Washington, D.C
Step inside the District Eagles Nest in Washington, D.C.:
A group of Eagles fans will cheer on their Birds in enemy territory for the NFC Championship in Washington, D.C. Step inside the District Eagles Nest.
“It really feels like our church on Sunday, and you know how people are about missing church,” said Buddy Burns, a District Eagles Nest member.
Religiously, Burns and three others CBS Philadelphia talked to ahead of the NFC title game plus dozens, if not sometimes hundreds of others come together to watch every single game at their home away from home in the D.C. area.
“Always called it like a little Philadelphia embassy, right, like where you were safe and you could root the way you wanted to root and boo the way you wanted to boo,” said Ryon “Duck” Duckett, co-founder of District Eagles Nest.
As the saying should go, you can take the Eagles fan out of South Philly, but you can’t take the South Philly out of the fan…That’s how these Delaware Valley transplants found each other.
“I know Buddy’s from Malvern. I know Sophie went to Village. I’m a Owen J Roberts. Somebody’s Council Rock, Roman Catholic, Neshaminy, right?” said Kennedy Praweckyj, a District Eagles Nest member.
Every week, the District Eagles Nest meet at the same bar, sit in the same seat and cheer on their Birds. Duckett co-founded the group more than a decade ago.
“We’re 4 for 4 fans, most of us, and, you know, we spend the off-season together, the football off-season together,” Duckett said.
Recently, the fan group lost its beloved co-founder, Tev Yoblick.
“I’m going to try not to get choked up here. I just want to direct our attention to the gentleman whose portrait is right behind Duck right at his back shoulder,” Praweckyj said.
This magical post-season run – these fans feel it’s for him.
“There’s some comfort that we know someone’s on the field with them, telling them what to do,” another member Sophie Edbrooke said.
This Sunday, these four say they’re sticking with what’s been working and staying in enemy territory to watch the NFC Championship.
“It’s gonna feel like Christmas morning. None of us gonna be able to sleep,” Burns said.
For these fans, they wouldn’t want to be anywhere else anyway.
“It’s the people you want to be around when something goes right. It’s the people you want to be around when things go wrong,” Edbrooke said.
Washington, D.C
Man in critical condition after water rescue in Southwest DC
WASHINGTON – A man is in critical condition after falling into the Anacostia River in Southwestern Washington, D.C., Friday night.
What we know:
D.C. Fire and EMS reported the rescue effort shortly after 10 p.m. at James Creek Marina in Buzzard Point.
Crews believe a man fell from the dock into the water.
By 10:30 p.m., crews were able to pull the man out of the water.
Paramedics took him to the hospital in critical condition.
What we don’t know:
Officials did not identify the man who was rescued. No other information was immediately available.
The Source: Information in this story is from the D.C. Fire and EMS Department.
Washington, D.C
DC’s baseball team faces potential DOJ probe after exec allegedly admitted to religious discrimination
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
FIRST ON FOX — Washington, D.C.’s professional baseball franchise could come under Justice Department scrutiny after a viral video showed a team executive appearing to admit to his religious discrimination against a Christian player.
Rep. Lauren Boebert, R-Colo., is urging Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche and Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Harmeet Dhillon to investigate alleged religious discrimination against players for the Washington Nationals, according to a letter sent Thursday to and first obtained by Fox News Digital.
The letter comes after Project Veritas founder James O’Keefe published a secretly recorded video of Washington Nationals Director of Community Relations Sean Hudson saying the team does not include pitcher Trevor Williams in certain social media promotion.
He cited the player’s public criticism of another Major League Baseball franchise for hosting a drag group mocking Catholics.
Rep. Lauren Boebert, R-Colo., is urging the Department of Justice to investigate alleged religious discrimination within the Washington Nationals organization and across Major League Baseball. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)
EXCLUSIVE: KENTUCKY BARISTA TAKES LEGAL ACTION AFTER TERMINATION, CLAIMS SHE WAS FIRED FOR SHARING HER FAITH
“According to the reporting by James O’Keefe, it appears the Washington Nationals are engaged in unlawful religious discrimination,” Boebert told Fox News Digital in a written statement. “I urge the DOJ to take immediate and decisive action.”
A spokesperson for the Justice Department said they received Boebert’s letter.
“The Department is reviewing the matter and will evaluate all appropriate next steps. As always, we remain committed to enforcing federal law and protecting civil rights,” they told Fox News Digital.
A spokesperson for the Washington Nationals did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Hudson, in the clandestine recording, pointed to Williams’ public objections to the Los Angeles Dodgers honoring the Sisterhood of Perpetual Indulgence — a drag group that dresses as nuns — during the team’s 2023 “Pride Night.
The event also drew condemnation from multiple Catholic bishops, who described it as “blasphemous.”
Trevor Williams of the Washington Nationals sits in the dugout before a game against the Seattle Mariners at T-Mobile Park in Seattle, Wash., on May 28, 2025. (Stephen Brashear/Getty Images)
Williams said he found the group’s anti-Catholic demonstration featuring vulgar caricatures of the crucifixion and sacred rituals to be “deeply offensive,” in an interview with Bishop Robert Barron last year. The professional baseball player said he made the decision with his wife to speak out even though it would put “a target on our back.”
“Baseball stadiums should be a place where everyone feels welcomed, like 100%,” Williams said in the interview. “We should all feel welcomed there. But that was clearly against one certain religion. If you don’t draw the line in the sand, who’s gonna do it?”
According to Hudson, that public criticism of the drag group’s performance later affected Williams’ opportunities at the Nationals franchise.
“Because of that we don’t use him on social [media],” Hudson told an undercover journalist in the video. “When they’re like ‘is a hot dog a sandwich’ and the players come up, we don’t ask him.”
CONGRESSMAN SAYS MLB IS OUSTING TREVOR BAUER DUE TO TRUMP SUPPORT, IN LETTER TO ROB MANFRED
Boebert said she is concerned that Hudson’s admission could mean the franchise violated Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, which prohibits discrimination based on religion and other protected classes.
“Americans of faith should not face professional repercussions for objecting to the mockery of their sacred traditions,” the Colorado Republican said in the letter. “MLB’s privileged legal position should not become a license for exclusionary practices.”
“Sister Unity” and “Sister Dominia” of the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence were honored on Pride Night before the MLB game between the San Francisco Giants and Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles on June 16, 2023. (Brian Rothmuller/Icon Sportswire)
Hudson, in the video, described himself as “far-left leaning” and nonreligious. Meanwhile, he called Williams “super Catholic.”
The Washington Nationals executive also boasted about a Communist Party poster in his office and mused about pushing redistribution of wealth and other leftist agendas during baseball games at Nationals Park in Southeast Washington, D.C.
CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP
“What a cool opportunity for us [Nationals] to also, be a little bit of like, the voice of reason,” Hudson said. “And a lot of people will tell you when I come to a baseball game, I don’t want to think about that s–t.”
“If you’re a sports fan and we piss you off, where else are you gonna go,” he went on. “I don’t give a sh–t.”
Washington, D.C
‘Gateway to our city’: $465M grant to renovate Union Station
U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy announced Thursday hundreds of millions of dollars to help with what he says are critical structural repairs and upgrades for D.C.’s Union Station.
“It was built in 1908, over a hundred years ago, and it was the largest train station in the world when it was built,” Duffy said. “And over the course of decades, it’s become run-down,” Duffy said.
A $465 million grant aims to ensure the overall experience for those coming and going remains up to par and on track at the transit hub. It will help fast-track repairs like roof upgrades and passenger concourses, Duffy said.
The project includes the Amtrak lounge and the ticket experience.
For some travelers, alternatives to fast food are a must.
Retail, parking and office spaces will be priorities of the project to maximize the station’s revenue, as will public safety.
Already, Columbus Fountain is flowing again after being broken and dry for almost two decades.
“Now when you come out of Union Station, the gateway to our city, you’ll be met with a fountain that is beautiful and a fountain that actually works,” Duffy said.
-
Movie Reviews7 minutes agoFilm Review: “Pitfall” – MediaMikes
-
World17 minutes ago
AI helped a musician with Parkinson’s finish his new album when he could no longer play guitar
-
News22 minutes agoVideo: Judge Orders Removal of Trump’s Name From Kennedy Center
-
Lifestyle59 minutes agoBack from Cannes, a critic shares the films he’s most excited to see again
-
Technology1 hour agoNvidia, Microsoft, and Arm are all teasing Nvidia’s new N1X laptop processors
-
World1 hour agoChristian farming communities under siege as US report names Fulani militants Nigeria’s deadliest threat
-
Politics1 hour agoFBI arrests protester who threatened to kill ICE officer’s family at NJ detention center protest, Blanche says
-
Health1 hour agoControversial drug delivered rapid relief for severe depression in just hours

