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  • Why the ‘Stranger Things’ finale has Philadelphia fans buzzing

    Why the ‘Stranger Things’ finale has Philadelphia fans buzzing

    This article contains spoilers.

    New Year’s Eve brought the much-anticipated finale of the ultrapopular Netflix series Stranger Things, marking the official conclusion of the 10-year sci-fi saga.

    One detail from the series’ two-hour finale caught the ear — and imagination — of local viewers.

    In one of the episode’s final scenes, four of the show’s main characters — Robin, Nancy, Jonathan, and Steve — discuss how to keep in touch now that many of them have departed their cursed hometown, the fictional Hawkins, Indiana.

    Over beers on the rooftop of a local radio station, the characters vow to meet up once a month in a convenient location.

    “What’s a city between Hawkins and Massachusetts [and] New York?” asks Nancy, who drops out of Emerson College to take a job at the Boston Herald.

    “I have an uncle who lives in Philly,” replies Robin, played by Maya Hawke, who attends Smith College in Massachusetts. “He’s kind of weird, but he’s got a really big house.”

    It’s an idea that Philadelphians quickly took to online, obviously.

    “The closest thing to the upside down IRL would probably be Philly, so I guess that makes sense,” wrote one commenter in a Reddit thread on the topic.

    “Gritty has yet to emerge so they think it’s safe,” wrote another.

    Even the city’s official tourism agency got in on the action.

    “Did the Stranger Things crew just say they’re meeting up in Philly?!” the Visit Philly account posted to the social media site Threads. “Where should they meet?”

    (Among the suggestions: It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia’s Paddy’s Pub.)

    Inevitably, some pined for a Philly-based spinoff — or, at the very least, a crossover with another high-profile show set in the region.

    “I’m pretty sure when she says Philadelphia she really means Delco which, to [an] Indiana native, would be close enough,” wrote one Reddit commenter. “And would make for a kickass spin off or team up with Mare of Easttown.”

  • Will Smith sued by violinist claiming sexual harassment and wrongful termination

    Will Smith sued by violinist claiming sexual harassment and wrongful termination

    Actor and musician Will Smith is facing a lawsuit filed by violinist Brian King Joseph, who has accused Smith of sexual harassment, wrongful termination, and retaliation during Smith’s “Based on a True Story” tour.

    Joseph, who rose to fame as an America’s Got Talent contestant, was hired for Smith’s concerts in 2024. Now, he is suing Smith and his company, Treyball Studios Management, over an alleged incident that took place in March 2025 during the tour’s Las Vegas stop.

    According to a civil complaint filed in a Los Angeles court on Tuesday, Joseph said he returned to his Las Vegas hotel room at 11 p.m., which was booked by Smith’s company, to find it was “unlawfully entered” by an “unknown person.”

    Brian King Joseph plays the National Anthem before the Los Angeles Rams host the Dallas Cowboys in the NFL Divisional Round at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in 2019.

    Max Faulkner/Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    A handwritten note was left behind, according to the lawsuit. It read, “Brian, I’ll be back no later [sic] 5:30, just us, Stone F.” The note was left behind with other items that allegedly include “wipes, a beer bottle, a red backpack, a bottle of HIV medication with another individual’s name, an earring, and hospital discharge paperwork belonging to a person” unknown to Joseph, the lawsuit states.

    Joseph said he reported the incident to hotel security, local police, and tour management. The musician claims he was accused of fabricating the story and was “shamed” for reporting the incident. He was subsequently fired from the tour, with management telling him the tour was “moving in a different direction.” Another violinist was promptly hired in his place.

    In the lawsuit, Joseph claims that tour management had suspiciously lost his bag, which included his room key. Joseph called these a “sequences of events” which, paired with the nature of the hotel intrusion, “all point to a pattern of predatory behavior rather than an isolated incident.”

    The lawsuit also claims that Smith, a Philadelphia native, was “grooming and priming” the violinist for “further sexual exploitation.”

    Will Smith poses for a portrait on Monday, March 17, 2025, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)

    Joseph said in the filing that he and Smith had developed a close relationship while working together on Smith’s latest album and concert tour.

    “You and I have such a special connection that I don’t have with anyone else,” Joseph claims Smith said to him.

    Joseph is seeking compensation for personal and financial damages. He claims he made significant financial investments for the tour, and now suffers from major physiological damage and PTSD.

    Smith’s attorney, Allen B. Grodsky, denied all claims, calling the allegations “false” and “baseless.”

    “They are categorically denied, and we will use all legal means available to address these claims and to ensure that the truth is brought to light,” Grodsky said to People in a statement on Thursday.

  • Eagles remain favorites over the Commanders; plus, game props for Week 18

    Eagles remain favorites over the Commanders; plus, game props for Week 18

    Coming off a win over the Buffalo Bills, the Eagles (11-5) will host the Washington Commanders (4-12) before they head into the postseason. As both teams prepare for the Week 18 matchup, here’s an updated look at the game odds and some prop bets from two of the biggest sportsbooks …

    Eagles vs. Commanders updated odds

    The Eagles beat the Commanders, 29-18, on Dec. 20 at Northwest Stadium to clinch the NFC East. Entering this week, the Eagles were 7.5-point favorites. Now, with plans to rest most of their starters, the odds have slightly changed.

    FanDuel

    • Spread: Eagles -3.5 (-120); Commanders +3.5 (-102)
    • Moneyline: Eagles (-200); Commanders (+168)
    • Total: Over 39.5 (-105); Under 39.5 (-115)

    DraftKings

    • Spread: Eagles -4.5 (-102); Commanders +4.5 (-118)
    • Moneyline: Eagles (-218); Commanders (+180)
    • Total: Over 38.5 (-112); Under 38.5 (-108)

    Total touchdowns

    There are no individual player props on FanDuel or DraftKings. However, there are a few game props that fans can bet on, such as total touchdowns for both teams.

    Tanner McKee will start at quarterback for the Eagles for the first time since last season’s Week 18 win over the New York Giants, when he threw for 269 yards and two touchdowns.

    The Commanders will start third-string quarterback Josh Johnson, who passed for 198 yards in his first start of the season last week in a 30-23 loss to the Dallas Cowboys.

    FanDuel

    DraftKings

    Team to score first

    The Eagles have better odds to score first. The last time the teams met, the Commanders managed to get the first points on the board with a field goal and Marcus Mariota under center.

    FanDuel

    DraftKings

    First scoring play

    Although a Commanders field goal was the first scoring play in their last meeting, an Eagles touchdown has the best first-scoring play odds for this week’s contest in both sportsbooks. Betting on an Eagles or Commanders safety could offer the greatest potential payout.

    FanDuel

    DraftKings

  • Two men dead in New Year’s Day shootout in lower Northeast Philadelphia, police say

    Two men dead in New Year’s Day shootout in lower Northeast Philadelphia, police say

    Two men died in a shootout that began over a domestic issue in the city’s Castor neighborhood on New Year’s Day, authorities say, and police have charged a man and a woman with murder for their involvement.

    The victims, 52-year-old Luis Colon and 21-year-old Quadir Tull, both died from their injuries at local hospitals, according to police.

    Tyriq Williams, 21, and Cara Williams-Reeves, 44, were charged with murder and related crimes on Friday.

    The incident began Thursday when a group of family members related to the ex-boyfriend of Colon’s stepdaughter showed up to Colon’s residence on the 7100 block of Oakland Street shortly after 11 a.m.

    The group, which included Tull, Williams, and Williams-Reeves, had come to “initiate a confrontation” with Colon’s stepdaughter, police said. The ex-boyfriend was not present.

    A struggle broke out when two women in the group — including Cara Williams-Reeves — began assaulting Colon’s stepdaughter and wife on the front lawn.

    When Colon intervened, Tull and Williams pulled out firearms and pushed Colon.

    Colon then pulled a firearm, and a shootout between the three men began, police said. They did not specify which man fired the fist shot.

    Colon was struck multiple times in the chest and was transported by police to a nearby hospital, where he was pronounced dead just before noon.

    Tull and Williams fled the scene in a dark-colored Chrysler 300 along with Williams-Reeves.

    Tull had been shot multiple times and was driven in the Chrysler to a different hospital, where he was pronounced dead around 11:50 a.m.

    Williams was shot in the hand and is in stable condition, police said.

  • The Philadelphia area’s first baby of 2026 was born at the stroke of midnight

    The Philadelphia area’s first baby of 2026 was born at the stroke of midnight

    Henry Schamp came into the world with a bang.

    The Philadelphia area’s first baby of 2026 was born at the stroke of midnight New Year’s Eve at Penn Medicine Doylestown Hospital, while fireworks lit up the sky outside their window.

    Parents Sarah and Ryan Schamp of Ambler described the moment as “surreal” and “picture perfect.”

    “I thought everyone was joking,” Sarah Schamp said of the perfectly timed fireworks display that was visible from their room moments after Henry’s birth.

    The family expected to return home later Friday, where they would be greeted by the couple’s 2-year-old daughter, Willow, and 5-year-old Australian shepherd, Winston.

    Willow is already embracing her duties as a big sister, piling blankets on him and showing him pictures in her books during visits to the hospital, which was acquired by Penn Medicine in 2025. Henry’s hospital bassinet is lined with Polaroid snapshots of her.

    Willow Schamp, 2, shows baby brother Henry a book during a visit at Doylestown Hospital on New Year’s Day 2026.

    Henry was one of several babies born at Philadelphia-area hospitals in the first hour of the new year:

    • Temple Women & Families Hospital, the North Philadelphia facility where Temple moved its labor and delivery services in September, celebrated its first baby of the year at 12:10 a.m. — a boy, Ezekiel Hall, born to Natalie Rivera.
    • Elliott Sarnoff was born to parents Kim and Jason Sarnoff at Lankenau Medical Center at 12:22 a.m.
    • Virtua Voorhees Hospital’s first baby of the year was a boy named Landon, born at 12:29 a.m. to parents Caitlyn and Mark. Virtua declined to provide surnames to protect patient privacy.
    • Lindsay and Matthew Logan of Chalfont welcomed baby Dawson Logan at Jefferson Abington Hospital at 1:01 a.m.

    While Henry was born on his due date, the Schamps expected him to arrive early, after Sarah started having contractions on Dec. 30 and the couple headed to the hospital.

    “It wasn’t what we planned, but it’s a cool thing and will be a fun tradition,” Sarah Schamp said.

    Plus, they joked, he’ll have a fun fact for breaking the ice with new friends and coworkers for the rest of his life.

  • Philadelphia records the fewest homicides in nearly 60 years, plus other insights to 2025’s crime

    Philadelphia records the fewest homicides in nearly 60 years, plus other insights to 2025’s crime

    For the first time in more than half a century, Philadelphia has recorded fewer than 225 homicides in a single year.

    In 2025, 222 people were killed — the fewest since 1966, when there were a fraction of as many guns in circulation and 178 homicides.

    It is a milestone worth commemorating — and mourning: Violence has fallen to its lowest level in decades, yet 222 deaths in a single city is still considered progress.

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    The drop mirrors a national reduction in violence and follows years of sustained declines after Philadelphia’s annual homicide totals peaked during the pandemic, and it reflects a mix of likely contributing factors: Tech-savvy police are solving more shootings, violence prevention programs have expanded, and the city has emerged from pandemic instability.

    No single policy or investment explains it, and officials caution that the gains are fragile.

    “The numbers don’t mean that the work is done,” said Adam Geer, the city’s director of public safety. “But it’s a sign that what we’re doing is working.”

    The impact is tangible: fewer children losing parents, fewer mothers burying sons, fewer cycles of retaliation.

    “We are saving a life every day,” District Attorney Larry Krasner said.

    Still, the violence hit some. Victims ranged from a 2-year-old girl allegedly beaten to death by her mother’s boyfriend to a 93-year-old grandfather robbed and stabbed in his home. They included Ethan Parker, 12, fatally shot by a friend playing with a gun, and Said Butler, 18, killed just days before starting his first job.

    Police say street-level shootings and retaliatory violence fell sharply, in part because some gang conflicts have burned out after key players were arrested or killed. Killings this year more often stemmed from long-standing drivers — arguments, drugs, and domestic violence — and were concentrated in neighborhoods that have borne the brunt of the crisis.

    “These same communities are still traumatized,” said Police Commissioner Kevin Bethel. “One gunshot is a lot. We can’t sit or act like we don’t see that.”

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    The number of domestic-related killings nearly doubled this year compared with last, making up about 20% of homicides, Geer said. The disappearance and killing of Kada Scott, a 23-year-old woman from Mount Airy, was among them, and led to a citywide outcry and renewed scrutiny of how authorities handle violence against women.

    And mass shootings on back-to-back holiday weekends — 11 people shot in Lemon Hill on Memorial Day, and 21 shot in a pair of incidents in South Philadelphia over July Fourth — left residents reeling.

    Still, a 2025 survey from Pew Charitable Trusts showed that a majority of Philadelphians feel safer in their neighborhoods than they have in years.

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    The progress comes even as the police department remains 20% below its budgeted staffing levels, with about 1,200 fewer officers on the force than 10 years ago.

    The city’s jail population has reached its lowest level in recent history. It dipped below 3,700 in April for the first time in at least a decade, and remains so today.

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    And arrests citywide, particularly for drug crimes, have cratered and remain far below pre-pandemic levels, mirroring a nationwide trend.

    Experts say the moment demands persistence.

    “We can’t look at this decline and turn our attention to other problems that we have to solve. We have to keep investing and keep pushing to get this number even lower, because it could be even lower,” said Jason Gravel, an assistant professor of criminal justice at Temple University.

    ‘Unheard of’ clearance rates

    After shootings exploded during the pandemic, and Philadelphia recorded 562 homicides in 2021 — the most in its history — violence began to decline, slowly at first.

    But then, from 2023 to 2024, killings fell by 35% — the largest year-over-year reduction among U.S. cities with the highest homicide rates, according to an analysis by Pew.

    The decline continued into 2025.

    Police Commissioner Kevin Bethel arrives at a North Philadelphia community meeting on Dec. 2.

    Bethel has pointed to a host of potential reasons for the decline: the reopening of society post-pandemic — kids returned to school and adults reconnected with jobs, courts, and probation officers — as well as police resources focused in hot spot crime areas and improved coordination among city leaders.

    Most notably, he said, detectives are making more arrests in nonfatal shootings and homicides. Experts say that arresting shooters is a key violence-prevention strategy — it prevents that shooter from committing more violence or from ending up as a victim of retaliation, sends a message of accountability and deterrence, and improves the relationship between police and the community.

    The homicide clearance rate this year ended at 81.98%, the highest since 1984, and the clearance of nonfatal shootings reached 39.9%.

    “That’s unheard of,” said Geer, the public safety director. “The small amount of people who are committing these really heinous, violent crimes in our neighborhood[s] are being taken off the street.”

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    Still, more than 800 killings from between 2020 and 2023 remain without an arrest, according to an Inquirer analysis.

    That has had a significant impact on the police department’s relationship with the community over the years, something Bethel has sought to repair since he was appointed commissioner in 2024.

    In 2025, he created an Office of the Victim Advocate, hired a 20-person team to communicate with and support victims, and hosted 35 meetings with residents of the most challenged neighborhoods.

    A few dozen community members gathered with top police brass in North Philadelphia on Dec. 2.

    Yet Bethel has grappled with the challenge of convincing residents that the city is safer today than four years ago, while questioning whether today’s gains can outweigh years of devastation.

    That challenge was on display on a recent cold December night, as Bethel gathered with a few dozen residents inside a North Philadelphia church and asked what they wanted him to know.

    Person after person stood and told him what gun violence had taken from them in recent years.

    My son. My brother. My nephew.

    Both of my sons.

    Investing in violence prevention

    The city’s network of violence prevention strategies has expanded greatly since 2020, when the city began issuing tens of millions of dollars in grants to grassroots organizations.

    Early on, the city faced criticism that its rollout of the funds was chaotic, with little oversight or infrastructure to track impact. Today, Geer said, the city has stronger fiscal oversight, better organizational support, and a data-driven approach that targets neighborhoods experiencing the most violence.

    In 2024, Community Justice, a national coalition that researches violence-intervention strategies, said that Philadelphia had the most expansive violence-prevention infrastructure of the 10 largest U.S. cities. When evaluating 100 cities, it ranked Philadelphia as having the third-best public-health-centered approach to preventing violence, falling behind Washington and Baltimore.

    Geer said the work will continue through 2026. Starting in January, the city will have a pool of about $500,000 to help cover the funeral expenses for families affected by violence.

    Members of Men of Courage pose with the certificates of accomplishment after completing a 16-week program on multi-media work and podcasting, one of multiple programs the community organization uses to help Black teens build their confidence.

    One of those organizations that has benefited from the city’s funding is Men of Courage, a Germantown-based group that mentors young Black men ages 12 to 18 and focuses on building their confidence, resilience, and emotional intelligence.

    “We want them to know that one decision can affect your entire life,” said founder Taj Murdock. “Their environment already tells them they’ll be nothing. … We have to shift their mindsets.”

    Arguments are a leading cause of shootings, and teaching teens how to de-escalate conflicts and think through long-term consequences can prevent them from turning disputes violent, he said.

    Isaiah Clark-White, second to left, and David Samuel, middle, pose for a photo with other members of Men of Courage before recording a podcast.

    Isaiah Clark-White, 16, a sophomore at Hill Freedman World Academy in East Mount Airy, said that in his three years working with Men of Courage, he has grown more confident and has improved his public speaking.

    And David Samuel, 15, of Logan, said he has learned how to better control his emotions and identify those of the people around him. Both said they feel safer today than three years ago, but remain vigilant of their surroundings.

    Samuel said his dad watches the news every day and talks about the overnight crimes and shootings.

    “He’s always telling me,” he said, “‘David, I don’t want this to happen to you.’”

  • Suraya is temporarily closed after a rooftop fire next door in Fishtown

    Suraya is temporarily closed after a rooftop fire next door in Fishtown

    Suraya, the Michelin-recognized Lebanese restaurant in Fishtown, will temporarily close Friday after a nearby rooftop fire left the restaurant without gas.

    The Philadelphia Fire Department arrived to fire on the roof of a two-story building on the 1500 block of Frankford Avenue late Thursday night. The department controlled the fire within 20 minutes and there were no reported injuries. The cause was under investigation.

    However, Suraya reported that its building was still without gas service and wouldn’t open until the service was restored.

    “We are incredibly grateful that our team was unharmed in the fire. We are temporarily without gas, so we cannot open the restaurant. The Suraya team will be working with local authorities to support their ongoing investigation and appreciates the community’s support,” said a spokesperson for Defined Hospitality, the restaurant group that includes Suraya.

    Halabi kebabs and the samke harra are pictured at Suraya in Philadelphia’s Fishtown section on Tuesday, Aug. 11, 2020.

    Updates on the restaurant opening will be posted on social media at @surayaphilly.

    Suraya, named after the sibling-cowners Nathalie Richan and Roland Kassis’ grandmother in Beirut, was just recognized by the Michelin Guide for its welcoming presence, rich Middle East and Levant-inspired menu, and expansive offerings from the bakery and shop up front to its open kitchen and outdoor dining area.

  • CBS Philadelphia anchor Jim Donovan set the Guinness record for largest sock collection

    CBS Philadelphia anchor Jim Donovan set the Guinness record for largest sock collection

    At 9 years old, Jim Donovan would share with his parents his dreams of becoming a journalist. Around that time, he also flicked through the Guinness Book of World Records, thinking it would be cool to set one himself one day.

    Both dreams culminated last month, after Donovan retired from a nearly 40-year broadcast journalism career and set the Guinness World Record for the largest collection of socks.

    Guinness World Records verified on Dec. 8 that the 15-time Emmy winner is now the owner of the world’s largest sock collection at 1,531 pairs, many of which have eccentric designs, including Friends and Star Trek-themed socks, and every color of the rainbow. Donovan announced the achievement before his final day on-air at CBS Philadelphia on Dec. 19.

    The previous record holder, Rex J. Pumphrey II, at 1,165 pairs of socks, achieved the feat just a few months before Donovan.

    Jim Donovan’s 1,531 pairs of socks laid out on the floor of CBS Philadelphia studios while Donovan and two independent experts counted each sock on camera to be submitted to the Guinness World Records.

    While Donovan said he’s immensely grateful for a ceremonious end to a long career — a feat he admits can be rare in the world of journalism — preparing his Guinness World Record application was also a difficult project.

    “I’ve done major investigation pieces and consumer stories over four decades of TV, and this was the thing that nearly pushed me over the edge,” he said of the nearly 40 hours of inventory work required to painstakingly document each pair of socks.

    Jim Donovan takes inventory of the thousands of socks he submitted for a Guinness World Record. After 40 years in broadcast journalism, he will be retiring. But, not before receiving the world record on Dec. 8, 2025.

    Donovan questioned himself at times when the hours of inventory work became overwhelming, but he remembered that this record was, in part, meant to thank his fans for their decades of support.

    Guinness requires applicants to have two independent third-party experts oversee the counting of the world records. Two members of Thomas Jefferson University’s fashion merchandising and management program, Juliana Guglielmi-DeRosa and Jeneene Bailey-Allen, stepped up to facilitate Donovan’s counting. Together, the two experts and Donovan recorded the counting of socks for more than an hour inside CBS Philadelphia studios, without interruptions or editing of the footage, as required by Guinness.

    Digital images of Jim Donovan’s socks that he submitted for a Guinness World Record. He received recognition for his 1,531 pairs of socks on Dec. 8, 2025.

    Donovan would then embed pictures and descriptions of each sock into what became a 262-page spreadsheet so that Guinness inspectors could verify the count at a later date. During the final count, Guglielmi-DeRosa and Bailey-Allen gifted Donovan an additional pair of socks, bringing the unofficial total to 1,532, but there was no way he was going to redo the spreadsheet, Donovan said.

    “I just remember when I was a kid looking in that Guinness World Records book and thinking, ‘Boy, it would be cool to do this.’ And here I am now, 59 years old, and I finally checked off one of those kid bucket list items,” Donovan said.

    Storing thousands of socks is no small feat, either. Folded and stacked inside dozens of bins, with 48 pairs per bin, Donovan has an entire closet dedicated to the socks. Each box contains different categories, from animals to food to holidays, and more.

    Jim Donovan holds his Guinness World Records plaque verifying that he owns the largest sock collection in the world at 1,531 pairs of socks. He received the recognition on Dec. 8, 2025.

    The first openly LGBTQ+ news anchor in Philadelphia, Donovan garnered a loyal fan base with whom he frequently chatted during his daily Facebook livestreams outside of his regular broadcasts. Around eight years ago, fans noticed Donovan’s penchant for socks with bold colors and designs, and started sending the journalist socks to wear on-air.

    During the winter holidays, it was Santa socks; birthdays, it was socks with his face on them; and randomly, folks would get creative, Donovan said, sending him Spock socks (complete with Spock ears), flamingos playing golf, and Superman socks with a cape.

    In his final week on-air at CBS Philadelphia, where he was for 22 years, the station celebrated each day as part of a “Week of Jim.” In retirement, Donovan plans to spend more time with his father, who lives on Staten Island, N.Y., and dive into volunteering and nonprofit work.

    Now he’ll be enjoying retirement as a world-record holder. Donovan said he’s even starting to get messages from other Guinness World Record holders welcoming him to the club.

  • Eagles vs. Commanders Week 18 prediction roundup: Will the Birds end the season with a win?

    Eagles vs. Commanders Week 18 prediction roundup: Will the Birds end the season with a win?

    After three consecutive wins, the Eagles are hosting the Washington Commanders to end the regular season. Heading into the matchup, the Birds are 3.5-point favorites. Here’s how experts in the local and national media are predicting Sunday’s game …

    Inquirer predictions

    We start with our own beat writers. Here’s an excerpt from Jeff Neiburg’s prediction …

    To see how our other beat writers are predicting this one, check out our full Eagles-Commanders preview here.

    National media predictions

    Here’s a look at who the national media is picking for Sunday’s game …

    • ESPN: Seven of eight panelists are picking the Birds straight up.
    • CBS Sports: All five experts are leaning toward the Eagles.
    • USA Today: All three panelists like the Eagles.
    • Bleacher Report: Five of seven analysts are choosing the Birds.
    • Sporting News: Bill Bender has the Eagles winning 28-17.

    Local media predictions

    Here’s what other local media think will happen on Sunday …

    • Delaware Online: They’re heavily leaning toward the home team, with eight of nine panelists choosing the Birds.
  • A familiar voice to Birds fans will call Eagles-Commanders on CBS

    A familiar voice to Birds fans will call Eagles-Commanders on CBS

    While the Eagles are prioritizing next week’s wild-card game, Sunday’s matchup against the Commanders is the sole focus of one announcer who grew up rooting for the Birds.

    Ross Tucker, the Eagles preseason announcer on NBC10 since 2019, will call Eagles-Commanders on CBS alongside veteran play-by-play announcer Kevin Harlan. Kickoff is scheduled for 4:25 p.m. Sunday.

    Tucker, a Wyomissing native and former NFL offensive lineman, has called a number of Eagles games on radio for Westwood One, where he’s worked since 2015. But Sunday will be his first chance broadcasting a Birds game on TV for CBS.

    “It’s super cool for me on multiple levels,” Tucker said. “I grew up an Eagles fan, and all my friends are Eagles fans, so this will be really neat for them.”

    It’s a stroke of luck on many fronts. Ordinarily, Tucker works games on CBS’s No. 6 crew alongside Phillies announcer Tom McCarthy. But Harlan’s normal broadcast partner, Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Trent Green, is off this weekend to attend his son’s wedding, opening a slot for Tucker.

    Despite that, the Eagles game wasn’t on Tucker’s radar, since Fox traditionally is the home of NFC games. But under new TV deals that began in 2021, the NFL is only required to schedule one of each NFC divisional matchup on Fox, which aired Eagles-Commanders in Week 16.

    Tucker didn’t know he landed the Birds game until CBS announced their broadcast lineups Tuesday.

    “I knew I was doing the game with Kevin for about three or four weeks, but I had no idea it would turn out to be the Eagles game,” Tucker said. “It’s really fortuitous.”

    This will be the first game Tucker and Harlan have called together on TV, but the two have been paired on radio a bunch on Westwood One, including for playoff games. Harlan has called games alongside plenty of analysts during his 40-year career, but thinks Tucker’s insight as a former offensive lineman in a broadcasting world dominated by former quarterbacks is enlightening.

    “Ross picks up nuance and the right way to capture what a line is doing or not doing, and I just find that refreshing,” Harlan said.

    With the Eagles resting their starters, it turned out to be a prescient move by CBS to turn to Tucker, who watched every preseason snap and knows the Birds’ backups better than most. Harlan also calls preseason games for the Green Bay Packers, but that won’t help him much when it comes to the Birds’ backups.

    “It’s a great challenge to come in and do a bunch of players I’m not really familiar with,” Harlan said. “I’m probably going to let Ross kind of lead things that he finds interesting to get the ball rolling, and then we’ll let the game take it from there.”

    Calling Sunday’s Eagles game certainly is a milestone for Tucker, but he remains a workhorse. In addition to calling NFL games for CBS and Westwood One (where he’ll broadcast playoff games), he calls college football games and continues to host the daily Ross Tucker Football Podcast. He also nearly replaced Angelo Cataldi as the morning host on 94.1 WIP, but a daily commute from Reading to Philadelphia for a 6 a.m. show wasn’t in the cards.

    “I still feel like I’m just grinding and trying to move up the ranks and doing the best I can,” Tucker said.

    Ross Tucker (right) called NFL games on CBS in 2025 alongside Phillies announcer Tom McCarthy.

    Tucker’s only regret is not being able to call his first Eagles game alongside McCarthy. The two have been friends since McCarthy called Tucker’s college football games at Princeton. And McCarthy, in his 12th season calling NFL games for CBS, has yet to land the Eagles, though he remains the only announcer not named Jim Nantz to call a game with Tony Romo.

    “He is the best,” McCarthy said of Tucker. “Just a tremendous partner. We have had such an amazing year.”

    But McCarthy has a nice consolidation prize. He will be in Cincinnati Sunday calling the Bengals’ matchup against the Cleveland Browns, where he’ll have the chance to voice Myles Garrett breaking the NFL’s single-season sack record (22), currently held by Michael Strahan.

    Where on TV is Eagles-Commanders airing

    Among other places, Sunday’s Eagles game is airing in Tampa, where a lot of Birds fans call home.

    This season, the Eagles have had their fair share of nationally televised games. That won’t be the case Sunday.

    In addition to the Philadelphia TV market, Eagles-Commanders also is airing in Washington, D.C., and throughout most of Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina. The game also will be available on CBS in Tampa, Fla., which an outsized number of Eagles fans call home.

    It’s airing in two TV markets home to teams the Eagles have a chance of facing in the first round of the playoffs — San Francisco and Green Bay, along with most of Minnesota and all of Detroit.

    It’ll also broadcast in Chicago, where Bears fans will be flipping to see which team ends up with the No. 2 seed.

    Los Angeles Rams fans will be out of luck, though. While the Eagles likely will face the Rams, CBS2 in Los Angeles is locked into airing the Chargers’ game against the Denver Broncos, where the AFC’s No. 1 seed is on the line.

    Other NFL games airing Sunday in Philadelphia

    D’Andre Swift and the Bears will lock down the No. 2 seed with a win Sunday.

    Eagles fans in Philadelphia will get plenty of games Sunday impacting the playoffs.

    Saturday night on ESPN, Carolina Panthers-Tampa Bay Buccaneers will likely decide the winner of the NFC South (although the Atlanta Falcons could play spoilers Sunday) while the winner of Seattle Seahawks-San Francisco 49ers will claim the NFC West crown and the No. 1 seed.

    Sunday afternoon, Fox will air Detroit Lions-Chicago Bears at 4:25 p.m. If the Eagles win and the Bears lose, the Birds will head to the playoffs as the No. 2 seed and host the Packers in the wild-card round. Otherwise the Birds will be the No. 3 seed and face the 49ers or Rams.

    Sunday night, NBC has a win-or-go-home game in the Baltimore Ravens at the Pittsburgh Steelers. The winner heads to the playoffs as the AFC’s No. 4 seed.

    Here are the games airing on TV in and around Philadelphia in Week 18:

    Saturday

    • Panthers at Buccaneers: 4:30 p.m., ESPN (Chris Fowler, Dan Orlovsky, Louis Riddick, Katie George, Peter Schrager)
    • Seahawks at 49ers: 8 p.m., ESPN/6abc (Joe Buck, Troy Aikman, Lisa Salters, Laura Rutledge)

    Sunday

    • Packers at Vikings: 1 p.m., CBS3 (Spero Dedes, Adam Archuleta, Aditi Kinkhabwala)
    • Cowboys at Giants: 1 p.m., Fox29 (Kevin Kugler, Daryl Johnston, Allison Williams)
    • Commanders at Eagles: 4:25 p.m., CBS3 (Kevin Harlan, Ross Tucker, Melanie Collins)
    • Lions at Bears: 4:25 p.m., Fox29 (Kevin Burkhardt, Tom Brady, Erin Andrews, Tom Rinaldi)
    • Ravens at Steelers: 8:20 p.m., NBC10 (Mike Tirico, Cris Collinsworth, Melissa Stark)