Shop the exclusive 'Bodega KAT' T-shirt inspired by Karl-Anthony Towns' nickname. Perfect for Knicks fans and streetwear enthusiasts who lov

#dc#dc comics#batman#bruce wayne#dick grayson#batfamily#batfam#tim drake#dc fanart





seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Argentina
seen from China
seen from Türkiye
seen from Türkiye
seen from Brazil

seen from United States

seen from Argentina

seen from Australia

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from Russia
seen from China

seen from United States
Shop the exclusive 'Bodega KAT' T-shirt inspired by Karl-Anthony Towns' nickname. Perfect for Knicks fans and streetwear enthusiasts who lov

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Shop the exclusive 'Bodega KAT' T-shirt inspired by Karl-Anthony Towns' nickname. Perfect for Knicks fans and streetwear enthusiasts who lov
Shop the exclusive 'Bodega KAT' T-shirt inspired by Karl-Anthony Towns' nickname. Perfect for Knicks fans and streetwear enthusiasts who lov
How New York City Celebrated the Knicks' First Championship in Over 50 Years
Fifty-three years is a long time to wait for a parade. For anyone who wants to understand exactly which players and trades finally got the Knicks back to the top, that breakdown is worth a read on its own. But this story is about what happened after the final buzzer — when an entire city, not just an arena, erupted.
The Moment It Became Real
When Jalen Brunson's floater put New York ahead for good in the closing minute of Game 5, Madison Square Garden wasn't even the epicenter of the celebration — the team was in San Antonio. Instead, it was the streets surrounding the World's Most Famous Arena, along with bars and living rooms across the five boroughs, that absorbed five decades of pent-up tension in one go. Tens of thousands of fans poured into the area north of the Garden as the final seconds ticked away, and the celebration ran well into the early morning hours.
It wasn't entirely tidy. The NYPD reported 63 arrests connected to the night's festivities, citing incidents that ranged from disorderly conduct to more serious offenses as the crowd grew increasingly rowdy as the night wore on. It's the kind of footnote that tends to accompany championship celebrations of this scale — exuberance occasionally tipping into chaos — but it didn't dampen the broader mood. By Sunday morning, the team had flown back into Westchester County Airport with the trophy in hand, and the city had already shifted its attention to planning something it had genuinely never done before.
A First-Ever Parade for a Franchise That Waited Its Whole Life
Here's a detail that surprises even longtime fans: the Knicks had never had a ticker-tape parade. When the team won its previous titles in 1970 and 1973, New York City didn't mark the occasion with the kind of Broadway procession reserved for the Yankees, Mets, or Giants. This time was different. New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani announced a parade for Thursday, June 18, running the traditional route up the Canyon of Heroes — starting near Battery Park, heading north along Broadway, and finishing at City Hall, where the roster received the Keys to the City.
Mamdani's announcement leaned into exactly what made the wait so distinctive, describing a fan base that had cheered through living rooms in the Bronx, watch parties in Brooklyn, and bars stretching from Queens to Staten Island without ever losing faith in the team. Players echoed the moment in their own way — both Brunson and Josh Hart used their public platforms in the days after the win to ask fans to celebrate safely, a small but telling sign of how aware the team was of the scale of what they'd unlocked.
A City-Wide Phenomenon, Not Just a Basketball Story
What made the celebration distinct from a typical title run was how far it spread beyond the arena itself. Watch parties packed bars in every borough, Times Square filled with fans in orange and blue over the weekend, and according to a recap from CBS News New York, city officials braced for one of the largest Canyon of Heroes turnouts in recent memory, with road closures and heavy security planned well in advance along the parade route. The mayor's office even confirmed there would be no day off from public schools for the parade itself — a minor logistical note that nonetheless underscored just how disruptive, in the best possible way, this celebration was shaping up to be for the entire city.
The Canyon of Heroes itself carries its own history as a New York institution — a stretch of Lower Manhattan that has hosted ticker-tape parades for everyone from World Series champions to returning astronauts. According to Wikipedia's overview of the tradition, the route has been used for more than a century to honor the city's biggest moments, which makes the Knicks' inclusion in that list feel less like a one-off and more like a long-overdue rite of passage.
What Fans Were Saying
Talk to anyone who'd followed the Knicks through the lean years, and the emotional through-line was the same: relief mixed with disbelief. Mamdani himself captured that sentiment when describing what the moment meant to New Yorkers who had grown up hearing "this could be our year" only to watch it slip away again and again — language that resonated because it wasn't coming from a marketing department, it was coming from someone who'd lived the drought alongside everyone else.
A Party That's Still Going
By the time Thursday's parade steps off from Battery Park, the celebration will have already stretched across more than a week — bar nights, a flight home with the trophy, a wave of orange and blue across the subway system, and now a formal procession through Lower Manhattan. For a fan base that waited 53 years, New York didn't just celebrate a championship. It celebrated the end of a very long, very specific kind of patience — and judging by the size of the crowds, nobody in the city was in a hurry to let the moment pass quietly.
Madison Square Garden was filled to the rafters (or at least the first few rows) with celebrities during Game 4 of the NBA finals.
Read More

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
GaryVee: Jordan poster for $3 hated it but had to show the kids the #fliplife is real .. #knicks #knicksfans
View On WordPress
Just opened a bunch of Christmas Presents 🎁 headed to the Knick Game #knickstape #knicksfans #headedtothegarden #headedtomsg #thegripplife #christmas2021 https://www.instagram.com/moneygripp13/p/CX6iybMJ6vE/?utm_medium=tumblr
Breakin' Balls On The Street with New York Knicks Fans. We’ll be back this Sunday, Nov. 7th talking to Knicks fans in front of the Garden. Pull up