NEW YORK, Dec. 31, 2006

Times Square Bash Could Break Records

Huge Crowds Expected For New Year's Eve Celebration In New York

  • Eddie Rodriguez and Alberto Ibanez install some of the 72 new Waterford crystal

    Eddie Rodriguez and Alberto Ibanez install some of the 72 new Waterford crystal "Hope For Peace" triangles on the Times Square New Year's Eve ball on the rooftop of One Times Square Wednesday, Dec. 27, 2006, in New York. The six-foot diameter, 1,070 pound crystal ball will serve as the centerpiece of the Times Square 2007 celebration.  (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

(AP)  At least a million revelers are expected to flood New York's Times Square Sunday evening for a celebration that will attempt to wash away thoughts of world conflict with a tumult of music, glitz and celebrity star power.

Those who come will find New York City at what may be the peak of its prosperity and appeal to tourists.

With relatively warm temperatures in the low 40s expected, this year could be a record-breaker on several counts, organizers said. Crowds are expected to pack Broadway all the way to Central Park.

An unprecedented 3.5 tons of confetti will be dumped on the crowd during the evening. Visitors are expected to spend tens of millions of dollars on food, booze and souvenirs, capping what some are calling the city's busiest tourism year ever.

"When you think about five years ago, when we had our first New Year's Eve after 9/11, there were two questions on everyone's mind: Was there going to be another attack, and was New York going to make it?" said Tim Tompkins, president of the Times Square Alliance, which co-organizes the party.

"That's so far removed from where New York is now," he said.

Indeed. Rooms with a view of the square at Doubletree Guest Suites are going for $2,000 for this year's celebration. The same rooms normally go for between $200 and $700, depending on the time of year.

Tables at Foley's Fish House, which has a panoramic view just above the crowd in the Marriott Renaissance New York Hotel, have sold out at a cost of between $750 and $1,000 per person for the evening, said Marriott spokeswoman Kathleen Duffy.

This year's celebration is shaping up to be a made-for-TV bonanza like never before.

More than a dozen major acts will perform on three different stages during the evening, including pop singer Christina Aguilera, the rap group Three 6 Mafia, country band Rascal Flatts, R&B singer Toni Braxton and the cast of the Broadway musical "Jersey Boys."

Lesser known entertainers will start performing as early as 6 p.m., when the famously flashy New Year's Eve Ball is raised to the top of a flagpole.

The explosion of live acts is a recent phenomenon, fueled by fierce competition for viewers by the television networks, several of which have arranged their own entertainment on their own stage.

"If you're actually here, you get nonstop entertainment for six hours, whereas a few years ago, you would literally sit there and chatter your teeth," said Tompkins.

Dick Clark will be back for ABC's "New Year's Rockin' Eve" broadcast for the second time since a stroke caused him to skip a broadcast in 2004.

His appearance last year was an abbreviated one in which he acknowledged that his illness had left him in "bad shape," but Clark's spokesman, Paul Shefrin, said the icon was doing better and planned to lead the countdown to midnight.

"As each day or each month goes by, he improves a bit," Shefrin said. "He looks forward to being on the air, and I hope that people feel the same way."

As usual, the pinnacle of the evening will be the drop of the ball at 11:59 p.m. to mark the last 60 seconds of 2006, followed by much cheering and kissing.

Security will be tightened in Times Square for the celebration. Revelers will have to pass through police checkpoints. No bags or backpacks will be permitted and bomb sniffing dogs will roam the crowd.

Public drinking is once again banned, and visitors will be corralled in a series of viewing pens that curtail their ability to bar hop until the show ends.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg said this week that revelers would be "safer in Times Square on New Year's Eve than anyplace else," but insisted that tight security won't spoil the show.

"The ball drops and people scream and the confetti comes down and the fireworks go up and the band plays. And its just ... its about as American and New York a thing as you can possibly do," he said.

"Come early," he added.


©MMVI, The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by cbtbcd12 January 1, 2007 4:29 AM EST
HAPPY NEW YEAR FROM WISCONSIN....2007....WOW...Y2K seemed like yesterday...TIME IS A FLY'IN
Reply to this comment
by mick7744 January 1, 2007 3:34 AM EST
RandalDS:

We are celebrating making it into another year where even a small bit of hope for a better tomorrow defies all logic, but yet endures.

If it were to be seriously thought out, if the facts and realities of our existence were to be viewed logically and dispassionately, we'd all probably just take the pipe...that final act of despair, which all major religions agree is the one unpardonable sin.

As the hapless theater owner in %u201CShakespeare in Love%u201D assures us, %u201CIt will all turn out to be well in the end.%u201D

%u201CHow?%u201D

%u201CI don%u2019t know%u2026it%u2019s a mystery.%u201D

Sometimes it's better to simply shut up and cheer up.

HAPPY NEW YEAR!
Reply to this comment
by randalds January 1, 2007 1:44 AM EST
What does your comment have to do with New Year?
It is a pity you are such a sad person. Look on the bright side!




Posted by Jeff92706 at 01:07 PM : Dec 31, 2006

Until Bush is gone there is no bright side and nothing to celebrate.
Reply to this comment
by zykracosmos December 31, 2006 11:13 PM EST
Happy New Year to all of you bloggers out there! Join in a sense of optimism that we are still capable of solving our problems, changing our course as we need to for the survival of all humanity, and pursuing peace and happiness in all the right ways. We are still masters of our own destiny on this beautiful little blue ball we call Earth. May 2007 be the year that we all step forward with a sense of compassion for others, a realistic dedication to preventing the destruction of our life support systems, and the understanding that we are all in this boat together. Wishing the very best to all the people of the world.. our family of humanity.
Reply to this comment
by elgraz December 31, 2006 8:24 PM EST
You can't win them all amigos. Be thankful you are alive in this screwed up world.
Reply to this comment
by canaima December 31, 2006 2:25 PM EST
We celebrate it because it's the New Year, Randal.

D'Oh!
Reply to this comment
by randalds December 31, 2006 10:33 AM EST
What do we have to celebrate? 3000 dead troops in Iraq? How about a few hundred thousand Iraqi civilians? Of course they don't really count since according to Bush it's not like they're real human beings.

Still go ahead and mark the occasion. Mark it as instead of humanity being one step closer to peace, thanks to Bush and his supporters we've gone two steps back to the dark ages.
Reply to this comment

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