It was quite the Sunday Funday for Jason Kelce.
The retired Eagles center let loose Sunday with Philadelphia fans in California, according to social media videos that featured the future Hall of Famer living his best life as the Birds demolished the rival Cowboys in Dallas, 34-6.
In one video, the 37-year-old Kelce is seen behind the bar of a Santa Monica establishment appearing to take drink orders from fans.
Jason Kelce celebrated as the Eagles improved to 7-2 on the season.New Heights/X
The ESPN analyst also sang the Eagles’ fight song, “Fly, Eagles, Fly,” high-fived fans and snapped photos as Philly improved to 7-2 on the season.
The Rams are hosting the Dolphins on “Monday Night Football” in Los Angeles this week, and Kelce — in his first season on ESPN’s “Monday Night Countdown” — is part of the pregame coverage.
Kelce hung up his cleats in March after 13 seasons with the Eagles that included a Super Bowl win.
Jason Kelce made headlines earlier this month over a phone-slamming incident.X/@LASHYBILLS
A fan heckled the retired Eagles center by using a homophobic slur when referencing Travis Kelce’s romance with Taylor Swift.X/@LASHYBILLS
The seven-time Pro Bowler is coming off what’s been a dramatic week, in which he made headlines for tossing a fan’s phone to the ground on Penn State’s campus after they used a homophobic slur toward his younger brother, Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, for his high-profile romance with pop superstar Taylor Swift.
The scene unraveled in University Park, Pennsylvania, earlier this month, when a fan said, “Kelce how does it feel that your brother is a f—–t for dating Taylor Swift?”
Upon hearing the derogatory comment, Kelce turned around, grabbed the mobile device and slammed it to the ground.
Jason Kelce addressed the incident on “Monday Night Countdown” on Nov. 4, 2024.Getty Images
Kelce expressed regret over the incident on the Nov. 4 edition of “Monday Night Countdown.”
“I think everybody’s seen on social media the thing that took place this week. Listen, I’m not happy with anything that took place. I’m not proud of it. In a heated moment, I chose to greet hate with hate, and I just don’t think that that’s a productive thing. I really don’t. I don’t think it leads to discourse, and it’s the right way to go about things, and in that moment I fell down to a level that I shouldn’t have,” Kelce said.
The Eagles legend expanded on the ordeal during Wednesday’s installment of the “New Heights” podcast he co-hosts with Travis, who praised his brother for taking accountability.
“The real situation is you had some f–king clown come up to you and talk about your family and you reacted in a way that was defending your family and you might’ve used some words that you regret using and that’s you just gotta kind of learn from and own and I think you owning it and speaking about it shows how sincere you are to a lot of people on this world and it shows what you said on Monday night. You don’t choose that. That’s just not who you are. I love you brother and I think you said that perfectly,” Travis said.
It’s all about family when it comes to the Kelces, who are already getting into the holiday spirit with help from Stevie Nicks.
Last week, the dynamic duo dropped their “Maybe This Christmas” duet as part of Kelce’s “A Philly Special Christmas Party” album.
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