Quote:
Originally Posted by PHLJD13
Whatever happened to our "Night Mayor"
Biggest joke ever.
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Philadelphia was far more 24-7 pre-COVID, and even moreso pre the post-recession boom of 2010 to present. I think this is generally true across major cities: the more affluent and gentrified they become, the more certain 24-7 staples go away. Counterintuitive perhaps given how much the aggregate spending power of CC's population has gone up, but affluence brings NIMBYism and pearl clutching and also just a lot of more established people who aren't looking for places to go between 1am and 5am.
When I was first going out in Philly in the early 2000's (illegally, because no one ever carded), I had a mental list of all the after hours spots around town. The major nightlife neighborhoods all had at least one if not several places that the party could continue past 2am. Now I can think of Voyeur and...Pen and Pencil, if they still stay open that late? And then of course the diners. All the Midtowns, Little Pete's, etc...again, whether you were out on South Street, in Old City, in Center City, there was somewhere you could go sitdown for food at any hour.
In the most recent pre-COVID boom we got a different kind of 24-7 vibe starting to emerge. Wawa pushed into the city (how quickly that cycle reversed!) and while it's not quite a diner, there were suddenly have a dozen wawa's open 24-7, and a handful of CVS and RiteAids open all night. Then the MFL and BSL started running 24-7 on weekends and whenever I rode it it was mostly civilized (perhaps a little drunken, but usually in a fun way), an incredibly far cry from today. I would take the MFL at 3am in 2019 over the MFL at 7pm in 2024 any day.
This is all to say that while COVID obviously accelerated certain closures and made certain business models untenable, I think Philly's been losing its overnight edge for several decades. I imagine New Yorkers would concur. NYC is still far more constant and late night than Philly, but as it's gotten wealthier the overnight economy has shifted and probably shrunk.