Teammates are remembering an 18-year-old student-athlete who died after he fell from a light pole following Sunday's Eagles win.
Philadelphia Mayor Cherelle Parker’s week did not start off the way she wanted. But in the end, she got the last laugh.
We want to have a good time celebrating our Eagles in every way imaginable. But we have to do so in a way that does not result in this kind of tragedy,” she said.
When Mayor Cherelle Parker took office a little more than a year ago, she laid out a series of concrete goals and priorities, and asked residents to hold her accountable for acting on her commitments.
Philadelphia Mayor Cherelle Parker is showing her city (and the rest of the world) that she can, in fact, spell “Eagles."
Philadelphia Mayor Cherelle Parker said the city celebrated the Eagles' NFC championship "responsibly" but had one warning.
The many cameras will run along Pennsylvania Route 13 in Philadelphia. You probably know that route better as the roadways whose sections make it up: parts of Baltimore Avenue, Powelton Avenue, Frankford Avenue, Girard Avenue, and Hunting Park Avenue, among others.
Approximately 42 new cameras are coming to Roosevelt Boulevard, as well as Baltimore, Hunting Park, Frankford, and Allegheny Avenues.
Philadelphia Mayor Cherelle Parker has a new way of spelling Eagles: Super Bowl. Parker kept it simpler this time after misspelling Eagles before Philadelphia's NFC divisional-round win over the Rams last week.
In an interview with School District of Philadelphia Superintendent Tony Watlington Sr., Action News reporter TaRhonda Thomas asked if the district has a plan in the event that ICE agents show up at schools.
A 27-year-old bald eagle named Lincoln has become a fan favorite at Philadelphia Eagles home games. Although Lincoln lives at the American Eagle Foundation in Tennessee, football fans in the City of Brotherly Love have grown fond of the North American bird of prey, who was chosen as the team’s mascot in 2018.
Sabapathy was a first-year exercise and sport science major from Toronto, Canada. He was climbing a pole at 15th and Market streets in Center City when he slipped and fell, hitting his head on the concrete sidewalk. He was hospitalized with a brain injury and pronounced dead two days later.