Throngs of people will welcome 2019 in a packed Times Square Monday along with revelers from around the world who come to see the traditional crystal ball drop, fireworks and a blizzard of confetti.
Spectators are expected to start assembling in early afternoon. As has been the case for years, the celebration will take place under tight security, with partygoers checked for weapons and then herded into pens, ringed by metal barricades, where they wait for the stroke of midnight.
Any repeat visitors from last year’s celebration will undoubtedly be praying for better weather. Last year’s event was one of the coldest on record at 10 degrees Fahrenheit. Forecasters say Monday’s party will take place amid mild temperatures but possibly rain. Umbrellas are banned for security reasons.
There are no public toilets in the pens, backpacks are banned and there are no garbage cans either, so picnicking for the event can be rough. But revelers will have plenty of companionship, though experts say probably well short of the 1 million to 2 million spectators claimed by city officials and organizers.
Thousands of police officers will be on hand to provide security, with the help of bomb-sniffing dogs, 1,225 security cameras and 235 “blocker vehicles” used to stop any potential vehicle attacks.
The ball drops during the midnight countdown. This year, the ball is a 12-foot (3.5-meter) diameter geodesic sphere covered with 2,688 Waterford crystal triangles lit by 32,256 LEDs. The numerals “2019” will burst into light at midnight accompanied by pyrotechnics and the release of 3,000 pounds of confetti.
Mixed in with the confetti will be tens of thousands of wishes from around the world. People write their wishes on pieces of confetti posted on a mobile “wishing wall” in Manhattan or submit them online. Some of the wishes will be read onstage throughout the evening.
(AP)
3 Responses
And LET IT RAIN!!! Don’t worry if we get some Gishmei Bracha on new years. It’s a Siman that the year will be full of Bracha….
Can anyone explain why anyone would stand outside for hours for this?
Do you even hear yourselves?
The ridiculous practice of “dropping the ball at midnight” has been turned into a “sacred tradition” by the media. Millions of knuckle-headed bystanders are prepared to brave rain and low temperatures to personally fulfill the “mitzva” (“be’gufo”). All this in celebration of the pagan 2-faced god janus? And all in a sober, straight-faced “news” report on the website for the yeshiva world?