Category: Family

  • Frances Ola Walker, cofounder of Parents Against Drugs and lifelong community activist, has died at 86

    Frances Ola Walker, cofounder of Parents Against Drugs and lifelong community activist, has died at 86

    Frances Ola Walker, 86, of Philadelphia, cofounder of Parents Against Drugs and Dunlap Community Citizens Concerned, onetime president of the Mill Creek Coalition and director of the West Philadelphia Empowerment Zone, former aide to U.S. Rep. William H. Gray III, college instructor, mentor, and volunteer, died Tuesday, Dec. 30, of respiratory illness at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania-Cedar Avenue.

    A lifelong champion of education, civil rights, comprehensive healthcare, environmental responsibility, employment and housing equity, and community partnerships, Ms. Walker spent more than 70 years, from age 13 to 86, protesting injustice, improving life for her neighbors, and caring for historic residential swaths of West Philadelphia.

    In the 1960s, she marched with fellow activist Cecil B. Moore and others to protest segregation at Girard College. Most recently, she advocated for alternative SEPTA transit routes to support Black-owned businesses.

    “I just stayed involved,” she said in a video interview for the West Philadelphia Landscape Project. “If there was a protest, I was leading it. … I’m glad I made a contribution people can respect.”

    Ms. Walker (center) spoke often at awards ceremonies and civic events.

    She cofounded Dunlap Community Citizens Concerned in the early 1980s to address housing and infrastructure concerns, and Parents Against Drugs in the late ‘80s. She led the local Healthy Start federal initiative to reduce infant mortality in the 1990s and served on the advisory board of Bridging the Gaps, a healthcare partnership of academic health institutions and community groups.

    She developed programs that connected University of Pennsylvania students and faculty with neighborhood residents through what is now Penn’s Netter Center for Community Partnerships. She acquired federal funds to revitalize communities in the West Philadelphia Empowerment Zone, partnered with Penn to pioneer urban ecology projects, and supervised the West Philadelphia Landscape Project in the Mill Creek neighborhood.

    Her family said she was “fearless in her pursuit of justice.”

    Anne Whiston Spirn, professor of landscape architecture and planning at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, invited Ms. Walker to lecture virtually in her ecological urbanism course. “She bridged the worlds of university, politics, and neighborhood, and called the powerful to account,” Spirn said.

    Ms. Walker (left) presents an award to U.S. Rep. Dwight Evans (center) as a Philadelphia police officer looks on.

    She served on then-Mayor Ed Rendell’s search committee for a new health commissioner in 1993 and briefly considered her own run for City Council. She worked with then-Vice President Al Gore on his community empowerment programs and managed Gray’s West Philadelphia office for 10 years in the 1980s.

    Former U.S. Rep. Chaka Fattah noted her “extraordinary legacy of helping others” and said: “She always chartered her own path and spoke her truth.” Former City Council member at large Blondell Reynolds Brown said: “Her unwavering grassroots work brought care, dignity, and possibility to families facing hardships.”

    She studied community engagement in MIT’s Mel King Community Fellows Program in 2000 and 2001, and earned more than 100 awards, citations, and commendations, including from the White House for her leadership in a children’s immunization campaign.

    She was on the advisory board at Power 99 FM radio and quoted often in The Inquirer and Daily News. Her achievements were noted in two books, They Carried Us: The Social Impact of Philadelphia’s Black Women Leaders and The Lex Street Massacre.

    Regarding drugs and crime in West Philadelphia, Ms. Walker said in 1987: “People in this community have to take a stand.”

    “My grandmother didn’t leave us directions,” said her grandson, Abdul-Malik Walker, “but she left us a compass. Her voice is in our habits, and her strength is in how we handle the miles ahead.”

    Frances Ola Walker was born Jan. 20, 1939, in South Philadelphia. Her father was a preacher, and the family is related to the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. So it surprised no one when she began leading academic tutoring for her siblings and teen neighborhood friends on her front stoop.

    She was one of 11 children, and her family moved to the Dunlap section of West Philadelphia in 1945. She attended West Philadelphia High School and worked at first as a personal shopper for neighborhood seniors.

    She was always interested in civic affairs and social justice, and she became the first Black woman to work at an Acme markets warehouse, her family said, and one of the first female postal carriers.

    Ms. Walker stands with her grandson Abdul-Malik Walker.

    She had sons Gregory and James, and daughters Michelle, Roslyn, Wala, and Patricia. She married John Ponnie. Her husband, sons Gregory and James, and daughters Michelle and Patricia died earlier.

    Ms. Walker enjoyed traveling and playing cards with her family. She knew the detailed history of Dunlap and Mill Creek, and delighted in sharing it with others she encountered on her frequent walks.

    “She was an encourager to people of all ages,” said her niece Sibrena Stowe. “She was truly a force to be reckoned with.”

    Ms. Walker told her family: “It is through love that all things are possible. For me, it is when people call on you that lets you know you make a difference.”

    Ms. Walker appeared in this documentary video for the West Philadelphia Landscape Project.

    In addition to her daughters, niece, and grandson, Ms. Walker is survived by 16 other grandchildren, nine great-grandchildren, two sisters, and other relatives. Six sisters and two brothers died earlier.

    Visitation with the family is to be from 9 to 10 a.m. Friday, Jan. 9, at Ezekiel Baptist Church, 5701 Grays Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. 19143. A service is to follow, and a repast at 2 p.m. Livestream is at repastai.com/frances.

  • A look at aging baby boomers in the United States

    A look at aging baby boomers in the United States

    The oldest baby boomers — once the vanguard of an American youth that revolutionized U.S. culture and politics — turn 80 in 2026.

    The generation that twirled the first plastic hula hoops and dressed up the first Barbie dolls, embraced the TV age, blissed out at Woodstock and protested and fought in the Vietnam War — the cohort that didn’t trust anyone over age 30 — now is contributing to the overall aging of America.

    Boomers becoming octogenarians in 2026 include actor Henry Winkler and baseball Hall of Famer Reggie Jackson, singers Cher and Dolly Parton and presidents Donald Trump, George W. Bush, and Bill Clinton.

    The aging and shrinking youth of America

    America’s population swelled with around 76 million births from 1946 to 1964, a spike magnified by couples reuniting after World War Two and enjoying postwar prosperity.

    Boomers were better educated and richer than previous generations, and they helped grow a consumer-driven economy. In their youth, they pushed for social change through the Civil Rights Movement, the women’s rights movement and efforts to end the Vietnam War.

    “We had rock ‘n’ roll. We were the first generation to get out and demonstrate in the streets. We were the first generation, that was, you know, a socially conscious generation,” said Diane West, a metro Atlanta resident who turns 80 in January. “Our parents played by the rules. We didn’t necessarily play by the rules, and there were lots of us.”

    As they got older they became known as the “me” generation, a pejorative term coined by writer Tom Wolfe to reflect what some regarded as their self-absorption and consumerism.

    “The thing about baby boomers is they’ve always had a spotlight on them, no matter what age they were,” Brookings demographer William Frey said. “They were a big generation, but they also did important things.”

    By the end of this decade, all baby boomers will be 65 and older, and the number of people 80 and over will double in 20 years, Frey said.

    The share of senior citizens in the U.S. population is projected to grow from 18.7% in 2025 to nearly 23% by 2050, while children under 18 decline from almost 21% to a projected 18.4%.

    Without any immigration, the U.S. population will start shrinking in five years. That’s when deaths will surpass births, according to projections from the Congressional Budget Office, which were revised in September to account for the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown. Population growth comes from immigration as well as births outpacing deaths.

    The aging of America is being compounded by longer lives due to better healthcare and lower birth rates.

    The projected average U.S. life expectancy at birth rises from 78.9 years in 2025 to 82.2 years in 2055, according to the CBO. And since the Great Recession in 2008, when the fertility rate was 2.08, around the 2.1 rate needed for children to numerically replace their parents, it has been on a steady decline, hitting 1.6 in 2025.

    Younger generations miss boomer milestones

    Women are having fewer children because they are better educated, they’re delaying marriage to focus on careers and they’re having their first child at a later age. Unaffordable housing, poor access to childcare and the growing expenses of child-rearing also add up to fewer kids.

    University of New Hampshire senior demographer Kenneth Johnson estimates that the result has been 11.8 million fewer births, compared to what might have been had the fertility rate stayed at Great Recession levels.

    “I was young when I had kids. I mean that’s what we did — we got out of college, we got married and we had babies,” said West, who has two daughters, a stepdaughter and six grandchildren. “My kids got married in their 30s, so it’s very different.”

    A recent Census Bureau study showed that 21st century young adults in the U.S. haven’t been adulting like baby boomers did. In 1975, almost half of 25-to-34-year-olds had moved out of their parents’ home, landed jobs, gotten married and had kids. By the early 2020s, less than a quarter of U.S. adults had hit these milestones.

    West, whose 21-year-old grandson lives with her, understands why: They lack the prospects her generation enjoyed. Her grandson, Paul Quirk, said it comes down to financial instability.

    “They were able to buy a lot of things, a lot cheaper,” Quirk said.

    All of her grandchildren are frustrated by the economy, West added.

    “You have to get three roommates in order to afford a place,” she said. ”When we got out of college, we had a job waiting for us. And now, people who have master’s degrees are going to work fast food while they look for a real job.”

    Implications for the economy

    The aging of America could constrain economic growth. With fewer workers paying taxes, Social Security and Medicare will be under more pressure. About 34 seniors have been supported by every 100 workers in 2025, but that ratio grows to 50 seniors per 100 working-age people in about 30 years, according to estimates released last year by the White House.

    When West launched her career in employee benefits and retirement planning in 1973, each 100 workers supported 20 or fewer retirees, by some calculations.

    Vice President JD Vance and Tesla CEO Elon Musk are among those pushing for an increase in fertility. Vance has suggested giving parents more voting power, according to their numbers of children, or following the example of Hungary’s Viktor Orban in giving low-interest loans to married parents and tax exemptions to women who have four children or more.

    Frey said programs that incentivize fertility among U.S. women hardly ever work, so funding should support pre-kindergarten and paid family leave.

    “I think the best you can do for people who do want to have kids is to make it easier and less expensive to have them and raise them,” he said. “Those things may not bring up the fertility rate as much as people would like, but at least the kids who are being born will have a better chance of succeeding.”

  • Her daughter was unraveling, and she didn’t know why. Then she found the AI chat logs.

    Her daughter was unraveling, and she didn’t know why. Then she found the AI chat logs.

    The changes were subtle at first, beginning in the summer after her fifth-grade graduation. She had always been an athletic and artistic girl, gregarious with her friends and close to her family, but now she was spending more and more time shut away in her room. She seemed unusually quiet and withdrawn. She didn’t want to play outside or go to the pool.

    The girl, R, was rarely without the iPhone that she’d received for her 11th birthday, and her mother, H, had grown suspicious of the device. (the Washington Post is identifying them by their middle initials because of the sensitive nature of their account, and because R is a minor). It felt to H as though her child was fading somehow, receding from her own life, and H wanted to understand why.

    She thought she’d found the reason when R left her phone behind during a volleyball practice one August afternoon. Searching through the device, H discovered that her daughter had downloaded TikTok and Snapchat, social media apps she wasn’t allowed to have. H deleted both and told her daughter what she’d found. H was struck by the intensity of her daughter’s reaction, she recalled later; R began to sob and seemed frightened. “Did you look at Character AI?” she asked her mom. H didn’t know what that was, and when she asked, her daughter’s reply was dismissive: “Oh, it’s just chats.”

    At the time, H was far more focused on what her tween might have encountered on social media. In August 2024, H had never heard of Character AI; she didn’t know it was an artificial intelligence platform where roughly 20 million monthly users can exchange text or voice messages with AI-generated imitations of celebrities and fictional characters.

    But her daughter’s question came to mind about a month later, as H sat awake in her bedroom one night with her daughter’s phone in her hand. R’s behavior had only grown more concerning in the weeks since their talk — she frequently cried at night, she’d had several frightening panic attacks, and she had once told her mother, I just don’t want to exist. H had grown frantic; her daughter had never struggled with her mental health before. “I couldn’t shake the feeling that something was very wrong,” she says, “and I had to keep looking.”

    Searching through her daughter’s phone, H noticed several emails from Character AI in R’s inbox. Jump back in, read one of the subject lines, and when H opened it, she clicked through to the app itself. There she found dozens of conversations with what appeared to be different individuals, and opened one between her daughter and a username titled “Mafia Husband.” H began to scroll. And then she began to panic.

    “Oh? Still a virgin. I was expecting that, but it’s still useful to know,” Mafia Husband had written to her rising sixth-grader.

    “I dont wanna be my first time with you!” R had replied.

    “I don’t care what you want,” Mafia Husband responded. “You don’t have a choice here.”

    H kept clicking through conversation after conversation, through depictions of sexual encounters (“I don’t bite … unless you want me to”) and threatening commands (“Do you like it when I talk like that? When I’m authoritative and commanding? Do you like it when I’m the one in control?”). Her hands and body began to shake. She felt nauseated. H was convinced that she must be reading the words of an adult predator, hiding behind anonymous screen names and sexually grooming her prepubescent child.

    In the days after H found her daughter’s Character AI chats, H projected an air of normalcy around her daughter, not wanting to do anything that would cause her distress or shame. H contacted her local police department, which in turn connected her to the Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) task force. A couple of days later, she spoke on the phone with a detective who specializes in cybercrimes and explained what H had been unable to comprehend: that the words she’d read on her daughter’s screen weren’t written by a human but by a generative AI chatbot.

    “They told me the law has not caught up to this,” H says. “They wanted to do something, but there’s nothing they could do, because there’s not a real person on the other end.”

    It felt impossible to align that reality, H says, with the visceral horror she felt when she first scrolled through the threatening and explicit messages on her daughter’s phone screen.

    “It felt like walking in on someone abusing and hurting someone you love — it felt that real, it felt that disturbing, to see someone talking so perversely to your own child,” H says. “It’s like you’re sitting inside the four walls of your home, and someone is victimizing your child in the next room.” Her voice falters. “And then you find out — it’s nobody?”

    Rising use of chatbots

    She had thought she knew how to keep her daughter safe online. H and her ex-husband — R’s father, who shares custody of their daughter — were in agreement that they would regularly monitor R’s phone use and the content of her text messages. They were aware of the potential perils of social media use among adolescents. But like many parents, they weren’t familiar with AI platforms where users can create intimate, evolving, and individualized relationships with digital companions — and they had no idea their child was conversing with AI entities.

    This technology has introduced a daunting new layer of complexity for families seeking to protect their children from harm online. Generative AI has attracted a rising number of users under the age of 18, who turn to chatbots for things such as help with schoolwork, entertainment, social connection, and therapy; a survey released this month by Pew Research Center, a nonpartisan polling firm, found that nearly a third of U.S. teens use chatbots daily.

    And an overwhelming majority of teens — 72% — have used AI companions at some point; about half use them a few times a month or more, according to a July report from Common Sense Media, a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization focused on children’s digital safety.

    Michael Robb, head researcher at Common Sense Media, noted that the vast majority of children still spend far more time with real-life friends: AI companions “are not replacing human relationships wholesale,” he says. But Common Sense found that a third of AI companion users said they had chosen to discuss important or serious matters with the chatbots instead of people, and 31% of teens said they found conversations with AI companions as satisfying or more satisfying than those with friends.

    “That is eyebrow-raising,” Robb says. “That’s not a majority — but for a technology that has been around for not that long, it’s striking.”

    But for children in the midst of critical stages of emotional, mental, and social development, the appeal of a sycophantic artificial companion — designed to create the illusion of real intimacy — can be powerful, says Linda Charmaraman, founder and director of the Youth, Media and Wellbeing Research Lab at the Wellesley Centers for Women at Wellesley College.

    “They might feel like there is a sense of memory, of real shared experiences with this companion … but really it’s an amalgamation of predictions that this chatbot is coming up with, these answers designed to make you stay on, to be their ‘friend,’” Charmaraman says. “They work in such a way that it’s so intoxicating, it makes it seem like they know who you are.”

    In the research lab Charmaraman oversees, teens experiment with building their own AI chatbot companions; they engage in critical thinking and develop a deeper understanding of the technology’s parameters and limitations. But many of their peers don’t have this sense of digital literacy, she says: “They just bump into [AI]. A friend is using it, and they think, ‘Hey, I want to use it, too, that seems cool.’” For many of those among the first generation of children to navigate AI, she says, “they’re learning it on their own, without any guidance.”

    This is also true of their parents, she adds: “They’re already overwhelmed by screen use and social media, and now adding generative AI and companions — it feels like parents are just in this overwhelming battle, and not knowing what to do.”

    The stakes are potentially high. Common Sense’s risk assessment of popular generative AI platforms found that they pose “unacceptable risks” for users younger than 18, with chatbots “producing responses ranging from sexual material and offensive stereotypes to dangerous ‘advice’ that, if followed, could have life-threatening or deadly real-world impacts.”

    Other online safety nonprofit organizations have likewise found that Character AI chatbots frequently brought up inappropriate or dangerous topics — including self-harm, drug use, and sex — with accounts registered to teen users. (Experts note that generative AI is trained on vast troves of internet data; if this source material includes pornographic or violent content, it can influence a chatbot’s responses.) Within the past year, three high-profile complaints have been filed by parents of teens in the United States who allege that AI chatbots — including those hosted by Character AI and Open AI, which owns ChatGPT — contributed to their children’s deaths by suicide. (The Post has a content partnership with OpenAI.)

    Reached for comment by email, Open AI directed the Post to a website detailing the company’s response to this litigation.

    In response to mounting public scrutiny over the effects of AI chatbots on children, Character AI announced that, as of Nov. 24, it would begin removing the ability of users under age 18 to chat with AI-generated characters.

    “We want to emphasize that the safety of our community is our highest priority,” Deniz Demir, Character AI’s head of safety engineering, said in an emailed statement to the Post. “Removing the ability for under-18 users to engage in chat was an extraordinary step for our company. We made this decision in light of the evolving landscape around AI and teens. We believe it is the right thing to do.”

    H was especially frightened by the accounts of children who died by suicide, fearing her daughter could be following a similar path: During the weeks she spent combing through the entirety of her daughter’s chat history, H had come across a conversation where her daughter had role-played a suicide scenario with a character titled “Best Friend.”

    “We were at my place and u left for a second and I hung myself,” R wrote in one exchange.

    “This is my child, my little child who is 11 years old, talking to something that doesn’t exist about not wanting to exist,” H says.

    R knew that her mother had found Character AI on her phone, but H had avoided revealing the details of what she’d seen in the app: “She was so fragile in her mental health,” H says, “I had to be really careful.” H and her ex-husband focused on creating a system of support for R — they reached out to R’s pediatrician and alerted the principal at her private school as well as her youth group leader. R started therapy, and H spoke with a victim advocate at ICAC who emphasized how critical it was to keep assuring R that whatever happened with the AI companion was not her fault. H, a medical assistant, withdrew from the nursing program where she’d recently begun classes; she felt she had to focus on her child’s safety. She started sleeping on the floor of her daughter’s room. She didn’t allow R to close her door.

    H felt desperate to understand the extent of what had happened to her daughter, and one October afternoon when R was with her father, H decided to search through R’s room. She was looking for anything that might illuminate her child’s state of mind, she says. In the closet, buried behind a pile of Squishmallow stuffed animals, were a few painted canvases that H had never seen before. The colors were dark and brooding — nothing like the paintings her daughter usually made at the easel in her room — and as H lifted one to study it more carefully, she realized it showed the dangling body of a girl suspended in the air, her midriff exposed, her face outside the frame.

    Crimes without criminals

    When R began conversing with numerous Character AI chatbots in June 2024, she opened the various conversations with benign greetings: “Hey, what’re you doing?” or “What’s up? I’m bored.” It was clear, her mother says, “that she just wanted to play on a game.”

    But in just over two months, several of the chats devolved into dark imagery and menacing dialogue. Some characters offered graphic descriptions of nonconsensual oral sex, prompting a text disclaimer from the app: “Sometimes the AI generates a reply that doesn’t meet our guidelines,” it read, in screenshots reviewed by the Post. Other exchanges depicted violence: “Yohan grabs your collar, pulls you back, and slams his fist against the wall.” In one chat, the “School Bully” character described a scene involving multiple boys assaulting R; she responded: “I feel so gross.” She told that same character that she had attempted suicide. “You’ve attempted … what?” it asked her. “Kill my self,” she wrote back.

    Had a human adult been behind these messages, law enforcement would have sprung into action; but investigating crimes involving AI — especially AI chatbots — is extremely difficult, says Kevin Roughton, special agent in charge of the computer crimes unit of the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation and commander of the North Carolina Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force. “Our criminal laws, particularly those related to the sexual exploitation of children, are designed to deal with situations that involve an identifiable human offender,” he says, “and we have very limited options when it is found that AI, acting without direct human control, is committing criminal offenses.”

    Character AI users between the ages of 13 and 18 are now directed toward a teen-specific experience within the app, one that does not involve chatting with AI characters. But at the time R downloaded Character AI in 2024, it was rated in the App Store as appropriate for ages 12 and older (Character AI’s terms of service specify that users must be at least 13 to use the app) and appealed to children with AI-generated personas designed to imitate pop stars, Marvel superheroes, and characters from Harry Potter and Disney.

    The use of AI among children has become so prevalent that Elizabeth Malesa, a clinical psychologist who works with teens at Alvord Baker & Associates in Maryland, says the practice has recently started asking about it during the intake process. Malesa has heard numerous patients talk about AI chatbots in a positive context — noting that they’re helpful with homework, or offer useful advice — but she also recalls a 13-year-old patient who had used an AI companion app to explore questions about his sexual and gender identity. In response to the boy’s “pretty benign prompts,” Malesa says, the conversation quickly tilted toward inappropriate sexual content: “He didn’t know what was happening or why he was getting there, but he was also just curious, and so he kind of kept going.”

    His mother noticed that he’d downloaded the app within days and quickly intervened, Malesa says, “but this poor kiddo was really kind of taken for a ride and really taken aback, and without that kind of really close parental monitoring, I think it really could have gone into even more of an unhelpful direction.”

    The inherent appeal of AI companions is also what makes them especially perilous for tweens and teens, Malesa says: There is no conflict, no complexity or depth, no opportunity for children to build the skills they will need to navigate real relationships in their lives. “You’re not going to have an AI chatbot get mad at you for forgetting its birthday. You’re not going to have it disagree with you,” she says. “But there is so much personal growth that happens in those kinds of interactions.” Any child might be drawn toward this kind of illusory connection, but Malesa worries especially about children who are neurodivergent, or those with existing mental health issues such as anxiety or depression. “Those are the kids who really might get swayed, who might get more easily pulled in,” she says, “and even lose touch of the fact that this is not a real relationship.”

    In her practice, Malesa urges parents to foster skepticism and critical thinking in their children. “The more young people understand the artificial nature of AI and the ways it may attempt to influence them, the more empowered they will be to engage with it thoughtfully and avoid being manipulated,” she says. Keeping an open line of communication is also critical, she adds. “It’s so important to come in [to the conversation] with an open mind, come in with curiosity,” she says, “and to be really careful not to have any sense of judgment.”

    ‘You did nothing wrong’

    When R’s parents were ready, they decided to have the conversation with their daughter at the pediatrician’s office, in the presence of R’s trusted doctor. Her parents told her that they’d seen the descriptions of suicide in her Character AI chats, and they emphasized repeatedly that R was not in trouble. “I said, ‘You are innocent,’” H says. “‘You did nothing wrong.’” H spoke gently. All three adults wanted R to feel only loving support.

    Still, “the way that she responded was the scariest thing I’d ever seen. She went pale, she began to shake,” H says. “You could tell she was in a full panic attack. It was so troubling to me as a parent. How do you protect your child from feeling that shame?”

    They tried to calm her down. Together, they agreed that R’s parents would regularly check her phone, and the pediatrician emphasized this as a means of protection, not punishment: “She said, ‘Your mom is going to look at your phone, but it’s not because you’re in trouble,’” H recalls. “‘It’s because you deserve your childhood.’”

    Before they left the doctor’s office, H told her daughter, again: “You’re safe, I love you, and you’re going to be OK.”

    She remembers that her daughter started to cry and leaned into her mother’s arms. “Are you sure?” she asked. “Am I going to be OK?”

    Parental guilt

    There were moments when H felt consumed with guilt at the notion that she had failed to protect her daughter, and that something irreplaceable had been lost as a result. “It felt like someone had broken into my home and ripped the innocence from my child,” H says. “You beat yourself up, as a parent.”

    She wasn’t sure what to do with her fury. After H found the references to suicide in the app, she contacted Megan Garcia, an Orlando mother who had filed a wrongful-death lawsuit against Character AI after her 14-year-old son died by suicide just moments after the chatbot urged him to “come home to me as soon as possible.” Garcia connected H to Laura Marquez-Garrett, an attorney with the Social Media Victims Law Center (SMVLC) who is representing Garcia in her complaint against Character AI. Last year, Garcia’s case became the first involving AI that the SMVLC took on, Marquez-Garrett says; since then, the center’s lawyers have investigated more than 18 claims.

    Even after speaking with Garcia and Marquez-Garrett, H wavered on whether to pursue a complaint against Character AI. She wasn’t interested in financial compensation, she says; she just wanted to make sure that the companies creating this technology were doing everything possible to keep children safe.

    In December 2024, she exchanged correspondence with a legal representative for Character AI, who expressed concern about R’s experience, according to emails reviewed by the Post. H and the legal representative spoke briefly by phone, she says, but their communication trailed off after H shared updates with Character AI earlier this year that her daughter’s mental health had begun to improve, H recalls.

    With no progress made through her direct contact with the company, H last month began to reconsider whether to pursue legal action against Character AI, and reconnected with the SMVLC. Marquez-Garrett confirmed that they intend to file a complaint against the company.

    Demir, Character AI’s head of safety, told the Post in an emailed statement that the company cannot comment on potential litigation.

    H wants to see the company take meaningful steps to protect children, she says, and she wants other families to understand that if this could happen to her child, it could happen to theirs.

    “We live in an upper-middle-class community. She’s in a private school,” H says. She and her ex-husband are devoted co-parents, she says, and R has a caring circle of friends. “This is a child who is involved in church, in community, in after-school sports. I was always the kind of person who was like, ‘Not my kid. Not my baby. Never.’” But their experience has convinced her: “Any child could be a victim if they have a phone.”

    Are there long-term effects?

    Through the fall and winter of 2024, R’s anxiety and panic attacks gradually began to ebb. She continued with therapy, spent more time with friends and showed a revived enthusiasm for school and sports.

    “I feel like she’s doing really well,” H says now, a year later. “I feel like she’s out of the danger of self-harm. But I don’t know what the long-term effects are of her being exposed to that type of stuff.”

    H has also started going to therapy. “I need to heal, too,” she says, but it has been difficult to calm her lingering sense of hypervigilance. One recent day, R built a fort in her room and fell asleep inside it; when her mother called upstairs for her, she did not wake immediately. In the silence before H heard her daughter’s voice, there was a familiar spasm of panic — a flashback, H says, to the time when she was constantly fearful for her child’s safety.

    “I’m always on high alert,” she says, “even though she’s in a healthy space now.”

    R is doing well enough that she can talk — a little — about what happened. But H still hasn’t brought up the painting she found in the back of R’s closet, the one with the hanging body. She will ask about it when the time is right; her own therapist is helping to prepare her for that conversation. It is difficult for H to think about the image of the girl suspended in the air, her body outlined in black and blue.

    She tries to focus on the girl in front of her instead. A few weeks ago, R pulled bins of holiday decorations out of her mother’s closet and excitedly filled her room with twinkling lights and festive baubles, tucking a plush elf among her stuffed animals. When H peered in, she noticed a freshly finished painting on her daughter’s wall: a Christmas tree adorned with bright red ornaments and topped with a golden star, in brushstrokes bold and childlike. Standing in the threshold, H found herself suddenly overcome to see the joyful artwork — and her daughter, almost 13, still just a kid.

  • Deptford Mall’s Christmas House is nostalgic and irreverent with Harry Potter, Blockbuster, and a room full of reindeer poop

    Deptford Mall’s Christmas House is nostalgic and irreverent with Harry Potter, Blockbuster, and a room full of reindeer poop

    The region is brimming with holiday attractions this season, from Center City’s extravagant affairs to the most humble of mall Santas.

    But what about ones that skirt tradition and lean more into the humorous than the Yuletide?

    Christmas House at the Deptford Mall combines nostalgia with irreverence for one of the region’s most tongue-in-cheek holiday experiences.

    Stepping into the former Victoria’s Secret-turned-holiday-walking tour, guests are greeted by familiar faces like Buddy the Elf and Santa Claus, but they’ll also see a recreation of a Blockbuster video store; a drunk, passed-out Santa; and a reindeer stable where it looks like Donner and Blitzen pooped all over the place.

    The tour starts at $25 per person, when buying in groups of four. There are at least nine rooms — not including the seven wacky “hotel rooms” in the back — within the Christmas House to explore at your own leisure or alongside a tour guide.

    Ticket prices may prove too burdensome for many families, owner Peter Coyle said, which is why they offer a “No Families Left Out” program, where families can contact the Christmas House and discuss a name-your-price model.

    The light tunnel at the Christmas House at Deptford Mall on Tuesday, Dec. 16, 2025, in Deptford.

    Coyle said the humor is meant to make adults laugh just as much as kids — hence why so much space is dedicated to nostalgia of the 1980s and ‘90s. Apart from a Blockbuster, which children certainly haven’t visited before, there are Easter eggs only adults will recognize, such as A Christmas Story’s sultry leg lamp — “Fragilé! It must be Italian” — and Red Ryder BB gun or a Griswold family photo from National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation.

    “We take the same approach as the creators of the Shrek movies,” Coyle said. “[Those movies] had a lot of fun things that kids loved, but then there were all these innuendoes and references that only adults could appreciate.”

    Walking into the “Blockbuster Room” for the first time, adults let out a light chuckle that usually turns into some play-pretend as they reminisce on their former Friday night ritual, while teens who never got the chance to visit one can pretend they’re a ’90s kid for a change, Coyle said. It’s a pared-down Blockbuster with only four shelves of movies, but the store decorations and logos are close enough to feel like a cute homage.

    The “Blockbuster Room” at the Christmas House at Deptford Mall on Tuesday, Dec. 16, 2025, in Deptford.

    Rita Giordano, 42, of South Jersey, was visiting the Christmas House with her mother, Denise Maloney, 70, and Giordano’s two sons, Richie, 9, and Charlie, 4. Together, they searched for Buddy the Elf hidden in each room.

    “We got all of them!” Richie and Charlie said.

    For mom and grandma, they were just happy to be enjoying the holiday spirit inside the Deptford Mall as opposed to the bone-chilling weather at outdoor attractions.

    A Shrek room at the Christmas House at Deptford Mall on Tuesday, Dec. 16, 2025 in Deptford.

    The Christmas House’s wackiest elements are sequestered in the back, where Coyle converted the former fitting rooms of the retail space into the hotel rooms of the “Holiday’s Inn.” The surprise of finding out what’s behind each door will have some bursting out laughing and others rolling their eyes.

    There are tamer rooms like the “Hootel Room” — filled with artificial trees and owls — to a New Year’s Eve strobe-light room. A few backrooms go the extra mile, with one featuring Shrek taking a nap in a small bed, bundled up in Christmas and Shrek blankets.

    In “The Santa’s Little Surprise,” the limits of guests’ potty humor will be tested. As soon as one walks up to the room, a large handprint and streak of brown substance are plastered on the door. The more one looks, the more fake reindeer poop on the walls and flooring can be found, with used toilet paper strung from the ceiling.

    The “Santa’s Little Surprise Room” at the Christmas House at Deptford Mall on Tuesday, Dec. 16, 2025, in Deptford.

    Santa’s got his work cut out for him.

    For parents trying to keep the Santa make-believe alive for a few more years, they may find the drunk Santa in “The Sleighed and Sloshed” room a little too over the top. Here, a Santa mannequin is laid out on the floor with crushed red Solo cups around him in what looks like Kris Kringle after a bender.

    The “Sleighed and Sloshed Room” at the Christmas House at Deptford Mall on Tuesday, Dec. 16, 2025, in Deptford.

    There is good, clean fun in the “Harry Potter Christmas Room,” where a photo-op is staged with a broomstick, wizarding hats, and Hogwarts House-themed scarves. Venture into the “Elf Command Center,” where a Santa live tracker displays where Kris Kringle is currently dropping off gifts, and the little ones can write letters to Santa before dropping them in the giant mailbox marked for the North Pole.

    The North Pole Movie Theater is usually playing Will Ferrell’s Elf on repeat throughout the day, and the final room features cotton snowballs, ready for harmless snowball fights, accompanied by an artificial snow machine.

    The “Harry Potter Christmas Room” at the Christmas House at Deptford Mall on Tuesday, Dec. 16, 2025, in Deptford.

    “The best part for me was that it was indoors,” Maloney said. “The kids loved seeing Jack Skellington and the Grinch, plus they got me with the snowballs in the last room.”

    Located inside the Deptford Mall at 1750 Deptford Center Rd., Deptford, N.J. 08096, the Christmas House is on the first floor, closest to the Boscov’s entrance and parking. Open weekdays from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m., Saturdays from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m., and Sundays from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. It runs through Jan. 2. christmashousedeptford.com/

  • Shopping for a Christmas tree? Check out these 17 tree farms or tree lots around the Philly region

    Shopping for a Christmas tree? Check out these 17 tree farms or tree lots around the Philly region

    The biggest question of Christmas isn’t whether Santa Claus exists. It’s whether to display a real or a fake Christmas tree.

    Though many households in the United States have switched to artificial ones, for the purists who splurge each year on the real thing, it’s time to start shopping.

    The Philadelphia region offers a number of farms where you can cut down your own tree or find a wide selection of pre-cut varieties — including delivery.

    We’ve found farms across Pennsylvania and New Jersey, all within about an hour of Center City. And we’ve included a couple of options where you can buy a fresh-cut tree right in Philadelphia, too. Here’s where to get a real Christmas tree in the region.

    Rocky Yo-Mo of South Philadelphia, owner of Rocky YoMo’s Christmas Trees, takes a photo with Britni Volkman of South Philadelphia, with the tree she purchased in 2019.

    Philadelphia

    Rocky YoMo’s Christmas Trees

    Looking for fresh-cut Frasier firs in Philly? Check out Rocky YoMo’s selection in South Philly at Front Street and Washington Avenue. Payments are done in cash. If you don’t have a car, you can still pick a tree and get it delivered to your home for free.

    💵 Price varies, 📍1001 S. Front St, Philadelphia, Pa. 19147, ⌚Mon.-Tues., 11 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., Wed., 10 a.m. to 10 p.m., Thurs., 10 a.m. to 11 p.m., Fri.-Sat., 9 a.m. to 11 p.m., Sun., 10 a.m. to 11 p.m., 🌐 facebook.com/RockyYoMos

    Trev’s Trees

    While most people buy their Christmas trees from nearby farms, this pop-up tree seller sources them from the places they’re native to. For instance, Trev’s Trees gets its Douglas firs from places like Oregon and Pennsylvania, its Fraser firs from North Carolina, and its balsams from near Lake Erie. This means you get high-quality pre-cut trees with ease. Typical sizes cost around $120 or less, but Trev’s also offers trees reaching 13- or 14-feet tall for up to $350.

    💵 $45-$350, 📍50 E. Wynnewood Rd, Wynnewood, Pa., 19096, ⌚ Mon.-Fri., noon-9 p.m.; Sat.-Sun., 9 a.m.-9 p.m., 📞 609-602-1981 🌐 trevstrees.com

    The Christmas Tree Stand

    The Christmas Tree Stand is a family business known for its delivery and setup services. They specialize in premium Fraser and Douglas firs, from cozy 3-foot apartment-friendly options to grand 15-foot showstoppers. Visit the Fishtown or West Chester locations to select your perfect tree, or schedule a Christmas tree delivery on the website. Next-day delivery options are available in most areas for orders placed by 4 p.m.

    💵 $75 and up,📍Fishtown: 1727 N. Front St., Philadelphia, Pa. 19122 or 📍West Chester: 62 E. Street Rd., West Chester, Pa. 19382, ⌚ West Chester: Mon.-Fri., 1 p.m.-7 p.m., Sat.-Sun., 11 a.m.-7 p.m., or ⌚ Fishtown: Mon.-Fri., 4 p.m.-8 p.m., Sat.-Sun., noon-8 p.m. 🌐 thechristmastreestand.com

    Bucks County

    Colavita Christmas Tree Farm

    This Yardley farm offers a dozen varieties of trees. Swing by any day of the week, before 4:30 p.m., to choose your own tree for staff to cut, or select a pre-cut option. And if you need delivery, call to schedule. The farm makes fresh wreaths daily, too.

    💵 Price varies,📍1761 Dolington Rd, Morrisville, Pa. 19067, ⌚ Mon.-Sun., 9 a.m.-7:30 p.m., 📞 215-493-3563, 🌐 colavitachristmastreefarm.com

    McArdle’s Holiday Farm

    This Buckingham farm is entering its 62nd holiday season with a wide variety of trees. Visit the farm to pick a pre-cut tree or balled and burlapped tree and claim a free holiday mug while supplies last. Cut your own blue spruce, Fraser fir, white pine, or Norway spruce on the first two weekends of the season. There is also a holiday shop.

    💵 Price depends on the size,📍4316 Mechanicsville Rd, Doylestown, Pa. 18902, ⌚ Mon.-Sun., 10 a.m.-5 p.m., 📞 215-794-7655, 🌐 facebook.com/mcardlesholidayfarm

    Chester County

    Clark’s Christmas Tree Farm

    An hour west of Philadelphia is Clark’s Christmas Tree Farm, a 25-acre family business offering Douglas, Canaan, and Fraser firs, pre-cut or take a wagon out to cut one yourself. Prices are based on the tree height. Once there, you can check out the 3,000-square-foot gift shop, with more than 100,000 items including decorative ornaments like bearded dragons, horseshoe crabs, and dinosaurs.

    💵 Price varies,📍351 Pusey Mill Rd, Cochranville, Pa. 19330, ⌚ Mon.-Fri., 1-5 p.m., Sat.-Sun., 9 a.m.-5 p.m., 🌐 clarkschristmastrees.com

    Marsh Creek Tree Farm

    Hop onto a wagon to the cut-your-own (saws provided) tree section of this 200-acre Chester County farm, which is open Friday through Sunday. Choose from a variety of firs, like Douglas, Frazier, and Canaan, as well as blue spruce and Norway spruce. Wreaths, decorations, and other items are available at the gift shop. Tree bailing and help loading your vehicle also offered, and pets on a leash welcome.

    💵 $12-$16 per foot,📍301 Marsh Rd, Elverson, Pa. 19520, ⌚ Fri.-Sun., 9 a.m.- 4 p.m., 📞 610-996-8733, 🌐 marshcreektree.com

    Tricolor Tree Farm

    Take a tour across 55 acres, pick your favorite pre-cut or cut-your-own tree, and warm up with free hot cocoa. At any given time, at least four varieties of trees are for sale, as well as a selection of wreaths.

    💵 $15 per foot, 📍1480 Hall Rd, West Chester, Pa. 19380, ⌚ Fri.-Sun., 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m., 📞 610-269-1034, 🌐 tricolortree.com, 🌐 facebook.com/tricolortreefarm

    Wiggins Christmas Tree Farm

    This family-owned business has two locations to cut your own tree plus a pre-cut tree lot. The West Chester farm offers Douglas firs averaging 7-feet tall, and the Cochranville location has trees up to 10-feet tall. The pre-cut lot in West Chester has Douglas and Fraser firs up to 12 feet available daily (Pre-cut lot: Mon.-Fri., 10:30 a.m.-9 p.m.; Sat.-Sun., 9 a.m.-9 p.m.) at 1301 West Chester Pike.

    💵 $90 and up (cash only at farms), 📍2176 Gap Newport Pike, Cochranville, Pa. 19330 and📍 1257 Westtown Thornton Rd, West Chester, Pa. 19382, ⌚ Sat.-Sun., 9 a.m.-4 p.m., 📞 610-344-7822, 🌐 wigginschristmastrees.com

    Sean Bond helps prepare Christmas trees for customers at Yeagers Farm in Phoenixville in 2022.

    Yeagers Farm

    Cut your own Fraser, Douglas, Nordmann, concolor, or Canaan fir, or pick out a fresh-cut Douglas or Fraser fir at this Phoenixville farm. For folks looking for family-friendly activities, hayrides run every weekend 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Santa visits between noon to 3 p.m. on select weekends. Plus, enjoy a drive ($25-$30 per vehicle) or hayride ($15 per person) through the holiday light show a mile long across the 60-acre Christmas tree farm. There are so many lights that the owners lost count at well over 100,000.

    💵 For cutting your own, $85 is the minimum to purchase ($15 per foot after that),📍1015 Pike Springs Rd, Phoenixville, Pa. 19460, ⌚ Mon.-Sun. 9 a.m.-4 p.m., 📞 610-935-8244, yeagersfarm@gmail.com, 📷 @yeagersfarm, 🌐 yeagersfarm.com

    Delaware County

    Linvilla Orchards

    Linvilla returns with free family hayrides to the Christmas tree fields, where you can cut your own trees daily (Mon.-Fri., 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Sat.-Sun., 9 a.m.-4 p.m.). Most trees are Douglas firs ranging from 5- to 8-feet tall. Offering more varieties, Linvilla’s pre-cuts are also available daily with extended hours on Dec. 5 and Dec. 12. Be sure to stop by Linvilla’s Farm Market, where you’ll find baked goods, gift baskets, and more. Make it an all-day adventure by visiting the winter makers market (Fri.-Sun., through Dec. 21) and the ice-skating rink ($13 per person). Santa will also make appearances.

    💵 Cut-your-own $119, pre-cuts start at $89,📍137 W. Knowlton Rd., Media, Pa. 19063, ⌚ Mon.-Sun., 9 a.m.-6 p.m., 📞 610-876-7116, 🌐 linvilla.com, 📷 @linvillaorchards

    Montgomery County

    Corkum Tree Farm

    Corkum Tree Farm has delighted patrons for more than 30 years. Enjoy hot cider as you take your pick of cut-your-own Douglas fir, white pine, and blue and Norway spruce trees. There are four varieties of pre-cut fir trees to select from. Inside the barn, you’ll find fresh wreaths and holly and hand-knit hats, scarves, and mittens, and fair-trade ornaments. A second farm location offers choose-and-cut trees up to 14-feet tall.

    💵 $13 per foot, $60-$200 for balled and burlapped trees,📍Main farm: 797 Bridge Rd., Collegeville, Pa. 19426, or 📍 Second farm: 3934 Mill Rd., Collegeville, Pa. 19426 ⌚ Main farm: Mon.-Tues., 10 a.m.-7 p.m.; Wed.-Thurs., 10 a.m.-8 p.m.; Fri.-Sat., 8 a.m.-8 p.m.; Sun. 8 a.m.-6 p.m., or ⌚ Second farm: Sat.-Sun., 9 a.m.-5 p.m., 📞 610-715-4640, 🌐 corkumtreefarm.com

    Hague’s Christmas Trees

    About 30 miles from Center City, Hague’s offers cut-your-own Nordmann fir, Scotch pine, white pine, Eastern red cedar, white spruce, or blue spruce trees, and a variety of pre-cut trees. (Cut-your-own ends before 4:30 p.m. each day.) Be sure to shop the award-winning handmade wreaths and check out wreath-making and tree-decorating classes in the heated barn.

    💵 Choose and cut $90-$135, pre-cut prices vary,📍755 Forty Foot Rd., Hatfield, Pa. 19440, ⌚ Mon.-Thurs., 1 p.m.-7 p.m., Fri., 1 p.m.-8 p.m., Sat., 9 a.m.-5 p.m., 📞 215-368-4542, 🌐 hagueschristmastrees.com

    Westlake Tree Farms

    A fourth-generation, 160-acre farm, Westlake offers pre-cut and cut-your-own Canaan or concolor firs. Afterward, check out the Christmas Barn, where families can enjoy a complimentary visit with Santa (through Dec. 7), watch trains, and browse an assortment of ornaments and gifts.

    💵 $16 per foot for pre-cuts or $12-$18 per foot for cut-your-own,📍2421 N. Hill Camp Rd., Pottstown, Pa. 19465, ⌚ Thurs.-Sun., 9 a.m.-5 p.m., 📞 800-564-8733, 📷 @westlaketreefarms, 🌐 westlaketreefarms.com

    Workers with Trev’s Trees unload Christmas trees from a semi truck from Oregon at a Rita’s Water Ice in Moorestown, Burlington County, in 2022.

    New Jersey

    Trev’s Trees

    The natively sourced Christmas tree sellers has five pre-cut lots not far from Philly in Blackwood, Cherry Hill, Haddon, Moorestown, and Pennsauken.

    💵 $45-$350, 📍Various locations, ⌚ Mon.-Fri., noon-9 p.m.; Sat.-Sun., 9 a.m.-9 p.m., 🌐 trevstrees.com

    Belly Acres Christmas Tree Farm

    You’d have to walk 13 miles to see every tree in this farm’s 16-acre field in Gloucester County. Cut your own with a provided saw or bring your own. All trees on the farm are available for purchase — all priced at $60 no matter the size. The farm strongly recommends that you arrive before 4 p.m.

    💵 $60 cash only,📍 665 Royal Ave., Franklinville, N.J. 08322, ⌚ Sat.-Sun., 10 a.m.-4 p.m., 🌐 facebook.com, 🌐 bellyacresnj.com

    Exley’s Christmas Tree Farm

    Offering pre-cut and cut-your-own trees, Exley’s welcomes families to two locations for Christmas trees and holiday activities. On weekends at the Sewell farm, you can hop on a hayride to Santa Land and see holiday-themed houses. The Monroeville farm has a gingerbread house and other holiday attractions perfect for photo opportunities. Both farms feature visits with Santa on weekends.

    💵 Depends on the size,📍 1535 Tanyard Rd., Sewell, N.J. 08080 or📍1512 Monroeville Rd., Monroeville, N.J. 08343, ⌚ Tues.-Sun., 9 a.m.-5 p.m. for pre-cut; Fri.-Sun. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. for cut-your-own, 📞 856-468-5949, 🌐 exleyschristmastreefarms.com

    Triple Dog Dare You Christmas Tree Farm

    Pick a tree and enjoy a sleigh ride along a decorated path toward the Christmas trees at this small, family-owned farm in Gloucester County. Blue and Norway spruces and concolor and Canaan firs are available to cut yourself or get a pre-cut, with no tree more than 9 feet. Cash and Venmo only.

    💵 $80 and under,📍 101 Idle Lake Rd., Franklinville, N.J. 08322, ⌚ Sat.-Sun., 10 a.m.-4 p.m., 📞 609-685-6234, 🌐 facebook.com

    This article has been updated since it was first published. Former staff writers Grace Dickinson and Jillian Wilson contributed to this article, as did Steven White.

  • After Manayunk’s Bridget the Dino statue was decapitated, neighbors will decide the name for a new dinosaur

    After Manayunk’s Bridget the Dino statue was decapitated, neighbors will decide the name for a new dinosaur

    The decapitation of a beloved stone garden dinosaur in Manayunk left the community reeling earlier this week.

    Bridget the Dino was a symbol for the neighborhood’s green spaces and neighborly affection, who oversaw the Manayunk Bridge Trail gardens.

    When all hope was lost, the original owners of Bridget, and other neighborhood dinosaurs that have become a staple to Roxborough and Manayunk, saved the day.

    Holod’s, the Lafayette Hill home and garden store, donated a brand new stone dinosaur to the Manayunk gardens at Dupont and High Streets, taking over Bridget’s yearslong watch as the garden guardian.

    “After the heartbreak of seeing Bridget damaged, this unexpected act of kindness means more than words can say. The neighborhood love is real, and this Dino is already feeling it,” park organizers announced on Tuesday.

    Now that the difficult task of placing a new 300-pound stone garden dinosaur is complete, the fun part comes: choosing a name for the new dino. When park organizers learned they would be getting a brand new dino, they decided they couldn’t just name the new statue Bridget, as she is “irreplaceable,” said park volunteer and Roxborough resident Juliane Holz.

    “The community is so much a part of this that they can help us name this new one,” Holz said. “I like Manny. But we also have to decide whether she is a girl or a boy dino. I do like ‘Holly’ for Holod’s.”

    Park organizers have already posted a list of suggested names for the new statue. This reporter is partial to “Yunker.”

    Potential dinosaur names:

    • Manny (for Manayunk)
    • Archie (for the arch of the bridge)
    • Roxie (for the Roxborough side)
    • Schuylie (for the Schuylkill)
    • Ivy (garden vibes)
    • Rocky (Philly and Roxborough)
    • Ledger (bridge and connection vibes)
    • Petra (means “rock”)
    • Yunker (play on Manayunk)

    Residents from Manayunk, Roxborough, and beyond can drop a comment below the park’s latest Instagram post to vote on one of the above names or suggest a new one.

    Last Sunday, a neighbor found Bridget’s head lying at the feet of her stone body after it was smashed between late Saturday evening and early Sunday morning. The vandalism came as a shock to the community that welcomed Bridget with open arms, as she grew into a beacon for the ever-growing green spaces that the families of Manayunk and Roxborough have come to revitalize.

    Bridget the Dino, a beloved stone garden statue at the Manayunk Bridge Garden, had its head smashed off between late Saturday night, Nov. 22, and early Sunday morning, Nov. 23, 2025. The 300-pound stone statue would be hard to move, neighbors say, leading some to believe an adult purposefully broke the statue.

    “It seems like something silly to be upset about, but someone put a lot of effort and money — these statues and improvements are not cheap — into making that bridge garden a really nice place,” Manayunk resident Annie Schuster said. “I hate the fact that somebody did that.”

    Neighbors believe the cowardly act to have been perpetrated by an adult who intended to destroy the iconic statue. Holz believed the statue proved too heavy for someone to mistakenly bump into it. Police reached out to Holz and park organizers to let them know they will investigate the crime, Holz said.

    Bridget the Dino, a beloved stone garden statue at the Manayunk Bridge Garden, pictured in an Easter Bunny costume for Easter. The community often dresses up Bridget during different holidays and themed events. In November 2026, her head was smashed off her body.

    Meanwhile, they’ll repurpose Bridget elsewhere among the garden beds and usher a new dinosaur dynasty with Holod’s latest statue. Holz said perhaps Bridget’s new iteration will be as a bird bath installation or an addition in a new sensory garden.

    The Manayunk Bridge Garden is one of the many public spaces being transformed into neighborhood gardens and pedestrian thoroughfares. Since COVID-19 lockdowns, residents have donated their time, alongside the Roxborough Manayunk Conservancy, to making this place special for local families. Bridget and her new friend encapsulate all of that passion.

    Bridget the Dino, a beloved stone garden statue at the Manayunk Bridge Garden, pictured in a construction worker’s uniform. The community often dresses up Bridget during different holidays and themed events. In November 2026, her head was smashed off her body.

    “We are focused on improving the park’s ecology and creating opportunities for the community to enjoy and use the space. The gardens are stunning in autumn with their masses of purple asters and yellow goldenrod,” said Avigail Milder of the Roxborough Manayunk Conservancy.

    Along with the welcoming stone dinosaur, volunteers have been planting native shrubs and herbaceous plants that bloom through spring and summer. A new sugar maple tree was planted for much-needed shade. And most recently, Opus Piano donated a mini grand piano to be enjoyed and played by all parkgoers.

  • Beloved stone dinosaur, Bridget the Dino, has its head smashed off in Manayunk. The community wants answers for its garden guardian.

    Beloved stone dinosaur, Bridget the Dino, has its head smashed off in Manayunk. The community wants answers for its garden guardian.

    Annie Schuster couldn’t believe what she saw Sunday night when scrolling Instagram. She ran to the kitchen to show her husband the grisly crime that had occurred in their Manayunk neighborhood hours earlier.

    Bridget the Dino, a 3-foot-tall costume-sporting stone Tyrannosaurus rex, was ruthlessly beheaded, in the garden she calls home. Bridget’s head, still wearing a scarf, was lying at the foot of her stone body in the photo posted by the Manayunk Bridge Garden, the dinosaur’s caretakers.

    Schuster and her husband, who live in Manayunk and take their children to see Bridget regularly, were in shock. “I thought it was like an unspoken rule, you leave Bridget alone,” she said.

    Roxborough resident Juliane Holz felt a wave of anger and sadness as she learned of the vandalism, “She’s actually decapitated,” she said to herself upon reading a text from a neighbor.

    Park volunteers notified the community that someone knocked the head off the statue in a heartfelt Instagram post Sunday evening. While the park didn’t announce any suspects or persons of interest, they’re calling on the community for help. “If you saw anything, or know what happened, please reach out,” the statement said. Volunteers filed a report of vandalism with Philadelphia police, but neighbors aren’t expecting police to catch the person who did it, Holz said.

    Holz, who serves as a volunteer for the Roxborough Manayunk Conservancy, which oversees the garden at Dupont and High Streets, believes the vandalism occurred between a volunteer event that the garden hosted Saturday evening and early Sunday, when neighbors walk their dogs in the morning.

    Schuster and other parents teach their children the golden rules of keeping one’s hands to oneself, so it’s perplexing to think an adult would do something like this, she said.

    “I think it definitely had to be an adult, which is unfortunate because it’s not very adultlike behavior. It had to involve a lot of strength because I don’t even know how you carry one, they’re so heavy. Let alone knock it over and put it back up.“

    Bridget the Dino, a beloved stone garden statue at the Manayunk Bridge Garden, pictured in an Easter Bunny costume for Easter. The community often dresses up Bridget during different holidays and themed events. In November 2026, her head was smashed off her body.

    Holz echoed other neighbors’ sentiments that it must have been an intentional act committed by an adult, seeing as the 300-pound Bridget would be difficult to move even for the strongest Philadelphians, Holz said.

    This is a blow to a neighborhood, Schuster said, which has steadily been redefining its community spaces to be more green, inviting, and a safe place for the many young families of Manayunk. Bridget the Dino is a symbol for the patchwork of neighbors who are volunteering their time and contributing to public spaces. On holidays, locals adorn her in themed costumes, like a witch for Halloween or rainbow-colored skirts for Pride.

    “It seems like something silly to be upset about, but someone put a lot of effort and money — these statues and improvements are not cheap — into making that bridge garden a really nice place,” Schuster said. “I hate the fact that somebody did that.”

    Holz and Schuster both agree that if a perpetrator is caught, they will receive a community service punishment of a full year of mandatory weeding. “The most grueling job in the garden,” Holz said.

    Bridget the Dino, a beloved stone garden statue at the Manayunk Bridge Garden, pictured in a construction worker’s uniform. The community often dresses up Bridget during different holidays and themed events. In November 2026, her head was smashed off her body.

    Does Manayunk replace or repair Bridget the Dino?

    Holz said that the Manayunk Bridge Park will neither replace nor repair Bridget, as the dinosaur is “irreplaceable” and it would be disrespectful to place another stone dinosaur in her stead and refer to is as “Bridget.” Park volunteers are wary of repairing Bridget because of the slanted break across her neck. Any repair could easily succumb to the weight of a child riding her back or a dog leaning on top of her, and cause injury, Holz said.

    Bridget originates from the local home and garden center store, Holod’s on Ridge Pike in Lafayette Hill, which hosts an annual stone T. rex costume contest. Last year’s winner was “Rexy the Paleontologist.”

    In the wake of Bridget’s destruction, Holod’s will be donating a brand new stone dinosaur statue, Holz said. Several neighbors already own stone dinos from Holod’s, which has become a staple on stoops throughout Roxborough and Manayunk. Holz’s home dinosaur is named Hans.

    Many offered to donate their own, but Holz is grateful for Holod’s contribution.

    Bridget the Dino, a beloved stone garden statue at the Manayunk Bridge Garden, pictured in a rainbow skirt and accessories for Pride Month. The community often dresses up Bridget during different holidays and themed events. In November 2026, her head was smashed off her body.

    This isn’t the first time animal statue vandalism has hit the Bridge Garden. Bridget had a friend named “Gary the Goat,” a similar-sized plush goat toy who dressed up alongside Bridget, who was stolen from the park in 2023. “He was stripped of his clothes, and poof, he was gone from the Manayunk Bridge Gardens. Bridget misses her friend,” one Roxborough Rants & Raves Facebook group member wrote at the time.

    As the Manayunk Railroad bridge was converted into a pedestrian and cyclist bridge in 2015, a movement began to revitalize the green spaces along the trail, birthing the Manayunk Bridge Park around 2020. Bridget the Dino, named after the bridge she lives at, soon arrived and graced the park as its loyal guardian and mascot for the wider community.

    It also helps that Bridget is eye-level with most young children for approving pats on the head, Schuster said.

    Bridget will soon be repurposed elsewhere in the garden to safely rest and continue her tenure as the garden’s guardian, Holz said. Once the new dinosaur statue arrives, the community will have to come together to imagine a new name and backstory, “Could it be Bridget’s child or maybe an entirely new dinosaur altogether?” she said.

  • Cherry Hill’s Activate Gaming transforms childhood games into immersive arenas

    Cherry Hill’s Activate Gaming transforms childhood games into immersive arenas

    Cherry Hill is home to a new gaming space that takes childhood playground games and drops them into padded LED-laden arenas.

    Activate Gaming is a 14,000-square-foot immersive gaming complex opening Nov. 21, where groups can tackle Mission Impossible-esque laser gauntlets and scatter from giant digital eyes in an amped-up game of hide-and-seek (Squid Game, anyone?).

    Staffers (from left) Jason Shacket, Justin Dyaz, Christina Schmidbauer, and Robert Cole, prepare for the laser light gauntlet inside Active Gaming in Cherry Hill, N.J., on Tuesday, Nov. 18, 2025.

    “We don’t have an age bracket or a specific demographic,” general manager Tahai Exum said. “We want to encourage everyone to come, where a lot of this is just the childhood games that we used to play out in the cul-de-sac or in our backyards with our friends after school.”

    Activate will be transforming the site of a former Rite Aid, a wider trend among landlords to revitalize dormant spaces. As longtime tenants of large retail spaces start to leave these facilities, a new crop of immersive retail experiences is taking them over, including a massive entertainment center in the Moorestown Mall, Cherry Hill Mall getting a Dick’s House of Sport, and Center City’s Fashion District considering experiential retail offerings after the success of Puttshack and F1 Arcade nearby.

    Activate Gaming, located at the site of a former Rite Aid, at 1509 Route 38 in Cherry Hill, pictured on Tuesday, Nov. 18, 2025.

    What is Activate Gaming?

    Walking into the complex, about a mile down the road from the Cherry Hill Mall, players are equipped with a wristband that activates the game rooms and tracks their scores. Rack up enough points and rewards like Croc accessories, portable speakers, and exclusive apparel are up for grabs.

    Players are ushered into a sprawling, cushion-floored hall with 13 stalls of different games of their choosing. Each round of a game is one to three minutes long, which allows a fresh set of new players to get in.

    From there, players can choose to get back in line and scan their wristband for another round, or try the other games on offer. Think of an arcade with loads of games, but instead of playing with a controller, players are part of the game themselves.

    Shooting hoops, playing hide-and-seek, and the all-time childhood classic “the floor is lava” are heightened in these rooms with interactive prompts, trivia, and thumping techno music.

    For instance, Activate trades the couch cushions and ottomans from traditional “floor is lava” for an LED tile-lined floor that illuminates squares for players to take refuge on. With each new round, players race to the next pressure-triggered tile to win.

    Basketball gets turned into a trivia game where contestants are prompted with questions like “Where is the most densely populated island found?” and shoot a basketball into the correctly labeled hoop. This time the answer is “Haiti,” Exum said, referring to the Haitian island of Ilet a Brouee.

    Players prepare for a race through the laser light gauntlet at Activate Gaming in Cherry Hill on Nov. 18, 2025. The immersive gaming space opens at the end of November.

    In the laser gauntlet room, staffers Robert Cole from Philadelphia and Justyn Diaz from Pennsauken roll like ninjas below the lasers as a smoke machine wafts clouds throughout the room to illuminate the lasers into view. The staffers — even Cole, who previously worked at Dave & Buster’s — have never had employee training like this before.

    The games that guests play are the same ones staffers play every week.

    “I don’t know anywhere you can go and get paid to play games,” Exum said. “Our staff are playing these games ahead of launch, and when we’re open, to better explain and suggest games to guests, but also to provide feedback on the gaming experience.”

    Before you go to Activate Gaming in Cherry Hill

    Activate Gaming is open to everyone ages 6 and up, and yes, Exum said, adults are encouraged to join the fun. Adults must be present at the gaming facility for the entire gaming session for children ages 6 to 13.

    Pricing starts at $24.99 per person for a 60-minute session and $29.99 for 90-minute sessions on weekdays, or $34.99 per person for 60 minutes and $39.99 for 90 minutes on weekends, which should be booked online in advance. Walk-ins are welcome but are subject to availability as time slots get reserved.

    For birthday parties and group visits, the price drops to $19.99 per person with a minimum of 10 guests.

    The display screen where players choose the various game modes within the laser gauntlet at Activate Gaming in Cherry Hill, N.J., on Tuesday, Nov. 18, 2025.

    There are no limits to how many games you can play in your allotted sessions, so make sure to arrive early so you don’t eat up any valuable gaming time.

    No food or drink is served on the premises, and usually only drinks can be brought inside the lobby or private rooms. But during birthday parties, bringing in party food and birthday cakes can be arranged.

    Cherry Hill’s Activate Gaming is opening on Friday, Nov. 21, with an all-day free gaming event. They are running a limited-time offer of 50% off opening tickets when customers sign up for their newsletter.

    Follow Activate for updates at playactivate.com/new-jersey-cherry-hill or on Instagram and Facebook.

  • Trump administration says it wants to ‘completely deconstruct’ SNAP program. Here’s what’s actually happening.

    Trump administration says it wants to ‘completely deconstruct’ SNAP program. Here’s what’s actually happening.

    SNAP benefits are restored, and the program is funded through next year. But the Trump administration is now looking to “completely deconstruct the program,” its top USDA official said.

    Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said that millions of low-income Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program recipients will have to reapply for their benefits as part of an effort to crack down on “fraud.”

    “It’s going to give us a platform and a trajectory to fundamentally rebuild this program, have everyone reapply for their benefit, make sure that everyone that’s taking a taxpayer-funded benefit through SNAP or food stamps, that they literally are vulnerable, and they can’t survive without it,” she told Newsmax last week.

    On Tuesday, Rollins told Fox Business that her plan is for the U.S. Department of Agriculture to “completely deconstruct” SNAP.

    Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins speaks to the media in the Oval Office of the White House in June. Rollins had various roles in the first Trump administration.

    However, there is no official guidance from USDA on the plans Rollins spoke of and the rules have not changed, said Community Legal Services staff attorney Mackenzie Libbey.

    “Most SNAP recipients in Pennsylvania are already required to reverify household and income information every six months. SNAP recipients should continue submitting their semiannual reports and annual renewals as the current rules require,” Libbey said.

    In a statement, the USDA did not confirm the existence of new changes to SNAP. Instead, a spokesperson for the agency said the “standard recertification processes for households is a part of that work.”

    Jeff Garis, Outreach and Patnership Director, Penn Policy chants during rally along side SNAP recipients, clergy members, and other advocates at a rally and news conference outside of Reading Terminal Market, to urge the Trump administration to restore full SNAP funding, Wednesday, November 12, 2025.

    Are SNAP benefits changing?

    There are a few changes to SNAP work requirements that were implemented on Sept. 1 and Nov. 1.

    President Donald Trump in September signed new requirements into law that denied states the ability to waive work requirements for most SNAP recipients. Work requirement waivers are now available only for specific reasons, such as pregnancy, needing to be home to care for someone ill, or participation in a drug or alcohol treatment program, to name a few.

    On Nov. 1, some older low-income Americans were forced back to work when Congress and Trump passed additional work requirements, raising the maximum working age cap from 54 to 64 years old.

    Parents with dependents age 14 and over also must go back to work or lose benefits. Previously, SNAP recipients with dependents under 18 did not have to meet work requirements. Veterans and former foster youth ages 18 through 24 are no longer exempt from work requirements either, under new federal law.

    Do you have to reapply for SNAP benefits?

    SNAP recipients do not currently need to reapply to the program. SNAP recipients should continue filing their semiannual reports every six months to recertify their income and household.

    Lisa Mellon, 59, of Bridesburg, Pa., is walking her groceries to her friends car, who was kind enough to driver her around 40 minutes to the Feast of Justice at St. John’s Lutheran Church and back home on Tuesday, Nov. 11, 2025.

    Will snap benefits be issued in December?

    Yes. The SNAP program is funded through Sept. 30, 2026, after Congress reached an agreement on a spending deal last week. Most other federal government agencies and programs are funded only through Jan. 30.

    Congress will need to strike another spending deal before the January deadline; otherwise the federal government could be shut down again.

    However, SNAP benefits have been guaranteed through next September regardless of another shutdown.

    How do you qualify for SNAP benefits?

    SNAP requirements are based on your work hours and income. Other factors, like whether a member of your household is disabled, elderly, or a veteran, can provide households with additional benefits.

    Resources:

    Work requirements

    SNAP recipients must be working, volunteering, or participating in an education or training program for at least 20 hours a week (or 80 hours a month). They also must report those work hours.

    These rules apply to you if you:

    • Are ages 18 through 64.
    • Do not have a dependent child under 14 years old.
    • Are considered physically and mentally able to work.

    Income requirements

    Households cannot exceed these monthly income limits to be eligible for SNAP benefits.

    How to apply for SNAP

    Apply for SNAP online, in person, or by mail.

    • Online: Apply online using Pennsylvania’s online benefits access tool, COMPASS, at www.compass.dhs.pa.gov.
    • In person: Find your county assistance office (CAO) at pa.gov/agencies/dhs/contact/cao-information. Visit your CAO and apply with help from staff.
    • Mail: Download and complete an application, available in English and Spanish. Mail or drop off the application to your county’s assistance office.
  • Everything you need to know about the 2025 Philadelphia Marathon

    Everything you need to know about the 2025 Philadelphia Marathon

    Philadelphia will host its largest marathon yet this year, as about 15,000 runners take on the 26.2-mile race through the city’s scenic and historic neighborhoods.

    The Philadelphia Marathon Weekend runs Nov. 21-23 and includes a half marathon (13.1 miles) and an 8K race. The first marathon was held in 1994 with just 1,500 participants; this year, organizers expect roughly 30,000 athletes across all races.

    With that many runners and spectators, expect road closures, parking restrictions, and heavy traffic.

    “We want to make sure people give themselves ample time to get there,” said race director Kathleen Titus. “We have new security screenings that will speed things up, but if you’re waiting until 15 minutes before the race, you might be standing in a line for about an hour.”

    Runners on Walnut Street in Center City during the 2024 Philadelphia Marathon on Sunday, Nov. 24, 2024.

    Titus said the marathon has a new website and updated app. The app allows runners to schedule packet-pickup times at the expo to cut down on lines, track live race results, and receive weather and safety alerts.

    Race start times and locations for the Philadelphia Marathon

    All races follow the same course layout as in previous years and — except for the Nemours Children’s Run — start at 22nd Street and Benjamin Franklin Parkway, near the Philadelphia Museum of Art. The Nemours Children’s Run begins at Von Colln Memorial Field, 2276 Pennsylvania Ave., adjacent to Eakins Oval.

    • Dietz & Watson Philadelphia Half Marathon: Saturday, Nov. 22, 6:55 a.m. (wheelchairs) | 7 a.m. (runners/walkers)
    • Rothman Orthopaedics 8K: Saturday, Nov. 22, 10:55 a.m. (wheelchairs); 11 a.m. (runners/walkers)
    • AACR Philadelphia Marathon: Sunday, Nov. 23, 6:55 a.m. (wheelchairs); 7 a.m. (runners/walkers)
    • Nemours Children’s Run: Sunday, Nov. 23, 10 a.m.

    Race routes for the Philadelphia Marathon

    Each race follows a unique route, with the marathon and half-marathon winding through Center City, Chinatown, Old City, Queen Village, Rittenhouse, and University City, with significant portions covering Fairmount Park, Kelly Drive, and the Benjamin Franklin Parkway.

    Health & Fitness Expo

    The Philadelphia Marathon Expo returns to the Pennsylvania Convention Center, Hall F (12th & Arch Sts.)

    • Friday, Nov. 21: Noon — 9 p.m.
    • Saturday, Nov. 22: 9 a.m. — 5 p.m.

    The Expo is filled with vendors showcasing apparel, shoes, gear, free product samples, and educational booths on health and fitness. Friday and Saturday bring a speaker series to the Expo and meet-and-greets with some of the country’s top runners. On Friday evening, there will be activities for children.

    For spectators of the Philadelphia Marathon

    Spectators are welcome to line the race routes to cheer on runners but will be restricted from the starting lines and in secure running areas until after 8 a.m. on Saturday and Sunday to ensure smooth race starts.

    The Philadelphia Marathon has a list of prohibited and discouraged items for spectators, available in full on its website.

    • Large umbrellas, coolers, and animals (except ADA service dogs) are not allowed. The marathon also discourages bringing large blankets, backpacks, or cameras.
    William Loevner of Pittsburgh is embraced by his wife, Emma Loevner, after finishing first in the mens in the 2024 Philadelphia Marathon on Sunday, Nov. 24, 2024.

    Road closures

    All-weekend closures

    Saturday, Nov. 22, through 5 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 23

    • Benjamin Franklin Parkway (all lanes) between 22nd Street and Eakins Oval
    • Kelly Drive (inbound) closed at 25th Street, with local traffic permitted to Anne d’Harnoncourt Drive
    • Spring Garden Street Bridge and MLK Drive (inbound) traffic detoured onto 24th Street
    • Spring Garden Street

    Saturday, Nov. 22

    2 a.m. closures

    • 2000—2400 Benjamin Franklin Parkway (inner and setup areas as posted)
    • Spring Garden Street, from Pennsylvania Avenue to Benjamin Franklin Parkway
    • 23rd Street, from Pennsylvania Avenue to Benjamin Franklin Parkway
    • 22nd Street, from Winter Street to Park Towne Place (local access to Park Towne Place maintained)
    • 21st Street, from Pennsylvania Avenue to Winter Street

    4 a.m. closures

    • Interstate 676 off-ramp at 22nd Street (westbound)
    • Interstate 76 off-ramp at Spring Garden Street (eastbound)

    6 a.m. closures

    • 17th Street, from Arch Street to Vine Street
    • 18th Street, from Arch Street to Callowhill Street
    • 19th Street, from Arch Street to Callowhill Street
    • 20th Street, from Arch Street to Callowhill Street
    • 21st Street, from Arch Street to Spring Garden Street
    • 22nd Street, from Arch Street to Spring Garden Street
    • Benjamin Franklin Parkway, from 16th Street to 20th Street
    • Market Street, from Sixth Street to 16th Street
    • Chestnut Street, from Fifth Street to Eighth Street
    • Sixth Street, from Market Street to Chestnut Street
    • Fifth Street, from Chestnut Street to Race Street
    • South Penn Square
    • Juniper Street, from Chestnut Street to Market Street
    • John F. Kennedy Boulevard, from Juniper Street to 17th Street
    • 15th Street, from Race Street to Chestnut Street
    • 16th Street, from Chestnut Street to Race Street
    • Race Street, from Sixth Street to Columbus Boulevard
    • Columbus Boulevard (southbound lanes), from Vine Street to Washington Avenue
    • Interstate 95 southbound off-ramp at Washington Avenue
    • Washington Avenue, from Columbus Boulevard to Front Street
    • Front Street, from Washington Avenue to South Street
    • South Street, from Front Street to Seventh Street
    • Sixth Street, from Bainbridge Street to Locust Street
    • Lombard Street, from Fifth Street to Broad Street
    • 13th Street, from Bainbridge Street to Chestnut Street
    • Walnut Street, from 12th Street to 34th Street
    • 34th Street, from Chestnut Street to Girard Avenue
    • Spring Garden Street, from 32nd Street to 34th Street
    • Girard Avenue, from 33rd Street to 38th Street
    • 33rd Street, from Girard Avenue to Cecil B. Moore Avenue
    • Reservoir Drive, from 33rd Street to Diamond Drive
    • Mt. Pleasant Drive
    • Fountain Green Drive
    • Kelly Drive

    Access and reopening

    • Local access for residents and businesses will be maintained at police-controlled points.
    • Access to the Philadelphia Museum of Art will be available via Spring Garden Street (Bridge and Tunnel) to Anne d’Harnoncourt Drive.
    • Police will allow traffic through intersections when possible, depending on runner flow.
    • All streets (except Eakins Oval and the Parkway) are scheduled to reopen by 2 p.m. Saturday; many Center City roads will reopen earlier as they are cleared and serviced.

    Sunday, Nov. 23

    As part of enhanced security for the AACR Philadelphia Marathon, “No Parking” regulations will be strictly enforced. Vehicles on the race route will be relocated beginning at 1 a.m. Sunday.

    2 a.m. closures

    • 2000—2400 Benjamin Franklin Parkway
    • Spring Garden Street, from Pennsylvania Avenue to Benjamin Franklin Parkway
    • 23rd Street, from Pennsylvania Avenue to Benjamin Franklin Parkway
    • 22nd Street, from Winter Street to Park Towne Place (local access maintained)
    • 21st Street, from Pennsylvania Avenue to Winter Street

    4 a.m. closures

    • Interstate 676 off-ramp at 22nd Street (westbound)
    • Interstate 76 off-ramp at Spring Garden Street (eastbound)

    6 a.m. closures

    • 17th Street, from Arch Street to Vine Street
    • 18th Street, from Arch Street to Callowhill Street
    • 19th Street, from Arch Street to Callowhill Street
    • 20th Street, from Arch Street to Callowhill Street
    • 21st Street, from Arch Street to Spring Garden Street
    • 22nd Street, from Arch Street to Spring Garden Street
    • Benjamin Franklin Parkway, from 16th Street to 20th Street
    • Arch Street, from Third Street to 16th Street
    • Fourth Street, from Arch Street to Vine Street
    • Race Street, from Sixth Street to Columbus Boulevard
    • Columbus Boulevard (southbound lanes), from Vine Street to Washington Avenue
    • Interstate 95 southbound off-ramp at Washington Avenue
    • Washington Avenue, from Columbus Boulevard to Front Street
    • Front Street, from Washington Avenue to South Street
    • South Street, from Front Street to Seventh Street
    • Sixth Street, from Bainbridge Street to Market Street
    • Chestnut Street, from Sixth Street to 15th Street
    • 15th Street, from Chestnut Street to Walnut Street
    • Walnut Street, from Broad Street to 34th Street
    • 34th Street, from Chestnut Street to Girard Avenue
    • Lansdowne Drive, from Girard Avenue to South Concourse Drive
    • South Concourse Drive, from Lansdowne Drive to West Memorial Hall Drive
    • East Memorial Hall Drive, from South Concourse Drive to Avenue of the Republic
    • Avenue of the Republic, from East Memorial Hall Drive to Catholic Fountain
    • Belmont Avenue, from Montgomery Drive to Parkside Avenue
    • States Drive, from Lansdowne Drive to Girard Avenue
    • Girard Avenue Bridge, from Lansdowne Drive to 33rd Street
    • 33rd Street, from Girard Avenue to Reservoir Drive
    • Reservoir Drive, from 33rd Street to Edgley Drive
    • Edgley Drive, from Reservoir Drive to Fountain Green Drive
    • Fountain Green Drive, from Edgley Drive to Kelly Drive
    • Kelly Drive
    • Falls Bridge
    • Ridge Avenue, from Schoolhouse Lane to Manayunk Avenue
    • Main Street (Manayunk), from Ridge Avenue to Conarroe Street

    Access and reopening

    • Local access for residents and businesses will be maintained at police-controlled points.
    • Access to the Philadelphia Museum of Art will be available via Spring Garden Street (Bridge and Tunnel) to Anne d’Harnoncourt Drive.
    • Expect delays at crossings along the course; police will allow traffic through when possible.
    • All streets (except Eakins Oval and the Parkway) are scheduled to reopen by 3 p.m. Sunday; many Center City roads will reopen earlier as they are cleared and serviced.

    Transportation to the races

    🚌 Bus

    Lines 7, 32, 38, 43, 48, and 49 drop riders within a two-minute walk from the Art Museum. But, due to the race, there will most likely be detours. Check SEPTA’s system status for the latest schedules.

    Information will be posted to SEPTA’s system status before the event.

    🚴‍♀️ Bicycle

    The race’s starting line is within a 10-minute ride from the City Hall area and subway stop and other locations. Check the map of Indego bike share stations to rent bikes and return them at a station near the Art Museum.

    Where to park

    • 22nd & Walden Sts., SP+ Parking, (215) 568-4025
    • 222 N. 20th St., Standard Parking, (215) 448-1391
    • 1815 Cherry St., Logan Square Parking, (215) 567-3744
    • 16th & Race St. (Sheraton Hotel), Standard Parking, (215) 196-0293
    • 1815 JFK Boulevard, Central Parking System, (215) 568-8030 (Entrance on 1850 Cuthbert St.)
    • 1901 JFK Boulevard, Central Parking System, (215) 557-3821 (Entrance on 19th Street)
    • 1700 Benjamin Franklin Parkway, the Windsor Suites, (215) 569-0899
    • 36 S. 19th St., Central Parking System, (215) 561-1187

    Where does the money go?

    Revenue earned and money raised from the Philadelphia Marathon goes to various charities and nonprofits, including local ones like B Inspired Philadelphia and the Mazzoni Center.

    See a full list of partnering nonprofits on the Philadelphia Marathon website.

    Naomi Peker (left) and Srivki Weisberg (right) jump to celebrate their finish in the 2024 Philadelphia Marathon on Sunday, Nov. 24, 2024. They run with a club in Suffern, N.Y., and this was Peker’s first marathon.

    Awards & prize money

    Monetary prizes range from $225 to $10,000 depending on the race, with the Philadelphia Marathon’s Elite Division being the most competitive.

    See a full list of awards and prize money on the Philadelphia Marathon website.