Minneapolis, MN
Minnesota weather: Warm weekend ahead, cold again next week
MN weather: Warm weekend before cold returns again
Saturday is shaping up to be a fantastic December day. FOX 9 Meteorologist Jared Piepenburg has the full forecast.
MINNEAPOLIS (FOX 9) – Saturday is shaping up to be a fantastic December day.
Saturday forecast
Temperatures will be well above average with parts of the state reaching the mid and upper 40s.
There will be dry weather on Saturday, but a system will bring a chance of snow and wintry mix to northern Minnesota on Sunday.
Looking ahead
Monday will be a transition day when we leave the warmer and milder temperatures and head toward another cold snap.
Winds are expected to pick up Monday and eventually draw in much colder air for Tuesday through Thursday.
Most of this forecast stays dry.
Watch for a little dusting or flurries as the surge of cold air arrives next week.
Here’s a look at today’s highs and the seven-day forecast:
The Source: A FOX 9 weather forecast.
Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis honors Prince with concerts, block parties and new museum
Prince fans will paint Minneapolis purple this weekend as concerts, block parties and a new museum opening celebrate his musical legacy and what would have been his 68th birthday Sunday.
In St. Paul, roller skaters will head to Rice Park for a weekly disco night, while a new exhibit at Indigenous Roots showcases work by Black and Indigenous artists. In Maplewood, food trucks will roll into the Asian Street Food Night Market.
A weekend tribute to Prince
Fans will have multiple opportunities to celebrate Prince across Minneapolis this weekend. A concert at the Armory will bring together members of his backing bands alongside performers Morris Day, Miguel, Bilal and more.
Saturday’s events include a block party and sing-along at the downtown Prince mural, followed by late-night gatherings at Union Rooftop and First Avenue. On Sunday, fans can take part in a Lake Minnetonka tribute cruise.
This weekend also marks the grand opening of the People’s Museum for Prince at Roberts Gallery in north Minneapolis. The museum’s “Let’s Work! A Labor of Love” exhibit at the Capri features artwork created by community members inspired by Prince’s life and music.
Date: Friday, June 5 through Sunday, June 7
Time: Various times for different events
Location: Various locations across Minneapolis and Chanhassen
Cost: Varies by event
For more information: Visit princecelebration2026.com

Artists reflect on humanity’s ties to nature
A new exhibit at Indigenous Roots brings together Black and brown artists from the Twin Cities to explore the natural world as a source of guidance.
“Force of Nature” is the curatorial debut of Afro-Indigenous artist Dizi Lawrence. The show features more than 25 works that examine humanity’s complex relationships with land, water, wildlife and plant life.
“Nature itself, and the Earth are teachers,” Lawrence said. “In this time in particular — from a social and political lens — we have so many questions of how to solve certain problems or how to move through certain tragedies. The Earth holds a lot of the answers that we seek.”
The concept for the exhibit grew after Lawrence participated in “Where the Seed Remembers,” a group show at the Minnesota Arboretum.
The exhibit includes a range of media, from collage work by Pau Perez to three-dimensional pieces by Jaali Griffin, along with large-scale paintings by Maiya Lea Hartman and Linnea Kingbird-Martini.
Lawrence will also present 11 of her own paintings, shaped by her interest in Indigenous ways of living and Christian creation stories, including Genesis, Adam and Eve and the Garden of Eden.
Indigenous communities “have origin stories that completely encapsulate a reciprocal relationship to nature,” she said. “I would like people to come away from [“Force of Nature”] examining their own relationship to nature and honoring all the ways that it provides for us.”
The opening reception on Saturday will feature poetry readings from Kira Bunkholt and Isavela Lopez; live music from Jada Lynn and Brandyn Lee Tulloch; and a performance by the Mexica Aztec dance group Kalpulli Yaocenoxtli. Plant-based meals will be catered by Heal Minneapolis.
Date: Saturday, June 6 through July 26
Time: Opening reception from 6 to 9 p.m. on Saturday. Regular gallery hours from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday.
Location: Indigenous Roots, 788 E. 7th St., St. Paul
Cost: Free
For more information: Visit tinyurl.com/dizilawrence.

Skating and disco at Rice Park
An annual roller-skating series, “Roller Disco,” returns this Friday with free skate rentals, music by DJ Presto, line dancing led by Coach Rahn Oz and food trucks. Twin Cities Skaters also plan to introduce themed skating nights later in the summer.

Three days of street food, music and dance
The Asian Street Food Night Market returns to the Pan Asian Center in Maplewood for a three-day festival.
The weekend will feature a talent show, lion dances, a beer garden, and music and dance performances. More than 35 food vendors will serve Thai dishes, sushi, egg rolls, Korean corn dogs and more.
When: 5 to 10 p.m. Friday, June 5. 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday, June 6. 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday, June 7
Where: 3001 White Bear Ave., Maplewood
Cost: Free
Minneapolis, MN
For Minneapolis reporters, Operation Metro Surge was a reckoning – Poynter
For weeks, reporters at The Minnesota Star Tribune were covering scattered immigration enforcement actions around Minneapolis and St. Paul. Tom Scheck, the paper’s investigative editor, had assigned his small team of about four journalists to the story.
“We were trying to cover events, but they were not like 30, 40 people who were being detained. It was like more one-offs,” Scheck said.
Then, on Jan. 7, Renee Good was shot and killed by immigration enforcement officers as she tried to drive away from them.
“Our executive editor looked at me and said, ‘Well, what are we going to do?’ And I said, ‘I have four people.’ And that was a moment where she said, “Everyone in our newsroom will cover this story.”’
It marked a turning point in news coverage of Operation Metro Surge, the federal immigration crackdown that brought thousands of immigration officers to Minneapolis and St. Paul last winter.
During a community conversation hosted by Poynter on Wednesday night, Scheck and MPR News senior photojournalist Kerem Yücel reflected on what it was like to cover the operation as local journalists — and, in Yücel’s case, as an immigrant.
Both described a city transformed by the scale of the federal response, as well as an unusual sense of camaraderie among competing newsrooms. Everyone was dedicated to the story. The Minnesota Star Tribune hosted safety trainings that were open to other newsroom reporters. While out in the field, Yücel said reporters from other newsrooms stuck together to protect one another. They’d extend safety gear if he lost some of his, and they all kept a Signal chat or WhatsApp group to communicate.
Any of the typical competition between newsrooms was erased by an understanding that they needed to work together and protect each other.
For Yücel, documenting the impact on ordinary residents — the teachers and mothers, the doctors and clergy, and how they protected their fellow community members — became the focus of his work. Yücel, who immigrated from Turkey seven years ago, has covered the murder of George Floyd and the aftermath in Minneapolis in 2020 and spent five years covering the conflict in Syria.
“In the city (Minneapolis), I never imagined facing this reality,” he said as he flipped through photos he’d taken during the operation.
Kerem Yücel, senior visual journalist at MPR News, speaks with Tampa Bay Times photo director Martha Ascencio-Rhine during a VIP reception and visual presentation on Wednesday, June 3, 2026, at Poynter’s headquarters in St. Petersburg, Florida. The image displayed behind Yücel was taken during Operation Metro Surge in Minneapolis. (Chris Kozlowski/Poynter)
Scheck said he realized he needed to start paying attention to ICE presence in the Twin Cities in October — well before President Trump deployed waves of immigration enforcement to the city.
He was sitting at a bar in Washington, D.C., where he was attending a conference, when a Chicago reporter told him his newsroom needed to be ready.
Scheck asked his editor if there was a plan in case Minneapolis saw the kind of immigration crackdown that overtook Chicago. “Like any good manager, they said ‘congratulations, you’ve volunteered.’”
He dug into how other immigration enforcement crackdowns had transpired.
“I looked at the coverage in Chicago, in Los Angeles, in Portland, in Charlotte, and I made a timeline of the things that happened.”
Within a month, the first ICE raid took place in Minneapolis.
“They raided a facility called Bro-Tex … and I think they detained about 10 or 12 people at that event.”
US Border Patrol agents detain a person near Roosevelt High School during dismissal time as federal immigration enforcement actions sparked protests in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on January 7, 2026. (Kerem Yücel/MPR News)
About two weeks later, a conservative outlet in the city ran an article alleging that members of the Somali community were engaging in fraud, which the Trump administration latched onto and used as its reason to deploy thousands of immigration agents to Minneapolis.
As the operation expanded, both journalists found themselves reporting on a major story unfolding in their own communities.
Yücel’s citizenship status was questioned by immigration officers routinely. There were many times out in the field when he feared what might happen.
“Well if something’s happened to me, I only know I have my wife and my kids, and there is no other person to call in for the emergency,” he said.
For him, the severity of the situation became clear the day after Good was shot and killed. He went out to the scene, but found himself at the nearby Roosevelt High School where Greg Bovino, then-commander of Border Patrol, was holding a canister of gas and running into crowds of teachers, parents and students.
“Everywhere was covered with the tear gas and smoke and they detained a person just in front of me.”
After he photographed the moment, Yücel had to pick up his children, twin boys. That night, they asked him hard questions. Were they considered white or brown? Could they be detained? They were scared, having witnessed a classmate being taken away, and knowing that they weren’t American.
It was the next day, sitting in his therapist’s office, that the reality of his experience as a photojournalist documenting an immigration crackdown as an immigrant himself really came into view.
“That day I was start(ing) thinking, ‘Oh, this story is also becoming my story.’”
From left, Angie Drobnic Holan, director of the International Fact-Checking Network; Tom Scheck, investigative editor at The Minnesota Star Tribune; Kerem Yücel, senior visual journalist at MPR News; and Amy Sherman, senior correspondent at PolitiFact, participate in a community conversation about Operation Metro Surge on Wednesday, June 3, 2026, at Poynter’s headquarters in St. Petersburg, Florida. (Chris Kozlowski/Poynter)
In Minneapolis, no community or person was left untouched by the scale and force of Operation Metro Surge, not even the journalists. Yücel went out and reported despite the fear that he might be detained or arrested. During protests following a Nov. 25 immigration enforcement operation, he was injured by tear gas and rubber bullets fired by local police and was hospitalized. He kept reporting.
Scheck said that by day, at the office, he focused on getting the story right — what needed to be covered and where to send reporters.
But, at home, the reality that he was living through Operation Metro Surge rather than just reporting on it was unavoidable.
“You see all these people who are like out either protesting or out on the streets just watching the school because they want to make sure that kids feel safe … it was just a little bit jarring.”
Portraits of Renee Nicole Good, Alex Pretti and other people killed by law enforcement in Minnesota are displayed on a wooden fence beside a memorial along Portland Avenue South on Tuesday, Feb. 3, 2026, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (Kerem Yücel/MPR News)
For both journalists, Operation Metro Surge wasn’t just a story. It was something unfolding in their own neighborhoods, among their friends, families and neighbors.
Yücel said the experience changed how he felt as a resident of Minneapolis and an immigrant in the United States.
“It wasn’t my home, but when I saw the people outside just standing, I found that I started feeling like I was growing some roots. My home is Istanbul, Turkey. But those people had an impact on my life. My roots are starting to reach down in the soil. I’m starting to call Minneapolis my second home.”
For Yücel, that connection to the community was essential to the work. Had he not been there to witness its pain, resilience and solidarity, he said, he would not have been able to tell the story in the same way.
Update (June 4, 2026, 2:40 p.m.): An earlier version of this story misspelled the name of MPR News senior visual journalist Karem Yücel and incorrectly linked an injury he sustained while covering immigration enforcement protests to the Bro-Tex raid. The injury occurred during a separate operation later that month.
Minneapolis, MN
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