Minneapolis, MN
1st and North: Week 7
Sports anchors from Minneapolis, Milwaukee, Chicago, and Detroit team up to look back at week six of the NFL season and provide a preview for the NFL’s NFC North in week seven.
Minneapolis, MN
Some U.S. Olympians are speaking out after Minneapolis killings
The fatal shootings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti by federal authorities in Minneapolis last month have drawn condemnation from politicians, influencers and celebrities — and increasingly from athletes who will soon be representing the U.S. at the Olympics.
Emotions have been running high in Minnesota, where the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown has permeated nearly every aspect of daily life amid weeks of protest and confrontations with federal authorities, and they were on display last Sunday during a Professional Women’s Hockey League game in St. Paul as fans chanted “ICE out now.”
At a postgame press conference, Minnesota Frost stars Kelly Pannek and Taylor Heise, both members of the U.S. Olympic squad, said it was important to acknowledge what was happening in their own community.
“It’s obviously really heavy,” said Pannek, who appeared to be overcome with emotion. “I think people have been asking a lot of us what it’s like to represent our state and our country. I think what I’m most proud to represent is the thousands — tens of thousands — of people who show up on some of the coldest days of the year to stand and fight for what they believe in.”
Heise added that the team has done a good job of making everyone feel welcome and safe during its games, “even though you can’t feel safe, I feel like, in this time and place here in Minnesota.”
Cross-country skier Jessie Diggins also acknowledged the situation last week after her final competition before the 2026 Winter Olympics. Diggins, who won gold in 2018, wrote in an Instagram post that she hoped she was able to bring some joy to people watching and honor all those back home protecting their neighbors.
“Honestly, this week was mentally and emotionally stressful for me for many different reasons, all of which were outside of sport,” Diggins wrote on Jan. 25, the day after Pretti’s killing. “Primarily, it’s been devastating following the news of what has been happening in Minnesota right now and it’s really hard feeling like I can do nothing about it.”
Diggins, Pannek and Heise are three of the 24 athletes from Minnesota who will represent the U.S. at the Milan Cortina Games. But they are not the only Olympians who have spoken out.
Figure skater Alysa Liu, who is from California, has been sharing posts to her Instagram Stories this week about the deaths of Pretti and Good. She also shared a post on Thursday urging people to call their representatives in Congress to oppose the current funding bill for the Department of Homeland Security, the agency that oversees immigration enforcement.
It’s unclear whether more Olympians will speak out on the world stage in the coming weeks, especially following news that the U.S. will send Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents to Italy to assist with security.
In a video that’s been viewed more than 500,000 times on TikTok and another 60,000 on Instagram, Coach Jackie J, a popular content creator who focuses on sports, urged athletes to use their platform at the Olympics to “speak up” against a government “going after its own people,” describing it as not only an opportunity but a “responsibility.”
“Let everyone know that you’re not representing this government, you’re not representing what it’s doing, you’re representing the people,” she said.
The International Olympic Committee noted that all athletes have the ability to express their views but that there are restrictions in place to maintain the neutrality of the Games overall.
Athletes can’t make political statements during competition or official events, such as a medal ceremony or the opening or closing ceremonies. They are also not allowed to speak out inside the Olympic village. The IOC said these rules have been in place since the Tokyo Games and were made in consultation with the IOC Athletes’ Commission.
The Olympics have been a venue for political expression for more than a century, with the first modern podium protest taking place in 1906 by Irish track athlete Peter O’Connor. After winning the silver medal in the long jump, O’Connor scaled the flagpole to replace a British flag with an Irish nationalist banner in protest of having to compete as a British athlete before Ireland gained its independence.
The 1906 Intercalated Games were considered Olympic Games by the International Olympic Committee at the time, but the IOC no longer recognizes the event or its medals.
One of the most well-known protests to Americans happened at the 1968 Summer Olympics, when Tommie Smith and John Carlos raised their fists and bowed their heads in a Black Power salute to protest racial discrimination. Smith and Carlos, U.S. track stars, had just won first and third place in the 200-meter race.
Amy Bass, a professor of sports studies at Manhattanville University in Purchase, New York, said that at first the big news was that Smith had broken a world record, but the protest made headlines only after the U.S. Olympic Committee removed their Olympic credentials following pressure from the International Olympic Committee.
“Doing that sort of created a bigger spectacle than had already happened,” Bass said. “And so they kept their medals and they were sent home.”
Their protest was part of a larger movement by a collective of Black athletes, the Olympic Project for Human Rights, who had threatened to boycott the Olympic Games if a set of civil rights demands were not met, according to Bass. But the group failed to find consensus, which led Smith and Carlos to the now famous moment in Mexico City.
Athletes don’t leave their lived experiences or belief systems behind the moment they step into a competition, Bass said, and the platforms they’ve worked hard to build are theirs to use as they see fit.
“The Olympics are inherently political, because one enters the Olympics under a flag which represents some form of nation state,” Bass said. “So there’s nothing apolitical about the Olympic Games, and there never has been. There’s nothing apolitical about sport, and there never has been.”
The 1968 protest led to Rule 50 of the Olympic Charter banning demonstrations at the podium and during specific events.
There are big and small ways athletes can signal their own views.
Bass noted that just before the 2018 Winter Olympics, skier Lindsey Vonn told CNN that she would not visit the White House if she won a gold medal, in a statement against President Donald Trump. At the Tokyo Games a few years later, the U.S. women’s national soccer team took a knee before they took the field, a protest against racial injustice.
It’s up to individual athletes to decide what role they want to play in a larger collective action, something that is a lot to consider, Bass added.
“The ancient Greeks created the Olympics for this reason — to put down swords and see what peace felt like, so that if we ever achieve it, we’ll know when it arrives,” Bass said. “But the world doesn’t stop being the world just because they’re skiers on the hill.”
Minneapolis, MN
‘SNL’ takes on Minneapolis as Pete Davidson plays border czar
‘SNL’ cold open mocks Trump on Minneapolis, Venezuela
In the first “Saturday Night Live” episode of the year, cast members mocked Trump over his handling of Venezuela and the ICE shootings in Minneapolis.
Pete Davidson returned to “Saturday Night Live” and addressed the ongoing political turmoil in the U.S. in the show’s cold open.
In the sketch show’s latest cold open, the former cast member returned to play White House border czar Tom Homan in a sketch tackling the political unrest happening in Minneapolis. In the sketch, Davidson’s Homan spoke to a room full of confused ICE agents and grew frustrated while trying to explain why they should not use force against protesters or destroy evidence.
After Davidson’s Homan said that ICE’s mission in Minneapolis is to “detain and deport illegal immigrants who have committed crimes,” one of the agents said this is “literally the first I’m hearing of that.”
When he asked the agents what they’re looking for in Minneapolis, an ICE agent responded, “Epstein files?”
“No, we actually just released those to distract from this,” Davidson as Homan said. “Which is ironic, because we did this to distract from those.”
Pete Davidson, ‘SNL’ tackle ongoing ICE raids in cold open
Homan then stressed that ICE agents should not use force, asking, “The job, ultimately, is about keeping America safe from what?”
“This could be wrong, but Don Lemon?” an ICE agent responded.
Davidson’s Homan also addressed agents, saying that protesters shouldn’t be able to have guns, asking, “How many of you went to a ‘stop the steal’ protest with a loaded automatic weapon?”
James Austin Johnson’s ICE agent character eventually concluded, “You hired a bunch of angry, aggressive guys, gave us guns and didn’t train us, so this is maybe what you wanted to happen?”
The sketch ended with Davidson giving an inspirational speech to the agents, asking if they can do their jobs “without violating anyone’s rights as Americans,” to which an agent played by Kenan Thompson simply replied, “No.”
“Well, I had to ask,” Davidson’s Homan said. “Maybe just try not to get filmed?”
Tonight’s “SNL” cold open comes after the show’s previous episode on Jan. 24, which opened with a sketch in which Johnson’s Trump hosted an awards show reminiscent of the Oscars. The episode received backlash from some fans over the way it largely sidestepped the killing of Alex Pretti, who was fatally shot by Border Patrol agents in Minneapolis earlier that same day.
The Jan. 24 opening sketch only alluded to the events in Minneapolis when Johnson, as Trump, said he was trying to distract from “what all my little freaks and psychos in ICE have been doing.”
Later in the Jan. 24 show, Minneapolis was briefly referenced on “Weekend Update” and in a sketch depicting a PBS news program. “To have basically no mention of the absolute horror of today and the past month is a slap in the face,” one fan wrote on the “SNL” subreddit after the episode aired, drawing thousands of upvotes.
Who else was on ‘SNL’?
Alexander Skarsgård made his “SNL” hosting debut on the Jan. 31 episode, joined by Cardi B as the musical guest.
Skarsgård is starring in the new Charli XCX mockumentary “The Moment” and the dark comedy “Pillion,” while Cardi B is coming off the release of her album “Am I the Drama?” in September.
Who’s hosting ‘SNL’ next?
“SNL” will return on Feb. 28 with host Connor Storrie and musical guest Mumford & Sons.
Minneapolis, MN
Pho, handwarmers, grief and loss: a week on the block where Alex Pretti was killed
Nothing is quite as it used to be along Nicollet Avenue.
The spot where Alex Pretti was gunned down by federal agents has been cordoned off by orange stakes and caution tape, appearing like a giant gash along the block between 26th and 27th streets.
“It’s almost like a loss of innocence for a part of the neighborhood that was just pure joy before,” said Aldona Martinka, a healthcare worker who has lived in the area for more than a decade.
The Jamaican restaurant and the thrift store along this stretch of Minneapolis’s Whittier neighborhood have transformed into community gathering spaces, open to mourners who have come from near and far. All along the corridor, also known as “Eat Street” due to the preponderance of restaurants and bars featuring global cuisines, restaurants are offering free food and handwarmers.
Each day, neighbors have come to Pretti’s memorial to refresh the flowers, re-arrange the handwritten cards and messages, and sprinkle salt along its edges to prevent the pavement from icing over.
Each evening, the block glows with candlelight and blooms with the amalgamated fragrance of dozens of candles – prayer lights and Dixie Scents and old Bed Bath & Beyond classics dug out from the backs of neighbors’ closets.
Each night, there is a different sort of performance or dedication. On Monday, Brass Solidarity – a band founded in 2021 in response to the murder of George Floyd – played a blaring rendition of Stand by Me as a crowd sang along. On Tuesday, Kalpulli Yaocenoxtli, a Mexica-Nahua cultural group based in St Paul, performed several dances in solidarity and remembrance. On Wednesday, hundreds arrived for a vigil organized by Pretti’s fellow nurses.
“Even throughout the day, you’ll find people here who start singing,” said Aisha Chughtai, a local city council member, as she stood across the street, facing the memorial.
Chughtai was home on Saturday when she found out that Pretti had been killed, and like many of her neighbors, immediately ran outside. “I just wanted to bear witness,” she said. “And I was trying to help my neighbors who were getting hit with irritants.”
Dozens of federal agents soon flooded into the street, she said, deploying teargas and projectiles at neighbors and demonstrators who had gathered as reports of the killing spread.
Martinka and her husband, by that afternoon, had rushed with their five-month-old baby to her mother’s house in downtown. On the TV, they saw the camera pan over the bike lane outside their home – the one where they had imagined their daughter would one day learn to cycle. It was engulfed in chemical smoke.
From the window of her mother’s apartment, she could see Nicollet Avenue and the fumes clouding over the whole street – an ominous gray cloud.
She worried about her neighbors, many of whom also had small children or babies, and how most of them probably weren’t able to escape. Many had avoided going out for weeks because they didn’t want to be profiled or arrested by immigration agents.
She thought about all the children breathing in those chemicals, which were inevitably seeping through the poorly sealed doors and windows of the neighborhood’s century-old homes.
Pretti’s killing was a heartbreak that came after weeks of heartbreak, said Chughtai. She had seen neighbors, constituents – including legal residents and refugees – violently arrested by federal agents.
Here in Whittier, many locals were either hunkering down inside because they feared arrest, or spending their free time outside, delivering groceries to neighbors, patrolling the street corners while wearing bright red and orange whistles, ready to blow an alert each time they spotted an immigration agent.
Chughtai had checked on the families of refugees who were arrested despite having a valid legal status, and tried to connect immigrant families with legal aid groups. She had joined other council members in calling for an eviction moratorium for constituents who couldn’t work, and thus couldn’t afford rent. On 21 January, federal agents had handcuffed and detained 15- and 16-year-old siblings outside a Whittier clinic, deployed teargas and projectiles, and arrested two bystanders.
“Every day, I go through waves of grief and anger,” Chughtai said.
After Pretti was killed, the Trump administration demoted the border patrol commander Gregory Bovino – the “commander at large” who had been the public face of the militarized operation in Minneapolis.
“It’s a testament to the power of people that we were able to whistle Bovino out of Minneapolis,” Chughtai said. “But this cruelty did not start with Greg Bovino and it certainly will not end with him.”
On Thursday, after border czar Tom Homan came to Minneapolis and delivered a speech committing to reduce the federal presence in the city, Chughtai was alerted that several agents had violently arrested another man, in a neighborhood just north of here. They had also deployed mace against several bystanders, she said: “It’s bullshit.”
What happened to Pretti – “an execution,” Chughai said – and the subsequent show of force by federal agents against demonstrators was a turning point. To many locals, it looked like a war zone outside their doorsteps.
Martinka and Chughtai – who are good friends and former roommates – must have eaten at Peninsula Malaysian Cuisine, the dusty orange edifice right behind the memorial site, dozens or hundreds of times, Martinka said. “It’s always been like, our comfort food.”
Martinka has spent a good deal of time next door as well, at the Cheapo Records, with her husband, leisurely flipping through stacks of records, VHS tapes and cassettes.
“I will never be able to walk by this corner again without thinking about this really horrible time for our neighborhood and our city,” she said.
Jeff Cowmeadow, proprietor of the Prodigal Public House, just off Nicollet, had walked over to the memorial and was having a smoke. “People come to this neighborhood for happiness: We have the art institute [Minneapolis Institute of Art], ethnic restaurants, massage, thrift store, record store,” he said before trailing off.
Cowmeadow was a pastor at the nearby Calvary church for 38 years before he retired to focus full-time on running the pub. Both jobs, he said, were essentially about building community.
In the aftermath of Pretti’s killing, Cowmeadow’s daughter rushed out to open up the bar to neighbors who were injured by the teargas and projectiles that federal agents launched against the crowd. Chughtai was there, helping people wash chemical irritants out of their eyes.
Many other restaurants and businesses along Nicollet did the same.
Asha, a healthcare worker who has been volunteering as a street medic over the past few weeks, rushed over with her medical kit as soon as she heard what was happening. The Guardian is not using her full name because she fears her work as a street medic could compromise her employment.
At first, she made laps around the site of the shooting, which federal agents had cordoned off. Periodically, the agents unleashed clouds of chemical irritants and projectiles toward a crowd of demonstrators, she said; they’d advance, arrest one or two people, drag them into their perimeter, and retreat. “It was back and forth, push and pull like this for hours,” she said. Eventually, she ducked into My Huong Kitchen.
The restaurant’s owner, Tracy Wong, was there ushering in protesters and press, some of whom were vomiting from exposure to the irritants. “I’m so sorry, I’m so sorry,” she told them as they ducked inside.
Asha posted up there – along with several other medics – and was able to properly inspect the injured and help them rinse out their eyes in the restaurant’s restroom.
At one point, Wong, a petite woman with gold-streaked black hair whom several locals described as “the neighborhood auntie”, brought in piles of egg rolls from the kitchen and began distributing them. “I have been there a number of times before – they have really good pho,” said Asha, who used to live in the neighborhood. It was surreal, she said, seeing it transformed into a makeshift emergency medical center.
Samie Solina, a reporter for the local TV news station KARE-11, had run into My Huong Kitchen after nearly collapsing with exposure to irritants along with a colleague. After she posted a video about Wong’s kindness, customers came back that week in droves, leaving big tips and thank-you notes. “I don’t know – I am like, famous overnight!” said Wong, laughing.
Crowds from all over Minneapolis had booked out many of the restaurants along the avenue, which for weeks had been hurting for business. Many are owned and staffed by immigrants who had been unable to report to work due to the constant, overwhelming presence of immigration agents in the neighborhood.
The Copper Hen Cakery & Kitchen, a farmhouse restaurant that also transformed into a makeshift field hospital, once again filled with brunchers. Glam Doll Donuts, behind the bright pink edifice across from where Pretti was killed, reopened to long lines.
“The way that our community comes together in crisis – it’s a coming together, not a hunkering down,” Martinka said.
On Friday, Wong had styled her hair down. She had closed down the restaurant for the general strike, but was cooking up massive quantities of pho to give away. She had tasked a younger person to help her spread the word on Instagram.
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