Minneapolis, MN
Beck out of Arcade Fire’s Minneapolis show amid Win Butler controversy

Beck is dropping out because the opener for Arcade Hearth after they come to Minneapolis on Nov. 13.
A number of reviews verify the replace was despatched out to ticketholders through e mail from Stay Nation, which said Beck “is now not in a position to carry out,” with no point out of whether or not refunds could be provided.
No formal announcement was made by Beck wherever else, nor was an replace offered by Arcade Hearth.
The musician will probably be changed by Haitian sociopolitical rock band Boukman Eksperyans, based on a number of reviews. Nevertheless, the band’s web site does not checklist any upcoming reveals and bookings.
Arcade Hearth’s lead singer Win Butler has just lately been accused of sexual misconduct. As reported by the Washington Submit, Butler is accused of sending three girls “undesirable, sexually specific messages when he was in his late 30s” and a fourth one who is gender-fluid accused Butler of “sexually assaulting them twice in 2015, after they had been 21 and he was 34.”
This is not the primary opening act to drop from the tour. Canadian singer-songwriter Feist was scheduled because the opening act for the worldwide tour, however left it in early September after information of the accusations towards Butler broke.
In response, Butler claimed that whereas he confirmed poor judgement in looking for relationships outdoors of his marriage (to Arcade Hearth bandmate Régine Chassagne), he says that each encounter described was consensual.
Arcade Hearth introduced the tour in Might, making at cease at The Armory for the second present of the North America leg.
Carry Me The Information reached out to Stay Nation to substantiate its standing on refunds for the present. In response to a number of reviews, no refunds will probably be accessible even in gentle of Beck’s withdrawal.

Minneapolis, MN
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Minneapolis, MN
Lynx fend off Paige Bueckers' homecoming in Minneapolis to top Wings, remain undefeated
Paige Bueckers’ homecoming in Minneapolis didn’t quite go as she might have hoped.
Bueckers and the Dallas Wings dropped their third straight game to open the WNBA season on Wednesday night. While they mounted a bit of a comeback late, and Bueckers made a bit of league history in the process, the Minnesota Lynx held on to grab the 85-81 win at the Target Center. That spoiled Bueckers’ first professional game back in her hometown after she was taken No. 1 overall in last month’s WNBA Draft.
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The Wings came out hot on a 15-5 run, though that almost immediately fell apart. The Lynx responded with a 16-3 run to take control by the end of the first quarter.
The Lynx then pushed their lead to double digits late in the second quarter and nearly entered the locker room with a 10-point advantage after Natisha Hiedeman’s wild half-court shot at the buzzer went in. Her shot was deemed just barely too late, however, and the Lynx’s lead remained seven.
Bueckers struggled in the first half, too. She went just 1 of 6 from the field and didn’t score until late in the second quarter when she finally hit a 3-pointer.
Napheesa Collier dropped 12 points in the third quarter, including a 15-footer right before the buzzer to keep the Wings at bay over the next 10 minutes. Bueckers drilled her second 3-pointer just a few minutes into the fourth quarter, and then DiJonai Carrington drilled one of her own a few minutes later to make it a one-possession game. Then, after a bit of a fight down the stretch, Arike Ogunbowale drilled a 3-pointer from the wing with just 39 seconds on the clock to keep the Wings in it.
But Collier hit a pair of free throws after that, and Bueckers missed a last-ditch 3-pointer, which gave the Lynx the four-point win. That pushed them to 3-0 on the season and dropped the Wings to 0-3.
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Collier led the way for the Lynx with 28 points and eight rebounds while shooting 8 of 13 from the field. Alanna Smith and Courtney Williams added 13 points a piece, too. The Lynx had 27 assists on 28 made field goals and outrebounded the Wings by 16.
Ogunbowale led the Wings with 21 points and five assists, and Myisha Hines-Allen added 11 points. Bueckers dropped 12 points and 10 assists, shooting 3 of 11 from the field and 2 of 5 from behind the arc. Bueckers is now just the third player in WNBA history to record a points-assists double-double in the first three games of her career. She’s the first since Shoni Schimmel did it in 2014, according to ESPN’s Alexa Philippou.
Bueckers grew up in Hopkins, Minnesota, a suburb on the southwestern side of the Twin Cities. She led her high school to a state title in 2019 while being named the Gatorade National Player of the Year, which helped kickstart her remarkable run at UConn. So, earlier this month ahead of Bueckers’ first career WNBA game, Hopkins changed its name to honor her.
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The town, for a single day, became “Paige Bueckers, Minnesota.” There were countless events throughout the town, including a watch party for the Wings’ season opener. That game coincidentally also was against the Lynx, just in Dallas.
While Wednesday’s game wasn’t great for Bueckers, she at least got to play it in a familiar place and cross off a major milestone. And, as she’s still just three games into her WNBA career, Bueckers should have plenty of chances to win at the Target Center — starting when the Wings travel back to Minneapolis on Sept. 1.
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