Dining
fromBon Appetit
9 hours agoRice Is the Main Course at My 'Survivor' Watch Party
Hosting casual gatherings can be a fun way to celebrate any occasion, not just special events.
So it got me thinking about all the other people who host "watch parties" and invite friends over for a big game. So naturally, instead of wanting to talk about sports, I just want to hear about the drama surrounding your sports social gatherings. So tell me... Do any of you have a disasterous "watch party" story to share? Did someone try to propose during the halftime show and get rejected
3333 Georgia Ave., NW The beer garden is hosting a watch party for the opening ceremony on February 6 at 2 PM. Specials include $5 pints and $10 steins, and they're breaking out the shot-ski in celebration of winter sports. (That's a ski affixed with shot glasses on top.) The ceremony will be streamed indoors and outdoors, and the bar is also showing various events throughout the games.
If you're looking for a bar or restaurant to watch the Patriots take on the Seahawks in Super Bowl LX this Sunday, there's a lot to consider: Which bar has the best food? How many TV screens are there, and how big are they? Would you prefer an atmosphere closer to a Super Bowl party in your living room or a packed Lansdowne Street bar at last call?
The Working Families Party has announced that it's hosting a series of free, nationwide watch parties for Bad Bunny's Super Bowl LX Halftime Show. Dubbed the "Bad Bunny Bowl," the series consists of five nationwide watch parties to experience the artist's 2026 Super Bowl Halftime Show and give fans a safe opportunity to celebrate it together.
So you couldn't score a wildly expensive ticket to Monday's College Football Playoff National Championship game between the Miami Hurricanes and Indiana Hoosiers. Well, you're not alone, and so what? There are still plenty of ways to cheer on the home team, which last won a national title in 2002, at official CFP events and watch parties popping up at bars, clubs and restaurants throughout South Florida.
"Remember what I said about the monologue!" emcee Mary Michael shouted into the microphone as professional hockey player Ilya Rozanov ( Connor Storrie) started to confess his affection to his Canadian rival and paramour, Shane Hollander (Hudson Williams). "I have no one now," Connor says in Russian over the phone; Shane can't understand but listens regardless. "Well, not no one. I have Svetlana. She loves me and I love her, but not like ... not like I love you," Ilya says. Inside Boyfriend Co-op, hands covered mouths and a few patrons looked up at the ceiling, either wishing away or summoning tears.
Photo courtesy of Jasmeet SIngh Jasmeet Singh wasn't always a diehard Giants fan. He moved to the Tri-State area in 2002 and was a casual supporter for about five years. But when New York shockingly won the Super Bowl in 2007 against the then-undefeated New England Patriots, Singh became a hardcore fan. He attended his first game a few years later at the old Giants Stadium, just before it closed, and has been a season-ticket holder since 2021. He even dons a Giants-themed Turban, which he's received an abundance of support for, he said.