‘She’s a horror show’ / ‘Gerrymandering war’ / Cities vs. Pritzker / Quizzes!

‘She’s a horror show.’ President Trump yesterday attacked an ABC News reporter who dared to ask him a critical question …
 Award-winning former radio reporter turned media critic Rob Archer: “The press is no longer off limits. At protests, journalists are being treated like everyone else in the crowd.”

 Columnist Jeff Tiedrich: “It’s looking more and more like the guy who lied about bone spurs and lied about hush money and lied about his dead pedo bestie and lied about how tariffs work and lied about being able to point to a camel and lied about his weight and lied about his golf scores and lied about his wealth and lied about a hurricane and lied about a pandemic and lied about his taxes and lied about a million other things has been lying to us about just how swimmingly his don’t-you-dare-call-it-a-war on Iran is going.”
 The Bulwark asks, “Has Trump considered shutting the eff up?” (Answer: No.)

‘Gerrymandering war … to preserve their stolen power.’ Noting that Tennessee Republicans’ new U.S. House map carves up a majority-Black district in Memphis, Marc Elias at Democracy Docket says this is “the week Jim Crow came back to the South.”
 In what The Washington Post (gift link) calls a “a major setback for Democrats,” a voter-approved congressional redistricting plan for Virginia went down today before that state’s Supreme Court.
 Wonkette’s Evan Hurst holds out hope that all this could “bite Republicans in the asses”—adding, “Republicans think they birthed a nation yesterday. Looks like they birthed something else instead.”
 Columnist Thom Hartmann: “While Americans were trained to fear immigrants, trans kids and each other, the billionaire class quietly extracted trillions from the middle class and captured the nation’s politics, media and courts.”
 Lyz Lenz’s Dingus of the Week: “A guy so tangled up in the Trump business empire that he can’t see his own ass from a conflict of interest” and who “compared the phrase ‘tax the rich’ to racial slurs.”

‘Congratulations, you all are no longer charged with felonies.’ A federal judge has officially dismissed the main conspiracy charges against the “Broadview Six” immigration protesters …
 … who still face misdemeanor charges.
 And four Broadview demonstrators are suing the feds, alleging unconstitutional collection of their DNA after their arrests.

Cities vs. Pritzker. As Illinois’ governor—a potential presidential candidate—pushes a plan to expand the state’s housing supply by overriding local governments’ restrictive density regulations, the Illinois Municipal League’s pushing an alternative that would instead offer state funding as an incentive for towns to ease off.
 The Illinois Answers Project: As the Obama Presidential Center nears its opening next month, efforts to keep housing in the neighborhood affordable are falling short.
 Philadelphia Inquirer columnist Will Bunch (gift link) sees “a blow to [Pennsylvanial Gov.] Josh Shapiro’s White House dreams” as emails expose his “cozy relationship” with Amazon.

Fermata. Announcing the layoff of its seven administrative staffers, the Chicago Sinfonietta says it’s pausing artistic and educational activities at the end of this season.
 Its official statement declares a “strategic renewal period” into January 2027.

Above average. Your Chicago Public Square columnist racked up a near-perfect 7/8 score on this week’s news quiz from The Conversation’s quizmaster, past Jeopardy! Tournament of Champions winner Fritz Holznagel.
 Tip: Subscribers to The Conversation’s newsletters often get an edge in these quizzes.
 Axios’ Justin Kaufmann has assembled a quiz on Illinois’ colleges and universities—with an 80% score here. (You may need to enter an email address to play.)
 And it was a modest 3/5 correct for Square on City Cast’s Chicago-centric quiz.

The files are out there. The Pentagon’s begun releasing more files on UFOs—um, “unidentified anomalous phenomena” …
 The New York Times (gift link): “The initial files are murky images that show what could be anything.”
 Meanwhile, Mark (Luke Skywalker) Hamill is on the administration’s shitlist.

Comic care. The national nonprofit Comedy Gives Back is sponsoring a new organization devoted to providing health care for Chicago comedians.
 Tribune critic Chris Jones (no paywall) raves about Second City’s new revue: “Such are the times that a performer … can start to scream on that venerable comedy theater’s stage and, within the shake of a lamb’s tail, an entire audience has joined in without prompting.”

How to save TV’s late-night shows. Second City-trained comedian Stephen Colbert last night sought answers from the experts: Kids …
 … and then he produced the show they recommended.


 Status: Two press freedom groups that hold shares in CBS parent Paramount are demanding internal records that may show the controlling Ellison family’s agreed to compromise CNN’s editorial integrity if they take over parent company Warner Bros.

‘To Tell the Truth: The Future of Local Media.’ That’s the title of a discussion your Square columnist will moderate Saturday afternoon—free tickets for which you can register in advance.
Also: Refreshments!

Thanks. Amy Parker made this edition better.

‘Standard operating procedure’ / Turnabout / Strikes struck

It has become standard operating procedure for Trump and his aides to deceive the public with false statements and shifting accounts.’ Press Watch columnist Dan Froomkin calls on the news media to make boilerplate in their coverage of the president a sentence that The Washington Post included in a story eight years ago—but that hasn’t been repeated since.
 Which makes this a good time to check in on some of those near to Trump:
 A private congressional interview with Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick—the highest-ranked administration official besides Trump to be named in the Epstein files—has triggered calls for his resignation.
 American Freakshow: A purported Epstein suicide notelooks real.”
 Columnist Jeff Tiedrich: “We’re being governed … by morons.”

Journalist targeted. FBI Director Kash Patel’s agents have reportedly been investigating The Atlantic reporter who detailed his alleged misbehavior …
 … and who just yesterday published a fresh exposé (gift link) on Patel’s “unusual calling card,” a personalized bottle of bourbon.
 Evan Hurst at Wonkette:Daaaaaaaaamn Ka$h Patel is a dork.”
 Investigative journalist Ken Klippenstein: The White House’s newly released National Counterterrorism Strategy “declared war on the American people … labeling its political opponents as terrorists.”
 Law and Chaos columnist Liz Dye: “Trump never stopped harassing E. Jean Carroll. And neither has the DOJ.”

‘An outbreak of racism.’ That’s what law professor Joyce Vance sees spreading through Southern state legislatures following the Supreme Court’s decision effectively endorsing gerrymanders that disenfranchise Black voters.
 A Trump-appointed federal judge has ruled that Trump’s Justice Department can keep 2020 election ballots it seized in Georgia.
 In what one lawmaker calls “a tragic step backwards for Black Alabama voters,” that state’s House has approved a redistricting plan even though some early votes have already been cast.
 USA Today’s Chicago-based columnist Rex Huppke: “Republicans get to ride into the midterm elections with a wildly unpopular president who most voters see as wholly unfit for the job.”

‘YouTube removed a video I made about abortion pills.’ Abortion, Every Day columnist Jessica Valenti says “this …feels ominous.”
 You can see it here.

Not gone yet. A WBEZ / Sun-Times analysis confirms immigration enforcement ain’t over in Chicago—with close to 600 people detained in the area during the year’s first quarter.
 A new AP survey finds that about a third of U.S. adults report knowing someone impacted by the administration’s aggressive immigration enforcement.

Turnabout. Social worker Anjanette Young—the subject of an erroneous police raid that left her naked and handcuffed in her home seven years ago—is on the way to becoming a member of the commission overseeing Chicago cops.
 Columnist Eric Zorn: “Surprise! A Cook County judge gives a Cook County elected official an enormous break.”

Airbag crime streak. Chicago police advise owners of Hondas and Acuras to beware thieves stealing airbags on the West Side.
 Popular Information turns words from a State Farm commercial against the company: “Forget what we told you. It ain’t worth squat.”

Don’t hold your breath. The first month of tickets to the Obama Presidential Center—which opens to the public on Juneteenth—sold out in hours yesterday …
 … but, hey, you can still get into the Griffin Museum of Science and Industry, which now features a huge new slide.
 Chicago 312 columnist H Kapp-Klote: MSI benefactor “Ken Griffin needs everyone to stop trying to tax Ken Griffin.”

Strikes struck. A walkout by workers at Brookfield Zoo is over after three days.
 Non-teaching staff at Illinois State University were headed back to work after four weeks.

Gas shriek. A coalition of utility watchdogs and consumer champions is encouraging the state to “take an axe” to a Peoples Gas rate hike request.
 The Citizens Utility Board has launched an online petition.

‘Trump held a Mother’s Day event for military mothers. It went about as well as you’d expect.’ Columnist Mary Geddry reviews yesterday’s White House mishap …
 … at which Melania Trump triggered laughter when she touted her husband’s “empathy.”

‘Ted Turner Was Captain Planet.’ The Hollywood Reporter celebrates the life of CNN founder Ted Turner, whose passion for the environment drove him to create an animated icon.
Poynter’s Tom Jones: “Turner’s impact on media still shapes how we get the news today.”
 Journalism critic Jeff Jarvis praises Turner’s vision—“for media, for democracy, for peace and the planet.”

‘To Tell the Truth: The Future of Local Media.’
That’s the title of a discussion your Chicago Public Square publisher will moderate Saturday afternoon—free tickets for which you can register in advance.
Also: Refreshments!

Correction. Yesterday’s Square misstated Apple’s settlement of a class action suit: It could send you up to $95 per affected device.
 Chris Koenig made this edition better.

Square up.

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