And nearly two years into the cityâs efforts to shut down Kensingtonâs open-air drug market, some of the neighborhoodâs most chronic challenges are slowly improving. But is the crisis too entrenched?
By the end of Michelinâs Kimmel Center ceremony on Tuesday night, three local restaurants had gotten a one-star rating, and 31 others got recognition.
But did the vaunted international arbiter of dining get it right in Philadelphia? Restaurant critic Craig LaBan sat down with food reporters Michael Klein and Kiki Aranita to compare notes, including which eateries they think deserve a second look.
Hereâs more from our Michelin review:
đ´ Discerning palates: We asked readers last week to tell us which Philly restaurants you thought deserved a star. You agreed with Michelin on just one out of three.
đ´ Taste test: Is there a difference between a Michelin star, Bib Gourmand, and recommendation? Yes, but theyâre all a win. Dig into the distinctions.
đ´ Closing time: Barely 12 hours after being included in Michelinâs recommended restaurants, East Passyunk Avenueâs Laurel said its final night of service would be Friday.
đ´ Love at first bite: All three Philly men who earned Michelin stars share another common thread â theyâre proud âWife Guys.â
In other food news:
The owner of the beleaguered Bistro at Cherry Hill, a longtime mall fixture that closed this summer amid bankruptcy proceedings, has been indicted on charges of tax fraud.
Under the renewed efforts of Mayor Cherelle L. Parkerâs administration, some residents and city officials agree that many of Kensingtonâs most chronic challenges have been improving, albeit slowly.
The neighborhood has fewer shootings and more drug arrests amid an expanded police presence. Riverview Wellness Village, Parkerâs new $100 million recovery and treatment facility in Northeast Philadelphia, now houses more than 200 people.
But the open-air drug market persists â an intractable problem that has been a main character in Kensingtonâs story for decades. Some critics, including harm-reduction groups, say the administrationâs efforts push the issues to other areas of the city or donât target the source of the ills.
Police are seeking to question two men in connection with the death of an American Airlines flight attendant who they believe was attacked in his South Philadelphia home last week.
The head of Delaware County nonprofit the Opioid Crisis Action Network traded cash for sex acts to women in addiction, officials said, and has been charged with trafficking.
A former West Philly ward leader was sentenced Wednesday to a year in federal prison for stealing more than $140,000 from his ward and a church where he served as a deacon.
Immigration advocates say the Philadelphia Criminal Justice Center has become a âhunting groundâ for federal agents. They want agents barred from the building. And in South Jersey, the Trump administration told Democrats it has no timeline to begin holding undocumented immigrants at Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst.
The new Working Pennsylvanians Tax Credit could put hundreds of dollars in the pockets of roughly 1 million people. Hereâs how it works.
Philly-area federal workers are finally getting paid again. But after Jan. 30, if lawmakers once again fail to agree on keeping the government open, some federal workers could once again face a lapse in their pay.
P.S. Philadelphia International Airport will reopen two U.S. Transportation Security Administration-run security checkpoints that were closed amid the government shutdown.
đ§ Trivia time
Philadelphia School District students this week were invited to give their honest (and sometimes brutal) reviews of what?
Cheers to Nick Scola, who solved Wednesdayâs anagram: DuPont. Axalta, a Philly-based spin-off of the Wilmington chemical company, hopes its merger with a global paint giant will boost sagging sales.
Photo of the day
“Crab Couch” by artist Rose Luardo at the cement triangle at the intersection of Washington Avenue, Passyunk Avenue, and Eighth Street.
đŚ One last crabby thing: The artist behind the âBoob Gardenâ and âRave Coffinâ strikes again in South Philadelphia with âCrab Couch,â which, as columnist Stephanie Farr notes, comes with claws and killer side-eye.
Thanks for starting your day with The Inquirer. Back at it tomorrow.
By submitting your written, visual, and/or audio contributions, you agree to The Inquirerâs Terms of Use, including the grant of rights in Section 10.
Lower Merion Township’s administrative building. The township’s board of commissioners is set to raise parking meter rates, reduce the speed limit on a main artery, and regulate vape and smoke shops in upcoming votes.
Lower Merion residents may want to brace for a few adjustments on the horizon, including a lower speed limit on parts of Lancaster Avenue and new rules surrounding where smoke and vape shops can operate.
Township commissioners considered multiple ordinances at their meeting last night, including the speed limit reduction and a proposal that would up the cost of parking in the township for the first time in 25 years, potentially generating around $900,000 annually.
Speaking of the state budget, the finalized plan provided no additional funding for SEPTA. Meanwhile, the transit agency completed its required inspections of all 223 Silverliner IV Regional Rail vehicles just ahead of its deadline, but travel woes arenât likely to end with many cars yet to return to service.
Mark your calendars: There will be a concert honoring WMMR host Pierre Robert in Philly next month, where bands and musicians close to the former Gladwyne resident will gather to celebrate his memory after his recent death shocked the music world.
A Philadelphia man admitted to a hit-and-run that happened outside the Taco Bell on City Avenue last year. Jamal McCullough, 38, did not call 911 or help Tracey Carey, 61, after he struck her as she attempted to cross the highway in her wheelchair, according to police.
Two of this yearâs prestigious Rhodes scholars boast local connections: Yale University senior Aruna Balasubramanian hails from Bala Cynwyd and is a Harriton High alumna while Alice Hall, studying at MIT, is the daughter of Welsh Valley Middle School Principal Chris Hall, according to the school district. The Inquirerâs Maggie Prosser caught up with the two,and Balasubramanian shares advice for other Main Line high schoolers.
Lower Merionâs compost pilot program is underway, providing the free service to eligible households within Bala Cynwyd. You can find more details on the yearlong initiative here.
A reminder that the Thanksgiving holiday will impact your trash and recycling pickup next week. Not sure when your holiday collection will be? Use the townshipâs address lookup tool to confirm.
A chemist and former executive at Conshohocken-based pharmaceutical company Cencora (formerly AmerisourceBergen) recently launched a luxury skincare line out of her Bryn Mawr home. Jennifer Sherakâs eponymous company caters to women over 40 and is looking to buck a âone-size-fits-allâ approach. (Philadelphia Business Journal)
Harriton High Schoolâs boys soccer team recently won its first-ever Central Athletic League title, as well as the PIAA District One 3A title, before advancing to the state semifinals, where the team lost to Abington Heights.
Today is picture retake day. Also, the book fair continues today and tomorrow at Bala Cynwyd Middle School. And tonight, the high schools kick off their fall plays. Harriton is performing Clue, which runs through Saturday, while Lower Merion High is putting on Legally Blonde, which is on until Sunday. Reminder for families: Elementary and middle school students donât have class on Tuesday, and all students are out on Wednesday. The district is closed next Thursday and Friday for Thanksgiving. See the full calendar here.
Fox29âs Bob Kelly recently visited La Cabra Brewing Smokehouse in Bryn Mawr to sample its brews and barbecue. The Glenbrook Avenue eatery opened in 2019, where it smokes meats like brisket, pork, and chicken. See the segment here.
đł Things to Do
đ¤ Barn Dance: Brush up on your dancing skills or learn some new steps at this event. â° Friday, Nov. 21, 6:30-9 p.m. đľ $25 đ Riverbend Environmental Education Center
đ BHL Holiday Market: Belmont Hills Library is hosting the first of three holiday markets this weekend, where you can shop goods fromlocal artisans. â° Saturday, Nov. 22, 2-7 p.m. đľ Pay as you go đ Belmont Hills Library
đ§ââď¸ Letâs Celebrate the Opening of Wicked: For Good: Kids ages 5 to 12 can make themed edible crafts inspired by Elphaba and Glinda. â° Sunday, Nov. 23, 4-5 p.m. đľ $21.20 đ The Candy Lab
đŚ Movie Matinee: Catch a screening of The Land Before Time at the library. Registration is required. â° Tuesday, Nov. 25, 1-3 p.m. đľ Free đ Penn Wynne Library
đ Fall Cornucopia Creations: Create your own Thanksgiving centerpiece. â° Tuesday, Nov. 25, 6-7:30 p.m. đľ $95 đ Plant 4 Good
đ Worth the Drive: A Longwood Christmas: Longwood Gardensâ annual holiday display kicks off tomorrow and runs through early January. This yearâs theme is inspired by jewels and gems. â° Friday, Nov. 21-Sunday, Jan. 11, 10 a.m.-11 p.m. đľ $25 for kids 5-18, $45 for adults 19 and older, free for members and kids under 5đ Longwood Gardens
1075 Green Valley Road in Bryn Mawr is listed for $3.25 million.
This sprawling, nearly 8,000-square-foot gated estate in Bryn Mawr boasts five bedrooms and five-and-a-half bathrooms. Among its highlights? A sweeping staircase, gym, sauna, wine cellar, and lagoon-style pool.
By submitting your written, visual, and/or audio contributions, you agree to The Inquirerâs Terms of Use, including the grant of rights in Section 10.
This suburban content is produced with support from the Leslie Miller and Richard Worley Foundation and The Lenfest Institute for Journalism. Editorial content is created independently of the project donors. Gifts to support The Inquirerâs high-impact journalism can be made at inquirer.com/donate. A list of Lenfest Institute donors can be found at lenfestinstitute.org/supporters.
Chef Antonio Garcia (left) will balance being in the kitchen with being on the floor at his new restaurant, Taquero. He’s tapped Jose Rigoberto (right) as his sous chef.
Media is getting a new Mexican restaurant on Monday, when Chef Antonio Garcia of Ariano opens his own eatery, Taquero.
Garcia, whoâs been in the kitchen at Ariano since it opened over a decade ago, has been working to bring his new BYOB on Veterans Square to life for over 18 months. There, he will be serving a range of modern and traditional dishes from his native Mexico, including some his grandmother used to make.
âEverybody says their grandma is the best cook. My grandma was, like, insane,â Garcia said. âEverything she cooked was so delicious.â
Taquero, which translates to taco-maker, will serve five types of tacos, as well as appetizers, soups, salads, entrĂŠes, and desserts. It will also offer mixers for people who bring their own alcohol. In crafting the menu, Garcia said he wanted to do âsomething thatâs going to make me proud, for me and my family.â
The stateâs long-awaited $50.1 billion budget, signed last week, includes $3 million in supplemental payments for Riddle Hospital, which has seen an increase in patients since Crozer-Chester Medical Center closed earlier this year. There was no additional funding for mass transit, however.
Meanwhile, Delaware County last week reported that during the state budget impasse â which began after a missed July 1 deadline â it had spent about $12 million monthly through October from its reserves to backfill for state funding. The county expects to be reimbursed by the state, but itâs unclear when.
SEPTA has finished inspecting all 223 of its Silverliner IV Regional Rail cars, but normal service on the commuter system may not return until at least mid-December.
Staff members arrived at the Delaware County Republican Party headquarters in Media yesterday morning to find the buildingâs glass door shattered â the second such incident in 13 months. âItâs just a sign of the times unfortunately,â said party chair Frank Agovino, who also said police are investigating the apparent vandalism.
In Philly and Delco, listings and sales of luxury homes are down from last year while prices have grown. In the combined market of both counties, 285 luxury homes sold between July and September of this year â down 16% from the same period in 2024, according to a Redfin analysis.
A Delaware County Overdose Response Team was recently added to Riddle Hospital in Media. The partnership between paramedics and a certified recovery specialist team is intended to reduce some of the burden on emergency services. Through the program, a Main Line Health certified recovery specialist will follow ambulances to certain 911 calls and provide additional support to those who have overdosed. (Daily Times)
When shopping at the Promenade at Granite Run recently, Inquirer columnist Stephanie Farr came across what she believes to be the most offensively Pennsylvanian outfit: matching camouflage sweat suits. âHere were outfits that managed to do what no state legislature or psychological expert ever has: They married rural and urban Pennsylvania,” she writes.
A reminder that the Thanksgiving holiday will impact your trash and recycling pickup next week. Not sure when your holiday collection will be? Check the Media or Swarthmore websites. If you live in Nether Providence Township, check with your private trash collector.
Nether Providence Township is hosting a bulk trash drop-off event on Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., or until the bins are full, at Hepford Park and the South Media Fire Station.
Wallingford-Swarthmore School District is headed for a $2.6 million budget deficit that officials blame on a âspending problem.â Without implementing a âcultural shiftâ around spending, the district is staring down major fiscal problems for the 2027-28 school year, said business administrator DeJuana Mosley.
Book fairs continue at a couple RMTSD schools through Tuesday, and there are parent-teacher conferences at several schools on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday next week. There are no classes for kindergarten through eighth grade students starting Tuesday, and the high school has an early dismissal Wednesday. The district is closed next Thursday and Friday for Thanksgiving. See the full calendar here.
Wallingford Elementaryâs book fair continues through tomorrow, and Saturday and Sunday are fall drama performances. There will be no classes next Wednesday, and the district is closed next Thursday and Friday for Thanksgiving. See the full calendar here.
Speaking of Thanksgiving, if youâre still in search of a fresh turkey, weâve rounded up where you can buy them locally, including at Linvilla Orchards, which has whole birds or breasts. Preorders for turkeys are due today.
đł Things to Do
đď¸ Penncrest Band Annual Craft Show: Shop over 125 vendors, hear the band play, sample food, and try your luck at a raffle. â° Saturday, Nov. 22, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. đľ Pay as you go đ Penncrest High School, Media
đĽ Fire Pit Fridays: At the YMCAâs final fire pit event of the year, roast sâmores while connecting with other attendees. Hot chocolate will be available for purchase. â° Friday, Nov. 21, 6-8 p.m. đľ Free đ Rocky Run YMCA, Media
𼧠2nd Annual Hoedown and Pie Raffle Fundraiser: Put on your dancing boots for this family-friendly fundraiser that includes barbecue, kidsâ crafts, a pie raffle, and a live band with a professional caller to shout out the steps. â° Saturday, Nov. 22, 5 p.m. đľ $15 for children ages 4 to 9, $35 for attendees 10 and older đ Park Avenue Community Center, Swarthmore
đ˛ Cut-Your-Own Christmas Tree: Find your perfect Christmas tree among the pre-cut options or venture into the fields to chop down your own. â° Opening Saturday, Nov. 22 through Tuesday, Dec. 23, times and days vary đľ $119 per tree plus tax đ Linvilla Orchards, Media
đLittle Women: Hedgerow Theatreâs newest show kicks off and is a stage adaptation of Louisa May Alcottâs beloved book. â° Wednesday, Nov. 26-Sunday, Dec. 28, times and days vary đľ $20-$35 đ Hedgerow Theatre, Rose Valley
đââĄď¸ Delco Turkey Trot: Sunday is the last day to register for this yearâs race, which includes a 5K or a one-mile âlittle drumstickâ run to benefit Nether Providence Elementary Schoolâs parent-teacher organization. â° Thursday, Nov. 27, 8:30 a.m. đľ $25 for kids under 12, $40 for everyone else đ Nether Providence Elementary School, Wallingford
đ Worth the Drive: A Longwood Christmas: Longwood Gardensâ annual holiday display kicks off tomorrow and runs through early January. This yearâs theme is inspired by gems. Timed reservations are required. â° Friday, Nov. 21-Sunday, Jan. 11, 10 a.m.-11 p.m. đľ $25 for kids 5-18, $45 for adults 19 and older, free for members and kids under 5 đ Longwood Gardens
A custom bar and a hot tub? This four-bedroom, three-and-a-half bathroom home in Media boasts plenty of space for hosting. Other highlights include a farm sink, double ovens, multiple fireplaces, a two-story foyer, and more.
By submitting your written, visual, and/or audio contributions, you agree to The Inquirerâs Terms of Use, including the grant of rights in Section 10.
This suburban content is produced with support from the Leslie Miller and Richard Worley Foundation and The Lenfest Institute for Journalism. Editorial content is created independently of the project donors. Gifts to support The Inquirerâs high-impact journalism can be made at inquirer.com/donate. A list of Lenfest Institute donors can be found at lenfestinstitute.org/supporters.
On a week when the Union should be preparing for a crucial Eastern Conference semifinal against New York City FC on Sunday (7:55 p.m., Apple TV, MLS Season Pass), the prevailing news is drama of a different kind.
On Tuesday, the Guardian unveiled a monthslong report revealing alleged misconduct by the Unionâs sporting director, Ernst Tanner, who is considered the mastermind of the teamâs prominence in Major League Soccer over the last few seasons.
According to the report, Tanner is accused in a series of incidents involving racism, sexism, and homophobia directed toward people around American soccer. On Wednesday, we heard the latest from the stance of MLS, the club, and even Tanner himself, via his legal team after he was put on âadministrative leave.â
The situation puts the Union in a bind: The technical staff is focused on advancing to next weekâs conference final, while the front office seeks to distance itself from serious allegations against the guy in charge of its future.
Itâs what weâre leading off your Thursday with, one expected to remain cloudy, but peaking into the 50s today.
Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts during a break against the Detroit Lions last Sunday.
We all know the Eagles quarterback is good for a great quote or two, but what does he have to say about himself when asked? In a moment in which pundits once again are starting to doubt Jalen Hurts, hereâs a snippet of what he said, gathered by Inquirer reporter Olivia Reiner:
âI guess I get a lot of attention when things are going well and when things are not going so well,â Hurts said. âSo I never run away from holding myself accountable and I think thatâs exactly what Iâve taken the approach of doing. Even when I look at this last game, I take great pride in what we do on offense. I take great pride in how we go out there and play as a team and what our flow is.
âSo we obviously got work to do, and I think that obviously starts with me. Thatâs always my approach. Thatâs always me looking internally first in everything that we do. And in due time, rising above.â
According to Hurts, scrutiny is par for the course. But he doesnât plan on caving in to the rumors.
Sixers forward Paul George joined the team in 2024 with expectations that he would help the team compete for a title.
Paul George wasted no time getting in on the action in his first game of the 2025-26 season. Just 36 seconds into regulation Monday, George picked up a block against James Harden and turned a quick give-and-go with Tyrese Maxey into a catch-and-shoot three-pointer. Of course, the rest of Georgeâs night wasnât quite as smooth.
Itâs tough to draw too many sweeping conclusions from Georgeâs season debut. But The Inquirer takes a closer look at how his return could help the Sixers improve at both ends while lightening the load on Maxey. We look at what George can give to the Sixers â and what might be a thing of the past.
The Sixers could not overcome a third-quarter surge by the Raptors in a 121-112 loss to Toronto. Tyrese Maxey paced the Sixers with 24 points, but the team committed a season-high 21 turnovers that led to 31 Raptors points.
Joe Maddon (left) managed Kyle Schwarber for the first five years of his career with the Cubs.
Kyle Schwarber spent much of his first five major league seasons trying to get things right against lefties.
Joe Maddon watched the struggle up close as manager of the Cubs.
Schwarber became a complete hitter in four seasons with the Phillies â and put himself in position to cash in this offseason in free agency. As Schwarberâs market develops, Maddon sat down with Phillies Extra, The Inquirerâs baseball podcast, to discuss the sluggerâs maturation as a hitter.
Get up to speed before kickoff as the Inquirerâs Olivia Reiner and Jeff McLane break down everything you need to know ahead of Sundayâs game against the Cowboys. Watch here.
Eric Lindros
On this date
Nov. 20, 1997: Flyers great Eric Lindros is alleged to have bitten San Jose Sharks defenseman Marty McSorley. However, two days later, the NHL cleared Lindros of any wrongdoing, despite video appearing to show Lindros in full bite mode.
Standings, stats, and more
Want to see the full breakdown of last nightâs Sixers game against the Toronto Raptors? Hereâs a place to access your favorite Philadelphia teamsâ statistics, schedules, and standings in real time.
Nick Castellanos and the Phillies will likely part ways before the start of next season.
The most important variable in any negotiation is what the other side thinks you are willing to pay. Right now, the other 29 teams in Major League Baseball have every reason to think the Phillies arenât willing to pay Nick Castellanos anything. â The latest from Inquirer columnist David Murphy on the upside of Castellanosâ situation for the Phillies.
What youâre saying about Temple football
We asked: Can K.C. Keeler bring success back to Temple in football?
Success for Temple football is fielding a competitive team capable of earning a bid for a Bowl Game. Following four years of three-win seasons, KC [Keeler] has worked miracles on North Broad this season. He brought in 46 new players and totally revamped the culture. The team believes they can win and are on the brink of potentially qualifying for a bowl bid. Choosing a successful head coach who is committed to Temple, not the next job, is a big win for the Owls. Now, we need fans in the stands when Penn State visits next September. â Bob C.
Yes. They were competitive in the conference this year in his first year at Temple. He knows the area, he can recruit, he can coach and the American conference is not impossible to win (see Army and Navy this year and last). â Richard V.
Short answer on KC Keeler NO. Temple is not a football school. They should forget football and put all their money and efforts into becoming a big-name basketball school. Lifetime, the Owls are 499-622-52. They have played nine Bowl Games and won three. From 1887 to 2025, Penn State has had 16 coaches. From 1894 to 2025, Temple has had 34. They have played in multiple conferences and were expelled from the Big East in 2019 for a lack of commitment. Their greatest years were the Pop Warner era that ended in 1938 when I was born. Wayne Harden and Matt Rhule also had success there, but very limited success since then. âEverett S.
We compiled todayâs newsletter using reporting from Jonathan Tannenwald, Kerith Gabriel, Olivia Reiner, Keith Pompey, Scott Lauber, David Murphy, and Neil Pane.
By submitting your written, visual, and/or audio contributions, you agree to The Inquirerâs Terms of Use, including the grant of rights in Section 10.
Hey, thanks for allowing us to get your days started â or just to feel better informed. Bella returns to your inbox tomorrow to get you ready for the weekend.â Kerith
For the first time ever, Philadelphia has a Michelin star. Three, in fact. Plus 31 other restaurants with Michelin acclaim, including three cheesesteak spots!
Sundayâs Philadelphia Marathon wends from Old City out to Manayunk. If youâre watching with kids, here are 10 restaurants that can accommodate everyone relatively painlessly.
Chef Yehuda Sichel of the sandwich shop Huda has gone into the burger biz with Huda Burger, set right in the middle of everything in Fishtown. The secret sauce, as it were, is his fluffy, house-made milk buns.
đ§ Watch Eagles star Jordan Mailata and his wife, Niki, judge the Great Inquirer Bake-Off.
Scoops
Luna Cafe in Kensington is making a short but substantial move, ceding its home at Third Street and Cecil B. Moore Avenue for a new space two blocks away at the Luxe (1705 N. American St.), allowing owner Sarah Varisano to grow the brand without leaving the neighborhood sheâs called home for 13 years. Varisano, who started Luna in Old City 10 years ago as a new Drexel University MBA grad, will close the current cafe after brunch service on Dec. 14 and expects an April reopening. Lunaâs familiar identity â full-service brunch, breakfast, coffee-to-go â will remain, while its bar and beverage program will expand. Evening hours will be added Thursday through Saturday. A key Luxe draw is the large outdoor courtyard, which Varisano expects to activate with about 50 seats for brunch, evening service, collaborations, and pop-ups.
Palm Vintage Cafe â cafe by day, high-end cocktails and sushi by night â is on the way this winter to 1414 S. Penn Square (next to La Colombe and across from City Hall at the Residences at the Ritz Carlton). Houston Yang, who also owns the new Fushimi sushi counter at Two Liberty Place, and friend Mike Beja, an engineer, plan to offer pastries, breakfast sandwiches, salads, lunch sandwiches, and coffee from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. Then it goes to cocktails, sushi, caviar, oysters, and light food till 10 p.m. The tropical motif is meant to evoke a relaxed island escape in the middle of Center City.
Mei Mei in Old City is undergoing renovations. Meanwhile, owner Jay Ho is taking over the former Izakaya Fishtown space next spring with Kato, an homage to his Taiwanese father and the food he grew up eating, amped by his love of Korean, Thai, and Vietnamese cooking. Ho plans to keep the front bar intact but will transform the back sushi counter area into additional dining space with the option for private dining.
Capperini, a luxe spot serving an Italian-Mediterranean menu with a liquor license, is on its way to 137 S. Easton Rd. (at Wesley Avenue) in Glenside. Co-owner Ilya Vorobey, whose partners include the crew from Capri in Queen Village, says it should open next spring.
Restaurant report
Antonio Garcia, longtime chef of Italian restaurant Ariano in downtown Media, will open his own BYOB, Taquero, on the same block. The menu will pay homage to his Mexican roots. Above is fideo seco â noodles in a chipotle broth, served with queso fresco, crema, lump crab, and avocado. Read on as Lisa Dukart runs down the other specialties in advance of Taqueroâs opening Monday on Veterans Square.
Briefly noted
Rocket Cat Cafe is not coming back to Fishtown. The long-delayed LeoFigs decided to have some fun with its neighbors with a bit of a ruse.
Nan Xiang Soup Dumplings, the acclaimed Shanghainese restaurant that scored a âMichelin-recommendedâ tag at its flagship in Queens, has set Thursday for the opening of its first Delaware location in the Christiana Shopping District, 101 Geoffrey Drive, Newark.
St. Oners, Tired Hands Brewing Co.âs eatery at 2218 Frankford Ave., will mark the release of its cannabis-inspired beer Stoner Hands on Thursday (3-10 p.m.) with an a la carte Mexican pairing menu from chef Antonio Hidalgo. Attendees get a sample pint of Stoner Hands, a 5.5% ABV terpene-infused pale ale.
Chef Nana Araba Wilmot, whose cooking is shaped by her Ghanaian heritage and informed by French, Spanish, Southern, and Asian traditions, will host a Love That I Knead Supperclub installment themed to the cultural and culinary ties between Ghana and Jamaica. The BYO dinner, hosted by 5to9 Hospitality Group, will be from 5 to 7:30 p.m. Sunday in Fishtown. Itâs three courses plus welcome bites ($120 for chefâs table, $95 for general seating). A portion of proceeds benefits the Walkgood Jamaica Hurricane Relief Fund. Details are here.
Paris Baguetteâs first South Jersey location will ribbon-cut at 3:30 p.m. Monday at Moorestownâs East Gate Shopping Center (105 Mall Link Rd.). Franchisees are IT professionals Ami and David Shah.
Tickets for the James Beard Foundationâs Taste America: Philadelphia 2026 â itâs March 18 at the Grand Belle at the Bellevue â are now online.
âPop quiz
What is the manufacturer PepsiCo doing with Doritos and Cheetos to make them more healthful?
What is happening on Washington Avenue near Front Street? It looks like a huge space, and yet from what I can tell online, it is a coffee shop? â Amanda J.
It will be the first Philadelphia location of Trung NguyĂŞn Legend, the powerhouse Vietnamese coffee brand behind the G7 instant line and animal-free âweaselâ coffee. Grand opening is noted in its social media as Nov. 29. It started in 1996 in Vietnamâs Central Highlands and has grown into a global chain of philosophically themed cafĂŠs and franchises, now pushing into the United States. âWeasel coffee?â you ask. Thatâs Vietnamâs famed civet-style brew; traditionally made from beans eaten and excreted by civets, itâs now recreated by Trung NguyĂŞn through an enzyme-fermentation process that mimics the flavor without using animals.
đŽ Have a question about food in Philly? Email your questions to me at mklein@inquirer.com for a chance to be featured in my newsletter.
By submitting your written, visual, and/or audio contributions, you agree to The Inquirerâs Terms of Use, including the grant of rights in Section 10.
Hi, Philly. Expect clouds and possibly rain this morning.
Itâs almost time for the most ambitious among us to lace up their sneakers and run for hours through the cityâs scenic and historic neighborhoods. For the rest, thereâs the spectatorâs guide to the 2025 Philadelphia Marathon.
Philadelphia Marathon Weekend is upon us. This year, organizers expect roughly 30,000 athletes across Saturdayâs half marathon and 8K, and Sundayâs full marathon and childrenâs run.
Not running, but want to be one of the thousands of spectators supporting those who are? We have some advice.
𪧠Pick your position: If you want the energy of a crowd, consider posting up at Chestnut Street in Center City or Main Street in Manayunk. If youâre looking for a calmer vibe, head to Kelly Drive.
đ Get around: With road closures, parking restrictions, and heavy traffic expected, driving anywhere near the race is a risk. Metro lines and Regional Rail are your friends. Or, you can always travel by foot, like the runners.
đ Bring the party: But also layers, snacks, and the Philadelphia Marathon app downloaded on your phone to track participants in real time.
Life has gotten more stressful for residents of a suburban Bucks County community after a pipeline leaked jet fuel under their homes, contaminating their water supply.
The 67-year-old Twin Oaks Pipeline is owned by Sunoco and its parent company, Energy Transfer. As part of the more than 2.5 million miles of pipelines that transport fuels in the United States, it tunnels under the Delaware River and runs below a schoolâs grounds and state and local parks.
State inspectors uncovered the leak in January. Regulators say it likely began much earlier.
Energy Transfer has apologized and taken steps to remediate the issue. But now, most people in the neighborhood wonât drink the water. Many wonât cook with it. Some even bathe elsewhere.
In other environmental news: A Conshohocken-area data center proposal was abruptly withdrawn over legal issues. Neighbors have cited concerns about light, noise, and air pollution, as well as water usage and electricity costs.
Burlington County prosecutors identified the man they say is responsible for killing a Maple Shade woman and her 6-year-old son eight years ago.
Pennsylvania lawmakers from both sides of the aisle supported the release of the Epstein files after Republicans initially tried to avoid taking a vote on the matter. Plus, President Donald Trump is drawing widespread criticism after lashing out at a former Daily News reporter when pressed on the files.
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission is suing the University of Pennsylvania for failing to release information related to an antisemitism investigation.
West Phillyâs Jubilee School on Monday commemorated the 1967 student walkout, when thousands of Philadelphia School District students demanded better treatment of Black students.
đ§ Trivia time
As shown during Sundayâs Eagles broadcast, Boathouse Row recently glowed pink and green as a nod to what?
A) The Eaglesâ belated celebration of Breast Cancer Awareness Month
Cheers to Diane Marcakis, who solved Tuesdayâs anagram: The College of Physicians of Philadelphia. The MĂźtter Museumâs parent org announced plans Monday for a $27 million expansion and renovation at 22nd and Chestnut Streets.
Photo of the day
Crossing guard Terri Ashwood shields her head and face from cold winds while working on the 4700 block of Germantown Avenue.
Stay warm today. Iâll be back with you tomorrow.
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Cherry Hill will be doing a needs assessment to determine what makes older residents want to stay.
One-third of Cherry Hillâs residents are 55 or older. As the townshipâs population continues to grow, local leaders want to understand what makes its older residents stick around.
âFor those that have the means, itâs a conscious decision to stay,â said Mayor Dave Fleisher. âThey want to stay close to their kids, close to their grandkids.â
Cherry Hill will be using a $70,000 grant from the New Jersey Department of Human Services to do a needs assessment, including focus groups, listening sessions, and a survey. The goal of the grant, given to 17 communities in total, is to âmake communities more welcoming and livable for people of all ages.â
The Cherry Hill Public Library is facing âdisruptionsâ after one of the largest library book distributors in the country announced itâs shutting down operations. CHPL used Baker & Taylor almost exclusively as its vendor for books, audiobooks, and DVDs, and while some of those orders have been canceled, librarians said they are working with another provider to get new inventory.
Randy Fenoli of Say Yes to the Dress fame will be in town this weekend for the grand opening of bridal and formalwear shop Dress 2 Impressâ second location on Route 38. Started in Linwood, the shop is hosting an appointment-only trunk show featuring a selection of Fenoliâs âKeepsake Collectionâ gowns.
Still in search of a fresh turkey for Thanksgiving? Weâve rounded up where you can buy them locally, including Arnieâs Gourmet Butcher Shop & Culinaria. The Haddonfield-Berlin Road store sells farm-raised whole turkeys, turkey breast, and even turducken. For kosher options, Ravitz Family Marketsâ ShopRites in Garden State Pavilions and on Evesham Road have birds that meet Glatt Kosher standards.
Morton also last week released a report on the first quarter of the school year. It outlined key actions, currents challenges, and next steps across five areas, including academic achievement, the schoolâs climate, and staffing.
Reminder to families: There will be an early dismissal next Wednesday to kick off Thanksgiving break. See the districtâs full calendar here.
Inspire A Learner, a new Islamic youth education and daycare center, has received zoning approval to operate in a converted office building on Marlkress Road. (70 and 73)
đ˝ď¸ On our Plate
The owners of Cherry Hillâs Old World-style Italian restaurant Il Villaggio have an agreement to buy popular Haddon Township pub Keg & Kitchen. It will remain a pub, but undergo a few changes, including to its name, menu, and decor.
Bombay Express, an Indian restaurant that recently closed its Marlton location, is heading to Cherry Hill. The eatery, which offers chicken, lamb, and vegetable dishes, in addition to biryanis and tandoori, will open in the Centrum Shoppes on Haddonfield-Berlin Road, though an exact timeline has not yet been shared.
Umai Ramen is one of the 20 best ramen shops in the Garden State, according to BestofNJ.com. The food outlet noted the Brace Road restaurant âbrings a taste of authentic Japanese street food to Cherry Hill,â suggesting diners try the classic miso, tonkotsu, or the black garlic ramen.
đł Things to Do
đ đť CocaâCola Holiday Caravan: The bright red touring truck is making a stop in Cherry Hill tonight, where you can take photos with Santa, enjoy seasonal activities, and purchase Coca-Cola-themed gifts. â° Wednesday, Nov. 19, 5:30-7:30 p.m. đľ Pay as you go đ Roy Rogers
đď¸ Eyez on U Pop-Up Market: Beat the Black Friday rush and shop local businesses at the mallâs Grand Court. â° Friday, Nov. 21-Sunday, Nov. 23, times vary đľ Pay as you go đ Cherry Hill Mall
đ Holiday House: See Barclay Farmstead decked out for the holidays. â° Friday, Nov. 21-Sunday, Nov. 23, times vary đľ $5.49 for adults, $3.49 for children 10 and underđ Barclay Farmstead
đ¤ Philcon 2025: Science fiction, fantasy, and horror buffs will gather to celebrate the genres in books, film, television, and more. This yearâs principal speaker is writer Charles Gannon, who is known for his Caine Riordan series. â° Friday, Nov. 21-Sunday, Nov. 23, times vary đľ $35-$75 đ DoubleTree by Hilton
đ§ R&B Night: Drinksgiving: Three DJs will play tunes during this R&B-themed event. â° Friday, Nov. 21, 9 p.m.-2 a.m. đľ $13.34 đ Vera
đ Holiday Gift Bazaar: Over 40 vendors will be selling everything from accessories and beauty products to home goods at this event. â° Sunday, Nov. 23, 9 a.m.-2 p.m. đľ Pay as you go đ Congregation Kol Ami
đ Holiday Craft Fair: Browse an array of vendors selling items like jewelry, scrapbooking supplies, and pottery. â° Sunday, Nov. 23, 1-4 p.m. đľ Pay as you go đ Cherry Hill Public Library
The four-bedroom home spans more than 5,100 square feet.
Built in 1999, this spacious brick-fronted Short Hills home has a variety of unique features. Its first floor features a two-story foyer; a living room; an office; a family room with a fireplace set into a stone accent wall and vaulted ceilings; a dining room with a quartz waterfall island in lieu of a table; and a kitchen with granite countertops and high-end appliances. It has four bedrooms, including a primary suite, with a massive walk-in closet, a fireplace, a spa-like bathroom, and a balcony. The finished basement has a full bathroom and a home gym. Outside, thereâs a heated covered patio and a saltwater fiberglass pool with a rock waterfall.
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This suburban content is produced with support from the Leslie Miller and Richard Worley Foundation and The Lenfest Institute for Journalism. Editorial content is created independently of the project donors. Gifts to support The Inquirerâs high-impact journalism can be made at inquirer.com/donate. A list of Lenfest Institute donors can be found at lenfestinstitute.org/supporters.
Itâs no secret that Templeâs football team has struggled over the last several years, but the coaching position has long been transient.
The Owls have shuffled through 11 coaches, including interims, in 15 years. Some were fired because they werenât winning; some were poached to fill higher-paying jobs.
Remember Manny Diaz? The former Temple coach stayed on North Broad for 17 days before running off to the University of Miami. Another, Geoff Collins, led the Owls to a 15-10 record, only to leave for Georgia Tech after two years.
Then there was Stan Drayton, who won nine games in parts of three seasons. The dynamic of being a smaller Division I program with less resources has led Temple to a difficult balancing act.
K.C. Keeler appears to be different. He has an established track record of building winning programs, and the 66-year-old wonât likely use Temple as a stepping stone.
Heâs building a home with his wife in Wilmington. He has ties to this area, and is deeply committed in the Owls. He also can be humorous and serious when he needs to be.
There are times when practice is not fun, and there are times when heâs dancing in the huddle after a win. Temple quarterback Evan Simon compared it to being around your fun uncle, which may be the exact recipe for what Temple needs in a coach.
Eagles offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo with quarterback Jalen Hurts during the Lions game on Sunday night.
The Eagles defense came up with five fourth-down stops against the Lions â plus Cooper DeJeanâs first-quarter interception â while the offense didnât have much to show for it. The Eagles went 1 of 3 in the red zone and 4 of 15 on third down. When asked about his biggest frustration in Sundayâs game, Eagles offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo pointed to a familiar issue â negative plays.
Meanwhile, the defense has taken strides with Nakobe Dean back on the field and the addition of Jaelan Phillips. However, Jihaad Campbell has seen his playing time decrease because of this. The rookie linebacker isnât too concerned about that: âWhat matters is us winning.â
What weâre…
đ Celebrating: Randy Garberâs final hurrah as head coach ends with a state soccer title for Abington High School.
đ¤ Wondering: While the Eagles remain atop in the NFC, the offense has yet to show signs of improvement. Can that change in Week 12?
đ§ Listening: Jeff McLane breaks down the Eaglesâ 16-9 win against the Lions on Sunday and what to expect next from the team.
âž Following: The Phillies added three prospects to their 40-man roster Tuesday to protect them from Decemberâs Rule 5 draft.
Flyers defenseman Emil Andrae has featured in the team’s last six games.
Monday brought good news for Flyers fans clamoring for more Emil Andrae. When Rick Tocchet was asked about the young Swedish defenseman, he answered by saying that âAndrae deserves to play.â
On Tuesday, the team backed that up by loaning fellow Swede Adam Ginning, who has not played since Oct. 25, to AHL Lehigh Valley on a conditioning stint. The transaction was the latest vote of confidence for Andrae and the teamâs belief that he could be here to stay, writes Jackie Spiegel.
Sixers forward Paul George drives to the basket past Los Angeles Clippers guard James Harden on Monday.
After a long injury recovery, Paul George used the words ârustyâ and ârewardingâ to describe his first NBA game action since early March. In the Sixersâ 110-108 victory over the Los Angeles Clippers on Monday, George finished with nine points, seven rebounds, three assists, and two blocks in about 21 minutes of action. He finished the game on the bench, but making his season debut was a start.
Nick Nurse assured the media Tuesday that his star forward âfeels good,â and George was a full participant in practice.
Sports snapshot
Penn celebrates its win over St. Joe’s on Monday night.
Quinyon Mitchell’s family and friends at the Eagles game against the Lions on Sunday.
Quinyon Mitchell is the Eaglesâ best candidate for Defensive Player of the Year. On Sunday, with a dozen of his friends and family from Williston, Fla., in attendance, the cornerback had a dominant performance in prime time. He allowed zero catches on six targets. The NFL said that tied for the best performance against at least six targets since the beginning of the 2024 season â and Mitchell is in just his second season. He has not gotten the recognition he deserves, writes columnist Marcus Hayes.
đ§ Trivia time answer
Which former Eagles offensive tackle is in the Pro Football Hall of Fame?
D) Bob Brown â Pete S. was first with the correct answer.
What youâre saying about the loss of Lane
Lane Johnson walks onto the field before playing the Detroit Lions on Sunday.
We asked: Can the Eagles make up for the loss of Lane Johnson? Among your responses:
Better play calling would alleviate the loss of Lane. Kellen Moore got the Eagles in a flow; that is definitely missing this year. Every team has injuries, just need him back for the important games in Jan/Feb. â Carl H.
The ability of Lane Johnson canât be directly replaced. But the Eagles can still finish with the best record in the NFC, win through the playoffs and ultimately in the Super Bowl. Football is a team game, and the others on the team can rise to the occasion and remain the best team in the NFC. â John W.
Any player injury is a loss but this one is a huge loss for the team. We will go on without Lane, but it will be tough. A Lisfranc injury is a tough one with typically a long rehab. All my prayers for Lane as we navigate without him. â Kathy T.
Pretty much impossible to replace an all-pro 6-6 325 lineman. Whatâs the old cliche? âIt takes a village.â In this case it is going to take a TEAM. Fred and the other guys have to make it their mission to make it seem as if Lane is still there. In defense of Jalen I would offer up that perhaps he is just not happy with Patulloâs offense and has lost heart. If we the fans think the offense is a (bleep) show as AJ says, then maybe Hurts does too. â Everett S.
We compiled todayâs newsletter using reporting from Alex Coffey, Jeff Neiburg, Olivia Reiner, Gina Mizell, Jeff McLane, Lochlahn March, Marcus Hayes, Jackie Spiegel, Jonathan Tannenwald, Gabriela Carroll, Owen Hewitt, Sean McKeown, and Tyler Delpercio.
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As always, thanks for reading and have a wonderful Wednesday. Kerith will get your morning started tomorrow. â Bella
Iâm always reluctant to talk about upcoming columns, because in this twisted era everything changes at the drop of a MAGA hat, and I hate to jinx things. But as of now, Iâm booked for a trip to Charlotte (or Raleigh?…Iâve already jinxed it, maybe) this coming weekend, where I hope to report from the front lines of the Border Patrolâs latest big-city invasion that has terrorized the immigrant community in North Carolina. So Iâm going to spend a couple days reading up on what to do in a tear-gas attack, and Iâll see you again this weekend.
Fearless college kids are saving journalism. Grown-ups? Not so much
Editions of the Indiana Daily Student in the student media area in Franklin Hall on Indiana University’s campus on Oct. 14.
In American journalismâs year of the bended knee, nobody would have been surprised if the student editors of the Harvard Crimson followed the sorry example of major outlets like CBS News or the Washington Post in groveling before the rich and powerful â in this case, their ex-university president and still plugged-in professor Larry Summers.
Earlier this month, Summers took to social media (the Elon Musk-owned X, of course) with a rant against the student-run paper at the Ivy League school he once helmed, linked to an article by conservative commentator (and former Crimson editor) Ira Stoll accusing the Crimson of biased coverage in favor of Palestine. Summers said ominously, âI do hope alumni trustees will investigate and take any necessary steps lest a problematic situation deteriorate any further.â
But instead ofbacking down, Harvardâs student journalists stepped up. When the emails of the late financier and sex fiend Jeffrey Epstein, released last week by a House committee, proved to be riddled with his communications with Summers â long after Epstein had pleaded guilty to teen sex trafficking in Florida â the Crimson produced the most in-depth takedown of any media outlet, anywhere.
âAs Summers Sought Clandestine Relationship With Woman He Called a Mentee, Epstein Was His âWing Manââ was the blistering headline on the article by undergraduates Dhruv T. Patel and Cam N. Srivastava. It described, in excruciating detail, the married Summersâ missives to Epstein about his efforts to woo a much younger Chinese economist on campus whom he was mentoring (and whom the former U.S. treasury secretary and his felonious friend code-named, with a racism they thought would remain forever private, as âperil.â)
Take that to the alumni trustees, Mr. Summers!
With a devastating kicker that shows Summers still emailing Epstein up until 1:27 p.m. of the day before his pal was busted on new federal sex charges in 2019, the Crimson article went viral over the weekend. By Monday morning, Massachusetts U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren was calling for Summersâ ouster from his faculty post. By Monday night, a âdeeply ashamedâ Summers announced that heâs pulling back from his public commitments, although he plans to continue teaching.
The studentsâ reporting was another win for truth, justice, and the American way â but not an isolated incident. In recent years, as mainstream journalism looks increasingly weak and flabby in the face of U.S. authoritarianism, and with college campuses on the front lines of a culture war, scribes in their teens and early 20s â burning with youthful idealism and the freedom of not much to lose â have raced into the void.
Some 3,000 miles from Harvard Square, the student journalists at the Stanford Daily stood their ground after one of its reporters was charged with three felonies, at the behest of a top university administrator, for attempting to cover a pro-Palestinian protest on the California campus. Under increasing public pressure, the charges were dropped in March â another triumph for the paper whose 2022 investigative reporting into research irregularities took down the university president.
In the heartland, the editors of the Indiana Daily Student at that stateâs flagship public university last month stood up to school administrators banning their print editions, blasting the move in a front-page editorial that said âtelling us what we can and cannot print is unlawful censorship.â The students, who worked with their peers at nearby Purdue University to publish a special issue that circumvented the ban, rallied support from prominent alums and got the school to reverse course.
âI think that many of these college journalists are laser-focused on their beats, are developing great sources among administrators, faculty and students, and are unfazed by the possibility that their stories might piss off a valued source or two,â Columbia Journalism School professor Bill Grueskin, who covered the Stanford fracas for Columbia Journalism Review, told me Monday. âIn other words, theyâre doing the things that the best reporters do. Theyâre just not able to buy a beer (legally, at least) when their story shakes up the world.â
I know what some of you are thinking here. Investigating corruption or misconduct among university leaders, or fighting for a free press…arenât these college students just doing what any journalist worth their saltwould do? Well, yes and no.
Consider those Epstein emails that continue to dominate the news. It turns out that two prominent journalists corresponded frequently with the convicted sex creep: the âpalace intrigueâ access journalist Michael Wolff, and a soon-to-be-fired New York Times business reporter, Landon Thomas Jr. The missives suggest they had zero interest in reporting on Epsteinâs proclivity for underage girls but very much wanted the access to the rich and famous that jeevacation@gmail.com offered.
And it gets worse. Thomas actually solicited a $30,000 donation from Epstein to a favored charity â a severe ethical breach that cost him his job in Americaâs most prestigious newsroom. Wolff, meanwhile, was offering Epstein advice on how to leverage â in essence, blackmail â the sitting U.S. president, Donald Trump. At the same time, he was pushing a business venture that would link him not only with Epstein but another man later convicted of sex crimes, filmmaker Harvey Weinstein. It seems like both conflicted journalists wanted to play in the big leagues with the much richer people they were supposed to watchdog.
This is something that too many elite journalists share with the increasingly conflicted corporations that employ them: a desire to comfort the comfortable in return for access, or prestige, or money â and to avoid getting sued, which might jeopardize those first three things.
How else to explain major TV networks like CBS or ABC, owned by corporations with myriad issues before the federal government, settling frivolous lawsuits by Trump for millions of dollars, or the similarly conflicted Jeff Bezos telling his Washington Post to spike its endorsement of Kamala Harris, or the mealy-mouthed âboth sidesâ reporting on rising authoritarianism that plagues so many elite newsrooms of the traditional media?
The late, great Kris Kristofferson told us that freedomâs just another word for nothing left to lose, and maybe that simple explanation has a lot to do with the bravery of college journalists â that they are freer to question authority than folks with a mortgage and worries about paying for their own kids to attend a top school.
Still, itâs important to understand that most of the rot in modern mainstream journalism â too much consolidation in the hands of too few conglomerates with too much at risk to be seen as anti-regime â is institutional. We should strive to make something great out of the fact that the next generation of American journalists has arrived with smarts, savvy, and a moral compass yet to be worn down by late-stage capitalism.
Our challenge, as a society, is to tear down the decrepit structures of the corrupted old media and build a new one that rewards independent journalists who actually afflict the comfortable, and offers them incentives to keep doing that instead of cutting venture-capitalism deals with the folks they allegedly cover. Most of todayâs college journalism majors would never trade emails with the likes of Jeffrey Epstein â except to take him down.
Yo, do this!
The stroke of timing behind Ken Burnsâ latest documentary epic, The American Revolution, which is currently running this week on PBS stations like WHYY here in Philadelphia and also streaming, was supposed to be the 250th anniversary of the conflict that created the United States. But the project has taken on much greater relevance in a fraught present, when folks are heatedly arguing just what the Foundersâ American Experiment is really all about. Critics have praised Burns and his skilled team for blending the ideals and leadership of the George Washingtons and Thomas Paines with the realities faced by everyday folk, including indigenous and enslaved people.
Personally, Iâve been embroiled in my nostalgia for a more recent revolution â the cultural and musical explosions that occurred in 1966. Iâve been listening to the audiobook about that tumultuous year â 1966: The Year the Decade Exploded â by the British author Jon Savage, whose later book on the year 1971 was the basis for an outstanding but largely ignored documentary series on Apple TV, But 1971âs classic rock wouldnât have happened without the cultural pioneers and a youthful clamor for liberation that came five years earlier. The book is an engrossing reminder that change is possible.
Ask me anything
Question: Now that People Magazine has revealed the disgusting âpiggyâ story, why isnât this atop every news outlets coverage? We spent 3 full weeks on Bidenâs age, a week on his pardon of his son with such moral outrage from every outlet. This doesnât even get covered? â BigTVFan (@bigtvfan.bsky.social) via Bluesky
Answer: The episode that BigTVFan is referring to occurred with a gaggle of journalists about Air Force One, but just started getting viral attention Monday night. It is, indeed, shocking to watch. When a Bloomberg woman journalist pressed Donald Trump on the Epstein files, the president erupted. âQuiet! Quiet, Piggy!â Yes, this should be a front-page story in the traditional media, and not only because of the stunning sexism (when the subject is Epstein, no less!) and the regal arrogance, but also this: the man whoâs followed around by the nuclear suitcase seems to be losing his grip on reality. Monday afternoon, Trump spoke to a gathering of franchisees of the fast-food addiction that may be just one reason why nobody believes he only weighs 16 ounces more than Jalen Hurts, McDonaldâs, and was at times beyond incoherent. Yet Trumpâs rapidly deteriorating mental state remains mostly off-limits for the elite media. Itâs a massive error of omission that the world will look back on and regret.
What youâre saying about…
Itâs funny how one week can feel like a decade in 2025. Last weekâs question about the eight senators (seven Democrats and an independent) who cut a deal to end the long government shutdown drew a huge response from folks fired up about an issue that now almost feels like ancient history after the Epstein email release. Readers were passionate but divided. Certainly many felt the eight senators had caved in the worst possible way. An outraged Freddi Carlip wrote that âmost people wanted to do what was best for Americans who are hurting and that is to stand up to bullies.â But a number of you thought the opposition had few real options but to deal from a weak hand. âThis was always going to end with the government opening under the black flag of the Big Ugly Bill,â wrote Kent Dietz. âOft repeated but true: elections have consequences.â
đŽ This weekâs question: Itâs all Epstein all the time, so letâs talk about it. Do you think Trump has sincerely flip-flopped and the relevant files will soon be released? Or is the White House still playing a long game aiming to keep Epsteinâs secrets buried with him? Please email me your answer and put the exact phrase âEpstein filesâ in the subject line.
History lesson on âCharlotteâs Webâ…and fascism
U.S. Border Patrol Commander at large Gregory Bovino, right, looks on as a detainee sits by a car Monday, in Charlotte, N.C.
Nobody reads any more, at least not to the end. Thatâs been driven home this autumn by several efforts from tech bros and other leaders of our dystopia falling flat on their face with their attempts at literary allusions. A viral post on Bluesky recently mocked the Icarus Flying Academy, whose founders may be blissfully unaware that their Greek mythological namesake flew too close to the sun and crashed. On Monday, gazillionaire Jeff Bezos also invoked ancient Greece by announcing his AI startup Project Prometheus, invoking an inventor who was ultimately bound to a rock by Zeus for his overreaching. Then thereâs the bad people behind the U.S. Border Patrol and its inhumane mass deportation drive, who took their horror show to North Carolina this past weekend with their âOperation Charlotteâs Web.â
The âbrainsâ behind the BPâs masked goon squad, Gregory Bovino, named the operation â which netted 81 detainees in its first Saturday during a chaotic surge through suburban lawns and Home Depot parking lots â after the 1952 classic childrenâs novel by E.B. White about a farm, a pig, and the compassionate spider, Charlotte, who saves the pigâs life. Why? Because Bovinoâs secret police force are ensnaring scores of immigrants in their web. In Charlotte, N.C. Get it? Bovino even took to social mediaâs X with a wildly out-of-context quote from the novel: âWherever the wind takes us. High, low. East, west. North, south. We take to the breeze, we go as we please.â
In a viral essay, the writer Chris Geidner of the excellent site LawDork demolished Bovinoâs literary aspirations for his police-state operation. His piece went well beyond the obvious point that a childrenâs novel that centers on a spiderâs quest to protect someone different from her â a pig â from his human predators is the 180-degree polar opposite from the web of inhumanity that Team Bovino is spinning in Charlotte, terrorizing the Latino community there. Geidner notes that much of E.B. Whiteâs wider work was in opposition to the very fascism thatâsbehind the mass deportation drive of Bovino and his ultimate boss, Donald Trump.
Geidner quotes White from a 1940 essay, as Adolf Hitlerâs stormtroopers were advancing across Europe: âI am in love with freedom and that it is an affair of long standing and that it is a fine state to be in, and that I am deeply suspicious of people who are beginning to adjust to fascism and dictators merely because they are succeeding in war. From such adaptable natures a smell rises. I pinch my nose.â
White, and his fictional Charlotte, would have done more than pinch their nose from the stench of this operation in a proud city that shares its name with a heroic spider. For sure, Bovinoâs crimes against literature pale in comparison to his ongoing crimes against humanity. But he may discover that the rapidly spinning American thread of community and common decency that is resisting mass deportation is the true sequel to Charlotteâs Web.
What I wrote on this date in 2018
It was Mississippiâs most famous writer, William Faulkner, who wrote, âThe past is never dead. Itâs not even past.â Seven years ago on this date, I wrote about how a justice-denied 1955 murder of a Black man trying to deliver absentee ballots to the county courthouse in Brookhaven, Miss., haunted the modern Senate campaign of that townâs GOP U.S. Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith. I wrote: âFour years after [Lamar Smith] was killed, a baby girl was born in Brookhaven named Cindy Hyde. Over the next 59 years, she immersed herself in the politics of a community that bitterly refuses to concede the just cause that Lamar Smith died for.â Read the rest from Nov. 18, 2018: âWhy the blood of a 1955 Mississippi murder drenches todayâs U.S. Senate race.â
Recommended Inquirer reading
Only one column this week, and as you might expect it drilled deeply into the true meaning of the Jeffrey Epstein emails that have dominated the headlines. I went beyond the suggestive comments about Donald Trump to look at the deeper moral decay of the rich and famous who continued to seek out Epstein and his connections years after his Florida guilty plea to child prostitution charges. The missives from billionaires and political insiders also reveal their growing â and justified â worries that the public may be reaching for pitchforks.
The John Fetterman saga never ends, nor does Pennsylvania readersâ bottomless fascination with his decade-plus odyssey from outspokenly progressive mayor of struggling Braddock, Pa., to the U.S. Senate, where he is increasingly at odds with his fellow Democrats about practically everything. The Inquirerâs coverage of revelations in Fettermanâs new autobiography, including his long-running feud with Gov. Josh Shapiro, was one of the most widely read stories last week. So was what happened next, as renewed heart problems caused Fetterman to fall flat on his face and again be hospitalized. Thereâs three more years until the end of Fettermanâs term and an all-but-certain primary challenge from his political left. No one is going to cover this better than The Inquirer, so why not subscribe today?
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Gov. Josh Shapiro is calling the state budget that came out of the Pennsylvania legislatureâs monthslong stalemate an across-the-board victory. What does it mean for his national brand?
The federal government and Pennsylvania got new budgets on the same day last week. Both were late â the countryâs by six weeks, the stateâs by more than four months.
Shapiro, who oversaw negotiations among top Pennsylvania legislators, says the outnumbered Democrats in his state ended up with a better deal than what the outnumbered national Democrats got in the government shutdown. He also touts his willingness to âstay at the table and fight and bring people together in order to deliver.â
For a popular Democratic leader facing reelection in 2026 as whispers swirl over his potential 2028 presidential ambitions, the moment was bigger than a procedural win.
But critics are quick to note that it took the self-proclaimed dealmaker so long to get a deal. And securing long-term funding for public transit remains, in Shapiroâs words, âunfinished business.â
Plus: Shapiro had a guest at Sundayâs Eagles-Lions game at Lincoln Financial Field: Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, a fellow swing-state leader who is seen as a likely rival for the Democratic nomination in 2028.
Frankford High, like many schools in Philadelphia and across the country, has recently moved to get cell phones out of studentsâ hands during the school day in a bid to reduce distractions.
But tensions are flaring at Frankford over its stowaway policy, which requires phones be kept in lockers outside the building.
Several phones were recently stolen from the lockers, sparking a fight that sent a student to the hospital, as well as protests over concerns that the school cannot keep studentsâ property safe.
The families of two Mexican nationals killed in Januaryâs Northeast Philadelphia jet crash have filed a wrongful-death suit against a medical airline, alleging that its negligence was responsible.
A woman who was found dead inside an abandoned car in Lower Makefield on Sunday had been killed hours earlier by her boyfriend in Trenton, police said Monday.
Pennsylvaniaâs Working Families Party is recruiting candidates to run against Sen. John Fetterman, should he seek reelection in 2028. Plus, the Democratic senator returned to work after recovering from a fall that required hospitalization, speaking Monday at a conference for Jewish leaders.
Citing extraordinary circumstances, the Chester County Board of Elections will count the vast majority of the thousands of provisional ballots cast amid Election Day chaos.
Following a cybersecurity breach at the University of Pennsylvania last month, a hacker claimed that they had compromised data for 1.2 million people â a figure the school now disputes.
Flight schedules should soon return to normal across major U.S. airports, including Philadelphia, after the Federal Aviation Administration lifted government shutdown-related restrictions.
In Philly and Delaware County, listings and sales of luxury homes are down from last year â but prices are up, according to a Redfin analysis.
Cheers to Lynn Brubaker, who solved Mondayâs anagram: Lancaster. The latest edition of our Field Trip series outlines a perfect weekend in the small city about 90 minutes from Philly, complete with lakeside glamping, a presidential home, and international eats.
Photo of the day
The Grand Court of the Wanamaker building on Monday, Nov. 3, 2025.
Spread your own joy today, and Iâll see ya back here tomorrow.
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