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Wild Super Bowl celebrations in Tampa prompt COVID super-spreader worries

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33ft/iStockBy BILL HUTCHINSON, ABC News

(TAMPA, Fla.) — Thousands of football fans in Tampa, Florida, many seen without masks and partying shoulder-to-shoulder in the streets as if in a pre-coronavirus time warp, are worrying health care professionals who fear the Super Bowl LV hoopla will become a COVID-19 super-spreader event.

Following the hometown Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ blowout win over the Kansas City Chiefs, revelers poured into the streets outside Raymond James Stadium and elsewhere in the city, apparently throwing caution to the wind and ignoring guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to stay masked up and socially distanced.

The NFL limited the crowd capacity to 22,000 in the 65,000-seat stadium and required spectators to wear masks. But outside, video footage from some Tampa neighborhoods showed scores of people without masks, turning streets into dance floors and high-fiving and hugging friends and strangers with abandon. Several nightclubs even opened their doors to take advantage of the festive atmosphere.

ABC News contributor Dr. John Brownstein, an epidemiologist and chief innovation officer at Boston Children’s Hospital, called the spontaneous congregated scenes in Tampa an apparent “recipe for virus transmission.”

Adding to fears is the fact that the Super Bowl was played amidst the backdrop of the highly-contagious B117 variant, also known as the U.K. or British variant, sweeping through South Florida.

“Time will tell, but we have seen throughout the pandemic that when people gather — especially when you have drinking … as well as shouting and screaming, which can help project the virus — this creates a good substrate for the virus,” Brownstein said.

He noted that 10 days after the famed Sturgis Motorcycle Rally in South Dakota drew more than 460,000 people over the summer, a dramatic increase in new COVID-19 infections and deaths were traced to the event.

“That was a good example of a single-point event that brought a lot of people together with minimal adherence to interventions, and we saw the repercussions of cases and deaths as the result of a single event,” Brownstein said.

Tampa Mayor Jane Castor defended her city’s handling of the event on Monday, saying, “The media can always find examples of bad behavior.”

“I’m proud to say that the majority of individuals that I saw out and about enjoying the festivities associated with the Super Bowl were complying,” Castor said during a news conference. “They understood their level of personal responsibility and they were doing the right thing.”

She said that prior to the Super Bowl, the city enacted a mask mandate for certain neighborhoods where people are known to congregate, handed out 200,000 masks and launched a safety campaign in which thousands of volunteers were out advising people to wear masks or pull them up to cover their noses and mouths.

“You can supply everyone with a mask, advise them of the science behind it and expect that they are going to abide by the mask order,” Castor said. “Again, you’re going to find a few that don’t, but the majority that I saw were wearing masks.”

Castor did not release numbers on how many people police cited for violating COVID-19 protocols.

Cellphone videos posted on social media showed thousands of people, many not wearing masks, lining the streets of 7th Avenue in the popular Ybor City neighborhood throughout the weekend and late into Sunday night. Many of the revelers crowded inside and outside clubs that were open for business.

“Scenes from Ybor last night and a few other clubs were incredibly disappointing,” the Tampa Police Department said in a statement to ABC affiliate WFTS-TV in Tampa. “The city spent the better part of a year educating residents on precautions due to the pandemic and have recently put a mask order in place for both the entertainment and event zones to ensure the safety of our residents and visitors to our great city.”

Dr. Jay Wolfson, senior associate dean of the Morsani College of Medicine at the University of South Florida, told ABC News on Monday that the videos of football fans celebrating out in public are “just the tip of the iceberg” of the festivities that went on over the weekend in the Tampa area.

“There were neighborhood parties and basement parties, and parties inside private venues that we didn’t see where the same thing was going on in even more confined quarters,” Wolfson said.

He added that he drove by a barbecue restaurant Sunday night in a suburb of Tampa that was crowded inside and outside with Kansas City Chiefs fans, many of whom were not wearing masks or socially distancing.

Wolfson noted that many of the football fans who descended on Tampa over the weekend were from out of state.

“They’re going to now take whatever they have gotten from here, and some of them will have gotten something, and they’re going to bring it back to Kansas City or Chicago, or Minneapolis, wherever they come from, and that’s going to be part of that super-spreader activity,” Wolfson said. “And then we’re going to experience the same thing because many of the folks in the streets were Tampa or Florida residents.”

Mayor Castor said the celebration isn’t over. Tampa is planning to commemorate the Buccaneers’ big win with a public celebration. She said the city proved it can safely hold such an event after organizing a boat parade on the bay and a free ceremony at Raymond James Stadium that drew an estimated 12,000 to 15,000 people in September after the Tampa Bay Lightning won the National Hockey League’s Stanley Cup.

“We can’t have a historical event of this significance in our community and not celebrate,” said Castor, adding that the city saw no COVID-19 spikes after the Lightning’s celebration. “We will do it in a safe manner, but that adds another element to the celebration as well. But we definitely have to celebrate this momentous occasion.”

Meanwhile, St. Petersburg, Florida, Mayor Rick Kriseman is threatening to hit rapper 50 Cent with a fine for hosting a Super Bowl party on Friday night inside a private hanger at Albert Whitted Airport. Video of the event posted on Snapchat and Facebook showed a large crowd with many people, who paid a cover charge, not wearing masks.

“This isn’t how we should be celebrating the Super Bowl. It’s not safe or smart. It’s stupid,” Kriseman wrote on Twitter. “We’re going to take a very close look at this, and it may end up costing someone a lot more than 50 cent.”

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Scoreboard roundup — 2/8/21

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iStockBy ABC News

(NEW YORK) — Here are the scores from Monday’s sports events:

NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION
Charlotte 119, Houston 94
Washington 105, Chicago 101
Toronto 128, Memphis 113
San Antonio 105, Golden State 100
Dallas 127, Minnesota 122
Phoenix 119, Cleveland 113
Milwaukee 125, Denver 112
LA Lakers 119, Oklahoma City 112

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE
Toronto 3, Vancouver 1
NY Islanders 2, NY Rangers 0
Edmonton 3, Ottawa 1
Columbus 3, Carolina 2
Tampa Bay 4, Nashville 1
SO Arizona 4, St. Louis 3
Buffalo at Boston (Postponed)

TOP-25 COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Ohio St. 73, Maryland 65
Kansas 78, Oklahoma St. 66
Gonzaga 82, BYU 71

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

"Happy Does": Kenny Chesney loves the idea of you living your best life

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Warner NashvilleIt was love at first listen when Kenny Chesney discovered his latest hit. 

“The first time I heard ‘Happy Does,’ ironically, it made me smile a lot,” he recalls, “because I love the idea of my audience and the people that listen to this music living their best life.”

Kenny believes that’s not as simple as it used to be, thanks to 21st-century technology.

“I think it’s really hard in today’s world,” he explains, “in the social media world of getting drawn in to what everyone else is doing and how everyone else is living their life instead of concentrating on your own, and not necessarily letting outside factors dictate your life or the mood you’re in.”

“You know, it’s just being happy and being thankful and being humble and having gratitude,” he reflects. “Those are the things that I try to lean on.”

“Happy Does” is the follow-up to Kenny’s 31st number one, “Here and Now,” which topped the chart in June of last year.

By Stephen Hubbard
Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

'The Bachelor' recap: Emotions run high as a former contestant crashes the competitio

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ABC/Craig Sjodin(LOS ANGELES) — Monday’s episode marked the halfway point of Matt James’ quest to find true love on The Bachelor, and time was running out for the women to strengthen their connection with him.  Little did they know, more competition was on the way.

More on that later, but first, Matt had some unfinished business from last week to handle.  Following Jessenia’s allegations of bullying at the hands of MJ, Matt settled the argument with a two-on-one date.  At the end, Matt showed MJ the door while Jessenia joined the others, rose in hand.

Afterwards, the remaining women were once again disappointed to learn that Matt had decided to cancel the pre-rose ceremony cocktail party and head straight to the ceremony.  This time, the finger of blame was pointed squarely at Katie, whom they blamed for bringing the “mean girl” culture into the house.  

Following an emotional rose ceremony, which saw Magi, Brittany and Ryan getting sent home, Serena C. pulled Katie aside for “a talk,” during which Serena expressed her frustration over losing time with Matt as a result of Katie’s “antics.”  The conversation turned into a shouting match, with Serena accusing Katie of “not being truly here for Matt.”

Meanwhile, Pieper and Matt take a break from the drama with a romantic carnival date, followed by a performance by country music trio Temecula Road — which ended with a rose for Pieper.

Bri, Kit, Rachael, Michelle, Jessenia, Serena P., Abigail, Chelsea and Serena C. met up with Matt for a bowling group date that turned competitive. Michelle won herself the coveted rose at the end.

Following a visit from best friend and Bachelor Nation favorite Tyler Cameron, Katie and Matt put their chemistry to the test on a fun one-on-one date that saw them teaming up to turn Cameron’s relaxing massage appointment into a nightmare.

The date, as it turned out, had an unexpected twist for Katie when Matt confessed his relationship with some of the other women “had progressed further along” than theirs .  After succeeding in eliminating several women from the competition, Katie herself was sent packing.

That left nine girls left to vying for Matt’s heart — or so they thought — because Heather Martin, from season 23 of The Bachelor, managed to force her way into the competition — egged on by mutual friend Hannah Brown.  Hannah and Heather were both in the hunt for Bachelor Colton Underwood’s affections, before Heather eliminated herself ahead of the hometown dates.

We have yet to find out if Matt will let Heather join the competition so late in the game, but, needless to say, the other ladies won’t be happy if he does.

“If you’re gonna let a new girl come in or you’re gonna give a new girl a rose over some of us who have been here this long, than you better marry that girl, because the rest of us, we’re gonna be p*****,” fumed Chelsea.

The Bachelor returns Monday at 8 p.m. ET on ABC.

By George Costantino
Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Believe it or not…You can now snag the Jason Alexander Super Bowl hoodie, for a good cause

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© 2021 Procter & Gamble(NEW YORK) — Arguably one of the oddest commercial that aired during the Super Bowl was Tide’s spot that featured Jason Alexander’s giant face on a messy guy’s hoodie. 

And now, it can be yours, for a good cause.

In a callback to Seinfeld, the ad was set to “Believe It Or Not (Theme from The Greatest American Hero)” — which references George Costanza’s phone message when he was avoiding an inevitable break up — and showed the giant face reacting to being slobbered on by a dog, sat on, and dirtied by other sloppy situations.

Tide has just announced it is giving away “a limited supply of the same hoodie from our Super Bowl LV commercial,” and all you need to do is go to charityhoodie.tide.com and click a button to contribute anywhere from $5 to $25.

“All contributions will be split evenly between Feeding America and Matthew 25: Ministries to help families in their time of need,” the detergent company notes.  

However, just like fighting a stain, time is your enemy: entries will only be accepted until Wednesday, February 10, 11:59 PM.

By Stephen Iervolino
Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.