Philadelphia santa claus booed
But wait, Madonna. We had many changes to make from Europe to America, and I wanted the show to be perfect for you because my fans deserve it and quite frankly I deserve it.
This is the city where the Declaration of Independence was signed. We are in the land of democracy. We started the word, motherfuckers. But in Moscow, there are three girls in jail. Yes, free Pussy Riot. In St. Petersburg, there are gay men in jail for exhibiting that they are gay. How fucked up is that? Never forget how lucky you are to live where you live. Madonna is probably not singing half the time. And the show is probably exactly the same from city to city.
She is Madonna, and she is awesome, and she can still kick her foot above her head while maybe playing the guitar and wearing towering heels.
Search for: Search. I'm a scraper This search result is here to prevent scraping. Get a compelling long read and must-have lifestyle tips in your inbox every Sunday morning — great with coffee! Read More About: Music. You Might Also Like. Philadelphia has a bit of a reputation when it comes to its sports fans. In terms of heckling, jeering, throwing stuff and generally trying to get into the heads of opposing players, no one does it quite like Philly fans.
But the incident that truly made angry Philadelphia fans the stuff of legend was the time they supposedly booed and threw snowballs at Santa Claus. But did it really go down that way?
Yes, yes it did. Patriots-Eagles anti-analysis. That sounds like actual work Matt Vautour or Chris Mason would do suckers. That time Philly fans threw snowballs at Santa.
That was the only fun part of the game, and everybody joined in — fathers, sons, even the old ladies. That guy had it coming. Hey, it was just the thing to do at the time. No big deal. The incident in question occurred during a game on Dec. The Eagles claimed an early lead until, just before the end of the half, the Vikings capitalized on an interception and quickly tied the game with a yard touchdown pass. But Santa was nowhere to be found, the person hired to portray him depending upon which report one believes having been prevented from making it to Franklin Field due to either an excess of inclement weather or an excess of alcoholic refreshments.
At first, I was scared because it was so loud. But then I figured, hey, it was just good-natured teasing. I thought it was funny. A fan in the upper deck threw the first snowball. As Santa hit the south end zone, one turned into ten, then into Still, he had his limits. What prompted the Philadelphia fans to treat Santa Claus so inhospitably that day remains a subject of contention.
Bad suit, scraggly beard. That guy had it coming.
0コメント