Good morning.
The first measurable snowfall of the winter seems a certainty this weekend with about 3 inches expected in the region.
Today, weâre discussing train etiquette when it comes to playing music loudly.
But first, letâs go over the latest broadside against the board of the Philadelphia Art Museum by ousted director and CEO Sasha Suda, what we know about Phillyâs first-ever New Yearâs Eve outdoor concert, and our report card for this week in Philly news.
â Paola PĂ©rez (morningnewsletter@inquirer.com)
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What you should know today
- Police are looking for a suspect wanted in connection with the killing of a 93-year-old man in the cityâs Logan neighborhood last week.
- A flier showing the KKK was posted in Southwest Philly. A ward leader, wanting to calm community fears, said he believes this all may be some kind of misunderstanding.
- A Southwest Philadelphia woman was sentenced to 10 to 20 years in state prison for the October 2024 killing of a pregnant woman during a fight.
- Dismissed Art Museum chief Sasha Suda is arguing for a trial with a jury, rather than settling her dispute with the museum through arbitration, in a new court filing.
- Pennsylvaniaâs political elite will return this weekend for the first time in seven years to where the annual out-of-state glitzy gathering all began: the Waldorf Astoria New York.
- Phillyâs celebration of Americaâs 250th birthday kicks off on New Yearâs Eve with a free outdoor concert featuring LL Cool J, DJ Jazzy Jeff, and more.
- The Philadelphia Portal art installment at City Hall is offline. The cause of the blackout was unclear as of Friday.
- After Lincoln Universityâs homecoming in October ended with seven people shot, including one killed, the surrounding rural Chester County township plans to pass new regulations on large events.
- Itâs a buyerâs market around Temple. But an Old City real estate agentâs clients were paying about double the original asking price for properties.
- What, exactly, is the Eagles âpositivity bunnyâ? We explain in our roundup of the good, bad, and weird in the latest stories out of Philly.
Etiquette on the El

It happens every so often, even in the quiet car: I get on the train, and somebodyâs loudspeaker starts blaring music or even TikTok videos. A quick look around, and a shared discomfort is obvious on other ridersâ faces. What do you do in this situation? Do you speak up, or suffer on your morning commute?
To answer this reader question, Inquirer editor Evan Weiss recruited reporters Beatrice Forman and Henry Savage. Their chat touched on whether there is a âright wayâ to ask someone to quit blasting their playlist or other disruptive behaviors like smoking.
Forman shared a solution-oriented anecdote: âI was recently on the BSL home from an assignment in South Philly around the time classes let out, and this kid was blasting Kendrick Lamar loud enough for all the train car to hear, so I ended up politely offering him a pair of corded earbuds to use to see if heâd take the hint.â
Personally, I opt for drowning it out with my own music â in my headphones, of course. But Iâve definitely been stuck on SEPTA without that option because said headphones also run out of battery.
Read along for my colleaguesâ full verdict. And if you have a pressing question you need advice on, weâre all ears. Send it in here.
One viewpoint

Mayor Cherelle L. Parkerâs H.O.M.E. initiative â a $2 billion proposal to build or restore 30,000 homes across the city â has proved to be a sticking point between Parkerâs administration and City Hall. On Wednesday, City Council voted against Parkerâs vision.
In the latest edition of âShackamaxon,â Inquirer columnist Daniel Pearson unpacks the mayorâs housing plan and more.
đ Find the location
Somewhere in Philly, thereâs a bright yellow pop-art inspired sculpture that reads âOY/YOâ (depending on your vantage point).
Where is it?
A) City Hall
B) Independence Mall
C) Pennâs Landing
D) None of the above
Think you know? Our weekly game puts your knowledge of Phillyâs streets to the test. Check your answer.
đ§© Unscramble the anagram
Hint: Gilded Age property in Montco
LEAKIEST NEST
Email us if you know the answer. Weâll select a reader at random to shout out here.
Cheers to Ken Schwartz, who correctly guessed Fridayâs answer: Baby KJ. The Philadelphia-area infant, who made international headlines this year after a successful gene-editing treatment at CHOP, has been named by Nature as one of 10 people who helped shape medicine in 2025.
We were there

This is Olga Sorzano, owner of Babaâs Brew of Phoenixville, holding a scoby.
Sorzanoâs kombucha company generates large amounts of scoby, the mother culture used as a kombucha starter, so she found a new way to use leftover supply: in skincare products.
Food writer Kiki Aranita and photographer Alejandro A. Alvarez went inside the brewing room to learn how the fermenter transforms her bubbly brew into toners, masks, and more.
Somewhere on the internet in Philly
Redditors are nostalgic for these SEPTA bus designs from the â80s.
Jake Beckman, âthe Eagles guyâ for FanSided and a stand-up comic, shared a video of what appears to be a police officer conducting a wellness check on Monday night. Their exchange says it all: âThe Eagles lost.â âI know.â I wonder how Beckman feels about the positivity bunny.
And another passionate Birds fan is keeping the holiday spirit alive by belting out a Jalen Hurts serenade to the tune of âAll I Want for Christmas is Youâ â at 3 in the morning, no less.
đđœ Thatâs it for now. Letâs catch up again tomorrow.
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