s the first time that the worlds of Task and Mare have officially collided, though both shows were created by Berwyn writer Brad Ingelsby and filmed in the Philadelphia area. There’s also some overlap in their creative teams, from production and costume design to dialect coaching. (Ingelsby recognizes the importance of getting the signature Delco accent just right.)

    That connection, Ingelsby told The Inquirer last year, was intentional.

    “We weren’t trying to separate Task from Mare. In fact, we were actually going the other way and saying, ‘No, it’s OK to use the same streets,’” said Ingelsby, who received an Emmy nomination recognizing his writing for the Task finale. “If there’s something architecturally that can connect the two worlds, let’s wrap our arms around it.”

    “Task” and “Mare of Easttown” writer Brad Ingelsby in his office in Berwyn, Pa.. on July 17, 2025.

    Mare was initially developed as a limited series, but talk of a potential second season has persisted in the years since its release. Ingelsby has said the door is always open for a continuation of the show and earlier this year, Winslet reportedly said recent conversations with HBO were promising enough that she believes there’s a “strong likelihood” filming could begin in 2027.

    It’s not yet clear whether Winslet could make a cameo in Task when the two shows crossover.

    Task started shooting its second season in Manayunk this week with a largely new cast including Oscar winner Mahershala Ali (playing the rival to Ruffalo’s character), Henry Melling, Edgar Ramirez, Aminah Nieves, and Adam Nagaitis.

    A premiere date is yet to be announced.

  • Bonnie Tyler, who topped the charts with epic ‘Total Eclipse of the Heart,’ has died at 75

    Bonnie Tyler, who topped the charts with epic ‘Total Eclipse of the Heart,’ has died at 75

    Bonnie Tyler, the gravelly voiced, Grammy-nominated Welsh pop star best known for singing the chart-topping power ballad “Total Eclipse of the Heart” in 1983, and seeing new generations succumb to its bombastic charms during solar and lunar eclipses, has died. She was 75.

    Tyler died unexpectedly in a hospital in Portugal where she was being treated for an illness, her family said Thursday in a statement on her website. She was hospitalized in May in Faro, where she had a home, for emergency intestinal surgery. She had been placed in an induced coma for a period but was reportedly improving last month and expected to make a good recovery.

    “Bonnie’s family and team are heartbroken to announce that Bonnie unexpectedly passed away last night in hospital in Portugal as a result of the illness that she was being treated for,” her family said.

    Tyler earned three Grammy nods, represented Britain at the Eurovision Song Contest 2013, where she came in 19th. She was honored as a Member of the Order of the British Empire for her services to music by Queen Elizabeth II in 2022, all largely thanks to “Total Eclipse of the Heart,” which has had more that 1 billion streams, boosted by real eclipses in 2017 and 2024.

    The song spent four weeks at No. 1, and when Stereogum reevaluated it in 2020, the music outlet declared it an “extinction-level event rendered in musical form.”

    “It’s pop music as heart-pounding, chest-thumping, blood-gargling, heavens-falling passion explosion. It’s sheer spectacle. It’s fireworks and lasers and lightning and thunder. It soars and swoops and barrel-rolls,” the site said.

    The song has never really gone away, covered by the English singer Nicki French in 1995, and the band Westlife in 2006. Cate Blanchett sang it while hitting Billy Bob Thornton with her car in 2001’s “Bandits,” it appeared in a wedding scene in 2003’s “Old School” and One Direction sang it in 2010 on a U.K. version of “The X Factor.”

    Early life

    Tyler was born — as Gaynor Hopkins — a coal miner’s daughter in public housing with an outside toilet in Skewen, Wales, about 7 miles (11 kilometers) outside Swansea. She grew up with three sisters and two brothers.

    She adored the Beatles and her first album was “A Hard Day’s Night.” The first song she bought was “Hippy Hippy Shake” by the Swinging Blue Jeans at 13 and watched “Top of the Pops” religiously, according to her memoir, “Straight From the Heart.”

    She would record “Top of the Pops” on a reel-to-reel two-track recorder and write down the lyrics of songs she loved. Her favorites were songs by Janis Joplin, Nina Simone, Tina Turner, Wilson Pickett and Otis Redding.

    “I used to sing them into my hairbrush for hours and hours, and that’s how it all started for me. I fell in love with singing just from doing that. Looking back, even then my voice had a husky tone to it, but I didn’t think much of it. I thought everyone’s voices were different from each other’s,” she wrote.

    In 1976 she had to have surgery to remove nodules on her throat, leaving her with that trademark vocal sound. Changing her name to Sherene Davis, she was fronting a soul band when she was discovered by talent scout Roger Bell, who brought her to London for demo sessions. Then she waited for a label until RCA said it was interested.

    Under her new RCA-sanctioned name Bonnie Tyler, her debut album “The World Starts Tonight” in 1977 contained her first chart hit, “Lost in France,” and she was nominated for a breakthrough artists award at the Brits Awards. She then had a No. 3 hit in 1978 with “It’s a Heartache,” but soon drifted. She then signed with Sony and saw Meat Loaf perform “Bat Out of Hell” on the BBC. Impressed, she requested to work with Meat Loaf songwriter and producer Jim Steinman.

    ‘Total Eclipse of the Heart’

    Steinman introduced her to his song “Total Eclipse of the Heart,” which would become the debut single for her fifth studio album, “Faster Than the Speed of Night.” He borrowed one of the song’s lyrics — “Turn around, bright eyes” — from his 1969 musical “The Dream Engine,” written as a student at Massachusetts’ Amherst College. He told her the song was from a prospective musical version of “Nosferatu.”

    “Jim liked to put down a basic rhythm track, do nine takes of the song, choose the best one and then put the kitchen sink on there, like Phil Spector used to,” Tyler told The Guardian in 2023. “He gave me a cassette to listen to in my hotel and we both preferred take two.”

    Featuring E Street Band members Roy Bittan on piano and Max Weinberg on drums, “Total Eclipse” is a rumination on lost love: “Once upon a time there was light in my life/But now there’s only love in the dark,” she sings.

    The video, a staple of early-days MTV, was shot in a frightening gothic former asylum in Surrey, where the guard dogs apparently wouldn’t set foot in the rooms downstairs where they used to give people electric shock treatment. The visuals included slow-motion tossed doves, candles, dancing ninjas, dancing greasers, Tyler in frighteningly big shoulder pads, fencers, gymnasts, wind machines and shirtless boys wearing swim goggles being doused with water.

    “Faster Than the Speed of Night” earned a Grammy nomination for best rock vocal performance — losing to Pat Benatar’s “Love Is a Battlefield” — and Tyler got another nod for “Total Eclipse of the Heart” in the best pop vocal performance category, losing to Irene Cara’s “Flashdance — What a Feeling.”

    After the ‘Eclipse’

    Tyler never reached such dizzying heights again but stayed current with such movie soundtrack singles as “Holding Out For a Hero” — from 1984’s “Footloose” — and “Here She Comes” from “Metropolis” also in 1984.

    Her 2019 disc “Between the Earth and the Stars” featured duets with Rod Stewart, Cliff Richard and Status Quo’s Francis Rossi, and she ended that year performing a Vatican Christmas concert before Pope Francis.

    In 2013, she switched gears to make a country-flavored record in Nashville, “Rocks and Honey,” which included the Vince Gill duet “What You Need From Me” and a little ballad called “Believe in Me,” written by American songwriter Desmond Child and British songwriters Lauren Christy and Christopher Braide. “Believe in Me” was picked to represent the United Kingdom at that year’s Eurovision Song Contest in Sweden.

    “It was an absolutely wonderful atmosphere there,” she told the San Francisco Examiner in 2023. “I was being interviewed every 15, 20 minutes, and when I walked out onstage behind the British flag, I thought the roof was going to come off! It was awesome, just awesome!”

    In 2017, she joined Joe Jonas’ band DNCE for a performance on the cruise ship Oasis of the Seas as part of a “Total Eclipse Cruise.” When the moon passed in front of the sun, they played “Total Eclipse of the Heart.”

    Tyler was married to property developer and former Olympic judo competitor Robert Sullivan.

  • Jill Scott returned to her old Philly neighborhood for a classic summertime ritual after her July 4 concert

    Jill Scott returned to her old Philly neighborhood for a classic summertime ritual after her July 4 concert

    I’m not going to lie — I fell asleep during the rain delay in the One Philly: Unity Concert for America, on the Benjamin Franklin Parkway on July 4.

    Luckily, I wasn’t on the Parkway, but at home watching it on TV. But I’d been looking forward to seeing the show featuring Philly legends like The Roots, DJ Jazzy Jeff, Will Smith, and Meek Mill.

    Earlier in the evening, I’d marveled at the relatively small size of the crowd in attendance for performances by Seal and Jill Scott, who took the stage before it rained. The concertgoers who did brave the 100-degree-plus temperatures in Center City that day were all huddled in what little shade there was near the stage.

    I’ve covered a lot of events on the Parkway and I’d never seen it look so empty.

    And yet, both Seal and Jilly from Philly performed like that crowd stretched all the way back to City Hall. Did I rise up in my living room with a beer in my hand and tears in my eyes as I sang “Kiss from a Rose” with Seal? Maybe. And I definitely gave Scott a standing ovation for her powerhouse performance. Not only did she bring it, she did so barefoot in a tall denim hat few others could pull off. It was golden.

    Jill Scott (right) and Tierra Whack on stage Saturday at One Philly: Unity Concert for America on the Benjamin Franklin Parkway.

    When I woke up the next day and realized the concert had resumed after midnight, I kicked myself for falling asleep and searched for clips of it on social media. I found quite a few, but it was a video Scott posted of herself in Philly after her performance that’s stuck with me days later.

    In the video, which was filmed around dusk, Scott and her crew get out of their cars at the intersection of 17th and Wallace Streets in Spring Garden, where an open fire hydrant was spraying cool water in beautiful arches onto the road. It’s unclear if the hydrant was open when they arrived, but this Philly sprinkler scene is a classic summer tableau in almost every neighborhood in the city (even if opening hydrants is technically illegal).

    Running through the cool spray of a fire hydrant on a hot day is just as much of a childhood rite of passage in Philly as climbing through the Franklin Institute’s Giant Heart. It’s a core memory, a collective experience, and a kind of joy that imprints itself on the soul.

    Folks may question the quality of the water in the Delaware River, but they don’t question the magic of the city’s fire hydrant sprays — the tiny rainbows that appear in their mists, their power to bring neighbors together, and the giggles of pure joy they inspire in kids.

    The video of Scott begins with laughter as she and her crew get out of a car and walk toward the hydrant. The man taking the video tries to hurry them along — “Let’s go, let’s go, let’s go!” — because their car appears to be stopped in the middle of the street (which is very Philly, too).

    “Excuse me y’all I need to get by,” a motorist says off-camera to the guy taking the video, marking one of the few times in Philadelphia history someone was polite on the road.

    The cameraman says to the motorist, “one second, one second,” and Scott and four others, including her son, run screaming through the open fire hydrant. The group then walks back through with beaming smiles on their faces.

    “My apologies, thank you, we just got finished with a show on the Parkway,” the videographer says to the Philadelphian who wanted to get by, marking yet another rare occurrence of a motorist being polite on a Philly street. Twice in one day is probably an all-time record.

    At this point in the video, Philadelphians on the sidewalk start recognizing Scott (“Oh my God!”) and she decides to take one final pass, alone, through the spray. At one point she just stands with her arms open and her face lifted to the sky, taking it all in.

    “Life is frfr what you make it. I love you Philadelphia. I love you so much. Thank you. 250yrsofPhilly,” she captioned the clip.

    Scott later added more context in the comments.

    “I love the alignment. My 1st apartment was on 17th and Wallace. 2 bedroom. 2 bathrooms. A fireplace and a deck facing the city. Guess how much I paid … $730/ month!!! That was my block 🥰and to do THAT with my beautiful friends plus my Son was … epic. Me loving on Philly and Philly loving on me. SMH. I’m So grateful. Thanx God. Love, Jill,” she wrote.

    I was completely taken that Scott — an internationally-touring, Grammy Award-winning artist — found such pure joy in such a small moment here in Philly. This is a woman who fills arenas and theaters and she seemed ecstatic to do something you and I could do any day.

    Jill Scott takes to the stage for One Philly: Unity Concert for America on the Benjamin Franklin Parkway on Saturday, July 4, 2026, in Philadelphia.

    She wasn’t upset that the heat had tempered crowds for her big hometown Fourth of July performance, she wasn’t worried about the water ruining her outfit, and she didn’t care if anyone saw her running through an open fire hydrant.

    Scott didn’t seem anything but incredibly grateful for that moment.

    Many people struggled with celebrating the nation’s 250th anniversary this year, whether because of the sweltering weather or the country’s political climate, and I did, too. But Scott reminded me that the everyday surprises Philly gives us — whether it’s an interaction with someone new, a corner of the city you’ve yet to explore, or an open fire hydrant — are an important part of the American experience, too.

    So soak up that kind of Philly magic whenever you can, and no matter how old or how famous you get, I hope you can always find childlike wonder in this city, too.

  • Long vilified graffiti art finds an unlikely gallery in Suburban Station

    Long vilified graffiti art finds an unlikely gallery in Suburban Station

    On entering Suburban Station from the 16th Street entrance, one is welcomed by a vast, bare-walled concourse punctuated by empty retail spaces.

    And then you turn right.

    A painting made to look like a subway car stands out against the blank concourse. The inside is entirely covered in graffiti, along with paintings, drawings, and mosaics. Not an inch of space is bare.

    Organizers and artists greet people as they come in and share stories about their street art journey.

    A room in the exhibit looks like the inside of a SEPTA BSL train car, orange seats and all.

    This is “Platform X,” a new era of graffiti art, organized by Step Outside, an artist-led program that transforms existing spaces into graffiti havens.

    Exhibition curator and fashion designer Zucati Zuce poses for a photo at Platform X.

    “We’re all street artists and we care about this more than anything,” said the artist who goes by the name Doomed Future. “There’s not much opportunity in galleries to showcase graffiti and street art here in Philly. We want to have our own thing here.”

    Doomed Future works alongside Step Outside organizers Philmadelphia, Inphltrate, Zucati Zuce, Raw G Zero, Ianismymiddlename, and RoboQ4. Because graffiti is considered criminal mischief under Pennsylvania law, the artists did not want to share their real names for this article.

    SEPTA representatives reached out to Doomed Future in January and asked them to take a look at the vacant spaces for rent in Suburban Station for a potential exhibit. The artist decided to rent a space from a real estate agent.

    Artwork showcased in the Platform X art exhibition, in which the back room was made to look like a subway car.

    “Street art’s grimy — it’s real, gritty, dirty,” Doomed Future said, “and so is the subway.”

    A more rebellious Semiquincentennial

    “USA 250″ is the theme around which 250 artists imagined their graffiti art.

    One piece, American Religion, depicts Benjamin Franklin with a crown of thorns and the words “In God We Lust” above his head, certainly a switch from the patriotic depictions of the Founding Father we’ve seen for the Semiquincentennial.

    Exhibition organizer Ianismymiddlename looks at artwork at Platform X, including “American Religion” by @Frewil_design.

    Other pieces present a more rebellious yet optimistic view. Love Is Not Dead by Banjax the Balaclava depicts a bunch of angry figures holding anarchist flags in front of City Hall, with a match burning between two traffic cones at the center.

    “The thinking behind it was that there’s been a lot of burnout and frustration, particularly with folks that have been active in the street, fighting against injustices,” said Banjax. “I think it’s important to bring the message of love into these spaces as much as there is rage. As things get harder, continue to heat up, I want to remind people of that love is at the core of what we do.”

    Artist Banjax the Balaclava poses with “Love Is Not Dead” at Platform X.

    “Platform X” is Step Outside’s fourth showcase after a year of operation, with this one put on in collaboration with the nonprofit United Street Art (USA). United Street Art is dedicated to advancing and highlighting street art and graffiti. Most of the artwork is for sale, with all profits going directly to the artists.

    “Supporting the artists is our main mission. We’ve been doing free shows before, and this is our biggest one,” said RoboQ4 aka Robb Quattro, executive director of USA. “This is a big, long-term investment for us and we’re ready to continue doing more shows beyond this one.”

    Establishment vs. antiestablishment

    Graffiti, as an art form, is inherently antiestablishment, and the establishment still does not receive it well.

    At the start of the year, the city announced the Gateways to Philadelphia project. In collaboration with Mural Arts and Pennsylvania Horticultural Society, it invests $11.5 million toward beautification initiatives, including landscaping, new murals, and graffiti removal.

    A sign for the Step Outside art exhibition with a sticker that says “Anti-Artificial Intelligence.”

    “I can understand some people saying some graffiti is an eyesore, but there’s a lot that’s not,” said contributing artist Satan, who has been making graffiti art for over 40 years. “This is helping me as an artist grow.”

    The show has been received glowingly by visitors, who have been invited to add to the art themselves. People have drawn on the walls with chalk, spray painted their own tags, and left stickers anywhere there was room.

    On Father’s Day, there was a father-son duo putting their own graffiti on the wall, said artist and organizer Inphltrate. “That was really cool to see,” she said. “This is a safe haven for not only street art and graffiti, but for any person who is creative who needs an outlet. You are safe and accepted here.”

    Artwork by the artist, who wishes to be identified with their Instagram username, @shrpy_ (top), and Elizabeth Fiend (bottom) is pictured at Platform X.

    “Writing our names, I didn’t look at it as art. We were vilified,” said wallwriter Lewis Pittman, also known as Lewis or King Lewis in the street art scene. “I’m glad I’m still above ground to see the evolution of this culture. I’m glad it’s accepted as an art form.”

    Pittman is one of Philadelphia’s original “wallwriters,” which is what graffiti artists called themselves in the 1970s. Pittman, along with wallwriters like Cool Cone and Cornbread, helped popularize the now iconic Philadelphia “gangster” handstyle, defined by tall, condensed letters.

    “I remember Sunday nights going to Fern Rock, writing on all the buses and trains,” Cone, aka Cone ICP, said. “On Monday morning, nothing but my name came down Broad Street.”

    Curator and fashion designer Zucati Zuce stands in front of street signs with graffiti, all of which are for sale.

    After the USA 250 show closes, Step Outside plans to put on a Then and Now-themed showcase in August at Platform X, showing the evolution of street art. Incorporating and paying respect to the OGs who popularized the art form is a necessity for their exhibits.

    The deep history of Philly graffiti

    As a teenager, Cone founded Imperial Casanova Persuaders (ICP), one of the country’s original graffiti clubs, known for tagging public transportation. They helped originate the “wicked” variant of the Philly gangster handstyle, which puts a more wild, energetic spin on the lettering.

    “They could look at us as being the start of murals, too, since a lot of stuff started in Philly. But we don’t get the recognition because a lot of people don’t speak on it,” he said. “In American history, we’re one of the best kept secrets.”

    Contributing artist and self-styled wallwriter, who wishes to be identified as Cool Cone, is interviewed by a reporter. As a teenager, he founded graffiti club ICP.

    Philadelphia, with its thousands of murals, is billed as the “Mural Capital of the World.” Mural Arts Philadelphia, the country’s largest public arts program, started off being a part of Philadelphia Anti-Graffiti Network in 1984.

    Cone, like many graffiti artists, had several run-ins with police officers in the 1970s, getting targeted for wallwriting. Today, he travels the nation, speaking at museums and various art events, recognized as a trailblazer in street art history.

    From left: Artists Cool Cone, Satan, and Lewis Pittman pose for a portrait at Platform X. The three are trailblazers in Philadelphia’s street art scene, going back to the 1970s and 1980s.

    ICP’s symbol, a capital “I” with two dots on the side, can still be seen tagged around the city and even in Platform X.

    “You’re not going to stop the wallwriters,” Pittman said.

    Closing receptions for the “Platform X” USA 250 show are Friday, July 10, from 5 to 10 p.m. and Saturday, July 11, from 1 to 10 p.m. The exhibit will stay open for the rest of the summer.

    Platform X is located in Suburban Station down the steps on 16th Street between Market Street and JFK Boulevard in Center City, Philadelphia. More information on stepoutsideshow.com and @stepoutsideshow.

  • A group of Philadelphia men decided to get fit and started a ballclub in 1833. Here’s how they paved the way for the Phillies.

    A group of Philadelphia men decided to get fit and started a ballclub in 1833. Here’s how they paved the way for the Phillies.

    During the early 19th century, gentleman did not play games, at least not outdoors.

    Outdoor frolicking was for children.

    But the yellow fever epidemic of 1822 and the cholera epidemic a decade later started Philly’s men of means on a health kick. It became cool for grown men to play outside, breathe fresh air, stretch limbs, and build their muscles.

    In 1833, a few of them formed a social club to play a fairly new outdoor game called Townball in which a player goes to bat at “home,” and gets three tries to hit a ball. If he manages to hit it, he runs a course, stopping at three bases along the way before returning home, safely.

    Every time a player returned home, his team scored a point.

    Artist David McShane illustrated three three ball players from the early- and mid-1800s to represent the Olympic Ball Club.

    Sounds familiar? John Thorn, the official historian for MLB Baseball agrees.

    Townball, Thorn said, caught on because it was a different kind of sport. “It wasn’t not gymnastic. It wasn’t pugilistic. It wasn’t mere combat…It was more than exercise. It was camaraderie. That was nice.”

    The recreational athletes referred to themselves as the Olympic Ball Club and are considered America’s first baseball team. As MLB All-Star Week 2026 gets underway in Philly this weekend at Citizens Bank Park, that first ballclub will be feted at the park for the Philadelphia Historic District’s 28th firstival.

    Firstivals are weekly day parties honoring events that happened in Philadelphia before anywhere else in the world, part of the city’s yearlong celebration of America’s 250th birthday.

    The Olympic Ball clup pictured in 1883, 50 years after the organization was founded.

    The Olympic Ball Club played early games in Camden. In those days the club split themselves into two teams and played against each other. There was no foul territory, the ball was smaller, yet softer. And sometimes they even swung the bat with one arm.

    “Runners would be declared out if the ball was thrown at them between the bases,” Thorn said. In other words, you didn’t have to tag people out.

    In the 1860s, the Olympic Ball Club adopted the same rules as the New York Knickerbockers. In the same decade, they also moved the club’s home to North Philadelphia, a field between Master and 27th Streets. Back then, this area was known as Camac’s Woods, an estate and public park owned by 19th century Philadelphia gentleman Turner Camac.

    The first professional base ball team — it was originally spelled with two words — the Cincinnati Red Stockings, were formed in 1869. Their salaries were paid by an organization of local businessmen.

    By 1876 — the year the National League was founded — Philadelphia had a second base ball team, the Athletics. On April 22 of that year, the Athletics played the Boston Red Caps in America’s first professional league baseball game. That game was played in North Philadelphia at 25th and Jefferson, and Boston beat Philadelphia 6 to 5.

    Pittsburgh Pirates’ Esmerlyn Valdez hits a run-scoring single against Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Tim Mayza during the fifth inning of a baseball game Thursday, July 2, 2026, in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

    In the early 20th century, baseball started to be spelled as one word, Thorn said. And its play mirrors that of today. The Philadelphia Phillies, originally called the Quakers, were founded in 1883, making them the oldest, one name, one-city, franchise of professional sports.

    Why are there so many baseball firsts in Philadelphia?

    “Philadelphia was the home to organization and structure,” Thorn said. “This was the seat of government, the place where American politics and innovation started. Philadelphia is a town of invention.”

    This week’s Firstival is Saturday, June 11, 11 a.m.-1 p.m., at Citizens Bank Park, 1 Citizens Bank Way, Philadelphia, PA

    The Inquirer is highlighting a “first” from the Philadelphia Historic District’s 52 Weeks of Firsts program each week. A “52 Weeks of Firsts” podcast, produced by All That’s Good Productions, drops every Tuesday.

  • Philly shows ‘Abbott Elementary’ and ‘Task’ nominated for Emmy Awards

    Philly shows ‘Abbott Elementary’ and ‘Task’ nominated for Emmy Awards

    Following a banner year for TV shows set in Philadelphia, the ABC sitcom Abbott Elementary and HBO drama Task received multiple Emmy Award nominations on Wednesday.

    The debut season of Task, the Delco crime thriller from Berwyn’s Brad Ingelsby which filmed throughout the region, marks a triumphant return to the Emmys red carpet for the Mare of Easttown creator.

    Starring Mark Ruffalo, the show received six nominations and began filming Season 2 in Manayunk this week with new cast members, including Mahershala Ali.

    Ruffalo and Tom Pelphrey both received acting nominations, in outstanding lead and outstanding supporting categories, respectively.

    The finale, “A Still Small Voice,” received particular attention: Ingelsby was nominated for outstanding writing for a drama series and editors Keiko Deguchi and Amy E. Duddleston were nominated in the picture editing category. The episode “Crossings” was recognized as well, with director of photography Alex Disenhof nominated for outstanding cinematography for a one-hour series.

    Additionally, director Salli Richardson Whitfield was nominated for directing the action-packed episode “Out Beyond Ideas of Wrongdoing and Rightdoing, There Is a River.” She was also nominated in the same category for directing an episode of HBO’s The Gilded Age.

    Ingelsby told The Inquirer in an email that the Task team is “deeply honored” by the recognition.

    Task exists solely because of the remarkable people who have believed in it and helped bring it to the screen. Thank you to HBO for shepherding it into the world so beautifully,” Ingelsby wrote. “I’m especially happy to see our cast leaders Mark Ruffalo and Tom Pelphrey nominated for their extraordinary performances.”

    “This recognition represents the entire Task team,“ he said, ”in front of and behind the camera who poured their enormous talent and hearts into bringing this story to life.”

    He added: “We are busy at work shooting Season 2 right now, and this is a very nice reason to pause for a moment and celebrate.”

    Fresh off concluding its fifth season, the Emmy-winning powerhouse Abbott Elementary returns to the awards ceremony with seven nods, including outstanding comedy series and outstanding casting. West Philly’s Quinta Brunson, Abbott’s star and creator, was nominated for outstanding lead actress in a comedy series for her role as Janine Teagues and outstanding writing for a comedy series for the episode “Team Building.” Brunson won an outstanding lead actress Emmy for the same role in 2023 and an outstanding writing award for the Abbott pilot in 2022.

    Joining Brunson in acting nominations are Janelle James, who plays the chaotically unpredictable principal Ava Coleman and is nominated for outstanding supporting actress in a comedy series. Tyler James Williams, who plays neurotic teacher Gregory Eddie, is nominated for outstanding supporting actor in a comedy.

    “Abbott Elementary” creator and star Quinta Brunson watches the Phillies play the Atlanta Braves during a taping of the show on Thursday, Aug. 28, 2025. in Philadelphia.

    Abbott Elementary also received a nod for outstanding directing for a comedy series, recognizing Randall Einhorn for his effort filming the “Ball Game” episode during a live Phillies game at Citizens Bank Park last August. Phillies fans will remember it as the night Kyle Schwarber made MLB history with four home runs, while Abbott fans will recall suspecting the mysterious janitor Mr. Johnson (William Stanford Davis) was secretly the Phanatic.

    “I couldn’t be more proud,” Brunson wrote on Instagram. “Congratulations to the hardworking cast and crew of Abbott. I am grateful for each and every person that makes this production move.”

    In the supporting actor category, Williams will compete with West Philly native Colman Domingo, who was nominated for his role as the sharp and sassy Danny in Tina Fey’s Netflix comedy, The Four Seasons. This is Domingo’s second consecutive year as a best supporting actor nominee. The show’s second season, released in May, was filmed partially at the Jersey Shore and revealed that Domingo’s character is also from Philadelphia.

    Domingo received a second Emmy nomination this year for the final season of HBO’s Euphoria, in the category of outstanding guest actor. He played the tenderhearted and justifiably furious addiction sponsor Ali to Zendaya’s lovably tragic character, Rue. In 2022, Domingo won the supporting actor Emmy for the same role.

    The actor was just in Philadelphia on July 4, when he received a Philadelphia Freedom Award from Mayor Cherelle L. Parker. Now on vacation in Europe, he’s celebrating the double Emmy nods that highlight his acting skills in both comedic and dramatic roles.

    “I think the diversity of work is what I’ve always hoped for, to have these opportunities to flex very different muscles,” Domingo told Deadline on Wednesday. He added that he believes the finale of Euphoria “is some of my best work” and he “gave it everything I had.”

    Another Philly son got a nomination this year: It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia creator Rob Mac (formerly McElhenney) stars in and executive produces the Emmy-winning Welcome to Wrexham, about the Welsh soccer team he co-owns with Ryan Reynolds. The show is in the running for outstanding unstructured reality program, which it has won twice before. (Mac’s Always Sunny costar and wife, Kaitlin Olson, also received a nomination for her guest appearance in Hacks.)

    Leading in Emmy nominations were The Pitt, the emergency room drama set in Pittsburgh, with 25 nods, and Hacks, the comedy costarring Eagles superfan Hannah Einbinder, receiving 24. The daughter of a diehard Eagles fan from Doylestown, Einbinder is nominated again for outstanding supporting actress in a comedy series. She won the award last year and made headlines for ending her speech with “Go Birds, f — ICE, and free Palestine.”

    Hosted at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles, the 78th annual Primetime Emmy Awards will air 8 p.m. Monday, Sept. 14, on NBC.

  • Philly music with Patti LaBelle, Bob Dylan, Tame Impala, Alex Warren, Todd Rundgren, Megan Moroney, and more

    Philly music with Patti LaBelle, Bob Dylan, Tame Impala, Alex Warren, Todd Rundgren, Megan Moroney, and more

    This week in Philly music features a triumvirate of legends with Patti LaBelle, Bob Dylan, and Todd Rundgren. Plus, a trio of summer arena tour headliners with Alex Warren, Megan Moroney, and Tame Impala, all coming to South Philly.

    Thursday, July 9

    Patti LaBelle

    July 4 has come and gone, but America 250 celebrations go on. Patti LaBelle headlined the Essence Festival in New Orleans on the holiday, but now she’s back in her hometown. Chester Grammy-winning singer Avery Sunshine is also on the bill along with Jeff Bradshaw and Pieces of a Dream. 7 p.m., Dell Music Center, 2400 Strawberry Mansion Drive, thedellmusiccenter.com

    Singer Patti LaBelle is photographed at Mother Bethel AME Church in Philadelphia on Jan. 22. LaBelle will play the Dell Music Center in Strawberry Mansion in an America’s 250th birthday celebration concert July 9.

    Marty Stuart & His Fabulous Superlatives

    Philadelphia, Miss., native Marty Stuart and his band, which includes drummer Harry Stinson, guitarist Kenny Vaughn, and bassist, steel guitar player, and drummer Chris Scruggs, is aptly named. Among other surprises at their terrific show in Phoenixville this spring, the country-surf band sang a fab close harmony version of the Rolling Stones’ “Wild Horses.” 8 p.m., Sellersville Theater, 18 W. Temple Ave., Sellersville, st94.com

    Dave Matthews of the Dave Matthews Band performs at the Railbird Music Festival in Lexington, Ky., on Aug. 29, 2021. The band plays two shows at the Freedom Mortgage pavilion in Camden this weekend. (Photo by Amy Harris/Invision/AP, File)

    Friday, July 10

    Dave Matthews Band

    It’s time again for the annual DMB two-night summer stand in Camden. This is the third year of the environmentally conscious band’s “On the Road to Zero Waste” campaign and the group continues its work with the Nature Conservancy. Pennsylvania DMB fans take note: The Ben Franklin Bridge will be closed to celebrate its 100th birthday in the hours before the show, so if you intended to “Drive In Drive Out” to the show, make alternative plans. 8 p.m., Freedom Mortgage Pavilion, 1 Harbour Blvd, Camden. freedommortgagepavilion.com

    Vince Gill

    Too often country acts that aren’t the biggest mainstream stars of the moment skip Philadelphia, and play only in what the music business considers secondary markets. So if you want to see and hear Vince Gill, the 22-time Grammy winner and stellar singer and guitarist, you’ll have to go to Hershey. Now a member of the Eagles, which is doing dates at the Sphere in Las Vegas this fall, Gill is on a creative jag. He has been releasing one EP per month over the course of a year for his 50 Years From Home project. 7:30 p.m., Hershey Theatre, 15 E. Caracas Ave., Hershey, hersheytheatre.com.

    Alex Warren

    The winner of last year’s song of the summer sweepstakes with “Ordinary” is on his first arena tour. When the tour was initially announced, the Californian former YouTuber, whose father died when he was 9 and mother died when he was 21, called it the “Little Orphan Alex” tour. That has now been amended to the “Finding Family on the Road” tour. Warren’s third album, Wildchild, comes out in August. Noah Cyrus opens. 8 p.m., Xfinity Mobile Arena, 3601 S. Broad St., xfinitymobilearena.com

    Philly band Hurry celebrates the release of their new album “Zoned Out” at Johnny Brenda’s on Friday.

    Hurry & Sad13

    This is a double release party, with two of Philly’s most consistently rewarding acts. Headliners are Hurry, Matthew Scottoline’s formidable four-piece power-pop band, which is celebrating their sixth album, Zoned Out. It’s a 10-song platter of jangling, bittersweet bliss, that features a cameo from Gerard Love of Hurry heroes Teenage Fanclub. Love sings on “Moving After You” and refines the band’s memorably melodic attack.

    Hurry will be preceded by Sad13, the solo endeavor of Speedy Ortiz leader Sadie Dupuis. Her cool, compelling new project is 1331, a 13-song, 16-minute mixtape whose concise approach finds inspiration in jingle writing and Tierra Whack, among other sources. Its synthy self-produced songs are shaped by Philadelphia: from Dupuis’ organizing efforts with the United Musicians and Allied Workers to a 2024 biking accident that broke the elbow of the guitarist that Rolling Stone named the 176th greatest of all time. 8 p.m., Johnny Brenda’s, 1201 N. Frankford Ave., johnnybrendas.com

    Megan Moroney performing in Nashville in 2025. The country singer plays Xfinity Mobile Arena on Saturday.

    Saturday, July 11

    Louis Tomlinson

    Former One Direction boy band star Louis Tomlinson’s new album asks the musical question How Did I Get Here? By singing pop songs that send young fans into paroxysms of pleasure, presumably. Canadian rock band Beaches and English indie outfit Picture Parlour open. 6:30 p.m., Skyline Stage at Highmark Mann, 5201 Parkside Ave., highmarkmann.org

    Megan Moroney

    The country songwriter has sharp words for foolhardy dudes on songs like “Stupid” and “Medicine” on her third album, Cloud 9, featuring guest spots from Ed Sheeran and Kacey Musgraves. Openers are J.P. Saxe and Solon Holt. 8 p.m., Xfinity Mobile Arena, 3601 S. Broad St., xfinitymobilearena.com

    Miami rapper Rick Ross performs at Rolling Loud Miami, at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida, in July 2021. He play the Met Philly on Saturday. (Daniel A. Varela/Miami Herald/TNS)

    Rick Ross & the Renaissance Orchestra

    Rick Ross is celebrating the 20th anniversary of his 2006 debut album, Port of Miami, in style. The Florida man will perform reworked version of his songs with orchestral arrangements, and its billed as “Black Tie Affair,” so get dressed up. Philly State Property rappers Beanie Sigel and Freeway open, going on much earlier than they did last weekend with The Roots. Also, anytime Ricky Rozay is in town, it’s a safe bet frequent collaborator Meek Mill will show up. 8 p.m., Met Philly, 858 N. Broad St., themetphilly.com

    Saturday, July 11 and Sunday, July 12

    Todd Rundgren

    Upper Darby’s own reluctant Rock & Roll Hall of Famer is playing the hits. The “Damned If I Do” tour is subtitled “The Fan-Favorite Classics Return,” and he’s playing with a full band as well as doing an acoustic interlude. So get ready to “bang on the drum all day.” 8 p.m., Keswick Theatre, 291 N. Keswick Ave, Glenside, KeswickTheatre.com

    Sunday, July 12

    Shovels & Rope

    South Carolina folk and Americana band Shovels & Rope is a true duo: Married singers and songwriters Michael Trent and Cary Ann Hearst are both multi-instrumentalists who play drums, guitars, and whatever else is necessary to bring their sound to life on albums like 2024’s Something Is Happening Up Above My Head. Intriguing openers are the Golden Hours, featuring members of the David Wax Museum and the Lowland Hum. 7 p.m., Bryn Mawr Twilight Concerts, 9 S. Bryn Mawr Ave, Bryn Mawr, brynmawrtwilightconcerts.com

    Kevin Parker of Tame Impala. He brings his “Deadbeat Tour” to Xfinity Mobile Arena on July 15.

    Tuesday, July 14

    Bob Dylan

    The world’s greatest living songwriter is having difficulty keeping his band together this year. Longtime guitarist Doug Lancio left the band in June, followed by the exciting news that jazz guitar standout Julian Lage joined. Then, second guitarist Bob Britt quit, replaced by Chicago blues guitarist Joel Paterson. He was the lone guitarist in the band for one gig missed by Lage, who now seems to be back in the band. Dylan has not commented. Jimmie Vaughan & the Tilt-a-Whirl Band and Brittney Spencer open. 7 p.m., TD Pavilion at the Highmark Mann, 5201 Parkside Ave., highmarkmann.org

    Wednesday, July 15

    Tame Impala

    Australian psychedelic rock mastermind Kevin Parker is Tame Impala. And on Deadbeat, the 2025 album that was its first in five years, Tame Impala became a psychedelic disco Dad Rock band, transformed by Parker’s experience as a father, with a newfound compulsion to head to the dance floor. DJO opens. 8 p.m., Xfinity Mobile Arena, 3601 S. Broad St., xfinitymobilearena.com

  • Mahershala Ali seen jumping rope behind the scenes of ‘Task’ in Manayunk

    Mahershala Ali seen jumping rope behind the scenes of ‘Task’ in Manayunk

    Mahershala Ali is staying warmed up amid filming for season two of the HBO series Task.

    The Oscar-winning actor was spotted on Grape Street in Manayunk, jumping rope between scenes. Wearing a grey polo T-shirt, blue jeans, and a Phillies hat, Ali seemed to be getting in a quick exercise while the Task crew set up equipment behind him, according to a video posted to the Roxborough Rants & Raves Facebook group on Tuesday.

    The video was posted by Facebook user Trevor D’Arcy, a Doylestown native per their social media profile.

    The second season of the Mark Ruffalo-led, Delco-set series has been filming in the area since Monday. Ruffalo will be reprising his role as FBI agent Tom Brandis while Ali will be playing a longtime Philadelphia DEA agent named Eddie Barnes. Barnes will reportedly rival Ruffalo’s efforts in his new task force.

    The first season was filmed in the greater Philadelphia region, with the production team having deep Philly roots. Executive producer Jeremiah Zagar is a South Philly native, and is the son of the late Philadelphia mosaicist Isaiah Zagar.

    The show’s creator Brad Ingelsby resides in Berwyn, where he was born and raised.

    Ali grew up in Oakland, Calif., but his wife, Amatus-Sami Karim, spent part of her childhood in Philadelphia. Ali was raised Christian, but converted to Islam after attending a prayer at a Philadelphia mosque with Karim and her mother, according to People.

    “I converted Dec. 31, 1999. It was a Friday. That was my second time going to the mosque,” Ali said to the Kansas City NPR affiliate, KCUR in 2017. “I went to a mosque in Philadelphia with her … and I just had such a strong reaction to the prayer.”

    In 2017, Ali became the first Muslim actor to win the Academy Award for best supporting actor, for his role in Moonlight. He won the same award two years later for Green Book (2018).

    Task is Ali’s second HBO venture after the third season of True Detective, where he played Arkansas State Police Detective, Wayne Hays. He was most recently seen in Jurassic World: Rebirth.

    No premiere date for season two of Task has been announced.

    This article has been updated to include Mahershala Ali’s wife, Amatus-Sami Karim, and details about her connection to Philadelphia.

  • Devan Kaney lands a new gig in Chicago as WIP still has an Eagles opening

    Devan Kaney lands a new gig in Chicago as WIP still has an Eagles opening

    Devan Kaney is headed to Chicago.

    The former 94.1 WIP sideline reporter and Fox 29 sports anchor is leaving Philadelphia to cover the Chicago Bears for Fox 32, she announced on social media.

    Kaney is taking over the role vacated by Cassie Carlson, who was promoted as the station’s lead sports anchor. Kaney will also do some sports anchoring work for the station, much like her role at Fox 29, which she left last month.

    “I’m so grateful for the support all of my colleagues at Fox 29 have given me during my time there, but especially in the last few months,” Kaney told The Inquirer.

    Those last few months included being laid off at WIP as part of company-wide cutbacks by parent company Audacy.

    The move was a surprise considering Kaney was coming off her first full season as the station’s sideline reporter during Eagles broadcasts after replacing Howard Eskin, who abruptly left the station in January 2025 following an incident with a female staffer. Kaney jumped in and served as the station’s sideline reporter during the Eagles’ Super Bowl run.

    Devan Kaney (right) with 94.1 WIP’s morning show: (from left) Rhea Hughes, Jon Ritchie, Jason Kelce, and Joe DeCamara.

    She also served as an on-air host, worked with the station’s popular morning crew, and hosted shows alongside Phillies announcer and former general manager Rubén Amaro Jr.

    WIP hasn’t announced who will replace her, and the clock’s ticking. The Eagles’ first preseason game is five weeks away, with the Birds taking on the Baltimore Ravens on Aug. 15.

    “It’s a tough job,” WIP program director Rod Lakin told The Inquirer in 2025. “You have to be someone that’s a really good communicator. You also need to be able to change quickly — circumstances change all the time in the NFL, and you’ve got to deliver that information quickly and in a collaborative way, because the game doesn’t stop.”

    Over at Fox 29, Kaney’s role was partly taken over by former 6abc sportscaster Jamie Apody, who among other things is anchoring the station’s 10 p.m. newscast.

    While Kaney is leaving the city, she’ll continue to host Werth Talking About, a PHLY podcast she’s co-hosting with former All-Star Jayson Werth. And Eagles fans might get a glimpse of her Sept. 28, when the Birds travel to Soldier Field to take on the Bears on Monday Night Football in Week 3.