Elections in the balance / Children led them / Jon Stewart’s in the Epstein files

Elections in the balance. Popular Information: “The Trump administration is engaged in a multi-pronged effort to undermine the integrity of and confidence in the 2026 election.”
 Trump’s words, in an interview with a podcaster who joined the FBI and left after nine months to become a podcaster again: “Republicans should say, ‘We want to take over.’ … Republicans ought to nationalize the voting.”
 The Washington Post (gift link): The president’s claiming a power the Constitution explicitly grants to states.
 Former Illinois Republican U.S. Rep. Adam Kinzinger sees “a psychopath talking about seizing elections—and a party too cowardly to stop him.”

‘I am their voice.’ As Chicagoan Marimar Martinez, shot five times by a Border Patrol agent last fall, prepared to testify today in Washington, she told the Sun-Times and WBEZ she intends to speak up for those killed by immigration agents in Minneapolis.
 Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem says each of her officers on the ground in Minneapolis will be issued a body camera.
 Trump sounded less than enthusiastic.
 Journalism critic Margaret Sullivan pleads with reporters to apply far more skepticism to things Trump says.

‘My 8-year-old woke up, but she was so terrified she just laid in the bed and cried.’ Independent Minnesota journalist Georgia Fort last night recounted for MS NOW’s Rachel Maddow her nighttime arrest at her home after covering an anti-ICE protest at a St. Paul church.
 CNN veteran Don Lemon last night shared with Jimmy Kimmel the details of his very public arrest after covering that protest: “They want to embarrass you. They want to instill fear.”
 A St. Paul native and senior at Temple University in Philadelphia has turned himself in on charges of conspiring with Lemon to interfere in that service at a church served by a pastor who’s also an ICE official.

 The student Republican club at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign is in the spotlight after posting an illustration of a masked gunman holding a weapon to a kneeling man’s head, with the caption “Only traitors help invaders.”
 Reporter Marisa Kabas shares “what it’s like to see ICE tear gas kids.”


Jon Stewart’s in the Epstein files. And he is offended: “Somebody like Jon Stewart, or Jon Stewart? My point is, do I have the offer, or is this an audition?”
 Media critic and Chicago TV news exec Jennifer Schulze: One of new CBS boss Bari Weiss’ new hires “was one of Epstein’s biggest pen pals, sending him cringey and disturbing emails but she’s fighting to keep him on staff anyway.”
 Stephen Colbert: “Punxsutawney Phil … might be the only prominent American male who is not in there … is what I would have said if he wasn’t in there. But—and this is true—he actually appears in it four times.”
 Columnist Eric Zorn is beggin’ Trump to sue Trevor Noah over that Epstein joke at Sunday’s Grammys: “No one in America needs to be deposed more than our reflexively dishonest president.”
 Are you in the Epstein files? Search here.

Who owns ‘Stephen Colbert’? As CBS prepares to cut ties with its Late Show host, longtime late-night critic Bill Carter says control of the faux-right character Colbert played on Comedy Central hangs in the balance.
 Tribune columnist—and former TV critic—Rick Kogan: New CBS Evening News anchor Tony Dokoupil’s disparagement of Walter Cronkite “made me wonder how long this anchorman might last” (gift link).
 Mark Jacob at Stop the Presses: “Megyn Kelly is a fascist propagandist selling out her country for attention and profit.”

Amazon’s watching. The company’s donating a thousand of its Ring security cameras to Illinois—for distribution to domestic violence survivors, giving them an increased sense of security.
 404 Media: A photo booth company that caters to weddings and D.C. lobbying events has been collecting and insecurely storing those photos for anyone to download.

All that glitters … Axios reports that a new bill in Springfield would outlaw the sale of personal products that include body glitter—one of the world’s most pervasive pollutants.
 Now that the Trump administration’s yanked the U.S. out of the World Health Organization, Gov. Pritzker’s signing Illinois up.

Not following Chicago Public Square on Bluesky? Here’s a taste of what you missed yesterday:
 Bill and Hillary Clinton agreed to testify before Congress about Jeffrey Epstein.
 Mark Jacob compared and contrasted: “Yesterday: Deputy AG Todd Blanche denies that Trump played any role in the FBI’s seizure of Georgia voting records or had been briefed on the case. Today: The NY Times reports that Trump talked by phone to the FBI agents who conducted the raid, asking them questions and getting answers. (Gift link).”
 Wonkette surveyed the Sunday news shows: House Speaker Mike Johnson “talks like a typical abuser.”
 A Mother Jones review: “The Melania movie is an American obscenity.”


Do it for Chicago journalists—or do it for the chance at a $100 gift card. Take a few minutes for a survey to help news organizations working with Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism better understand the public they serve.


Get one for $9 off—or get it free. During this ninth anniversary month for Square, you can get a special code good for $9 off the price of a Square T-shirt or hoodie if you support this publication in any amount—even $1, just once.
 Make it $10/month and get one free.

‘While some news bears repeating, don’t you think that’s a bit much?’ A few readers didn’t get this newsletter’s recurring Groundhog Day gag.
 Mike Braden made this edition better.

‘Sue this … dope’ / ‘Pure fascism’ / Plow ahead

Happy Groundhog Day. Punxsutawney Phil saw his shadow, so don’t be surprised by six more weeks of winter.
Then again, Illinois’ Woodstock Willie went shadowless, so maybe better things await us.
Regardless, today’s looking a lot better than Chicago’s snowpocalypse of 15 years ago today—when just walking through the snow was a workout.
At 3 p.m. this afternoon, the third annual Harold Ramis Day at Navy Pier will celebrate the late Chicago-born filmmaker who brought us the movie Groundhog Day.

Plenty of expletives got cut during the broadcast as music’s biggest stars profanely slammed Trump’s Twin Cities reign of terror.
The New York Times (gift link) has found more than 5,300 files containing more than 38,000 references to Trump, his wife, his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida and other related words and phrases in the latest batch of Justice Department-released emails, government files, videos and other records related to dead sex offender Epstein.
Also from the Times: “They said they weren’t close to Epstein. New documents show otherwise.”
The AP surveys a who’s who of powerful people named in the latest trove.

‘I don’t think people realize how much of an insane step up Minneapolis was, how much more violence and aggression, and how many more agents doing completely illegal things.’ Two Chicago-area teenage brothers born in Minneapolis have spent days up there observing and documenting immigration agents’ actions.
Y’know that video of a federal agent running at a Minneapolis protester and then slipping on ice and falling on his ass, to the cheers of onlookers? That was their work.
The BBC surveys “how ICE raids changed a once bustling Chicago neighbourhood.”

Freed at last. Five-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos and his father, snatched by immigration officers and shipped to Texas last month, have been returned to Minnesota …
 … after a judge issued a blistering order condemning “the ill-conceived and incompetently-implemented government pursuit of daily deportation quotas.”

‘Pure fascism.’ Contrarian editor-in-chief Jennifer Rubin: “The arrests of journalists Don Lemon and Georgia Fort for simply covering a protest at a St. Paul, Minn., church … remind us that no one has been more instrumental than Attorney General Pam Bondi in the assault on Americans’ civil liberties and the rule of law.”
Philadelphia Inquirer columnist Will Bunch sees trouble ahead for Ohio: “It’s hard to call this proposed operation anything … besides an ethnic cleansing on U.S. soil.”
Want to support journalists stretched to the limit covering the Twin Cities incursion? Here’s how.
The Intercept: A raid on a Washington Post reporter’s home is a warning: “Turn off your phone’s biometrics now.”
Salty Politics columnist Julie Roginsky: “Trump is selling out our national security and the Constitution all at once.”

‘Just like his casinos and other businesses, the Kennedy Center went out of business after he put his name on it.’ That’s one of the slams against Trump on social media after his announcement that the [Trump] Kennedy Center would be closing for a two-year renovation …
 … coincidentally—or not—after a bunch of artists refused to perform at the facility he’s taken over.

‘How disappointed are you that former Mayor Rahm Emanuel won’t be testifying about the Chicago Police Department’s notorious code of silence in federal court?’ Sun-Times columnist Neil Steinberg? Not so much: “I’m not sure why lawyers … ever thought they’d need Rahm Emanuel to explain the tight lips of Chicago police. Everybody knows.”
A judge’s change of heart is good news for those hoping Emanuel runs for president.
The New York Times (gift link): “The Supreme Court secretly made itself even more secretive.”

Plow ahead. Balloting’s now open in Chicago’s annual name-the-snowplow finals.
Chicagoans—or at least those who enter a Chicago ZIP code (nudge, nudge, wink, wink)—can vote here.

‘Leftist claptrap.’ Chicago Public Square T-shirts bearing that reader’s 2022 unsubscribe note on the back are newly back in stock—and you can buy one here.
During this ninth anniversary month for Square, you can get a special code good for $9 off the purchase price if you support this publication in any amount—even $1, just once.

Happy National News Literacy Week. The News Literacy Project has a passel of activities for teaching kids—and adults—to be smart news consumers …

Chicago news needs you. If you can spare about 10 minutes for a survey, you can help news organizations working with Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism to better understand the public they serve—and you could win a $100 gift card.
Completed the survey for another news organization? Do it again and get a bonus shot at that gift card.
Thanks. Karen Kring and Mike Braden made this edition better.
A hat-tip to Igor Studenkov for kind words in his new Chicago Media Journal email newsletter.


Happy Groundhog Day. Punxsutawney Phil saw his shadow, so don’t be surprised by six more weeks of winter.
Then again, Illinois’ Woodstock Willie went shadowless, so maybe better things await us.
Regardless, today’s looking a lot better than Chicago’s snowpocalypse of 15 years ago today—when just walking through the snow was a workout.
At 3 p.m. this afternoon, the third annual Harold Ramis Day at Navy Pier will celebrate the late Chicago-born filmmaker who brought us the movie Groundhog Day.

Plenty of expletives got cut during the broadcast as music’s biggest stars profanely slammed Trump’s Twin Cities reign of terror.
The New York Times (gift link) has found more than 5,300 files containing more than 38,000 references to Trump, his wife, his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida and other related words and phrases in the latest batch of Justice Department-released emails, government files, videos and other records related to dead sex offender Epstein.
Also from the Times: “They said they weren’t close to Epstein. New documents show otherwise.”
The AP surveys a who’s who of powerful people named in the latest trove.

‘I don’t think people realize how much of an insane step up Minneapolis was, how much more violence and aggression, and how many more agents doing completely illegal things.’ Two Chicago-area teenage brothers born in Minneapolis have spent days up there observing and documenting immigration agents’ actions.
Y’know that video of a federal agent running at a Minneapolis protester and then slipping on ice and falling on his ass, to the cheers of onlookers? That was their work.
The BBC surveys “how ICE raids changed a once bustling Chicago neighbourhood.”

Freed at last. Five-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos and his father, snatched by immigration officers and shipped to Texas last month, have been returned to Minnesota …
 … after a judge issued a blistering order condemning “the ill-conceived and incompetently-implemented government pursuit of daily deportation quotas.”

‘Pure fascism.’ Contrarian editor-in-chief Jennifer Rubin: “The arrests of journalists Don Lemon and Georgia Fort for simply covering a protest at a St. Paul, Minn., church … remind us that no one has been more instrumental than Attorney General Pam Bondi in the assault on Americans’ civil liberties and the rule of law.”
Philadelphia Inquirer columnist Will Bunch sees trouble ahead for Ohio: “It’s hard to call this proposed operation anything … besides an ethnic cleansing on U.S. soil.”
Want to support journalists stretched to the limit covering the Twin Cities incursion? Here’s how.
The Intercept: A raid on a Washington Post reporter’s home is a warning: “Turn off your phone’s biometrics now.”
Salty Politics columnist Julie Roginsky: “Trump is selling out our national security and the Constitution all at once.”

‘Just like his casinos and other businesses, the Kennedy Center went out of business after he put his name on it.’ That’s one of the slams against Trump on social media after his announcement that the [Trump] Kennedy Center would be closing for a two-year renovation …
 … coincidentally—or not—after a bunch of artists refused to perform at the facility he’s taken over.

‘How disappointed are you that former Mayor Rahm Emanuel won’t be testifying about the Chicago Police Department’s notorious code of silence in federal court?’ Sun-Times columnist Neil Steinberg? Not so much: “I’m not sure why lawyers … ever thought they’d need Rahm Emanuel to explain the tight lips of Chicago police. Everybody knows.”
A judge’s change of heart is good news for those hoping Emanuel runs for president.
The New York Times (gift link): “The Supreme Court secretly made itself even more secretive.”

Plow ahead. Balloting’s now open in Chicago’s annual name-the-snowplow finals.
Chicagoans—or at least those who enter a Chicago ZIP code (nudge, nudge, wink, wink)—can vote here.

‘Leftist claptrap.’ Chicago Public Square T-shirts bearing that reader’s 2022 unsubscribe note on the back are newly back in stock—and you can buy one here.
During this ninth anniversary month for Square, you can get a special code good for $9 off the purchase price if you support this publication in any amount—even $1, just once.

Happy National News Literacy Week. The News Literacy Project has a passel of activities for teaching kids—and adults—to be smart news consumers …

Chicago news needs you. If you can spare about 10 minutes for a survey, you can help news organizations working with Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism to better understand the public they serve—and you could win a $100 gift card.
Completed the survey for another news organization? Do it again and get a bonus shot at that gift card.
Thanks. Karen Kring and Mike Braden made this edition better.
A hat-tip to Igor Studenkov for kind words in his new Chicago Media Journal email newsletter.


Happy Groundhog Day. Punxsutawney Phil saw his shadow, so don’t be surprised by six more weeks of winter.
Then again, Illinois’ Woodstock Willie went shadowless, so maybe better things await us.
Regardless, today’s looking a lot better than Chicago’s snowpocalypse of 15 years ago today—when just walking through the snow was a workout.
At 3 p.m. this afternoon, the third annual Harold Ramis Day at Navy Pier will celebrate the late Chicago-born filmmaker who brought us the movie Groundhog Day.

Plenty of expletives got cut during the broadcast as music’s biggest stars profanely slammed Trump’s Twin Cities reign of terror.
The New York Times (gift link) has found more than 5,300 files containing more than 38,000 references to Trump, his wife, his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida and other related words and phrases in the latest batch of Justice Department-released emails, government files, videos and other records related to dead sex offender Epstein.
Also from the Times: “They said they weren’t close to Epstein. New documents show otherwise.”
The AP surveys a who’s who of powerful people named in the latest trove.

‘I don’t think people realize how much of an insane step up Minneapolis was, how much more violence and aggression, and how many more agents doing completely illegal things.’ Two Chicago-area teenage brothers born in Minneapolis have spent days up there observing and documenting immigration agents’ actions.
Y’know that video of a federal agent running at a Minneapolis protester and then slipping on ice and falling on his ass, to the cheers of onlookers? That was their work.
The BBC surveys “how ICE raids changed a once bustling Chicago neighbourhood.”

Freed at last. Five-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos and his father, snatched by immigration officers and shipped to Texas last month, have been returned to Minnesota …
 … after a judge issued a blistering order condemning “the ill-conceived and incompetently-implemented government pursuit of daily deportation quotas.”

‘Pure fascism.’ Contrarian editor-in-chief Jennifer Rubin: “The arrests of journalists Don Lemon and Georgia Fort for simply covering a protest at a St. Paul, Minn., church … remind us that no one has been more instrumental than Attorney General Pam Bondi in the assault on Americans’ civil liberties and the rule of law.”
Philadelphia Inquirer columnist Will Bunch sees trouble ahead for Ohio: “It’s hard to call this proposed operation anything … besides an ethnic cleansing on U.S. soil.”
Want to support journalists stretched to the limit covering the Twin Cities incursion? Here’s how.
The Intercept: A raid on a Washington Post reporter’s home is a warning: “Turn off your phone’s biometrics now.”
Salty Politics columnist Julie Roginsky: “Trump is selling out our national security and the Constitution all at once.”

‘Just like his casinos and other businesses, the Kennedy Center went out of business after he put his name on it.’ That’s one of the slams against Trump on social media after his announcement that the [Trump] Kennedy Center would be closing for a two-year renovation …
 … coincidentally—or not—after a bunch of artists refused to perform at the facility he’s taken over.

‘How disappointed are you that former Mayor Rahm Emanuel won’t be testifying about the Chicago Police Department’s notorious code of silence in federal court?’ Sun-Times columnist Neil Steinberg? Not so much: “I’m not sure why lawyers … ever thought they’d need Rahm Emanuel to explain the tight lips of Chicago police. Everybody knows.”
A judge’s change of heart is good news for those hoping Emanuel runs for president.
The New York Times (gift link): “The Supreme Court secretly made itself even more secretive.”

Plow ahead. Balloting’s now open in Chicago’s annual name-the-snowplow finals.
Chicagoans—or at least those who enter a Chicago ZIP code (nudge, nudge, wink, wink)—can vote here.

‘Leftist claptrap.’ Chicago Public Square T-shirts bearing that reader’s 2022 unsubscribe note on the back are newly back in stock—and you can buy one here.
During this ninth anniversary month for Square, you can get a special code good for $9 off the purchase price if you support this publication in any amount—even $1, just once.

Happy National News Literacy Week. The News Literacy Project has a passel of activities for teaching kids—and adults—to be smart news consumers …

Chicago news needs you. If you can spare about 10 minutes for a survey, you can help news organizations working with Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism to better understand the public they serve—and you could win a $100 gift card.
Completed the survey for another news organization? Do it again and get a bonus shot at that gift card.
Thanks. Karen Kring and Mike Braden made this edition better.
A hat-tip to Igor Studenkov for kind words in his new Chicago Media Journal email newsletter.


Happy Groundhog Day. Punxsutawney Phil saw his shadow, so don’t be surprised by six more weeks of winter.
Then again, Illinois’ Woodstock Willie went shadowless, so maybe better things await us.
Regardless, today’s looking a lot better than Chicago’s snowpocalypse of 15 years ago today—when just walking through the snow was a workout.
At 3 p.m. this afternoon, the third annual Harold Ramis Day at Navy Pier will celebrate the late Chicago-born filmmaker who brought us the movie Groundhog Day.

Plenty of expletives got cut during the broadcast as music’s biggest stars profanely slammed Trump’s Twin Cities reign of terror.
The New York Times (gift link) has found more than 5,300 files containing more than 38,000 references to Trump, his wife, his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida and other related words and phrases in the latest batch of Justice Department-released emails, government files, videos and other records related to dead sex offender Epstein.
Also from the Times: “They said they weren’t close to Epstein. New documents show otherwise.”
The AP surveys a who’s who of powerful people named in the latest trove.

‘I don’t think people realize how much of an insane step up Minneapolis was, how much more violence and aggression, and how many more agents doing completely illegal things.’ Two Chicago-area teenage brothers born in Minneapolis have spent days up there observing and documenting immigration agents’ actions.
Y’know that video of a federal agent running at a Minneapolis protester and then slipping on ice and falling on his ass, to the cheers of onlookers? That was their work.
The BBC surveys “how ICE raids changed a once bustling Chicago neighbourhood.”

Freed at last. Five-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos and his father, snatched by immigration officers and shipped to Texas last month, have been returned to Minnesota …
 … after a judge issued a blistering order condemning “the ill-conceived and incompetently-implemented government pursuit of daily deportation quotas.”

‘Pure fascism.’ Contrarian editor-in-chief Jennifer Rubin: “The arrests of journalists Don Lemon and Georgia Fort for simply covering a protest at a St. Paul, Minn., church … remind us that no one has been more instrumental than Attorney General Pam Bondi in the assault on Americans’ civil liberties and the rule of law.”
Philadelphia Inquirer columnist Will Bunch sees trouble ahead for Ohio: “It’s hard to call this proposed operation anything … besides an ethnic cleansing on U.S. soil.”
Want to support journalists stretched to the limit covering the Twin Cities incursion? Here’s how.
The Intercept: A raid on a Washington Post reporter’s home is a warning: “Turn off your phone’s biometrics now.”
Salty Politics columnist Julie Roginsky: “Trump is selling out our national security and the Constitution all at once.”

‘Just like his casinos and other businesses, the Kennedy Center went out of business after he put his name on it.’ That’s one of the slams against Trump on social media after his announcement that the [Trump] Kennedy Center would be closing for a two-year renovation …
 … coincidentally—or not—after a bunch of artists refused to perform at the facility he’s taken over.

‘How disappointed are you that former Mayor Rahm Emanuel won’t be testifying about the Chicago Police Department’s notorious code of silence in federal court?’ Sun-Times columnist Neil Steinberg? Not so much: “I’m not sure why lawyers … ever thought they’d need Rahm Emanuel to explain the tight lips of Chicago police. Everybody knows.”
A judge’s change of heart is good news for those hoping Emanuel runs for president.
The New York Times (gift link): “The Supreme Court secretly made itself even more secretive.”

Plow ahead. Balloting’s now open in Chicago’s annual name-the-snowplow finals.
Chicagoans—or at least those who enter a Chicago ZIP code (nudge, nudge, wink, wink)—can vote here.

‘Leftist claptrap.’ Chicago Public Square T-shirts bearing that reader’s 2022 unsubscribe note on the back are newly back in stock—and you can buy one here.
During this ninth anniversary month for Square, you can get a special code good for $9 off the purchase price if you support this publication in any amount—even $1, just once.

Happy National News Literacy Week. The News Literacy Project has a passel of activities for teaching kids—and adults—to be smart news consumers …

Chicago news needs you. If you can spare about 10 minutes for a survey, you can help news organizations working with Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism to better understand the public they serve—and you could win a $100 gift card.
Completed the survey for another news organization? Do it again and get a bonus shot at that gift card.
Thanks. Karen Kring and Mike Braden made this edition better.
A hat-tip to Igor Studenkov for kind words in his new Chicago Media Journal email newsletter.


Happy Groundhog Day. Punxsutawney Phil saw his shadow, so don’t be surprised by six more weeks of winter.
Then again, Illinois’ Woodstock Willie went shadowless, so maybe better things await us.
Regardless, today’s looking a lot better than Chicago’s snowpocalypse of 15 years ago today—when just walking through the snow was a workout.
At 3 p.m. this afternoon, the third annual Harold Ramis Day at Navy Pier will celebrate the late Chicago-born filmmaker who brought us the movie Groundhog Day.

Plenty of expletives got cut during the broadcast as music’s biggest stars profanely slammed Trump’s Twin Cities reign of terror.
The New York Times (gift link) has found more than 5,300 files containing more than 38,000 references to Trump, his wife, his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida and other related words and phrases in the latest batch of Justice Department-released emails, government files, videos and other records related to dead sex offender Epstein.
Also from the Times: “They said they weren’t close to Epstein. New documents show otherwise.”
The AP surveys a who’s who of powerful people named in the latest trove.

‘I don’t think people realize how much of an insane step up Minneapolis was, how much more violence and aggression, and how many more agents doing completely illegal things.’ Two Chicago-area teenage brothers born in Minneapolis have spent days up there observing and documenting immigration agents’ actions.
Y’know that video of a federal agent running at a Minneapolis protester and then slipping on ice and falling on his ass, to the cheers of onlookers? That was their work.
The BBC surveys “how ICE raids changed a once bustling Chicago neighbourhood.”

Freed at last. Five-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos and his father, snatched by immigration officers and shipped to Texas last month, have been returned to Minnesota …
 … after a judge issued a blistering order condemning “the ill-conceived and incompetently-implemented government pursuit of daily deportation quotas.”

‘Pure fascism.’ Contrarian editor-in-chief Jennifer Rubin: “The arrests of journalists Don Lemon and Georgia Fort for simply covering a protest at a St. Paul, Minn., church … remind us that no one has been more instrumental than Attorney General Pam Bondi in the assault on Americans’ civil liberties and the rule of law.”
Philadelphia Inquirer columnist Will Bunch sees trouble ahead for Ohio: “It’s hard to call this proposed operation anything … besides an ethnic cleansing on U.S. soil.”
Want to support journalists stretched to the limit covering the Twin Cities incursion? Here’s how.
The Intercept: A raid on a Washington Post reporter’s home is a warning: “Turn off your phone’s biometrics now.”
Salty Politics columnist Julie Roginsky: “Trump is selling out our national security and the Constitution all at once.”

‘Just like his casinos and other businesses, the Kennedy Center went out of business after he put his name on it.’ That’s one of the slams against Trump on social media after his announcement that the [Trump] Kennedy Center would be closing for a two-year renovation …
 … coincidentally—or not—after a bunch of artists refused to perform at the facility he’s taken over.

‘How disappointed are you that former Mayor Rahm Emanuel won’t be testifying about the Chicago Police Department’s notorious code of silence in federal court?’ Sun-Times columnist Neil Steinberg? Not so much: “I’m not sure why lawyers … ever thought they’d need Rahm Emanuel to explain the tight lips of Chicago police. Everybody knows.”
A judge’s change of heart is good news for those hoping Emanuel runs for president.
The New York Times (gift link): “The Supreme Court secretly made itself even more secretive.”

Plow ahead. Balloting’s now open in Chicago’s annual name-the-snowplow finals.
Chicagoans—or at least those who enter a Chicago ZIP code (nudge, nudge, wink, wink)—can vote here.

‘Leftist claptrap.’ Chicago Public Square T-shirts bearing that reader’s 2022 unsubscribe note on the back are newly back in stock—and you can buy one here.
During this ninth anniversary month for Square, you can get a special code good for $9 off the purchase price if you support this publication in any amount—even $1, just once.

Happy National News Literacy Week. The News Literacy Project has a passel of activities for teaching kids—and adults—to be smart news consumers …

Chicago news needs you. If you can spare about 10 minutes for a survey, you can help news organizations working with Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism to better understand the public they serve—and you could win a $100 gift card.
Completed the survey for another news organization? Do it again and get a bonus shot at that gift card.
Thanks. Karen Kring and Mike Braden made this edition better.
A hat-tip to Igor Studenkov for kind words in his new Chicago Media Journal email newsletter.


Happy Groundhog Day. Punxsutawney Phil saw his shadow, so don’t be surprised by six more weeks of winter.
Then again, Illinois’ Woodstock Willie went shadowless, so maybe better things await us.
Regardless, today’s looking a lot better than Chicago’s snowpocalypse of 15 years ago today—when just walking through the snow was a workout.
At 3 p.m. this afternoon, the third annual Harold Ramis Day at Navy Pier will celebrate the late Chicago-born filmmaker who brought us the movie Groundhog Day.

Plenty of expletives got cut during the broadcast as music’s biggest stars profanely slammed Trump’s Twin Cities reign of terror.
The New York Times (gift link) has found more than 5,300 files containing more than 38,000 references to Trump, his wife, his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida and other related words and phrases in the latest batch of Justice Department-released emails, government files, videos and other records related to dead sex offender Epstein.
Also from the Times: “They said they weren’t close to Epstein. New documents show otherwise.”
The AP surveys a who’s who of powerful people named in the latest trove.

‘I don’t think people realize how much of an insane step up Minneapolis was, how much more violence and aggression, and how many more agents doing completely illegal things.’ Two Chicago-area teenage brothers born in Minneapolis have spent days up there observing and documenting immigration agents’ actions.
Y’know that video of a federal agent running at a Minneapolis protester and then slipping on ice and falling on his ass, to the cheers of onlookers? That was their work.
The BBC surveys “how ICE raids changed a once bustling Chicago neighbourhood.”

Freed at last. Five-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos and his father, snatched by immigration officers and shipped to Texas last month, have been returned to Minnesota …
 … after a judge issued a blistering order condemning “the ill-conceived and incompetently-implemented government pursuit of daily deportation quotas.”

‘Pure fascism.’ Contrarian editor-in-chief Jennifer Rubin: “The arrests of journalists Don Lemon and Georgia Fort for simply covering a protest at a St. Paul, Minn., church … remind us that no one has been more instrumental than Attorney General Pam Bondi in the assault on Americans’ civil liberties and the rule of law.”
Philadelphia Inquirer columnist Will Bunch sees trouble ahead for Ohio: “It’s hard to call this proposed operation anything … besides an ethnic cleansing on U.S. soil.”
Want to support journalists stretched to the limit covering the Twin Cities incursion? Here’s how.
The Intercept: A raid on a Washington Post reporter’s home is a warning: “Turn off your phone’s biometrics now.”
Salty Politics columnist Julie Roginsky: “Trump is selling out our national security and the Constitution all at once.”

‘Just like his casinos and other businesses, the Kennedy Center went out of business after he put his name on it.’ That’s one of the slams against Trump on social media after his announcement that the [Trump] Kennedy Center would be closing for a two-year renovation …
 … coincidentally—or not—after a bunch of artists refused to perform at the facility he’s taken over.

‘How disappointed are you that former Mayor Rahm Emanuel won’t be testifying about the Chicago Police Department’s notorious code of silence in federal court?’ Sun-Times columnist Neil Steinberg? Not so much: “I’m not sure why lawyers … ever thought they’d need Rahm Emanuel to explain the tight lips of Chicago police. Everybody knows.”
A judge’s change of heart is good news for those hoping Emanuel runs for president.
The New York Times (gift link): “The Supreme Court secretly made itself even more secretive.”

Plow ahead. Balloting’s now open in Chicago’s annual name-the-snowplow finals.
Chicagoans—or at least those who enter a Chicago ZIP code (nudge, nudge, wink, wink)—can vote here.

‘Leftist claptrap.’ Chicago Public Square T-shirts bearing that reader’s 2022 unsubscribe note on the back are newly back in stock—and you can buy one here.
During this ninth anniversary month for Square, you can get a special code good for $9 off the purchase price if you support this publication in any amount—even $1, just once.

Happy National News Literacy Week. The News Literacy Project has a passel of activities for teaching kids—and adults—to be smart news consumers …

Chicago news needs you. If you can spare about 10 minutes for a survey, you can help news organizations working with Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism to better understand the public they serve—and you could win a $100 gift card.
Completed the survey for another news organization? Do it again and get a bonus shot at that gift card.
Thanks. Karen Kring and Mike Braden made this edition better.
A hat-tip to Igor Studenkov for kind words in his new Chicago Media Journal email newsletter.


Happy Groundhog Day. Punxsutawney Phil saw his shadow, so don’t be surprised by six more weeks of winter.
Then again, Illinois’ Woodstock Willie went shadowless, so maybe better things await us.
Regardless, today’s looking a lot better than Chicago’s snowpocalypse of 15 years ago today—when just walking through the snow was a workout.
At 3 p.m. this afternoon, the third annual Harold Ramis Day at Navy Pier will celebrate the late Chicago-born filmmaker who brought us the movie Groundhog Day.

Plenty of expletives got cut during the broadcast as music’s biggest stars profanely slammed Trump’s Twin Cities reign of terror.
The New York Times (gift link) has found more than 5,300 files containing more than 38,000 references to Trump, his wife, his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida and other related words and phrases in the latest batch of Justice Department-released emails, government files, videos and other records related to dead sex offender Epstein.
Also from the Times: “They said they weren’t close to Epstein. New documents show otherwise.”
The AP surveys a who’s who of powerful people named in the latest trove.

‘I don’t think people realize how much of an insane step up Minneapolis was, how much more violence and aggression, and how many more agents doing completely illegal things.’ Two Chicago-area teenage brothers born in Minneapolis have spent days up there observing and documenting immigration agents’ actions.
Y’know that video of a federal agent running at a Minneapolis protester and then slipping on ice and falling on his ass, to the cheers of onlookers? That was their work.
The BBC surveys “how ICE raids changed a once bustling Chicago neighbourhood.”

Freed at last. Five-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos and his father, snatched by immigration officers and shipped to Texas last month, have been returned to Minnesota …
 … after a judge issued a blistering order condemning “the ill-conceived and incompetently-implemented government pursuit of daily deportation quotas.”

‘Pure fascism.’ Contrarian editor-in-chief Jennifer Rubin: “The arrests of journalists Don Lemon and Georgia Fort for simply covering a protest at a St. Paul, Minn., church … remind us that no one has been more instrumental than Attorney General Pam Bondi in the assault on Americans’ civil liberties and the rule of law.”
Philadelphia Inquirer columnist Will Bunch sees trouble ahead for Ohio: “It’s hard to call this proposed operation anything … besides an ethnic cleansing on U.S. soil.”
Want to support journalists stretched to the limit covering the Twin Cities incursion? Here’s how.
The Intercept: A raid on a Washington Post reporter’s home is a warning: “Turn off your phone’s biometrics now.”
Salty Politics columnist Julie Roginsky: “Trump is selling out our national security and the Constitution all at once.”

‘Just like his casinos and other businesses, the Kennedy Center went out of business after he put his name on it.’ That’s one of the slams against Trump on social media after his announcement that the [Trump] Kennedy Center would be closing for a two-year renovation …
 … coincidentally—or not—after a bunch of artists refused to perform at the facility he’s taken over.

‘How disappointed are you that former Mayor Rahm Emanuel won’t be testifying about the Chicago Police Department’s notorious code of silence in federal court?’ Sun-Times columnist Neil Steinberg? Not so much: “I’m not sure why lawyers … ever thought they’d need Rahm Emanuel to explain the tight lips of Chicago police. Everybody knows.”
A judge’s change of heart is good news for those hoping Emanuel runs for president.
The New York Times (gift link): “The Supreme Court secretly made itself even more secretive.”

Plow ahead. Balloting’s now open in Chicago’s annual name-the-snowplow finals.
Chicagoans—or at least those who enter a Chicago ZIP code (nudge, nudge, wink, wink)—can vote here.

‘Leftist claptrap.’ Chicago Public Square T-shirts bearing that reader’s 2022 unsubscribe note on the back are newly back in stock—and you can buy one here.
During this ninth anniversary month for Square, you can get a special code good for $9 off the purchase price if you support this publication in any amount—even $1, just once.

Happy National News Literacy Week. The News Literacy Project has a passel of activities for teaching kids—and adults—to be smart news consumers …

Chicago news needs you. If you can spare about 10 minutes for a survey, you can help news organizations working with Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism to better understand the public they serve—and you could win a $100 gift card.
Completed the survey for another news organization? Do it again and get a bonus shot at that gift card.
Thanks. Karen Kring and Mike Braden made this edition better.
A hat-tip to Igor Studenkov for kind words in his new Chicago Media Journal email newsletter.


Happy Groundhog Day. Punxsutawney Phil saw his shadow, so don’t be surprised by six more weeks of winter.
Then again, Illinois’ Woodstock Willie went shadowless, so maybe better things await us.
Regardless, today’s looking a lot better than Chicago’s snowpocalypse of 15 years ago today—when just walking through the snow was a workout.
At 3 p.m. this afternoon, the third annual Harold Ramis Day at Navy Pier will celebrate the late Chicago-born filmmaker who brought us the movie Groundhog Day.

Plenty of expletives got cut during the broadcast as music’s biggest stars profanely slammed Trump’s Twin Cities reign of terror.
The New York Times (gift link) has found more than 5,300 files containing more than 38,000 references to Trump, his wife, his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida and other related words and phrases in the latest batch of Justice Department-released emails, government files, videos and other records related to dead sex offender Epstein.
Also from the Times: “They said they weren’t close to Epstein. New documents show otherwise.”
The AP surveys a who’s who of powerful people named in the latest trove.

‘I don’t think people realize how much of an insane step up Minneapolis was, how much more violence and aggression, and how many more agents doing completely illegal things.’ Two Chicago-area teenage brothers born in Minneapolis have spent days up there observing and documenting immigration agents’ actions.
Y’know that video of a federal agent running at a Minneapolis protester and then slipping on ice and falling on his ass, to the cheers of onlookers? That was their work.
The BBC surveys “how ICE raids changed a once bustling Chicago neighbourhood.”

Freed at last. Five-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos and his father, snatched by immigration officers and shipped to Texas last month, have been returned to Minnesota …
 … after a judge issued a blistering order condemning “the ill-conceived and incompetently-implemented government pursuit of daily deportation quotas.”

‘Pure fascism.’ Contrarian editor-in-chief Jennifer Rubin: “The arrests of journalists Don Lemon and Georgia Fort for simply covering a protest at a St. Paul, Minn., church … remind us that no one has been more instrumental than Attorney General Pam Bondi in the assault on Americans’ civil liberties and the rule of law.”
Philadelphia Inquirer columnist Will Bunch sees trouble ahead for Ohio: “It’s hard to call this proposed operation anything … besides an ethnic cleansing on U.S. soil.”
Want to support journalists stretched to the limit covering the Twin Cities incursion? Here’s how.
The Intercept: A raid on a Washington Post reporter’s home is a warning: “Turn off your phone’s biometrics now.”
Salty Politics columnist Julie Roginsky: “Trump is selling out our national security and the Constitution all at once.”

‘Just like his casinos and other businesses, the Kennedy Center went out of business after he put his name on it.’ That’s one of the slams against Trump on social media after his announcement that the [Trump] Kennedy Center would be closing for a two-year renovation …
 … coincidentally—or not—after a bunch of artists refused to perform at the facility he’s taken over.

‘How disappointed are you that former Mayor Rahm Emanuel won’t be testifying about the Chicago Police Department’s notorious code of silence in federal court?’ Sun-Times columnist Neil Steinberg? Not so much: “I’m not sure why lawyers … ever thought they’d need Rahm Emanuel to explain the tight lips of Chicago police. Everybody knows.”
A judge’s change of heart is good news for those hoping Emanuel runs for president.
The New York Times (gift link): “The Supreme Court secretly made itself even more secretive.”

Plow ahead. Balloting’s now open in Chicago’s annual name-the-snowplow finals.
Chicagoans—or at least those who enter a Chicago ZIP code (nudge, nudge, wink, wink)—can vote here.

‘Leftist claptrap.’ Chicago Public Square T-shirts bearing that reader’s 2022 unsubscribe note on the back are newly back in stock—and you can buy one here.
During this ninth anniversary month for Square, you can get a special code good for $9 off the purchase price if you support this publication in any amount—even $1, just once.

Happy National News Literacy Week. The News Literacy Project has a passel of activities for teaching kids—and adults—to be smart news consumers …

Chicago news needs you. If you can spare about 10 minutes for a survey, you can help news organizations working with Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism to better understand the public they serve—and you could win a $100 gift card.
Completed the survey for another news organization? Do it again and get a bonus shot at that gift card.
Thanks. Karen Kring and Mike Braden made this edition better.
A hat-tip to Igor Studenkov for kind words in his new Chicago Media Journal email newsletter.


Happy Groundhog Day. Punxsutawney Phil saw his shadow, so don’t be surprised by six more weeks of winter.
Then again, Illinois’ Woodstock Willie went shadowless, so maybe better things await us.
Regardless, today’s looking a lot better than Chicago’s snowpocalypse of 15 years ago today—when just walking through the snow was a workout.
At 3 p.m. this afternoon, the third annual Harold Ramis Day at Navy Pier will celebrate the late Chicago-born filmmaker who brought us the movie Groundhog Day.

Plenty of expletives got cut during the broadcast as music’s biggest stars profanely slammed Trump’s Twin Cities reign of terror.
The New York Times (gift link) has found more than 5,300 files containing more than 38,000 references to Trump, his wife, his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida and other related words and phrases in the latest batch of Justice Department-released emails, government files, videos and other records related to dead sex offender Epstein.
Also from the Times: “They said they weren’t close to Epstein. New documents show otherwise.”
The AP surveys a who’s who of powerful people named in the latest trove.

‘I don’t think people realize how much of an insane step up Minneapolis was, how much more violence and aggression, and how many more agents doing completely illegal things.’ Two Chicago-area teenage brothers born in Minneapolis have spent days up there observing and documenting immigration agents’ actions.
Y’know that video of a federal agent running at a Minneapolis protester and then slipping on ice and falling on his ass, to the cheers of onlookers? That was their work.
The BBC surveys “how ICE raids changed a once bustling Chicago neighbourhood.”

Freed at last. Five-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos and his father, snatched by immigration officers and shipped to Texas last month, have been returned to Minnesota …
 … after a judge issued a blistering order condemning “the ill-conceived and incompetently-implemented government pursuit of daily deportation quotas.”

‘Pure fascism.’ Contrarian editor-in-chief Jennifer Rubin: “The arrests of journalists Don Lemon and Georgia Fort for simply covering a protest at a St. Paul, Minn., church … remind us that no one has been more instrumental than Attorney General Pam Bondi in the assault on Americans’ civil liberties and the rule of law.”
Philadelphia Inquirer columnist Will Bunch sees trouble ahead for Ohio: “It’s hard to call this proposed operation anything … besides an ethnic cleansing on U.S. soil.”
Want to support journalists stretched to the limit covering the Twin Cities incursion? Here’s how.
The Intercept: A raid on a Washington Post reporter’s home is a warning: “Turn off your phone’s biometrics now.”
Salty Politics columnist Julie Roginsky: “Trump is selling out our national security and the Constitution all at once.”

‘Just like his casinos and other businesses, the Kennedy Center went out of business after he put his name on it.’ That’s one of the slams against Trump on social media after his announcement that the [Trump] Kennedy Center would be closing for a two-year renovation …
 … coincidentally—or not—after a bunch of artists refused to perform at the facility he’s taken over.

‘How disappointed are you that former Mayor Rahm Emanuel won’t be testifying about the Chicago Police Department’s notorious code of silence in federal court?’ Sun-Times columnist Neil Steinberg? Not so much: “I’m not sure why lawyers … ever thought they’d need Rahm Emanuel to explain the tight lips of Chicago police. Everybody knows.”
A judge’s change of heart is good news for those hoping Emanuel runs for president.
The New York Times (gift link): “The Supreme Court secretly made itself even more secretive.”

Plow ahead. Balloting’s now open in Chicago’s annual name-the-snowplow finals.
Chicagoans—or at least those who enter a Chicago ZIP code (nudge, nudge, wink, wink)—can vote here.

‘Leftist claptrap.’ Chicago Public Square T-shirts bearing that reader’s 2022 unsubscribe note on the back are newly back in stock—and you can buy one here.
During this ninth anniversary month for Square, you can get a special code good for $9 off the purchase price if you support this publication in any amount—even $1, just once.

Happy National News Literacy Week. The News Literacy Project has a passel of activities for teaching kids—and adults—to be smart news consumers …

Chicago news needs you. If you can spare about 10 minutes for a survey, you can help news organizations working with Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism to better understand the public they serve—and you could win a $100 gift card.
Completed the survey for another news organization? Do it again and get a bonus shot at that gift card.
Thanks. Karen Kring and Mike Braden made this edition better.
A hat-tip to Igor Studenkov for kind words in his new Chicago Media Journal email newsletter.

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