Tag: new years eve
Times Square Heats Up Ahead Of New Year’s Eve Revelry

Times Square Heats Up Ahead Of New Year’s Eve Revelry

NEW YORK (Reuters) – What will become a veritable sea of humanity has begun to converge on Times Square on Saturday to experience the annual descent of the New Year’s Eve ball, a century-old tradition that will unfold this year under an unprecedented blanket of security.

As many as 2 million people, surrounded by a ring of 40-ton sand trucks and some 7,000 police, are expected to gather in the “Crossroads of the World” to watch the glittering sphere complete its midnight drop, marking the beginning of 2017.

Michelle Adkins was so excited to stand at the crossroads of the world on New Year’s Eve that she left her friend behind at the hotel and headed for the bright lights.

“I’ve waited my whole life to see Times Square,” said Adkins, 51, who works in a tire manufacturing plant in Rocky Mountain, North Carolina. “I didn’t come to New York to sleep! I ain’t got no time for sleep!”

Even though city and federal officials say they are not aware of any credible threats, the specter of two deadly truck attacks in Europe looms over the Times Square rite of winter, which has attracted merrymakers since the early 20th century.

In devising the security plan, New York police officials say they heeded lessons from recent holiday attacks in Germany and France, where suspected militants intentionally plowed vehicles into crowds of pedestrians, killing dozens.

Despite the heavy police presence, or perhaps because of it, throngs of people, many from overseas, arrived hours early to get a prime view of festivities, which will include live musical performances by Mariah Carey, Thomas Rhett and Gloria Estefan.

Although skies were cloudy, temperatures were expected to hold at a comfortable 40F (5C), with no rain in the forecast.

John O’Leary, 57, of the Midlands, England, his wife, Claire, 51, and their two children were passing through Times Square on Saturday afternoon.

“It’s just amazing,” O’Leary said. “I just can’t believe how they can manage all this, in terms of security.”

At 11:59 p.m. (0459 GMT), the Waterford Crystal ball, five feet in diameter, will begin to slid down a pole that sits atop a building at the point where Broadway crosses Seventh Avenue. When it completes its descent at midnight, a giant “2017” sign will illuminate and a shower of fireworks with light up the sky.

Throughout the evening, a protective perimeter of 65 hulking sanitation trucks filled with sand, as well as about 100 other smaller vehicles, will encircle Times Square. Placed in strategic positions, the “blockers” are intended to prevent any repetition of the truck attacks in Berlin and Nice earlier this year, officials said.

Authorities used the same strategy at the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade after Islamic State militants encouraged followers to target the event, which drew about 3.5 million people to the streets of the largest U.S. city.

Blocker trucks have also taken up positions across town near Trump Tower since President-elect Donald Trump was elected in November.

In addition, New York has deployed heavily armed police teams, snipers, bomb-sniffing dogs and helicopters. Coast Guard and police vessels will patrol waterways surrounding Manhattan.

U.S. defense and security agencies said they believed the threat of militant attacks inside the United States was low during the New Year’s holiday, though the possibility of an attack, no matter how remote, was “undeniable.”

Likewise, New York Police Commissioner James O’Neill said at a briefing this week that there were “no direct concerns” related to this year’s festivities in Times Square.

Even so, he vowed, “we are going to have one of the most policed, best protected events and one of the safest venues in the entire world given all the assets we deploy here.”

Other big cities around the country, including Chicago and San Francisco, put heavy security in place as well to protect sprawling crowds expected to gather at public fireworks displays and other “first night” events.

In Washington, where federal budget cuts have done away with traditional New Year’s Eve fireworks on the National Mall, no major events were planned. District of Columbia police declined to comment on any special security plans, saying only that events across the world are monitored for their potential impact on the U.S. capital.

(Additional reporting by Chris Francescani in New York; Ian Simpson in Washington; Editing by David Gregorio)

IMAGE: The New Year’s Eve Ball on top of One Times Square is tested in Manhattan, New York City, U.S. December 30, 2016. REUTERS/Stephen Yang

#EndorseThis: How To Avoid That Perennial New Year’s Eve Letdown

#EndorseThis: How To Avoid That Perennial New Year’s Eve Letdown

Anyone worried that New Year’s Eve 2016 will be a disappointment — in keeping with the general tenor of this awful year — is probably right. The experts at AsapSCIENCE have compiled a compelling list of reasons based on evolutionary psychology that explain why your New Year’s will almost certainly suck. (The only obvious reason they omit is Donald Trump, a gigantic downer whose negative impact on human evolution is yet to be determined.)

The principal psychological trap we confront on the year’s final night is our perennially elevated expectations — followed inevitably by a negative reaction that is amplified by alcohol, pricey entertainment venues, reflections on aging…

Now there is a simple way to address this annoying problem, even in 2016. It won’t fix everything, but it may just make the holiday a little less depressing.

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