Alaska
Alaskan wins Emmy award for work on ‘Molly of Denali’
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – An episode of “Molly of Denali” has won the PBS Kids program its first Emmy award.
The episode that won the prestigious award was co-written by Alaska Native language expert X‘unei Lance Twitchell. Twitchell was born in Skagway and raised in Anchorage, now a professor of Native languages at the University of Alaska Southeast.
“It feels real now,” Twitchell said, still glowing from the achievement.
“I guess for the first two or three days like I just kept revisiting the moment in my mind and saying, ‘Did that really happen?’” he said. “I’m so blessed. It’s the second time I’ve had a chance to go to the Emmys.”
He said that he and his team were ready in case they didn’t win, and were surprised when they did.
“In the back of my mind was this thought like this doesn’t happen for indigenous people,” he recalled. “We don’t win these types of awards.
“And so I went in and as we got closer and closer to them, calling our category, I was having this little conversation in my mind, which was I really want this for the native people, for native writers. For this particular show for native kids,” he added.
Twitchell remembers growing up and not having proper representation on television, especially in children’s programming.
“There was a documentary called ‘Real Injun,’” he referenced. “It points out that what you had was Bugs Bunny shooting Native Americans and singing a song about it.”
“And just to think like how that violence was normalized towards Native people and now we can say look at this, these brilliant kids who can… they can speak indigenous languages. They can solve problems and they’re fun funny and intelligent. And it’s just such a wonderful thing to be a part of,” he said.
But the road to the gold award wasn’t paved in gold. Twitchell recalled many tribulations along the way.
“I just remember going to high school in Anchorage and being advised on what I should be doing,” he said. “I feel like the advice I was given was to [not] do things that are difficult, and I felt kind of insulted by that, that I couldn’t do things that were.”
“I’ve had some writing teachers over the years who’ve been absolutely wonderful, but one of them, when I was in a writing class, he would take my writing and put it up in front of the class and, like, make fun of it. Wouldn’t tell anybody whose it was,” he said.
“He would just make fun of it and I thought, ‘What a terrible way to teach people.’ But the ones that I had who are really good, they would sort of get you to believe that you could do something that you thought was maybe impossible.”
The program that won the Emmy award from the National Academy of Television, Arts, and Science, featured Molly and her friends discussing Native mascots in sports. Twitchell said we’ve come a long way, but there are still conversations to be had with teams like the Atlanta Braves and Kansas City Chiefs encouraging fans to do the “tomahawk chop.”
“You don’t have to go back very far, you can just watch the replay of the Super Bowl or World Series a couple of years ago and just see whole stadiums of people making this very silly chant,” he explained.
“Things are getting better as far as Native Americans and mascots, but just the amount of misrepresentation. The stereotypes that are there, the very weird simplistic songs and dances and costumes that are created are damaging, and so to just sort of see that costuming of culture and to be able to address that through a preschool show and have these kids model conversations that I just wish adults would have on a more regular basis in a way that was less hostile and violent.”
“[I’m] also trying to have these conversations, conversations in ways that aren’t embarrassing to people or humiliating anybody. And just being kind and showing this other perspective.”
When accepting the Emmy, Twitchell said he spoke in his Native language of Tlingit. He honored the past, with a hope to inspire the future.
“The moment was overwhelming, but I said in our language, finally it has happened,” Twitchell recalled. “This is for the storytellers of ancient days. The ones of today, the ones of tomorrow.”
“And then gave a message which is for all the writers out there. All the Native writers, all the Native babies out there who want to become storytellers someday. If you ever wondered if you could tell your stories through film and television, then ending on the tagline for the show, which is ‘mahsi choo’, let’s go… thank you in Gwich’in.”
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Alaska
Alaska’s Maxime Germain named to US Olympic biathlon team
Alaska’s Maxime Germain has been named to the U.S. Olympic biathlon team and will compete at the 2026 Milano-Cortina Olympic Winter Games.
Germain, 24, who was born in Juneau and graduated from West Anchorage High School in 2019, will be making his Olympic debut.
“I am stoked to have qualified,” Germain said in a U.S. Biathlon release. “The goal is now to perform there! It is going to be my first Olympics, but it shouldn’t be any different from other racing. Same venue, same racing, different name!”
The announcement was made Sunday at the conclusion of the World Cup stop in France. He is currently 34th in World Cup rankings, the second-best American behind Olympic teammate Campbell Wright.
Germain has raced for the APU Nordic Ski Center and trained with the Anchorage Biathlon Club.
“Maxime has worked really hard throughout the off season, improving his mental game and bringing an overall level up to the World Cup this year,” U.S. Biathlon High Performance Director Lowell Bailey said in the release. “This showed right away at the first World Cup in Ostersund, where he proved he can be among the world’s fastest and best biathletes. Maxime will be a great addition to the U.S. Olympic team!”
Before coming to Anchorage, Germain grew up in Chamonix, France, and started biathlon there at age 13.
Germain is a member of Vermont Army National Guard as an aviation operations specialist and is studying to become a commercial pilot. Germain has trained with the National Guard Biathlon Team and races as part of the US Army World Class Athlete Program.
Germain joins Wright, Deedra Irwin and Margie Freed as the first four qualifiers for the 2026 Olympic Biathlon Team. The remaining members of the team will be announced on Jan. 6 following completion of the U.S. Biathlon Timed Trials.
The 2026 Winter Olympics run from Feb. 6-22 in Italy.
Alaska
Trump administration opens vast majority of Alaska petroleum reserve to oil activity
The Bureau of Land Management on Monday said it approved an updated management plan that opens about 82% of the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska to oil and gas leasing.
The agency this winter will also hold the first lease sale in the reserve since 2019, potentially opening the door for expanded oil and gas activity in an area that has seen new interest from oil companies in recent years.
The sale will be the first of five oil and gas lease sales called for in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act that passed this summer.
The approval of the plan follow the agency’s withdrawal of the 2024 activity plan for the reserve that was approved under the Biden administration and limited oil and gas drilling in more than half the reserve.
The 23-million-acre reserve is the largest tract of public land in the U.S. It’s home to ConocoPhillips’ giant Willow discovery on its eastern flank.
ConocoPhillips and other companies are increasingly eyeing the reserve for new discoveries. ConocoPhillips has proposed plans for a large exploration season with winter, though an Alaska Native group and conservation groups have filed a lawsuit challenging the effort.
The planned lease sale could open the door for more oil and gas activity deeper into the reserve.
The Voice of the Arctic Iñupiat, consisting of elected leaders from Alaska’s North Slope, where the reserve is located, said it supports the reversal of the Biden-era plan. Infrastructure from oil and gas activity provides tax revenues for education, health care and modern services like running water and sewer, the group said.
The decision “is a step in the right direction and lays the foundation for future economic, community, and cultural opportunities across our region — particularly for the communities within the (petroleum reserve),” said Rex Rock Sr., president of the Arctic Slope Regional Corp. representing Alaska Natives from the region, in the statement from the group.
The reserve was established more than a century ago as an energy warehouse for the U.S. Navy. It contains an estimated 8.7 billion barrels of recoverable oil.
But it’s also home to rich populations of waterfowl and caribou sought by Alaska Native subsistence hunters from the region, as well as threatened polar bears.
The Wilderness Society said the Biden-era plan established science-based management of oil and gas activity and protected “Special Areas” as required by law.
It was developed after years of public meetings and analysis, and its conservation provisions were critical to subsistence users and wildlife, the group said.
The Trump administration “is abandoning balanced management of America’s largest tract of public land and catering to big oil companies at the expense of future generations of Alaskans,” said Matt Jackson, Alaska senior manager for The Wilderness Society. The decision threatens clean air, safe water and wildlife in the region, he said.
The decision returns management of the reserve to the 2020 plan approved during the first Trump administration. It’s part of a broad effort by the administration to increase U.S. oil and gas production.
To update the 2020 plan, the Bureau of Land Management invited consultation with tribes and Alaska Native corporations and held a 14-day public comment period on the draft assessment, the agency said.
“The plan approved today gives us a clear framework and needed certainty to harness the incredible potential of the reserve,” said Kevin Pendergast, state director for the Bureau of Land Management. “We look forward to continuing to work with Alaskans, industry and local partners as we move decisively into the next phase of leasing and development.”
Congress voted to overturn the 2024 plan for the reserve, supporting bills from Alaska’s Republican congressional delegation to prevent a similar plan from being implemented in the future.
Alaska
Opinion: Alaskans, don’t be duped by the citizens voter initiative
A signature drive is underway for a ballot measure formally titled “An Act requiring that only United States citizens may be qualified to vote in Alaska elections,” often referred to by its sponsors as the United States Citizens Voter Act. Supporters say it would “clarify” that only U.S. citizens may vote in Alaska elections. That may sound harmless. But Alaskans should not sign this petition or vote for the measure if it reaches the ballot. The problem it claims to fix is imaginary, and its real intent has nothing to do with election integrity.
Alaska already requires voters to be U.S. citizens. Election officials enforce that rule. There is no bill in Juneau proposing to change it, no court case challenging it and no Alaska municipality contemplating noncitizen voting. Nothing in our election history or law suggests that the state’s citizenship requirement is under threat.
Which raises the real question: If there’s no problem to solve, what is this measure actually for?
The answer has everything to do with election politics. Across the Lower 48, “citizenship voting” drives have been used as turnout engines and list-building operations — reliable ways to galvanize conservative voters, recruit volunteers and gather contact data. These measures typically have no immediate policy impact, but the downstream political payoff is substantial.
Alaska’s effort fits neatly into that pattern. The petition is being circulated by Alaskans for Citizen Voting, whose leading advocates include former legislators John Coghill, Mike Chenault and Josh Revak. The group’s own financial disclaimer identifies a national organization, Americans for Citizen Voting, as its top contributor. The effort isn’t purely local. It is part of a coordinated national campaign.
To understand where this may be headed, look at what Americans for Citizen Voting is doing in other states. In Michigan, the group is backing a constitutional amendment far more sweeping than the petition: It would require documentary proof of citizenship for all voters, eliminate affidavit-based registration, tighten ID requirements even for absentee ballots, and require voter-roll purges tied to citizenship verification. In short, “citizen-only voting” is the opening move — the benign-sounding front door to a much broader effort to make voting more difficult for many eligible Americans.
Across the country, these initiatives rarely stand alone. They serve to establish the narrative that elections are lax or vulnerable, even when they are not. That narrative then becomes the justification for downstream restrictions: stricter ID laws, new documentation burdens for naturalized citizens, more aggressive voter-roll purges and — especially relevant here — new hurdles for absentee and mail-in voters.
In the 2024 general election, the Alaska Division of Elections received more than 55,000 absentee and absentee-equivalent ballots — about 16% of all ballots cast statewide. Many of those ballots came from rural and roadless communities, where as much as 90% of the population lacks road access and depends heavily on mail and air service. Absentee voting is not a convenience in these places; it is how democracy reaches Alaskans who live far from polling stations.
When a national organization that has supported absentee-voting restrictions elsewhere becomes the top financial backer of the petition, Alaskans should ask what comes next.
Supporters say the initiative is common sense. But laws don’t need “clarifying” when they are already explicit, already enforced and already uncontroversial. No one has produced evidence that noncitizen voting is a problem in an Alaska election. We simply don’t have a problem for this measure to solve.
What we do have are real challenges — education, public safety, energy policy, housing, fiscal stability. The petition addresses none of them. It is political theater, an Outside agenda wrapped in Alaska packaging.
If someone with a clipboard asks you to sign the Citizens Voter petition, say no. The problem is fictional, and the risks to our voting system are real. And if the measure makes the ballot, vote no.
Stan Jones is a former award-winning Alaska journalist and environmental advocate. He lives in Anchorage.
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