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After Record Heat, A Reminder That Summer Safety Matters

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The Jersey Review -2026 July 4th Heat Wave

For many New Jersey families, the Fourth of July weekend is about beach days, backyard barbecues, fireworks, and time with loved ones. This year, however, the holiday also served as a sobering reminder that summer’s greatest danger isn’t always visible. Following several days of record-breaking temperatures across New Jersey, state health officials reported multiple suspected heat-related deaths, many involving people who were alone, without air conditioning, or especially vulnerable to prolonged exposure. As temperatures begin to ease, it’s tempting to think the danger has passed.

It hasn’t.

Extreme heat is often called the “silent weather emergency” because it doesn’t arrive with the drama of a hurricane or the warning sirens of a tornado. Instead, it quietly places stress on the human body, especially older adults, young children, outdoor workers, people with chronic medical conditions, and anyone spending long periods in direct sunlight.

The encouraging news is that many heat-related illnesses can be prevented with simple precautions.

Stay Ahead of Thirst

One of the biggest mistakes people make is waiting until they feel thirsty before drinking water. By then, the body may already be dehydrated. Whether you’re spending the day at the beach, cutting the lawn, or enjoying a neighborhood cookout, drinking water regularly throughout the day can make a significant difference.

Check on Someone Who Lives Alone

Sometimes the most important safety measure isn’t for yourself. It’s for someone else. Many of the most serious heat-related incidents occur when elderly residents or those with mobility challenges are isolated inside homes that become dangerously hot. Health officials said several of the recent suspected victims were found in homes without air conditioning. A quick phone call or knock on the door can take only a few minutes, but it could make a lasting difference.

Don’t Forget Pets

Dogs can overheat far more quickly than many people realize. Pavement temperatures can become hot enough to burn paws, parked vehicles can reach life-threatening temperatures within minutes, and fresh water and shade are just as important for pets as they are for people.

Respect the Sun

Even after the hottest days pass, July sun remains intense. Sunscreen, lightweight clothing, hats, and periodic breaks in the shade help reduce the risk of heat exhaustion and sunburn, especially during the middle of the afternoon.

Know the Warning Signs

Heat exhaustion often begins with heavy sweating, dizziness, weakness, nausea, headaches, or muscle cramps. If those symptoms progress to confusion, fainting, or a person stops sweating despite the heat, it may signal heat stroke, a medical emergency that requires immediate attention.

Looking Out for One Another

One of the strengths of New Jersey communities has always been neighbors helping neighbors. Summer safety isn’t only about government advisories or weather forecasts. It’s about paying attention to the people around us. Checking on an elderly neighbor. Offering water to someone working outdoors. Making sure children take breaks from the sun. Looking after a friend before they drive home after a long day on the beach. Those small acts of awareness often matter more than we realize. Summer is one of New Jersey’s greatest seasons. Our beaches, boardwalks, parks, and neighborhoods come alive in ways that make this state special.

With a little preparation and a willingness to look out for one another, we can help ensure that this summer is remembered for family memories—not preventable tragedies.

Evan Blaze is a Jersey Shore based editor and writer focused on coastal culture, local arts, and the evolving character of communities along the New Jersey coastline. With a background shaped by years spent around the water and small creative circles along the shore, he brings a grounded perspective to stories about music, independent film, neighborhood businesses, and the people who keep local culture alive. Known for balancing a laid-back coastal sensibility with a sharp editorial eye, Evan works to highlight authentic voices and emerging talent across the region. His work often explores the intersection of surf culture, live music, and the everyday rhythm of shore towns, capturing the energy that defines life along the Atlantic. When he’s not editing stories or working with contributors, he can usually be found near the water, checking the surf, walking the boardwalk at sunrise, or tracking down the next local story worth telling.

Editorial

The Greatest Generation Built America. Who Will Build the Next 250 Years?

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The Jersey Review 250th USA

Next year, America will celebrate its 250th birthday.

For a nation that has weathered wars, economic depressions, scientific breakthroughs, and generations of change, the milestone offers more than fireworks and parades. It presents an opportunity to pause and ask an important question:

What kind of country are we leaving to the next generation?

Much has been written about the “Greatest Generation,” those Americans who endured the Great Depression, fought in World War II, returned home, built businesses, raised families, and helped create decades of prosperity. Their legacy can still be seen in our highways, neighborhoods, schools, churches, and small businesses.

But every generation faces challenges unique to its own time.

Today’s Americans are navigating rising housing costs, changing technology, an evolving job market, and economic uncertainty. Many families have relied on some form of temporary assistance at different points in their lives, whether through unemployment benefits, disaster relief, food assistance, veterans’ programs, scholarships, or help from local charities. There should be no shame in accepting help when life takes an unexpected turn. Communities are often strongest when neighbors lift one another up during difficult seasons.

The larger question is what comes next.

How do we create a society that not only helps people through hardship but also encourages opportunity, independence, and long-term success? That conversation deserves thoughtful discussion, not political slogans. Families remain the first place where values are taught. Parents and grandparents often pass down lessons about responsibility, perseverance, generosity, and service long before children enter a classroom. Churches, synagogues, mosques, and other faith communities continue serving millions through food pantries, mentoring programs, counseling, addiction recovery, and volunteer outreach. These institutions frequently meet needs that government programs alone cannot address. Teachers, coaches, employers, and local business owners also play important roles. A first job, a trusted mentor, or someone willing to take a chance on a young worker can change the course of a life. Small businesses, in particular, have long been engines of opportunity in communities across New Jersey. They don’t simply create jobs. They teach skills, build confidence, and provide stepping stones for future entrepreneurs.

Self-reliance and compassion do not have to compete with one another. A healthy society can value both. Helping a struggling neighbor while encouraging personal growth is not a contradiction. It is often how strong communities have always operated. As America approaches its semiquincentennial, perhaps the greatest tribute we can pay to previous generations is not simply remembering what they built. It is continuing the work. That work may look different today than it did in 1946 or 1976. It may involve new technologies, different careers, and changing economic realities. But the principles that have strengthened communities for generations remain remarkably familiar: hard work, personal responsibility, strong families, engaged neighborhoods, and people willing to invest in one another.

The next 250 years of American history will not be written by governments alone.

They will be written by parents raising children with character, teachers inspiring curiosity, employers opening doors, volunteers serving quietly, entrepreneurs taking risks, and neighbors helping neighbors when life becomes difficult.

History remembers the generations that build.

The question now is whether ours will be remembered as one of them.

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Editorial

Summer at the Shore: The Return of Classic American Coastal Style

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The Jersey Review

Every summer, the Jersey Shore becomes a stage.

From the boardwalks of Belmar and Point Pleasant to the sidewalks of Spring Lake and Sea Girt, people step back into a tradition that is as much a part of Shore culture as salt air and ice cream cones: dressing well for summer.

Not flashy.

Not loud.

Not driven by whatever trend appeared online last week.

Instead, the Shore’s most enduring style remains rooted in something timeless: classic American coastal fashion blended with generations of European influence.

The Formula Hasn’t Changed

For men, the look is remarkably simple:

  • Linen shirts
  • Lightweight chinos
  • Tailored shorts
  • Polo shirts
  • Crisp button-downs
  • Loafers and boat shoes

Navy, white, khaki, and soft coastal colors continue to dominate because they simply work.

They look clean. They age well. They never feel out of place.

The most stylish people at the Shore are often the ones who appear to be trying the least.

Effortless Never Goes Out of Style

A white linen shirt.

A pair of loafers.

A lightweight navy sport coat for dinner.

These pieces have survived decades because they never truly go out of fashion.

For women, the same philosophy applies.

Flowing summer dresses, tasteful patterns, natural fabrics, and timeless silhouettes continue to define Shore elegance. Whether it’s dinner overlooking the water or an evening stroll along the boardwalk, the look remains polished without feeling formal.

A Tradition Passed Down Through Generations

Part of what makes Jersey Shore style unique is its cultural foundation.

Many Shore communities were built by families whose roots trace back to Italy, Ireland, Germany, Poland, and other parts of Europe. Along with recipes and traditions came a belief that presentation mattered.

Dressing well wasn’t about showing off.

It was about self-respect.

You can still see that mindset today.

Grandparents, parents, and grandchildren may wear different brands, but they often share the same appreciation for quality, fit, and timeless style.

Why It Still Works

Fashion trends come and go.

Social media constantly declares a new must-have item.

Yet every summer, the classic look returns.

Clean lines.

Quality materials.

Confidence without excess.

As outdoor dining patios fill, live music drifts through beach towns, and families gather for evenings on the boardwalk, the Shore naturally encourages people to put a little more thought into how they present themselves.

Not because they have to.

Because they want to.

The Jersey Shore Look for 2026

This summer, the winning formula remains the same:

✔ Linen over logos
✔ Fit over flash
✔ Timeless over trendy
✔ Quality over quantity

Some traditions survive because they work.

At the Jersey Shore, classic style remains one of them.

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Celebrity

TESD, Q, and the Great NJ Fame Wall Conspiracy: Did They Finally Notice The Jersey Review?

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The Jersey Review - Tell Em' Steve- Dave, Impractical Jokers, Brian Quinn

There are certain moments in New Jersey entertainment culture where reality begins to blur into pure Jersey mythology. A casual podcast conversation turns into a weeks-long debate. A throwaway joke becomes local folklore. And somehow, against all odds, everyone ends up arguing about Ernie O’Donnell again.

Which brings us to the latest episode of Tell ’Em Steve-Dave! and what may or may not be the beginning of the greatest cultural controversy in modern New Jersey history:

Did TESD secretly launch a campaign to get onto The Jersey Review Fame Wall?

We’re just asking questions here.

Because after Episode #672, “Now You’re Fabio,” listeners quickly noticed something unusual: The Jersey Review got mentioned inside the sacred TESD universe. Now, for most podcasts, that would just be a nice little shoutout.

But this is TESD. Nothing is ever normal.

Especially when Impractical Jokers star Brian Quinn is involved.

Longtime listeners already know that Q exists in a rare category of New Jersey-adjacent fame. He’s simultaneously:

  • one of the most recognizable faces in American Comedy,
  • one of the funniest podcasters “kind of running a show in Jersey territory,”
  • and somehow still feels like a guy you’d randomly run into arguing about horror movies at a diner in Hazlet at 1:00 a.m with Jersey folks.

Which honestly makes him a consideration for our New Jersey Fame Wall. Normally, Fame Wall candidates must formally submit through info@thejerseyreview.com and pass the Jersey Review Smell Test. But for Q, we may need to convene an emergency committee.

And yet… nobody from TESD has formally requested induction yet. Suspicious.

The Jersey Review -Ernie O'Donnell

Of course, once the conversation drifted into Jersey personalities and local legends, there was only one inevitable apparent destination: Ernie O’Donnell.

At this point, the “Ernie Debate” deserves protected historical status in New Jersey. TESD fans have spent plenty of time trying to determine whether Ernie is:

  • a cult comedy genius,
  • a chaos magnet,
  • the same guy who takes care of droves of children down at the local movie theatre,
  • a misunderstood icon,
  • the lighthouse that keeps Kevin Smith (Clerks, Dogma, Jersey Girl) returning to Jersey every month, 
  • a suspiciously capable carpenter,
  • or the single most Jersey human being ever created.

The answer somehow continues to be… only Ernie truly knows. 

What makes TESD special is that it still feels local in the best possible way. It feels Jersey. Even with massive audiences and years of podcast success, the show still sounds like old friends from Jersey (and Q, lol) sitting around making each other LAUGH until the conversation completely derails. And goes a little too south for general audiences.

That authenticity is why people love it. 

It also explains why the possibility of Q, Walt, or even Bry himself appearing on the NJ Fame Wall suddenly feels weirdly plausible.

And honestly? It could happen. Submissions come in regularly.

Because the Fame Wall was never just about traditional celebrities. It’s always been about those shining stars, the people who are worthy of celebration for just being part of New Jersey culture itself. The personalities who represent the strange, funny, loyal, sarcastic energy that makes this state feel different from everywhere else. Those New Jerseyians that pass our smell test, and most of the time, it’s one strong whiff, and it’s either, “yup, she’s Jersey,” or “nope, not on our watch.”

TESD is definitely worth a submission, but none have been received to date.

The truth is, New Jersey has always had two entertainment industries:

  1. the official one,
  2. and the weird local one everybody actually talks about.

We have famous people from both. Which one TESD belongs to is probably still being debated, and that’s exactly what makes it fun.

So yes, we noticed the mention.

Yes, the NJ Fame Wall doors remain open… but heavily guarded. ;P

And yes, Q may currently be under highly classified internal review for “advanced Jersey icon status by the sheer mention of close professional association with NJ Fame Wall Star, Ernie O’Donnell, but only time will tell.”

As for Ernie O’Donnell?

The debate continues everywhere else. Here, however, the wall has spoken.  As it should.

Here he sits in New Jersey, watching movies with an old friend, still half-kid at heart, tucked behind the public wall of the theater that shaped them.

The Jersey Review - Tell Em Steve
Ernie O’Donnell and Kevin Smith inside their Atlantic Highlands movie theater, the childhood movie house where they once watched stories from the audience and now help keep the magic alive from behind the wall.
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