Thousands brave rain in New York's Times
Square to welcome 2019
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[January 02, 2019]
By Gabriella Borter and Jonathan Allen
NEW YORK (Reuters) - New York's Times
Square erupted with fireworks and cheers at the stroke of midnight on
Tuesday as thousands of hardy merrymakers braved pouring rain and
watched the glowing New Year's Eve ball complete its midnight descent to
mark the start of 2019.
For the multitudes who gathered in the famed midtown Manhattan
crossroads, the thrilling moment was reward for enduring hours of
standing in a steady downpour during the waning hours of 2018.
Helping to keep spirits high was a slate of performers including
Christina Aguilera, New Kids on the Block and Sting who entertained the
resilient crowd. Many donned plastic rain ponchos and sported colorful,
oversized top hats handed out by organizers.
"It was a bucket-list thing," said Daniela Ramous, a 34-year-old sales
manager from McAllen, Texas. "You grow up watching it on TV, you see all
the excitement. There's something magical about New York during this
time of year."
Injecting a somber note into the festivities, the Times Square Alliance,
the business association that organizes the event, paid a special
tribute to freedom of the press, after a year in which journalists came
under attack around the world, including in the United States.
A minute before midnight, an invited group of journalists from ABC News,
NBC News, the Washington Post, Reuters and other outlets joined Mayor
Bill de Blasio in pushing the button that initiates the glittering
ball's drop.
Visitors had begun gathering inside penned-off enclosures in the
morning, starting an hours-long marathon of standing in one place, with
no access to public restrooms.
Belying the idea that New Yorkers themselves eschew the Times Square
festivities, Eskie Garcia, a 59-year-old city worker living in Brooklyn,
said she has come every year for about a decade.
"You have to come here in person," she said before applying lipstick and
asking a stranger to take her picture on her cellphone. "Especially when
you live by yourself. You come, you meet people."
DANCING IN THE RAIN
Janette Masson, 29, said she preferred this year's rain to last year's
bone-chilling cold. Masson, who works in retail in Boston, had been in
her pen since 9.30 a.m., eating granola bars for lunch and dinner.
"I can deal with it," said Masson's 61-year-old mother, Judy Masson, as
she stood in the rain with many hours of waiting still to come. "You
make the best of a bad thing."
Umbrellas were banned as part of the tight security plan, reflecting
concern over the possibility of random attacks. Plastic ponchos were
allowed, with street vendors selling them for $5 on nearby avenues.
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Revelers celebrate New Year's Eve in Times Square in the Manhattan
borough of New York, U.S., December 31, 2018. REUTERS/Jeenah Moon
The Werline family from San Antonio, Texas, parlayed a connection
with a friend who works at the Hard Rock Cafe into a coveted dry
spot. Even though they did not have tickets for the private party
inside, they had been permitted to stand under the attraction's deep
awning.
"Thank God we know someone," Tammy Werline, 49, said as rain
cascaded off the awning's edge and people in suits and cocktail
dresses buzzed in and out of the restaurant, almost directly below
the glowing ball.
The tradition of watching a giant ball drop from a pole on top of
the narrow building at the head of Times Square in midtown Manhattan
began in 1907.
The ball in current use - a glittering, LED-studded sphere made by
Waterford Crystal and Philips Lighting - made its debut in 2008.
Weighing 11,875 pounds (5,386 kg) and measuring 12 feet (3.7 meters)
in diameter, it sits year-round on the roof of One Times Square, the
one-time headquarters of the New York Times.
SHARPSHOOTERS AND DETECTORS
As in years past, the New York Police Department screened people
entering the corrals, deployed sharpshooters on rooftops and used
radiation detectors throughout the event.
It also had planned to use an aerial drone for the first time to
monitor the crowds, but canceled the effort on Monday evening given
the wind and rain.
The organizers chose to honor press freedom and the contribution of
journalists partly because of the deadly hostility that some
reporters have faced this year.
Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi columnist for the Washington Post and U.S.
resident, was killed inside a Saudi Arabian consulate in Turkey. In
June, a gunman shot dead five employees of The Capital, a newspaper
in Annapolis, Maryland.
This month also marked the first anniversary of the imprisonment in
Myanmar of Reuters reporters Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo for
investigating how the country's security forces killed members of
its Muslim Rohingya minority.
(Reporting by Jonathan Allen; Additional reporting by Gabriella
Borter; Writing by Frank McGurty; Editing by Kim Coghill)
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