(23 Jun 2025)
RESTRICTION SUMMARY:
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Philadelphia – 23 June 2025
1. Wide of a splashpad at Love Park in Center City, Philadelphia
2. Mid of the sun
3. Mid of children playing
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4. SOUNDBITE (English) Tiffany Murray, visitor from Baltimore, Maryland:
“And it’s boiling. It feels like over 100 degrees out of here. It’s very hot. I’m trying to hit the water over here to get a little cool down, but don’t come out if you don’t have to.”
5. Mid of splashpad at Love Park
6. Various of people walking, sitting in the heat
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7. SOUNDBITE (English) Alan Bernstein, resident from Philadelphia suburbs:
“We’re not camels, I mean, camels can overheat and still survive, but we’re not able to do that. So, we have to drink plenty of fluids and try to stay, try to go indoors where there’s air conditioning to get out of the heat and humidity at various times in the day. Just be careful and try to be aware of your body when you do feel like you’re being overcome by the heat, you should immediately get away from that, from any exposure to the outside area.”
8. Mid of a bike path
9. Wide of Amin Hucks and his son Sultan Hucks riding their Segway scooters
10. SOUNDBITE (English) Amin Hucks, Philadelphia resident:
"I’m doing good so far, only because I just finished my bottle of water, I had a bottle of water with me, I finished it, so we’re going to see how lasts that long.”
11. Cut away of sunlight coming through trees
12. SOUNDBITE (English) Sultan Hucks, student:
“I am so used to being outside because I play sports, yeah, training. So the heat is really nothing to me.”
13. Various of splashpad with Museum of Art as a background
STORYLINE:
An intense and nearly historic weather pattern is cooking much of America under a dangerous heat dome this week with triple-digit temperatures in places that haven’t been so hot in more than a decade.
The heat wave is especially threatening because it’s hitting cities like Boston, New York and Philadelphia early in the summer when people haven’t gotten their bodies adapted to the broiling conditions, several meteorologists said.
In Philadelphia’s Love Park, children and adults were cooling themselves down at the park’s splash pad.
Tiffany Murray, a tourist from Baltimore, said that the temperature feels as if it over 100 degrees Fahrenheit. Murray and her friend have no plans to stay out for long and are on their way back to their hotel to cool down.
Alan Bernstein said that he is being more mindful of about how he feels while exposed to sunlight and remind others to stay hydrated.
Amin Hucks and his son Sultan Hucks were riding their Segway scooters on Kelly Drive along the Schuylkill River in Philadelphia. The pair said they are feeling fine under the heat so far.
Nearly three-quarters of the country’s population — 245 million people — will swelter with 90 degrees Fahrenheit (about 32 Celsius) or higher temperatures on Monday and 33 million people, almost 10% of the country, will feel blistering 100-degree heat (about 38 Celsius) on Tuesday.
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AP Video by Tassanee Vejpongsa
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