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  • After striking gold in Paris in 2024, can NBC do it again at the Winter Olympics in Milan?

    After striking gold in Paris in 2024, can NBC do it again at the Winter Olympics in Milan?

    NEW YORK — In the lead-up to the Summer Olympics in Paris two years ago, there was no small amount of fear that the Games were losing their luster.

    It probably didn’t help that there were three straight Olympics in Asia, which meant most of the action was overnight for U.S. television viewers. And the pandemic definitely didn’t help, because sports without crowds in the stands weren’t as fun to watch.

    But NBC went all-in on Paris anyway, and was rewarded with huge ratings. Yes, people did still care, and they showed up to prove it.

    Now the network faces the challenge of bringing that energy to next month’s Winter Olympics in Milan and Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy. The winter edition has historically drawn lower audiences than the summer no matter the circumstances, but NBC once again is going all-in.

    The Winter Olympics start Feb. 6 in Milan and Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy.

    “We know the Winter Olympics haven’t been fully attended in eight years,” NBC’s Olympics executive producer Molly Solomon said at a media preview event last week. “We can’t take anything for granted. The media landscape has completely changed since 2018. So what have we got to do? We’ve got to win back viewers, we’ve got to show them why they should watch.”

    As with two years ago, there will be a lot of coverage on the big broadcast network, starting with at least five live hours a day. Because of the six-hour time difference between Italy and the eastern United States, the traditional prime time show will be like it was in Paris, with a mix of highlights and features.

    There will also be a lot of broadcasts on the USA Network and CNBC cable channels, and every event will be live on NBC’s Peacock streaming platform.

    If it feels natural to say all that, veteran Olympics fans will remind you quickly of how different things used to be. For many years, NBC held back showing some big events live to save them for the big prime time show.

    South Jersey-raised figure skater Isabeau Levito will likely be the highest-profile name from the Philadelphia area competing at the Winter Olympics.

    Paris was the first time NBC really opened everything up. It isn’t a coincidence that those were the first Games after Rick Cordella was promoted to president of NBC Sports, and the first outside of Asia after Solomon was promoted to her job in 2019.

    “The Olympics in Paris proved the Olympics are back, and remain an unrivaled media property with the unique abilities to captivate the nation and generate audiences across all demographics for 17 days and nights,” Cordella said. “We expect Milan-Cortina to carry on that legacy.”

    Solomon said she “felt as though we handed the viewer the remote control, and we said, ‘Hey, we’re going to give you different ways to watch the Olympics.’ And we’re now going to take all those learnings and build on them for Milan-Cortina.”

    With dramatic backdrops like the Eiffel Tower, the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris proved to be a hit with U.S. TV viewers.

    A big bet paid off

    For as much as fans welcomed NBC’s change in philosophy, there was no guarantee it would succeed. If the prime time show’s ratings had flopped, some critics might have said the old way was more profitable.

    Instead, the network shot out of the gate. An average of 34.5 million viewers watched the first three days of competition in what were seen as the two “prime” slots, live coverage from 2-5 p.m. Eastern time then the nighttime highlights show — including a massive 41.5 million on the first Sunday.

    The average over the whole Summer Games ended at 30.4 million, which NBC said was up 80% from 2021 in Tokyo.

    Solomon said that when Cordella called her after the first weekend with the early returns, “I burst into tears, because those numbers — I didn’t think it was possible. … We didn’t even dream that big.”

    NBC’s lead Olympics host Mike Tirico said he could tell from the studio that things were working.

    “We saw that there was a formula for the prime time show: that [showing an event] live and then showing it again, and there was enough differentiation in what we showed again, that it was connecting with viewers,” he said. “And then hearing back from people who were home: ‘Hey, this is so great, I’m enjoying watching it at night after we watch all the daytime events.’ Probably day four, I would say that Monday or Tuesday, was [when] I got feedback that it was working.”

    The 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles will be different again, since they’ll be on home turf. Then the 2030 Winter Olympics will be back in Europe in the French Alps.

    Who knows what the media landscape will look like by then, given how quickly things change these days, but it’s hard to believe NBC will ever revert to its past.

    Mike Tirico does lots of things at NBC, from hosting the Olympics to calling NFL and NBA play-by-play.

    “Just as a sports fan, I would say not,” Tirico said. He emphasized he was speaking just for himself, not his bosses, but his opinion counts for something.

    “I think we’ve seen because of streaming, you can access anything you want at any time,” he continued. “There’s still the largest audience sitting there at the end at night, and you want to give them the biggest events [as highlights]. So holding them doesn’t make any sense in this day and age. And we had long talks about that before Paris, and I think we saw a formula that worked.”

    This year’s new additions

    There will be a few new toys for viewers to enjoy next month. Peacock will have extra camera angles available for figure skating — including some behind-the-scenes ones — and ice hockey.

    Solomon worked with the International Olympic Committee to get live drone cameras into coverage, to get microphones on some athletes, and to get into warmup areas to show how athletes get ready for their big moments.

    Skiing superstar Lindsey Vonn will be at her fifth Olympics, 24 years after her first.

    “We’ve really pushed everybody to go places, and take the viewer places they’ve never seen before,” she said. “Because in the winter, you’re covered with goggles and head gear. So we need to be at the place before they put this stuff on. We need to see faces. And the International Olympic Committee has been great about granting us that access.”

    The biggest new thing might be an expansion of the popular “Gold Zone” whip-around live highlights show. From 8 a.m. to around 4 p.m. each day, it will be televised not just on Peacock but on the recently relaunched NBCSN cable channel.

    That means more viewers will have access, but it also takes away an incentive to subscribe to Peacock if you don’t yet.

    “I think the NBA would say that would drive people to subscribe to Peacock, or Premier League [soccer], and now that’s available on NBCSN,” Cordella said. “And so our view of NBCSN is that we’re going to be agnostic to how people consume our content, as long as we’re getting adequately paid for it [by distributors]. We did a deal with YouTube [TV], we’ve done a deal with our parent company Comcast, and hopefully we’ll do a deal with others, but NBCSN is a big part of our strategy moving forward.”

    For the most part, everyone speaking at the media preview event stayed away from another addition to the landscape: the United States’ current hostilities with Venezuela and Greenland, the Russia-Ukraine war, and the turmoil within U.S. borders over ICE and many other subjects.

    But they did not stay away from the subject completely.

    “I’ve just been thinking a lot about this: In this increasingly divided and isolated world, there’s not many moments when we all come together anymore,” Solomon said. “Sports does bring us together, but I think the Olympics is really even more unique.”

    Comcast CEO Brian Roberts also alluded to wider affairs in his speech at the end of the event.

    “Bringing our country together when a lot of things are pulling us apart is just a fabulous opportunity,” he said.

  • Low-alcohol wines are trending. Here’s one that’s actually good.

    Low-alcohol wines are trending. Here’s one that’s actually good.

    If there is one thing that winemakers are certain of at the dawn of 2026, it’s that demand will continue to grow for lighter wines that contain less alcohol. To date, those who have successfully capitalized on this trend have tended to be cheap, mass-market brands. To appeal to those looking to reduce their alcohol intake, many companies have created “light” brand spinoffs, in which some portion of the wine’s alcohol is removed with tech wizardry.

    Removing alcohol, however, alters flavor and compromises the complex balance of tastes, smells, and textures that people expect from a good wine.

    As lighter wines grow more popular, a number of smaller and more traditional wineries are exploring alternate methods for making lower-alcohol wines without sacrificing quality. Companies like Ramón Bilbao in Spain are making lighter, brighter, and fresher wines by changing how they grow their grapes instead of how they make their wine.

    This limited-edition “Early Harvest” wine is crafted from verdejo grapes picked two weeks earlier than usual in the Rueda region of Spain’s Douro River Valley. Picking grapes earlier results in fruit that contains lower levels of sugar and higher levels of tangy acidity — yielding fresh, vibrant wines that contain a lower percentage of alcohol than the norm.

    Ramón Bilbao’s standard Rueda verdejo contains 13% alcohol, a very typical strength for a dry, unoaked white wine. This early-harvested version is 15% lower in alcohol, coming in at only 11% ABV. Both iterations are crisp, dry, citrusy, and herbal, with a flavor profile that would please any fan of sauvignon blanc or grüner veltliner. However, rather than tasting flattened by alcohol-reduction machinery, this early-harvested edition is simply more delicate and perhaps a touch more refined. It is, after all, a superior cuvée from a single estate. Its flavors may be lighter and milder but the wine is nonetheless balanced, complex, and complete in a way that manipulated “light” wines are not.

    Ramón Bilbao “Early Harvest” Verdejo

    Rueda, Spain; 11% ABV

    PLCB Item #100049347 — on sale for $16.99 through Feb. 2 (regularly $19.99)

    No alternate retail locations within 50 miles of Philadelphia according to wine-searcher.com.

  • Two former homicide detectives get probation for lying about DNA evidence in murder case that spanned decades

    Two former homicide detectives get probation for lying about DNA evidence in murder case that spanned decades

    Two former Philadelphia homicide detectives were sentenced Wednesday to a combined three years of probation for lying about their knowledge of DNA evidence during the retrial of a man they helped convict of murder 35 years ago.

    Common Pleas Court Judge Lucretia Clemons imposed a two-year probation sentence for Manuel Santiago, 76, and one-year sentence for Frank Jastrzembski, 78. The retired detectives will not be required to meet with probation officers.

    The sentencing punctuates an unusual case in which prosecutors accused three retired Philadelphia police officers of fabricating evidence in a decades-old homicide case, and later perjuring themselves when testifying about that evidence under oath. A grueling eight-day trial in March revisited the 1991 murder of 77-year-old Louis Talley in Nicetown and the 2016 retrial of Anthony Wright, the man police helped send to prison for the crime.

    The jury ultimately rejected the larger conspiracy built by prosecutors that the detectives had framed Wright, but found both Santiago and Jastrzembski guilty of misdemeanor false swearing and found Santiago guilty on an additional count of perjury, a felony. A third detective who worked on the case, Martin Devlin, was acquitted of all charges.

    Santiago’s attorney, Fortunado Perri Jr., thanked Clemons for the “appropriate” sentence on Wednesday. Steve Patton, an attorney for Jastrzembski, reiterated that the jury had acquitted his client of planting evidence and described the conviction as a matter of “technical knowledge.”

    “We’re pleased with that outcome and thankful for the judge’s careful consideration of the facts of this case,” Patton said.

    In an interview Wednesday, Krasner blasted what he described as lenient sentencing guidelines for lying under oath in Pennsylvania. Probation is the recommended sentence for a false swearing conviction, while the maximum recommended penalty for perjury is nine months.

    “Those sentencing guidelines are disgraceful,” Krasner said, while also acknowledging the two defendants are both now in their 70s and have health issues.

    Former Philadelphia Police Detective Frank Jastrzembski leaves the Criminal Justice Center in Philadelphia on March 17, 2025.

    At trial, Krasner’s top prosecutors contended that the three detectives had conspired to frame Wright for Talley’s murder, extracted a false confession from him, and planted evidence in his home.

    Santiago was acquitted of perjury in connection with his testimony about Wright’s murder confession, while Jastrzembski was acquitted of perjury and related charges for his testimony about a search warrant he executed at Wright’s home — charges that hinged on prosecutors’ ability to prove the detectives had wholly fabricated evidence.

    Instead, the convictions centered on what Santiago and Jastrzembski knew about the evidence against Wright when they testified at his 2016 retrial. The two detectives were instrumental in building the original case against Wright in 1991, and later sought to send him back to prison — even after DNA evidence implicated another man in Talley’s murder. Wright’s conviction was overturned in 2014 based on the strength of that forensic science.

    When prosecutors under former District Attorney Seth Williams charged Wright a second time — under suspicion that he had acted with an accomplice — Santiago and Jastrzembski were briefed on the new DNA information. The results pointed to a known crack user who lived near Talley in Nicetown, a man who had since died in a prison.

    Under oath at Wright’s retrial, however, Santiago and Jastrzembski denied knowing the DNA evidence implicated another suspect.

    Wright was acquitted and later filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against the city and won a $9.85 million settlement. During sworn depositions in that case, Santiago and Jastrzembski were questioned about the DNA evidence and gave answers that prosecutors said contradicted their earlier trial testimony.

    The perjury trial in March at times resembled a second retrial for Wright, with defense attorneys accusing him of getting away with Talley’s murder. Wright proclaimed his innocence.

    Following the jury’s verdict, Krasner insisted that the detectives had framed Wright, and he criticized his predecessor’s decision to retry the man after his conviction was overturned.

  • Older Americans quitting weight-loss drugs in droves

    Older Americans quitting weight-loss drugs in droves

    Year after year, Mary Bucklew strategized with a nurse-practitioner about losing weight. “We tried exercise,” like walking 35 minutes a day, she recalled. “And 39,000 different diets.”

    But 5 pounds would come off and then invariably reappear, said Bucklew, 75, a public transit retiree in Ocean View, Del. Nothing seemed to make much difference — until 2023, when her body mass index slightly exceeded 40, the threshold for severe obesity.

    “There’s this new drug I’d like you to try, if your insurance will pay for it,” the nurse-practitioner advised. She was talking about Ozempic.

    Medicare covered it for treating Type 2 diabetes but not for weight loss, and it cost more than $1,000 a month out-of-pocket. But to Bucklew’s surprise, her Medicare Advantage plan covered it even though she wasn’t diabetic, charging just a $25 monthly co-pay.

    Pizza, pasta, and red wine suddenly became unappealing. The drug “changed what I wanted to eat,” she said. As 25 pounds slid away over six months, she felt less tired and found herself walking and biking more.

    Then her Medicare plan notified her that it would no longer cover the drug. Calls and letters from her healthcare team, arguing that Ozempic was necessary for her health, had no effect.

    With coverage denied, Bucklew became part of an unsettlingly large group: older adults who begin taking GLP-1s and related drugs — highly effective for diabetes, obesity, and several other serious health problems — and then stop taking them within months.

    That usually means regaining weight and losing the associated health benefits, including lower blood pressure, cholesterol, and A1c, a measure of blood sugar levels over time.

    Widely portrayed as wonder drugs, semaglutide (Ozempic, Wegovy, Rybelsus), tirzepatide (Zepbound, Mounjaro), and related medications have transformed the treatment of diabetes and obesity.

    The FDA has approved several GLP-1s for additional uses, too — including to treat kidney disease and sleep apnea, and prevent heart attacks and strokes.

    “They’re being studied for every purpose you can conceive of,” said Timothy Anderson, a health services researcher at the University of Pittsburgh and author of a recent JAMA Internal Medicine editorial about anti-obesity medications.

    (Drug trials have found no impact on dementia, however.)

    People 65 and older represent prime targets for such medications. “The prevalence of obesity hovers around 40%” in older adults, as measured by body mass index, said John Batsis, a geriatrician and obesity specialist at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine.

    The proportion of people with Type 2 diabetes rises with age, too, to nearly 30% at age 65 and older. Yet a recent JAMA Cardiology study found that among Americans 65 and up with diabetes, about 60% discontinued semaglutide within a year.

    Another study of 125,474 people with obesity or who are overweight found that almost 47% of those with Type 2 diabetes and nearly 65% of those without diabetes stopped taking GLP-1s within a year — a high rate, said Ezekiel Emanuel, a health services researcher at the University of Pennsylvania and senior author of the study.

    Patients 65 and older were 20% to 30% more likely than younger ones to discontinue the drugs and less likely to return to them.

    What explains this pattern? As many as 20% of patients may experience gastrointestinal problems. “Nausea, sometimes vomiting, bloating, diarrhea,” Anderson said, ticking off the most common side effects.

    Linda Burghardt, a researcher in Great Neck, N.Y., started taking Wegovy because her doctor thought it might reduce arthritis pain in her knees and hips. “It was an experiment,” said Burghardt, 79, who couldn’t walk far and had stopped playing pickleball.

    Within a month, she suffered several bouts of stomach upset that “went on for hours,” she said. “I was crying on the bathroom floor.” She stopped the drug.

    Some patients find that medication-induced weight loss lessens rather than improves fitness, because another side effect is muscle loss. Several trials have reported that 35% to 45% of GLP-1 weight loss is not fat, but “lean mass” including muscle and bone.

    Bill Colbert’s cherished hobby for 50 years, reenacting medieval combat, involves “putting on 90 pounds of steel-plate armor and fighting with broadswords.” A retired computer systems analyst in Churchill, Pa., he started on Mounjaro, successfully lowered his blood glucose, and lost 18 pounds in two months.

    But “you could almost see the muscles melting away,” he recalled. Feeling too weak to fight well at age 78, he also discontinued the drug and now relies on other diabetes medications.

    “During the aging process, we begin to lose muscle,” typically half a percent to 1% of muscle weight per year, said Zhenqi Liu, an endocrinologist at the University of Virginia who studies the effects of weight loss drugs. “For people on these medications, the process is much more accelerated.”

    Losing muscle can lead to frailty, falls, and fractures, so doctors advise GLP-1 users to exercise, including strength training, and to eat enough protein.

    The high rate of GLP-1 discontinuation may also reflect shortages; from 2022 to 2024, these drugs temporarily became hard to find. Further, patients may not grasp that they will most likely need the medications indefinitely, even after they meet their blood glucose or weight goals.

    Reinitiating treatment involves its own hazards, Batsis cautioned. “If weight goes up and down, up and down, metabolically it sets people up for functional decline down the road.”

    Of course, in considering why patients discontinue, “a large part of it is money,” Emanuel said. “Expensive drugs, not necessarily covered” by insurers. Indeed, in a Cleveland Clinic study of patients who discontinued semaglutide or tirzepatide, nearly half cited cost or insurance issues as the reason.

    Some moderation in price has already occurred. The Biden administration capped out-of-pocket payments for all prescriptions that a Medicare beneficiary receives ($2,100 is the 2026 limit), and authorized annual price negotiations with manufacturers.

    The reductions include Ozempic, Wegovy, and Rybelsus, though not until 2027. Medicare Part D drug plans will then pay $274, and since most beneficiaries pay 25% in coinsurance, their out-of-pocket monthly cost will sink to $68.50.

    Perhaps even lower, if agreements announced in November between the Trump administration and drugmakers Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk pan out.

    The bigger question is whether Medicare will amend its original 2003 regulations, which prohibit Part D coverage for weight loss drugs. “An archaic policy,” said Stacie Dusetzina, a health policy researcher at the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine.

    The Trump administration’s November announcement would expand Medicare eligibility for GLP-1s and related medications to include obesity, perhaps as early as spring. But key details remain unclear, Dusetzina said.

    Medicare should cover anti-obesity drugs, many doctors argue. Americans still tend to think that “diabetes is a disease and obesity is a personal problem,” Emanuel said. “Wrong. Obesity is a disease, and it reduces life span and compromises health.”

    But given the expense to insurers, Dusetzina warned, “if you expand the indications and extent of coverage, you’ll see premiums go up.”

    For older patients, often underrepresented in clinical trials, questions about GLP-1s remain. Might a lower maintenance dose stabilize their weight? Can doses be spaced out? Could nutritional counseling and physical therapy offset muscle loss?

    Bucklew, whose coverage was denied, would still like to resume Ozempic. But because of a recent sleep apnea diagnosis, she now qualifies for Zepbound with a $50 monthly co-pay.

    She has seen no weight loss after three months. But as the dose increases, she said, “I’ll stay the course and give it a shot.”

    The New Old Age is produced through a partnership with The New York Times.

    KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF — the independent source for health policy research, polling, and journalism.

  • Why are malnutrition deaths soaring in America?

    Why are malnutrition deaths soaring in America?

    Something strange is happening with malnutrition.

    It’s by far the fastest-growing cause of death in America, soaring sixfold over the past decade or so, according to our analysis of death certificate data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    To be sure, we wouldn’t yet call it commonplace. But while it accounts for fewer than 1 in 100 deaths, its toll is rising so fast that it’s now in the same league as arterial disease, mental disorders, and deaths from assault.

    But when you dig into the data, it doesn’t look like our mental image of malnutrition, one which revolves around food banks and famine. For starters, it doesn’t quite map to economic hardship.

    It tends to kill somewhat more people in lower-income states, and among folks with less education in general. But the relationship isn’t as strong as you’d think, and it bears surprisingly little relation to state measures of food insecurity or food stamp use.

    More important, we’re worried here about the meteoric rise in deaths, not the level. And the rise is much harder to explain with demographics. We see it across the board. Every state, every education level, every race, every gender.

    When we split the numbers every which way, only one metric showed clear differences: age. Americans 85 or older die of malnutrition at around 60 times the rate of the rest of the population, and such deaths are rising about twice as fast among that group.

    What’s going on? Are older Americans struggling to eat?

    Yes (but). Uche Akobundu, a dietitian who directs nutrition strategy at Meals on Wheels America, told us the program’s local providers “consistently report serving seniors who struggle to afford or access nutritious food while living on fixed incomes and facing rising costs for housing, utilities, and healthcare.”

    Indeed, the share of Americans 65 or older who report some level of food insecurity hit a high in 2023. The rate among the 85-plus crowd was lower, but still near record levels.

    And those records may not be broken, at least after 2024. The source we used, a supplement to the Census Bureau’s Current Population Survey, has been canceled by the Agriculture Department. The forthcoming release could be the last.

    But before we declared this a closed case, we stepped back and put the numbers in context. Food insecurity among older Americans has risen 5% from 2011 to 2023. That’s not a good number, or one you can just wave off. But at the same time, it can’t explain a 746% increase in malnutrition deaths over that period. (And, yes, we adjusted for the aging population.)

    So, we called the American Society for Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition — also known as ASPEN or, more descriptively, the nation’s intravenous-nutrition and feeding-tube experts. If there’d been a sudden surge of malnutrition among older Americans, ASPEN would have noticed.

    Peggi Guenter led clinical practice, quality, and advocacy at ASPEN for two decades. Her best guess is simple: Malnutrition “has always been there. … We’re just identifying and documenting it better than we ever have in the past.”

    What happened in the past? Well, it has never been unusual for someone with a serious condition to lose weight. Watching a loved one waste away isn’t a modern phenomenon. But physicians used to see malnutrition as part of the patient’s overall decline.

    But around 2010, researchers started accumulating evidence that showed what they had long assumed: The lack of nutrients was, itself, a risk factor. A pile of papers now tell that malnourished people have more emergency room visits, spend longer in the hospital, and need more healthcare.

    Doctors weren’t trained to diagnose it separately, especially since research has shown it wasn’t as easy as lab-testing for a single indicator, according to Alison Steiber, chief research, impact, and strategy officer at the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics.

    That started to change in 2012. That’s when, prompted partly by new research finding malnutrition could be driven by inflammation as well as lack of calories, ASPEN and the nutrition academy released the Consensus Statement on “Characteristics Recommended for the Identification and Documentation of Adult Malnutrition (Undernutrition).”

    Not long after, in 2014, we saw the first big jump in death certificates labeled with malnutrition as the underlying cause of death. Nobody’s willing to say the declaration caused the rise in diagnoses. “Cause” is a sacred, hard-earned word in medicine. But it’s also true that the nutrition academy, ASPEN, and friends went all out to ensure that the statement caused physicians to be aware that they needed to diagnose malnutrition more often.

    The Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, ASPEN, and their allies taught clinicians from all over the country to diagnose malnutrition by looking not just for weight loss, but also for factors such as muscle loss, loss of under-the-skin fat pads, fluid retention, and simply not eating enough. They held awareness weeks, tons of trainings and — perhaps most notably — launched an ambitious Malnutrition Quality Improvement Initiative, which worked with hundreds of hospitals starting in 2013.

    All those efforts paid off.

    “I started practicing in 2010, and I was not trained to identify malnutrition in my education program, like in my internship,” said Michelle Schneider, ASPEN’s manager of clinical practice. And the 2012 paper and awareness push “is when I myself started … really evaluating the set of clinical characteristics that can identify and diagnose malnutrition.”

    When she and her colleagues started looking for malnutrition, their hospital’s related case numbers went up. It happened all over the country. As a rule of thumb, multiple experts told us that at least 1 in 5 hospital patients probably suffer from some kind of malnutrition. In 2010, about 3% were diagnosed with it. By 2018, it hit 9%, Guenter and her colleagues found.

    “As with other conditions, such as celiac disease, increased prevalence rates do not necessarily reflect more cases, but rather improved detection, diagnosis, and intervention,” Steiber told us.

    But what about older patients specifically? We called on the American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine and got ludicrously lucky: They put us in touch with their chief medical officer, Kristina Newport.

    Newport runs palliative medicine at Penn State Health, speaks in fully formed paragraphs, and probably could have dictated a better version of this column over breakfast before she’d had her first coffee. She confirmed everything we’d heard — then added another variable.

    “The other thing that happened around this timeline is that CMS, the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, changed the impact of the diagnosis of some of these diagnoses that fall under malnutrition,” she said.

    “When hospitals are measured on their mortality, the calculation includes a comparison of how many people actually die compared to how many people are expected to die. And that expected number is determined by the complexity of documented illnesses as reflected in diagnosis codes. So when there was more weight given to malnutrition as a diagnosis code — when it was better defined, based on the understanding that nutrition often correlates with severity of illness — all of a sudden, it changed the calculation.”

    So, hospitals and other providers were given a strong incentive to look out for malnutrition, because now official statistics (correctly) recognized it increases the odds that someone will have an awful outcome, which means you’re not penalized as much if said outcome occurs.

    “Long-term care facilities have also started paying very close attention to weight loss and are held accountable for folks having abnormal weight loss,” she added. In fact, nursing homes must have a dietitian or nutrition specialist on staff.

    And hospice, which can be part of many medical or at-home settings, has its own incentives.

    “You’re only eligible for hospice enrollment if you’re expected to die within six months and if you’re not pursuing life-prolonging treatments,” she told us. “The hospice clinicians have to regularly demonstrate that somebody is progressing toward death, which is crazy, right? And so one of the ways that they have to routinely demonstrate that there’s evidence that this person is dying is to routinely assess different aspects of nutrition.”

    It might not be weight loss, since people in failing health might retain water, but you can still look at arm circumference and other metrics. It helps demonstrate the decline needed to maintain eligibility (and payment) for hospice services, she said, and it can be an indirect way to measure the progress of a patient’s disease, particularly for folks who might not have a clear terminal illness.

    “So your 85-year-old woman who has a little bit of cognitive impairment but has never been diagnosed with dementia — she gets a urinary tract infection every once in a while, but she doesn’t have one right now. She had mild diabetes. None of those things are explicitly taking her life,” Newport said. “The most objective thing you can say is she continues to lose weight.”

    “Somebody like that may end up with a diagnosis of malnutrition on her death certificate because none of those other things obviously took her life. Right? But it wasn’t because she didn’t have access to food.”

    In fact, regardless of your condition, weight loss and loss of appetite are one of the most common pathways toward death as the body shuts down.

    So, malnutrition is often a normal part of dying. It hints at the presence of other underlying conditions. So how did it end up as the underlying cause of death on almost 25,000 death certificates last year?

    Newport had a hint for us on that one, too. We cherish death certificates as one of the most authoritative data sources out there — and they are, since they cover pretty much the entire population and are certified by professionals. But those professionals are human.

    “Despite the importance of the cause of death and filling out this form, there’s very little education or standardization of doing it,” she told us. “So that’s just something to keep in mind.”

    And we did. So we set out to learn about death certificates.

    We started with the folks who quarterback the entire certification process and make sure the families and doctors get what they need. We called the funeral directors.

    Chris Robinson just finished his term as president of the National Funeral Directors Association. He also runs Robinson Funeral Homes at the foot of South Carolina’s sliver of the Blue Ridge.

    When someone dies, Robinson gets a report from the hospital, hospice, or coroner. It tells him their next of kin and date of birth. He meets with the family to fill in vital statistics. But he’s not allowed to fill in the cause of death.

    “We submit it electronically to the certifying physician or coroner, whoever’s going to certify the death,” Robinson told us. “And then they send it back to us with the cause of death.” Robinson then sends the certificate to the health department to be finalized, so he can get official paper death certificates for the family.

    That pointed us to the next step in following the certificate on its journey. That step was Reade Quinton. Quinton is president of the National Association of Medical Examiners. He also runs the pathology residency at the Mayo Clinic. Filling out the cause of death on certificates — and teaching others to do so — is a large part of his career.

    “There’s a science and an art to filling out a death certificate,” he told us. It’s a forensic pathologist’s job to ask why, to get to the root of the problem. Ideally, he said, you’ll rarely see malnourishment on a death certificate by itself — the document should also define the underlying cause.

    You see, under cause of death, a typical certificate has four blanks. You start with what Quinton would call the “final insult,” and then tease out the causal chain until, by the fourth blank — if you need that many — you’ve listed the underlying cause.

    So, the chain might go something like: gastrointestinal bleeding due to swollen veins in the esophagus due to cirrhosis due to alcohol use disorder. In that case, the alcohol abuse would be the underlying cause.

    Malnutrition could play a role in that four-step mortality chain. But why are people listing it as the ultimate cause? Quinton’s not sure, but death certification isn’t really taught in depth outside of pathology residencies, and most deaths aren’t certified by pathologists.

    “There’s a large number of people … who fill out death certificates,” Quinton explained. “So you may have forensic pathologists filling them out in certain cases, you may have hospitalists filling them out, residents on service who are still in training, coroners. It’s incredibly variable depending on whose jurisdiction the death occurred in.”

    And looking at the data, we see clues that most of these malnutrition deaths probably weren’t certified by medical examiners.

    For example, we’ve seen very little growth in malnutrition deaths in hospitals in recent years. The increase has been sharpest at nursing homes and long-term care facilities, where some residents may arrive with nutrition issues, followed by deaths at home or hospice. Similarly, almost no patients who had an autopsy got malnutrition listed as a cause of death.

    Is it a perfect smoking gun? No. Malnutrition is a routine part of death. And unless someone suspects neglect, routine deaths often don’t cross the desk of specialists such as Quinton and his protégés.

    But we reckon it’s a hint, especially when paired with something else we heard from Quinton and several others.

    “Electronic records are so accessible now,” he told us. “We have a lot more information at our fingertips than we had 10 or 20 years ago. So is it possible that now they’re getting a better list of underlying conditions and saying, ‘Oh, he’s got malnutrition,’ and so they put that on there as well.”

    And that’s our best guess. A better understanding of malnutrition means it has appeared on more medical charts. And from there, it occasionally makes its way onto a death certificate, perhaps helped by a harried physician.

    But does that mean rising malnutrition deaths are a mirage?

    We didn’t really expect Kurt Soffe to answer that question. The fine folks at the National Funeral Directors Association put us in touch with Soffe, the director of Jenkins-Soffe Funeral Home south of Salt Lake City, to answer questions about death certificates in Utah, the state with the highest rate of malnutrition deaths.

    But when he logged on to Zoom, we saw Soffe was on his phone. He was in the driver’s seat of his vehicle, parked outside the retirement facility where he’d just dropped off his wife. Her 93-year-old father had just entered hospice.

    He said he’d seen diagnoses like malnutrition on more and more death certificates. But all the time he spent with grieving families still didn’t prepare him for the reality.

    “He was a robust healthy man just a few months ago,” Soffe said. “And he basically is 120 pounds of nothing now.”

    His father-in-law suffered a stroke. Doctors removed the blockage, but away from his beloved home and even-more-beloved yard, he lost the desire to eat. He told them everything tasted like “sand.”

    “We tried Boost protein drinks, we tried protein bars, we tried steak and potatoes, we tried everything,” Soffe told us.

    It reminded us of something we heard from Newport, the palliative care physician.

    “One of the main ways we take care of people we love is we feed them, right? And so it’s very distressing for caregivers to look at their loved ones and to see that they don’t want to eat. … We have to understand that in some situations, it’s not something we can fix.”

    We watched Soffe struggle with that conflict in real time.

    “You watch his mental change, his physical change, his capacity to communicate change, and then just watch him decline by the millimeter,” Soffe said, his voice breaking.

    “I’ve been in funeral service all my life and have been a caregiver all my life. Born and raised in the building, and I found myself absent of words because I didn’t know what to even say to my own father-in-law, who I knew was dying.”

    “There really isn’t anything to say other than ‘I love you’ and ‘thank you.’”

    Soffe’s father-in-law died about 12 hours later.

  • Mixing love with renovations | Real Estate Newsletter

    Mixing love with renovations | Real Estate Newsletter

    Renovating a home can be stressful. Tackling it with a romantic partner can either ease or add to the stress.

    A 2025 survey found that some couples felt that renovating or building a home was fulfilling. Others considered breaking up.

    We have some tips on how to protect your relationship while designing the home you want.

    Keep scrolling for that story and more in this week’s edition:

    — Michaelle Bond

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

    Renovations and relationships

    Picture this. You’ve been with your romantic partner for years, and you’ve seen each other through all kinds of ups and downs. Your relationship seems unshakeable. Then you decide to renovate your home.

    Renovations can be a source of stress for individuals and for a relationship.

    As a couples therapist in Center City put it, “the list of things that can trigger people during a renovation is very long.”

    The home remodeling and design platform Houzz surveyed hundreds of couples for its 2025 report on remodeling and relationships.

    According to the study, couples most often fight over:

    🙎🏽 staying on budget

    🙎🏽 deciding on products and materials

    🙎🏽 agreeing on the project’s design or scope

    Don’t feel bad if a renovation strains your relationship. Even a local couple who builds homes for a living had to bring in a third party to help settle disagreements on the design of their own home.

    Sometimes you need a mediator. Keep reading to learn more tips to make sure your relationship lasts through a renovation.

    A bipartisan effort to address homelessness

    At the end of 2024, Montgomery County had no full-time shelters, even though the number of people without homes was growing as the cost of housing increased.

    Now, the county has three emergency shelters.

    The county’s Democratic and Republican commissioners have led an unusually bipartisan effort to tackle homelessness. The Republican commissioner said he and his colleagues came to the job with similar goals around addressing the issue.

    It’s not unusual for residents to fight against new homeless shelters and low-income housing in their backyards. The county commissioners have been getting personally involved in pushing local governments to allow more housing.

    But 2026 will bring more challenges.

    Keep reading to find out what’s ahead this year, where shelters have been built, and why one commissioner says that making sure residents are housed takes “political courage” from local officials.

    The latest news to pay attention to

    Home tour: Apartment in Bella Vista

    What is it with Philly and trees growing in houses?

    While I was reporting my story about dangerous vacant homes last year, I came across two families in two different neighborhoods who were living next to empty houses with trees growing in them.

    And now Nate Carabello says that when he bought a rental property in Bella Vista in 2005, the rowhouse had been boarded up for 30 years and a tree was growing in the middle of it.

    The house is now home for Katie Kring-Schreifels, who lives in one of its apartments.

    She’s filled her space with art and things she’s found in a variety of places, including a Habitat for Humanity ReStore, eBay, and Ikea. A leather trunk in her bedroom was her great-grandmother’s. Her mom found the flock of paper bluebirds at a craft show.

    Peek inside Kring-Schreifels’ home and see how she’s furnished her apartment’s balcony.

    📷 Photo quiz

    Do you know the location this photo shows?

    📮 If you think you do, email me back. You and your memories of visiting this spot might be featured in the newsletter.

    Last week’s quiz showed a photo of the “Weaver’s Knot: Sheet Bend” public artwork on the Delaware River Trail along Columbus Boulevard. The stainless steel piece is between the Cherry Street and Race Street Piers.

    Shoutout to Lars W. for getting that right.

    Enjoy the rest of your week.

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

  • Shapiro is ready to run, as 2028 looms | Morning Newsletter

    Shapiro is ready to run, as 2028 looms | Morning Newsletter

    Hi, Philly. After all that talk of snow in yesterday’s newsletter, we have more, despite this week’s near-balmy temperatures: A snow record is officially on the books in New Jersey, 30 years later after it was set.

    Gov. Josh Shapiro will officially announce today that he is seeking reelection in Pennsylvania. Meanwhile, speculation over a 2028 run for president continues to build.

    And national attention on Philadelphia has been ramping up ahead of big events for the country’s 250th birthday. Below, learn the history of yet another notable first we can claim: a certain city-sponsored New Year’s Day procession.

    — Julie Zeglen (morningnewsletter@inquirer.com)

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

    Ready to run

    With expected stops in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh today, Gov. Shapiro is kicking off his campaign to be Pennsylvania’s chief executive for another four years.

    Speculation over a potential run for president just two years from now is building, too.

    Shapiro has been elusive when asked directly about plans for 2028. But he has made a number of big public moves to raise his national profile in the past year and change since he was on Vice President Kamala Harris’ short list of potential running mates.

    If he does run parallel campaigns, the gubernatorial election must take precedence, observers say.

    Notable quote: “The challenge, of course, is you have to take care of your next election first,” a polling expert told The Inquirer. “Of anything he does, he knows this is the most important thing for his potential success in 2028 if he was to run.”

    Politics reporters Julia Terruso and Gillian McGoldrick have more.

    Plus: State Sen. Doug Mastriano will not seek the GOP nomination for Pennsylvania’s governorship again this year, after months of teasing a potential run. Mastriano lost to Shapiro in the 2022 election by nearly 15 percentage points.

    Philly’s year

    Now that we’re officially in 2026, the year of the United States’ Semiquincentennial, the spotlight of the world’s attention on Philadelphia is getting brighter.

    🔔 The New York Times just stuck Philly (and, yes, some nearby places in the original colonies) at the top of its popular annual “52 Places to Go” list. That distinction came two weeks after the Wall Street Journal named it the world’s top travel destination this year, too.

    🔔 At home, we’ve already begun recognizing American milestones. Philadelphia Historic District Partners’ 52 Weeks of Firsts kicked off last week by celebrating the country’s first hydrogen-powered balloon ride.

    🔔 This week, they’re honoring the first folk parade. You know the one — it involves sequins, feathers, and (probably) a hangover.

    Columnist Elizabeth Wellington has the story on the event that was founded as a festive celebration of Philly’s immigrant communities.

    Further reading: On this week in 1776, Thomas Paine published his 47-page pamphlet Common Senseand helped ignite a revolution.

    What you should know today

    Quote of the day

    The third-generation owner of Donkey’s Place doesn’t know where the walrus penis bone came from, but he said it’s been with the bar since he was a kid. A patron was captured on video stealing the oddity on Dec. 29.

    🧠 Trivia time

    To prevent development, Radnor Township is moving to use eminent domain to take 14 acres owned by what?

    A) Cabrini University

    B) Penn Medicine Radnor

    C) Willows Mansion

    D) Valley Forge Military Academy

    Think you know? Check your answer.

    What we’re …

    📺 Anticipating: Donna Kelce’s reality TV debut tonight on The Traitors.

    🦅 Appreciating: Ladder 15’s response to the 49ers fans planning a playoff takeover.

    🏘️ Ogling: This $9.9 million Lower Merion mansion with a bonus house next door.

    🗞️ Mourning: The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, which will shut down May 3.

    🗳️ Considering: Why Pennsylvania’s leaders are losing Gen Z.

    🧩 Unscramble the anagram

    Hint: Manayunk music festival (three words)

    GNOME SUSHI

    Email us if you know the answer. We’ll select a reader at random to shout out here.

    Cheers to Lee Narozanick, who solved Wednesday’s anagram: Sheetz. Stephen G. Sheetz, the former president and CEO of the Altoona convenience store chain, died Sunday. His legacy — and the Wawa vs. Sheetz rivalry — lives on.

    Photo of the day

    Two of the “Three Kings,” Luis Quinones and Joseph Incandela (right), pose with a reluctant 1-year-old Uriel as his mother tries to take a photo during a Día de los Reyes party Tuesday at the Parish of the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in Camden.

    Cheer up, buddy, the weekend’s almost here. See you tomorrow.

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

  • Thomas Paine published ‘Common Sense’ and helped ignite a revolution on this week in Philly history

    Thomas Paine published ‘Common Sense’ and helped ignite a revolution on this week in Philly history

    They just needed a spark.

    The American colonies in the autumn of 1775, then under the thumb of King George III and his sprawling British Empire, were divided on the prospect of independence.

    Revolutionary ideas start in refined quarters, but they must spread to the masses to surge into action.

    And the 13 colonies were divided in threes: those who favored independence from English rule, those who opposed it, and those who wished to remain neutral.

    And then the spark arrived as a pamphlet.

    On Jan. 10, 1776, in a small publishing house at Third and Walnut Streets in present-day Old City, Englishman Thomas Paine published his 47-page document. It promoted the cause of American independence, and stoked the fires of revolution.

    This pamphlet, titled “Common Sense,” was first printed anonymously.

    But the colonists knew who wrote it.

    An original English printing of “Common Sense,” the pamphlet written by Thomas Paine, combined with a rebuke entitled “Plain Truth” by James Chalmers, a British Loyalist officer. The two pamphlets were reprinted together in a book in London in 1776.

    Paine was a self-educated rabble-rouser who had found little success making corsets or collecting taxes.

    And who, upon meeting Benjamin Franklin after giving a speech in London, opted to join the upstart colonists and move to America in 1774.

    After following Franklin to Philadelphia, he followed him into journalism, writing and editing for Pennsylvania Magazine.

    It’s where he displayed a knack for speaking to the common people through essays denouncing slavery, promoting women’s rights, and dumping on English rule.

    And again he took from Franklin, turning his pamphlet into a lightning rod.

    In it he laid out his arguments in plain language.

    An island, he argued, should not rule a continent.

    “Every thing that is right or natural pleads for separation,” he wrote.

    More than 500,000 copies circulated the colonies, convincing the commoners, the people who would actually take up arms against the Royal military, to support a war against Great Britain.

    Despite his outsized role in lighting the fires of rebellion, Paine’s services would go unrecognized for a generation.

    He temporarily returned to Europe after the war, and his later denouncing of Christianity did him no favors on either side of the Atlantic. He died in poverty in New York in 1809 at age 72.

    It wouldn’t be until the mid-1970s for historians to recognize the enduring power of Paine’s pamphlet, which now holds a place of honor a step below Thomas Jefferson’s Declaration of Independence.

  • Meet the township’s five new commissioners | Inquirer Lower Merion

    Meet the township’s five new commissioners | Inquirer Lower Merion

    Hi, Lower Merion! 👋

    Welcome to the first full week of 2026. To kick off the year, we get to know the township’s five new commissioners, who were sworn in Monday. Also this week, a popular Manayunk bakery specializing in gluten-free breads and pastries is moving to Bryn Mawr, plus construction on The Piazza is underway.

    We want your feedback! Tell us what you think of the newsletter by taking our survey or emailing us at lowermerion@inquirer.com.

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

    Get to know Lower Merion’s five new commissioners

    Lower Merion has five new commissioners.

    Five new Lower Merion commissioners were sworn in Monday evening: Michael Daly, Charles Gregory, Christine McGuire, Craig Timberlake, and Shelby Sparrow. Each replaces a township official who chose not to seek reelection.

    The new commissioners come from across the township and have varied backgrounds, including local government, law, forensic psychology, business, and community organizing.

    With its new members now in place, the board will make some big decisions in the year ahead, including negotiating collective bargaining agreements, overseeing Main Line Health’s redevelopment of the St. Charles Borromeo Seminary property, and addressing township finances, The Inquirer’s Denali Sagner reports.

    Learn more about the new commissioners and what’s on the docket for 2026.

    A popular gluten-free bakery is moving to Bryn Mawr

    Lila Colello is bringing her popular gluten-free bakery Flakely to Bryn Mawr.

    Popular Manayunk bakery Flakely is relocating to Bryn Mawr in February, where it will take over a former hookah lounge at 1007 W. Lancaster Ave.

    Flakely is known for its gluten-free breads and pastries and is the brainchild of Lila Colello, who’s worked for the Ritz Carlton and Wolfgang Puck Catering. She came up with the business after being diagnosed with Celiac disease.

    The new location, which will be takeout only, will offer everything from fresh baguettes to browned butter chocolate chip cookies, as well as frozen take-and-bake doughs, The Inquirer’s Beatrice Forman reports.

    Read more about Flakely’s new Main Line location here.

    💡 Community News

    🏫 Schools Briefing

    • Harriton High School is hosting its winter one act plays today through Saturday, and a number of other schools will have concerts next week. There are evening conferences at both high schools tonight and school board committee meetings Monday, in addition to an education association council meeting. See the district’s full calendar here.

    🍽️ On our Plate

    🎳 Things to Do

    🎶 Unforgettable Fire: Tickets are going fast for the U2 tribute band which will perform some of the Irish outfit’s best-known songs. ⏰ Friday, Jan. 9, 8 p.m. 💵 $33.38 📍 Ardmore Music Hall

    🍿 Paddington: See the film adaptation of the beloved children’s series on the big screen. Bryn Mawr Film Institute will have another screening on Jan. 24, plus screenings of the sequel on Jan. 17 and Jan. 31. ⏰ Saturday, Jan. 10, 11 a.m. 💵 $6.75-$7.75 📍 Bryn Mawr Film Institute

    🌹 Create Beautiful Paper Poppies: Add a little color to your winter by learning to make paper versions of these flowers. ⏰ Tuesday, Jan. 13, 6-8 p.m. 💵 $40 📍 Plant 4 Good

    🏡 On the Market

    A century-old stone Colonial in Merion Station

    The stone colonial was built in 1925.

    Built in 1925, this classic five-bedroom stone Colonial mixes modern amenities with classic charm. Its features include a living room with a fireplace, a family room, a dining room, and a modern kitchen with exposed wood beams and white cabinetry.

    See more photos of the property here.

    Price: $1.3M | Size: 3,110 SF | Acreage: 0.32

    🗞️ What other Lower Merion residents are reading this week:

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

    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 Inquirer’s high-impact journalism can be made at inquirer.com/donate. A list of Lenfest Institute donors can be found at lenfestinstitute.org/supporters.

  • Meet this Media biochemist-turned-artist | Inquirer Greater Media

    Meet this Media biochemist-turned-artist | Inquirer Greater Media

    Hi, Greater Media! 👋

    Welcome to the first full week of 2026. To kick off the new year, get to know a Media artist who blends folk art from her native India with scenes from the area. Also this week, the new mayors of Media and Swarthmore have been sworn in, along with county officials, including the new district attorney.

    We want your feedback! Tell us what you think of the newsletter by taking our survey or emailing us at greatermedia@inquirer.com.

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

    How a Media artist blends Indian folk art with local imagery

    Rinal Parikh poses in her Media studio with a few of her paintings.

    It’s not every day that you come across a biochemist who is also an artist, but that’s the case for Rinal Parikh.

    Born in India, Parikh has lived in the U.S. for 20 years, and from her home in Media blends several traditional styles of Indian art, drawing on observations from her own backyard.

    The 43-year-old delved into art after her son was born with health complications, stepping away from the lab to focus on him. She soon found inspiration and an artistic community, including at the Creative Living Room in Swarthmore, The Inquirer’s Denali Sagner reports.

    Today, her work, which spans the traditional Indian folk forms Warli, Madhubani, and Kalamkari, adorns her family’s home and has been exhibited throughout the region.

    Read more about what inspires Parikh’s works here.

    💡 Community News

    • This week marked a new era for a number of municipal and countywide roles, as recently elected officials took office. On Monday evening, Joi Washington was sworn in as the new mayor of Media, making her the first woman and first person of color to hold the office. And in Swarthmore, Conlen Booth was sworn in as mayor, succeeding Marty Spiegel. Booth is Swarthmore fire chief and previously worked for Crozer-Keystone Health System and its successor, Crozer Health. (The Swarthmorean)
    • Delaware County has a new district attorney. Tanner Rouse was sworn in Monday, taking over for Jack Stollsteimer. The Inquirer’s Vinny Vella spoke with Rouse about his goals, including continuing to reduce violent crime and the possibility of reciprocity agreements with his counterparts in other collar counties.
    • Also at the county level, Siddiq Kamara has been sworn in as sheriff. Just 30 years old, Kamara is the youngest sheriff in the U.S., according to the county, and the first Liberian-American to hold the office in Delco. (NBC10)
    • Pennsylvania State Police are investigating a sexual assault that was reported last month on the Chester Creek Trail in Middletown Township. A 24-year-old woman from Chester was allegedly raped shortly after midnight on Dec. 5. No additional details have been released. See the report on Page 8 here.
    • Have a Christmas tree to dispose of? Middletown Township is collecting them through Jan. 16. Trees should be placed curbside by 8 a.m. Swarthmore Borough will conduct a final round of curbside pickups next week. See your schedule here. Media will collect trees wherever you put your trash out throughout the month. And Nether Providence township is collecting trees curbside through Jan. 30.

    🏫 Schools Briefing

    • Rose Tree Media has a school board work session tonight at 6:30 p.m. at Springton Lake Middle School. See the district’s full calendar here.
    • In Wallingford-Swarthmore, there’s a Strath Haven High School Home and School Association meeting tonight at 6:30 p.m. and parent-teacher organization meetings for Wallingford and Nether Providence Elementary Schools on Tuesday evening. See the district’s full calendar here.

    🍽️ On our Plate

    • In case you missed it, The Inquirer’s Michael Klein reflected on the most notable restaurant openings of 2025. Among them is Maris, Loïc Barnieu’s Mediterranean eatery on West State Street in Media that opened late last year. See the full list here.
    • Santucci’s Original Square Pizza, which has a location in Media, is among the best takeout pizza spots in the Philadelphia suburbs, according to The Keystone, which noted the plain pie is served with cheese on the bottom and a generous coating of garlicky sauce on top.

    🎳 Things to Do

    ❄️ Snowy Songs, Stories & Sparkly Art: In this month’s Second Saturday Family Fun Series, kids ages 18 months to 5 years old can explore music, art, and stories with their caregivers. Registration is recommended. ⏰ Saturday, Jan. 10, 10:30-11:30 a.m. 💵 Free 📍Park Avenue Community Center, Swarthmore

    🌱 Winter Gardening: Seed Starting for Pollinators: It’s never too early to start preparing for spring. Learn how and what seeds you can start sowing now. ⏰ Sunday, Jan. 11, 1-2:30 p.m. 💵 $21.25 for members, $25 for non-members 📍Tyler Arboretum, Media

    🖼️ January 2026 Artists Reception: Explore the latest artwork on display at the Community Arts Center, including pieces from Carolyn Kline-Coyle and Jennifer Domal. ⏰ Monday, Jan. 12, 2-4 p.m. 💵 Free 📍Community Arts Center, Wallingford

    🏡 On the Market

    A charming five-bedroom Colonial in Rose Valley

    The Rose Valley home spans over 3,600 square feet.

    Built in 1937, this five-bedroom Colonial in Rose Valley exudes charm thanks to a covered front porch, dormers, and exposed stone along the front façade. Some of its features include a living room that has an ornate fireplace with handmade inlays; a dining room with a large brick fireplace; an updated kitchen; and a family room with another fireplace. The primary suite has its own bathroom as well as built-in wardrobes.

    See more photos of the home here.

    Price: $975,000 | Size: 3,641 SF | Acreage: 0.58

    🗞️ What other Greater Media residents are reading this week:

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

    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 Inquirer’s high-impact journalism can be made at inquirer.com/donate. A list of Lenfest Institute donors can be found at lenfestinstitute.org/supporters.