Northeast
New Hampshire video game designers create treasure hunt across Northeast with eye-popping reward
A pair of video game designers created a real-life, real-time treasure hunt in the Northeast with a hefty reward for the lucky individual who finds the unique treasure.
The game is called Project Skydrop, and players compete against one another to locate a 24-karat gold sculpture valued at $26,000.
“This treasure hunt is a prototype, just experimenting to see if people like it, if people like the format,” Project Skydrop co-creator Jason Rohrer told Boston 25 News.
The game started Sept. 19 and will end on Oct. 10.
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Project Skydrop is a real-life treasure hunt game based in New England. (Project Skydrop)
The golden treasure has been hidden within a 500-mile radius, and, for $20, players receive a daily hint of the location of the prize, located deep in the woods of public land on the forest floor. Each day, the clues start to reveal more and more about where the treasure is hidden. As the days go on, the circle gets smaller.
“We’re trying to figure out if the treasure hunt itself is a sort of self-contained, self-sustaining, financial thing, where these people are paying entry fees to join and that this bounty payment growing over time makes it more and more interesting. Can that snowball and take off? That’s the question,” Rohrer said.
Landscape views of the White Mountain National Forest in New Hampshire. (Andrew Lichtenstein/Corbis via Getty Images)
The object resembles a “cyclone” on a base with dots and symbols etched onto the sides of the rings. It was made of 10 troy ounces of 24-karat pure gold.
Along with the $25,000 value of the treasure, the winner will also receive a portion of an ever-growing prize bounty pool.
There’s also a Discord social media server with over 6,300 members signed up to share their thoughts and theories during the treasure hunt.
Trees in New Hampshire’s White Mountain National Forest. (Andrew Lichtenstein/Corbis via Getty Images)
According to the Project Skydrop website, the grand prize is under 24/7 surveillance.
The designers surrounded the prize with tree-mounted cameras that are both motion-sensitive and night-vision capable.
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Northeast
New Jersey-bound United flight makes emergency landing at LAX after engine fire
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A New Jersey-bound United Airlines flight that took off Monday in Los Angeles made an emergency landing shortly after departure due to an engine fire, aviation officials said.
United Airlines Flight 2127 took off from Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) around 10:15 a.m. before turning around an hour later because of a left engine issue, the Federal Aviation Administration told Fox News Digital.
United flight 2127 safely returned to Los Angeles to address an issue with one of the engines,” United told Fox News Digital. “Customers deplaned via slides and airstairs and were bused to the terminal.
A United Airlines airplane made an emergency landing Monday at Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) following a fire in the left engine, authorities said. (KTTV)
The airline said none of the 256 passengers and 12 crew members on board the Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner jet were injured. The FAA didn’t specify the issue with the left engine.
Video footage of the plane on the tarmac shows smoke coming out of one of the engines as firefighters blast water inside.
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Air traffic is seen on the runway at Los Angeles International Airport on Dec. 25, 2022. Los Angeles Police Department said they were aware of the protest, and asked people to stay away due to the traffic impact. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes, File)
The airliner was headed to Newark Liberty International Airport before it turned around. The FAA said the incident is under investigation.
Fox News Digital has reached out to the Los Angeles Fire Department. A spokesperson for LAX declined to comment and referred any inquires to United.
A United Airlines plane bound for LAX turned around mid-flight after a “potential security concern.” (Joan Valls/Urbanandsport/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
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The passengers were bused to a terminal and a different aircraft was arranged to fly them to their destination, United said.
“We are grateful to our pilots and flight attendants for their quick actions to keep our customers safe,” the airline said.
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Boston, MA
Andris Nelsons out as music director of Boston Symphony at end of 2026-27 season
Entertainment
Boston will have the third vacancy among major U.S. orchestras.
Andris Nelsons is being forced out as music director of the Boston Symphony Orchestra in the summer of 2027 after 13 seasons.
The orchestra made an unusually blunt announcement Friday.
“The decision to not renew his contract was made by the BSO’s board of trustees because, beyond our shared desire to ensure our orchestra continues to perform at the highest levels, the BSO and Andris Nelsons were not aligned on future vision,” the BSO said in a statement from its trustees and CEO Chad Smith.
A five-time Grammy award winner, the 47-year-old Nelsons is currently leading the Vienna Philharmonic on a U.S. tour and was to conduct the orchestra in Naples, Florida, on Friday night.
“While this is not the decision I anticipated or wanted, I am unwaveringly committed to you and to our work together,” Nelson wrote in a letter to BSO musicians and staff that was released by his management agency. “I understand the decision was not related to artistic standards, performances, or achievements during my tenure, and, therefore, my focus is straightforward: to protect the music, support the orchestra’s stability, and continue to perform with the musicians of the BSO at the highest artistic level.”
Nelsons made his BSO debut in March 2011 at New York’s Carnegie Hall as a replacement for James Levine, who announced 10 days earlier he was stepping down as BSO music director at the end of the 2010-11 season because of poor health.
Nelson was announced as music director in May 2013 and given a five-year contract starting with the 2014-15 season. The orchestra announced contract extensions in 2015 and 2020, then in January 2024 said he was given an evergreen rolling contract. He was bestowed an added title of head of conducting at Tanglewood, the music and educational center that is the orchestra’s summer home.
The last extension was announced a few months after Smith, who had been with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, started as the BSO’s chief executive.
Nelsons was music director of the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra in Britain from 2008-09 and has been chief conductor of Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra in Germany since the 2017-18 season. He married soprano Kristine Opolais in 2011, and in 2018 they announced their divorce.
Boston will have the third vacancy among major U.S. orchestras. Gustavo Dudamel is leaving the Los Angeles Philharmonic this summer after 17 seasons to become music director of the New York Philharmonic and Franz Welser-Möst will depart the Cleveland Orchestra at the end of 2026-27 after 25 seasons.
In addition, Klaus Mäkelä takes over the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in 2027-28, when he also starts as chief conductor the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra in the Netherlands.
Pittsburg, PA
Video shows Amazon driver illegally passing school bus in Pittsburgh area
A West Deer Township woman captured video of an Amazon driver illegally passing a school bus on Saxonburg Boulevard, saying it’s not the first time it has happened.
“They act like it’s a racetrack,” Carley Gavulich said of Tuesday’s incident. “What if there was multiple children? What if you were to hit my child, anyone’s child?”
It felt too close to home for Gavulich. She was waiting for her son to come off the bus from Curtisville Primary Center when it happened on Tuesday.
“He actually was getting his new dirt bike delivered, so that’s why we were even recording,” she said.
She wanted to get his reaction to the dirt bike. Instead, the bus driver pulled up, and the Amazon Prime truck blew past the stop-arm.
“The Deer Lakes School District’s top priority is always the safety, security, and wellbeing of its students,” a spokesperson for the district said on Friday. “The District is aware of the situation and is taking all steps to address any concerns.”
A spokesperson for Amazon told KDKA it is looking into the incident and will take appropriate actions after a review.
“Amazon should hold him 100% accountable,” Gavulich said.
But whoever was driving is not the only person Gavulich believes needs a bus safety refresher. She said her husband has witnessed vehicles blowing by the stop-arm at least seven times.
Both are grateful that the bus driver saw the delivery truck coming and stopped her son from getting off.
“She is amazing, 100 percent props to her. If she would have let him off that bus, we would be having a different conversation,” Gavulich said.
The chief of the West Deer Police Department told KDKA that someone in the community had notified him about this. He added that all the district’s buses have cameras and that an officer will review the video and approve the violation.
That video from the bus has not come in yet, though, the chief said on Friday, adding that it can take a few days.
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