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Manchester’s New Year’s Eve firework display halted by tram in wrong place.
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Revellers have to wait until four minutes past midnight to celebrate arrival of 2015 after tram pulls into firework zone.
Fireworks finally got going in Manchester after two failed countdowns. Photograph: Boris Grdanoski/AP
Timing is everything when it comes to the new year countdown. So
when an entire city centre had to wait for four minutes for a tram
driver to get out of the way before festivities could start, it got
slightly awkward.
Deemed “excruciating” by one spectator, the lag in Manchester to join
the rest of the UK in welcoming in 2015 followed a well-timed countdown
aided by a giant clock in the city’s Piccadilly Gardens.
“Five, four, three, two, one. Let’s have the fireworks!” ordered the show’s host, but after a massive roar, nothing happened.
In footage of the event, people in the crowd can be heard wondering
where they are supposed to look, and sarcastically remarking:
“Interesting fireworks!”
At about 90 seconds past midnight, the host tells the 15,000-strong
crowd there is a small problem. “Right folks, just a small hitch,” the
announcer says to the sound of booing. “We’re just waiting for a tram to
go out.”
He added: “Get out of the way of the fireworks, Mr Tram.”
Organisers later confirmed that the tram had pulled into the firework
“fallout” zone just at the wrong moment, halting the display for safety
reasons.
After another failed countdown and more booing, another person in the
crowd can be heard saying: “It’ll be another three hours before this
stupid tram moves.”
Dan Thompson, an investigative journalist at the Manchester Evening News (MEN), described the wait as excruciating before the display, set to a soundtrack of Take That’s Greatest Day, finally got going in earnest.
It is only the second year the city has held a pyrotechnic display in its centre. The council’s city centre spokesman Pat Karney told the MEN:
“It was a fabulous Manchester crowd, the biggest we’ve ever had for a
firework display. The tram delay added extra excitement and suspense to
the occasion. I’ll leave it to the transport authority to check what
happened.”
theguardian.
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