A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms Creator Unveils Decade-Spanning Plan for the Series

If your hopes were crushed when Game of Thrones ended after just eight seasons – despite such an elaborate world woven by George R.R. Martin in his novels –  A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms showrunner Ira Parker may have a wild idea for how long the show must go on, appeasing fans.

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In a conversation withEsquire, Parker revealed his bold idea for the adaptation. He wants to spread the series over decades, saying, "I hope George keeps writing these. The truth is—and I've pitched this to HBO with a couple of very polite eye rolls—I want to do four or five now with Egg as a kid. Then, I want to come back in ten years and do four or five more seasons…"

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He continued, "And with real Dexter [Ansell] and real Peter, just the age that they are at that point. Then, we'll come back ten years after that and do well, Egg the adult. So, it would be over the course of their lifetime. And mine too."

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While this sound intriguingly ambitious, it's very unlikely and far too bold. Even Parker admitted, "I'm not sure anyone's going to let me go for that."

A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms premiered on HBO and HBO Max on January 18, 2026, at 10 p.m. ET/PT, with new episodes dropping every Sunday through the finale on February 22, 2026.

Related: A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms Becomes Highest-Rated Season 1 in the GoT Universe

This story was originally published byTV Squadon Feb 1, 2026, where it first appeared in theShowssection. Add TV Squad as aPreferred Source by clicking here.

A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms Creator Unveils Decade-Spanning Plan for the Series

If your hopes were crushed when Game of Thrones ended after just eight seasons – despite such an elaborate world woven by...
HUNTR/X, Art Garfunkel, Clipse and more light up pre-Grammy gala hosted by Clive Davis

LOS ANGELES (AP) — The music world lost a giant when heavy metal iconOzzy Osbourne diedlast summer. So, what better way to kick off the famed Clive Davispre-Grammys galaSaturday night than with a tribute to the prince of darkness?

MGK (formerly known as Machine Gun Kelly) and country star Jelly Roll began the night of live music and tributes with Osbourne's "I Don't Wanna Stop" and "Mama, I'm Coming Home," respectively, at the Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills, Calif.

"Rest in peace, Ozzy," MGK said. "Bring it home, Jelly."

Performances followed fast and furious from there: Alex Warren brought his "Ordinary" hit; sombr did "12 to 12"; Clipse and John Legend's "The Birds Don't Sing" told a soulful story. Olivia Dean, atop contender for best new artistat the 2026 Grammys, sang "Man I Need."

Greatest of all? The trio HUNTR/X doing "Golden" from"Kpop Demon Hunters,"a fictional girl group built of very real singers Ejae (the voice of Rumi), Audrey Nuna (Mira), and Rei Ami (Zoey), for a full-throated vocal performance.

Before the 93-year-old famed music executive Davis emerged on stage in a sequined suit to host his annual gala, Recording Academy President and CEOHarvey Mason jr. announcedthat the date of the event, Jan. 31, had been dubbed "Clive Davis Day" by the city of Beverly Hills, where it was held.

"I think you're gonna have an incredible time this evening," Davis told his audience, an understatement if there ever was one, before shouting out some of the big names seated before him: Joni Mitchell, Nancy Pelosi, Berry Gordy and Brandi Carlile among them.

A midshowtribute to Bernie Taupin,Elton John's principal collaborator and lyricist, got people dancing; Darren Criss launched into "Benny and the Jets." Laufey joined him for the duet "Don't Go Breaking My Heart."

Republic Records founders, CEO Monte Lipman and COO Avery Lipman, were honored with the 2026 Grammy Salute to Industry Icons Award at the star-studded event and used their speeches to spotlight Universal Music Group's entrepreneurial spirit. EvenStevie Wondersang their praises.

The brothers have been celebrated as titans of their industry; Republic Records is routinely viewed as one of the most influential labels in the music business.

Davis' gala, the incredibly popular and equally exclusive event, struck a different tone this year than last, when it was transformedto refocus on relief effortsfollowing the devastatingLos Angeles-area wildfires.

Outside, a small group of protesters, with a megaphone, held an anti-immigration enforcement demonstration. The Beverly Hilton is a part of Hilton Worldwide; recently, protesters haveheld demonstrations in NYCand Minneapolis, wearing shirts that read "Hilton houses ICE" and calling for Hilton to stop federal immigration officers from staying there.

Inside, music was at the center: Jennifer Hudson paid homage tothe late Roberta Flackwith "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face." The duo Dan + Shay did the same for Art Garfunkel, who later closed the stage with "Bridge Over Troubled Water."

Before he performed, Garfunkel told the room his song was styled after Phil Spector's production on "Ol' Man River," where the biggest orchestration is saved for the last line. Davis was an early believer in the unusual idea.

Gaining admittance to Davis' event is notoriously challenging. The A-listers who made the cut this year included Diplo, Karol G, Pharrell Williams, Rita Wilson, Dave Grohl, Diane Warren, Sharon Osbourne, Yungblud, Colman Domingo, Teyana Taylor, Jeff Goldblum, Gladys Knight, Madison Beer, Cameron Crowe, Lana Del Rey, Shaboozey, Max Martin, Leon Thomas, Bebe Rexha and Jack Antonoff.

Don Lemon, too, received one of Davis' coveted shout-outs. The independent journalist was released from custody Friday after he was arrested and hit withfederal civil rights chargesover his coverage of an anti-immigration enforcement protest thatdisrupted a serviceat a Minnesota church. When he stood from his seat to wave to the crowd, he was met with a standing ovation.

Early on in the evening, a video message from President Barack Obama played on screen. "Clive's talent has always been seeing and hearing what other people don't," he said, then listed a few of the artists Davis helped launch: "Janis Joplin,Bruce Springsteen,Whitney Houston."

It is an impressive list and further evidence of what makes Davis' party a highlight of every Grammy week. There's a lot of talent in the room, and at its heart is the man who knows how to recognize it. Or, as Gayle King said when she quoted Warren at the top of the show: "He's the best friend a song ever had."

The 68th Grammy Awards will be held Feb. 1 at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles. The show will air on CBS and stream on Paramount+. For more coverage of this year's Grammy Awards, visit:www.apnews.com/hub/grammy-awards

HUNTR/X, Art Garfunkel, Clipse and more light up pre-Grammy gala hosted by Clive Davis

LOS ANGELES (AP) — The music world lost a giant when heavy metal iconOzzy Osbourne diedlast summer. So, what better way t...
Milan's historical trams at night as the city gears up for the Winter Olympic Games, in photos

MILAN, Italy (AP) — Milan's tram network is one of Italy's largest and oldest, with the core fleet dating back to the late 19th century, The network began with horse-drawn carriages, switching to steam in 1878, becoming fully electrified by 1901.

Associated Press A traditional vintage trams travel on rails through a downtown street near to the Peace Arch, with a view of the Olympic cauldron in the background, ahead of the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Milan, Italy, Saturday, Jan. 31, 2026. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno) A traditional vintage tram travels on rails through a downtown street, in Milan, Italy, Saturday, Nov. 29, 2025. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno) A traditional vintage tram travels on rails at the Peace Arch past a Milan Cortina Winter Olympics banner, in Milan, Italy, Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno) A driver controls the exchange of tracks of a traditional vintage tram through a downtown street, during a Tram tour, in Milan, Italy, Saturday, Dec. 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno) A traditional vintage tram travels on rails through a downtown street, in Milan, Italy, Friday, Nov. 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno) Visitors take a tram tour in a traditional vintage tram along a downtown street, in Milan, Italy, Saturday, Dec. 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno) People eat dinner in the 'ATMosfera' restaurant traditional vintage tram traveling on rails through a downtown street, in Milan, Italy, Monday, Dec. 15, 2025. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno) A traditional vintage tram travels on rails through a downtown street, in Milan, Italy, Friday, Nov. 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno) A woman rides her bike past a traditional vintage tram near to the Peace Arch, in Milan, Italy, Saturday, Nov. 29, 2025. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno) A woman sits in a traditional vintage tram traveling through a downtown street as it passes by Olympic rings placed in front of the town hall, in Milan, Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno) A traditional vintage tram waits for passengers at a stop near to a Milan Cortina Winter Olympics banner, in Milan, Italy, Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno) An operator controls command levels of a traditional vintage tram near to the Peace Arch during a Tram tour, in Milan, Italy, Saturday, Dec. 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno) Traditional vintage trams travel on rails through a downtown street near to the Peace Arch, in Milan, Italy, Friday, Nov. 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno) A traditional vintage tram travels on rails by La Scala theatre near to a Milan Cortina Winter Olympics banner, in Milan, Italy, Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno) People travel in a traditional vintage tram on rails through a downtown street, in Milan, Italy, Saturday, Nov. 29, 2025. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno) A traditional vintage tram travels on rails near to the Rainbow Tower, a former water tank, through a downtown street, in Milan, Italy, Saturday, Nov. 29, 2025. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno)

Milan Cortina Olympics Trams Photo Gallery

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The polished raised cabins, wooden interiors and ornate lighting of the oldest trams still operating, dating from 1927-'30, offer the perspective of a bygone era, especially alongside sleeker, modern models.

This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors.

Milan’s historical trams at night as the city gears up for the Winter Olympic Games, in photos

MILAN, Italy (AP) — Milan's tram network is one of Italy's largest and oldest, with the core fleet dating back to...
Does the Constitution protect begging? Supreme Court asked to decide

WASHINGTON – Two years after theSupreme Courtsaid cities canpunish homeless peopleforsleeping in public places,Alabama wants the high court to end protections for public begging.

The constitutional issues are different. In 2024, the courtsaidfining or jailing someone for sleeping outside when there are no available shelter beds doesn't violate the Eighth Amendment's ban on cruel and unusual punishment.

In Alabama'spending appeal, the state argues begging was widely criminalized at the start of the nation so should not be protected speech under the First Amendment.

While the legal strategy may be a longshot, Alabama hopes the justices will want to hear its appeal for one of the same reasons an Oregon city's sleeping ban was taken up: local governments' pleas for help with the nation's growing homelessness problem.

More:In major decision, Supreme Court allows cities to ban homeless camps

"Our cities cannot manage this crisis without the full measure of their traditional police powers," Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall told the court in an appealbackedby 19 GOP attorneys general from other states.

`Today it is me, tomorrow it could be you'

Alabama has asked the court to decide whether the Constitution prevents broad bans on panhandling, such as two Alabama laws successfully challenged so far by Jonathan Singleton, a homeless resident of Montgomery, Alabama.

Singleton was cited six times for violating a state law against soliciting contributions, including for holding a sign that read "HOMELESS. Today it is me, tomorrow it could be you" while standing in the grass near a highway exit.

Violators can be punished with fines up to $500 and three months in jail under one anti-begging law and with fines starting at up to $100 and 10 days in jail under a law against soliciting contributions from people in cars.

More:20 US states sue to block Trump from restricting homelessness funding

A homeless man holds a sign on the streets of Providence, Rhode Island.

Alabama's begging bans blocked by lower courts

After Singleton filed a class action lawsuit in 2020, lower courts blocked enforcement of the laws.

The Atlanta-based 11thCircuit Court of Appeals' 2025 ruling cited its previous decision in a different case from Florida that begging is speech protected by the First Amendment.

A three-judge panel said Alabama's laws are different from a ban on panhandling on Fort Lauderdale's beaches that the appeals court upheld in 1999 because Fort Lauderdale's restrictions weren't citywide.

In an appeal that includes several references to the Supreme Court's 2024 decision on outdoor sleeping bans, Alabama argues cities and states need more leeway to address panhandling amid the homelessness crisis and a "dramatic growth" in public demand for dealing with begging.

"At the founding, States commonly prohibited idleness, wandering about with no course of business or fixed residence, begging in the streets, and the like," Marshall wrote. "The basic theory, inherited from the English, was to distinguish those who could work (but refused) from those who could not."

More:A growing American crisis is affecting more than 1 million students

With his dog Molly, Chris Steininger knows the harsh and unforgiving business of being homeless. Panhandling is his fulltime job in Columbus, Ohio, and his dog Molly is the lure for many to give him the $100 per day he needs to pay for housing, as shown in this 2025 photo.

Courts have said begging is protected by First Amendment

Lawyers for Singleton, some of whom work for the Southern Poverty Law Center and the National Homelessness Law Center, counter that the historic laws Alabama cites "criminalized the conduct of voluntary idleness, not the communicative aspect of begging."

And even if they did cover begging, Singleton's lawyers said, First Amendment protections aren't determined by what laws were on the books at a single moment in time.

That's why Alabama's argument cuts against the position taken by courts across the country and against the Supreme Court's "long and unbroken line of precedent recognizing that speech seeking charitable relief is protected by the First Amendment," his lawyers wrote.

When initiating the lawsuit in 2020, the Southern Poverty Law CentersaidAlabama "should dedicate more resources to housing, shelter, and healthcare that would meet those needs rather than jailing or ticketing people that ask for help."

Alabama's appeal is scheduled to be considered by the Supreme Court at a closed-door conference on Feb. 20. Four of the nine justices must want to hear a case for it to be accepted for review.

The court rejects the vast majority of the thousands of appeals it receives each year.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Alabama asks Supreme Court to end protections for panhandling

Does the Constitution protect begging? Supreme Court asked to decide

WASHINGTON – Two years after theSupreme Courtsaid cities canpunish homeless peopleforsleeping in public places,Alabama wa...
Shutdown? What shutdown? For DC, just another day at the office

Shutdown?What shutdown?

USA TODAY

There was a time when shutting down the federal government seemed like a big deal. Thirty years ago, the firestorm over a 21-day shutdown revived Bill Clinton's presidency and grievously wounded Newt Gingrich's speakership.

But the partial shutdown that started at midnight on Jan. 31 created less buzz over the weekend than the early and almost-entirely-negativereviews of Netflix's "Melania," the first lady's entry into documentary filmmaking.

President Donald Trump (C-L) speaks during a meeting of the Cabinet in the Cabinet Room of the White House on January 29, 2026 in Washington, DC. President Trump is holding the meeting as the Senate plans to hold a vote on a spending package to avoid another government shutdown, however Democrats are holding out for a deal to consider funding for the Department of Homeland Security. President Donald Trump speaks during a meeting of the Cabinet in the Cabinet Room of the White House on January 29, 2026 in Washington, DC. President Trump is holding the meeting as the Senate plans to hold a vote on a spending package to avoid another government shutdown, however Democrats are holding out for a deal to consider funding for the Department of Homeland Security. (L-R) U.S. Office of Management and Budget Director Russell Vought, White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Eric Turner, and U.S. Agriculture Secretary Brooke L. Rollins look on during a meeting of the Cabinet in the Cabinet Room of the White House on January 29, 2026 in Washington, DC. President Trump is holding the meeting as the Senate plans to hold a vote on a spending package to avoid another government shutdown, however Democrats are holding out for a deal to consider funding for the Department of Homeland Security. A name card for U.S. Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security Kristi Noem sits on the table during a meeting of the Cabinet in the Cabinet Room of the White House on January 29, 2026 in Washington, DC. President Trump is holding the meeting as the Senate plans to hold a vote on a spending package to avoid another government shutdown, however Democrats are holding out for a deal to consider funding for the Department of Homeland Security. President Donald Trump speaks during a meeting of the Cabinet in the Cabinet Room of the White House on January 29, 2026 in Washington, DC. President Trump is holding the meeting as the Senate plans to hold a vote on a spending package to avoid another government shutdown, however Democrats are holding out for a deal to consider funding for the Department of Homeland Security. (L-R) White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Eric Turner, U.S. Agriculture Secretary Brooke L. Rollins, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, and U.S. Vice President JD Vance look on during a meeting of the Cabinet in the Cabinet Room of the White House on January 29, 2026 in Washington, DC. President Trump is holding the meeting as the Senate plans to hold a vote on a spending package to avoid another government shutdown, however Democrats are holding out for a deal to consider funding for the Department of Homeland Security. U.S. Secretary of Treasury Scott Bessent listens as President Donald Trump speaks during a cabinet meeting in the Cabinet Room of the White House in Washington, DC, on January 29, 2026. (L-R) U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, U.S. Vice President JD Vance and U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi look on during a meeting of the Cabinet in the Cabinet Room of the White House on January 29, 2026 in Washington, DC. President Trump is holding the meeting as the Senate plans to hold a vote on a spending package to avoid another government shutdown, however Democrats are holding out for a deal to consider funding for the Department of Homeland Security. President Donald Trump speaks alongside Secretary of State Marco Rubio (L) and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth (R) during a cabinet meeting in the Cabinet Room of the White House in Washington, DC, on January 29, 2026. President Donald Trump listens during a cabinet meeting in the Cabinet Room of the White House in Washington, DC, on January 29, 2026. Also pictured from L/R are Attorney General Pam Bondi, US secretary of Interior Doug Burgum, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick, and US Vice President JD Vance.

As shutdown threat looms, Trump meets with Cabinet

This even though parts of the Pentagon, the Health and Human Services Department and the Transportation Department, left without regular funding, were ordered to begin an "orderly shutdown" for a least a few days. Late Friday, the Senate passed five appropriations bills to fund them but the House can't begin to consider the measure until it reconvenes on Monday.

Passage there is considered likely but not guaranteed. Democratic leaders aren't yet on board; some Republican hardliners are expressing opposition.

Left unsettled is more money for the Homeland Security Department. Those funds are caught in a fierce battle over Democratic proposals, now backed by some Republicans, to impose limits on the behavior of the ICE agents whose aggressive tactics in Minneapolis have left protestersRenee GoodandAlex Prettidead.

Under the deal reached by the Trump administration and the Senate, negotiators would have another two weeks before a shutdown over that looms again.

What once seemed like a sign of a government-in-crisis is now viewed by many in Washington as just another day at the office. Shutdowns have lost their power to shock unless clear catastrophe ensues − say,disrupting air travelfor millions of Americans − or records are broken.

Travelers in Houston face delays as TSA operations are impacted by the government shutdown, waiting at least three hours to get through security.

That's not to say shutdowns are free, for federal workers or Americans generally.

Besides overwhelmed TSA lines at some airports, the last shutdown resulted in the furlough of about 670,000 government employees. Members of thearmed forceswere required to report for duty, but some military families turned to food banks to tide over their families.

Areport by the Congressional Research Servicereleased Jan. 29 estimated that the six-week shutdown cost the U.S. economy about $11 billion in lost spending and productivity.

The current shutdown has a long way to go before it challenges the record that one set last fall. That had been prompted by Democrats' demand to extend enhanced subsidies for those who buy health insurance through the Affordable Care Act.

An issue, by the way, that is still being debated.

Do you trust your government?

One reason shutdowns have often become a dog-bites-man story is that what once was seen as a shocking last resort has beenrelatively common.

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In the half-century since the federal budget process was overhauled in 1976, there have now been 23 of them, hitting every administration except those of presidents George W. Bush andJoe Biden.

Ronald Reagan had the most, at eight, but each for only a few days. Trump has scored the longest. The previous record of 35 days, set during his first term over funding for his proposal to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border, has now been supplanted by the 43-day shutdown in his second term.

Another reason is that the federal government is now viewed by many as so routinely dysfunctional that budget stalemates are seen as just one more example of a broader breakdown.

The U.S. Capitol dome rises above a pile of snow, as Congress works to resolve a dispute over immigration enforcement and avert a looming partial government shutdown, in Washington, D.C., U.S., January 29, 2026.

In aPew Research Center pollreleased in December, just 17% of Americans said they trusted the government in Washington to do what is right most or all of the time.

When that question was first asked by the National Election Study in 1958, an overwhelming 73% of Americans held that level of trust in their government.

Views of the government have gone up and down in the generations since then. They eroded during the Vietnam War and Watergate scandal, then rebounded during rosy economic times in the mid-1980s and late 1990s. But a spike after the Sept. 11 terror attacks in 2011 collapsed in the wake of the Iraq War and financial meltdown in 2008.

Today's reading, with only about one in six Americans expressing faith in government, is one of the lowest over the past seven decades.

When it's easier to sign your name

Washington has also set public expectations low that action will be taken on, well, just about anything.

The119th Congress, which took office in January 2025, is on track to enact the fewest pieces of legislation of any in decades, according to statistics reported by GovTrack.us.

The bills Trump signed into law in 2025 included the sweeping tax-cut measure known as the One Big Beautiful Bill. But the president has imposed many of his most far-reaching policies not by passing laws but by signing arecord 228 executive orders− to impose stringent tariffs, order mass deportations, shake up federal agencies and deploy the National Guard to the streets of U.S. cities.

For Congress, funding the government, one of its fundamental tasks, has proven problematic.

Another shutdown?

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:For Trump and Congress, budget shutdown just another day in DC

Shutdown? What shutdown? For DC, just another day at the office

Shutdown?What shutdown? There was a time when shutting down the federal government seemed like a big deal. Thi...
Gaza border crossing buzzes with activity after years of near-complete closure

CAIRO (AP) — Gaza'sRafah border crossingwith Egypt was busy with activity Sunday as Israel said that limited travel to and from the territory is set to resume after years of near-complete isolation. Reopening the border crossing is a key step as the Israel-Hamas ceasefire moves ahead.

Israel announced Sunday that the crossing has opened in a test. COGAT, the Israeli military agency that controls aid to Gaza, said in a statement that the crossing was actively being prepared for fuller operation, adding that residents of Gaza would begin to pass through the crossing once preparations were complete.

Palestinian security officers passed through the crossing's Egyptian gate and headed toward the Palestinian gate to join an EU mission that will be supervising exit and entry, said an Egyptian official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to talk to the media. Ambulances also crossed through the Egyptian gate, the official added.

The head of the new Palestinian administrative committee governing Gaza's daily affairs has said travel in both directions would start Monday.

Rafah, which Palestinians see as their gateway to the world, has been largely shut since it was seized by Israel in May 2024.

Few people will be allowed at first, and no goods allowed to cross. About 20,000 Palestinian children and adults needing medical care are hoping to leavewar-devastated Gazavia the crossing, and thousands of other Palestinians outside the territory hope to return home.

Zaher al-Wahidi, head of the Health Ministry's documentation department in Gaza, told The Associated Press that the ministry hasn't yet been notified about the start of medical evacuations.

Prime MinisterBenjamin Netanyahuhas said Israel will allow 50 patients a day to leave. An official involved in the discussions, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss the diplomatic talks, said each patient would be allowed to travel with two relatives, while some 50 people who left Gaza during the war would be allowed to return each day.

Israel has said it and Egypt will vet people for exit and entry through the crossing, which will be supervised byEuropean Unionborder patrol agents. The number of travelers is expected to increase over time if the system is successful.

Israeli troops seized and closed the Rafah crossing in May 2024, calling it part of efforts to combat Hamas arms smuggling. The crossing was briefly opened for the evacuation of medical patients during a ceasefire in early 2025. Israel had resisted reopening the Rafah crossing, but the recovery of the remains of thelast hostage in Gazalast week cleared the way to move forward.

The reopening is a key step as last year's U.S.-brokered ceasefire agreement, which took effect on Oct. 10, moves into its second phase.

Before the war, Rafah was the main crossing for people moving in and out of Gaza. Although Gaza has four other border crossings, they are shared with Israel. Under the ceasefire terms, Israel's military controls the area between the Rafah crossing and the zone where most Palestinians live.

Fearing that Israeli could use the crossing to push Palestinians out of the enclave, Egypt has repeatedly said it must be open for both entry to and exit from Gaza. Historically, Israel and Egypt have vetted Palestinians applying to cross.

The current ceasefire halted more than two years of war between Israel and Hamas that began with a Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. The truce's first phase called for the exchange of all hostages held in Gaza for hundreds of Palestinians held by Israel, an increase in badly needed humanitarian aid and a partial pullback of Israeli troops.

The second phase is more complicated. It calls for installing a new Palestinian committee to govern Gaza, deploying an international security force, disarming Hamas, and taking steps to begin rebuilding.

Find more of AP's coverage athttps://apnews.com/hub/israel-hamas-war

Gaza border crossing buzzes with activity after years of near-complete closure

CAIRO (AP) — Gaza'sRafah border crossingwith Egypt was busy with activity Sunday as Israel said that limited travel t...
In Minneapolis, all-encompassing immigration story tests a newsroom in midst of digital transition

With the eyes of a nation fixed on the unrest in Minneapolis, the events haven't left local journalists overmatched.

Associated Press A protester sits on the street with his arms up in front of federal agents in Minneapolis, on Saturday, Jan. 24, 2026. (Alex Kormann/Star Tribune via AP) This undated photo shows Steve Grove, publisher and chief executive of the Star Tribune, speaking to the newsroom in Minneapolis. (Renee Jones Schneider/Star Tribune via AP) This undated photo shows Star Tribune reporter Liz Sawyer in Minneapolis. (Aaron Lavinsky/Star Tribune via AP) This undated photo shows Star Tribune photographer Richard Tsong-Taatarii in Minneapolis. (Alex Kormann/Star Tribune via AP)

Immigration Enforcement Minnesota

Over the past month, the Minnesota Star Tribune has broken stories, including the identity of theimmigration enforcement officerwho shotRenee Good, and produced a variety of informative and instructive pieces. Richard Tsong-Taatarii'sphotoof a prone demonstrator sprayed point-blank with a chemical irritant quickly became a defining image. TheICE actionshave changed how the outlet presents the news.

At a time when many regional newspapers have become hollowed-out shells due to thedecline in journalismas a business, the Star Tribune has kept staffing relatively steady under billionaireGlen Taylor, who has owned it since 2014. It rebranded itself from the Minneapolis Star Tribune and committed itself to a digital transformation.

It was ready for its moment.

"If you hadn't invested in the newsroom, you wouldn't be able to react in that way," said Steve Grove, publisher and chief executive.

Minnesota's robust journalism tradition

The Star Tribune hasn't operated in a vacuum. Minneapolis has a robust journalism tradition, particularly on public radio and television. Sahan Journal, a digital newsroom focusing on immigrants and diverse communities, has also distinguished itself covering President Donald Trump's immigration efforts and the public response.

"The whole ecosystem is pretty darn good," said Kathleen Hennessey, senior vice president and editor of the Star Tribune, "and I think people are seeing that now."

While national outlets have made their presence felt, strong local teams offer advantages in such stories. The Star Tribune's Josie Albertson-Grove was one of the first journalists on the scene afterICU nurse Alex Prettiwas shot dead on Jan. 24. She lives about a block away, and her knowledge of the neighborhood and its people helped to reconstruct what happened.

Journalists with kids in school learned about ICE efforts to target areas where children gather by hearing chatter among friends. While covering a beat like public safety can carry baggage, Star Tribune reporter Liz Sawyer developed sources that helped her, along with colleagues Andy Mannix and Sarah Nelson, report on who shot Good.

Besides those contacts, the staff simply knows Minnesota better than outsiders, Hennessey said.

"This is a place with a really, really long and entrenched tradition of activism, and a place with really deep social networks and neighborhood networks," she said. "People mobilize quickly and passionately, and they're noisy about it. That's definitely been part of the story."

A Signal chat tipped Tsong-Taatarii about a demonstration growing raucous on Jan. 21. Upon arriving, he focused his lens on one protester knocked to the ground, leaving the photographer perfectly placed for his richly-detailed shot. Two officers hold the man face-down with arms on his back, while a third unleashes a chemical from a canister inches from his face. The bright yellow liquid streams onto his cheek and splatters onto the pavement.

What some have called the sadistic cruelty involved in the episode outraged many who saw the photo. "I was just trying to document and present the evidence and let people decide for themselves," Tsong-Taatarii said.

'A badge to prove I belong'

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In one enterprising story, the Star Tribune's Christopher Magan and Jeff Hargarten identified 240 of an estimated 3,000 immigrants rounded up in Minnesota, finding 80% had felony convictions but nearly all had been through the court system, been punished and were no longer sought by police. Hargarten and Jake Steinberg collaborated on a study of how the size of the federal force compared with that of local police.

Columnist Laura Yuen wrote that her 80-year-old parents have begun carrying their passports when they leave their suburban townhouse, part of the "quiet, pervasive fear" in the Twin Cities. Yuen downloaded her own passport to carry on her phone. "A document that once made me proud of all the places I've traveled is now a badge to prove I belong," she wrote.

A piece by Kim Hyatt and Louis Krauss detailed the health consequences of chemical irritants used by law enforcement — or thought to be used, since questions about what specifically was deployed went unanswered.

"I really think they've done a commendable job," said Scott Libin, a veteran television newsman and journalism professor at the University of Minnesota. He praised the Star Tribune's story about the criminal backgrounds of immigrants as thorough and dispassionate.

Since Hennessey, a former Associated Press editor, began her job last May, the Star Tribune has experienced a run of big stories, including theshootingof two state lawmakers and agunman opening fireat a Catholic school in Minneapolis. And, of course, "we have a newsroom that still has muscle memory fromGeorge Floyd" in 2020, Grove said.

News compelled fundamental shifts in the way the Star Tribune operates. Like some national outlets, it has rearranged staff to cover the story aggressively through a continuously updated live blog on its website, offered free to readers. There's also a greater emphasis on video, with the Star Tribune doing forensic studies on footage from the Pretti and Good shootings, something few local newsrooms are equipped to do. Traffic to its website has gone up 50 percent, paid subscriptions have increased and the company is getting thousands of dollars in donations from across the country, Grove said.

"People have changed the way that they consume news," Hennessey said. "We see that readers are coming back. You know, they're not just waking up in the morning, reading the site and then forgetting about us all day long. They're coming back a couple of times a day to check in on what's new."

Most people in the newsroom are contributing to the story, including the Star Tribune's food and culture team, and its outdoor reporters. "There are no normal beats anymore," Albertson-Grove said.

A rapid transformation to a digital-first newsroom

Under Grove, a former Google executive, the Star Tribune has attempted a digital-first transition, turning over about 20% of its staff in two years. The paper shut its Minneapolis printing plant in December, laying off 125 people, and moving print operations to Iowa.

"We face every single headwind that every local news organization in the country does," Grove said. "But we do feel fortunate that we're the largest newsroom in the Midwest and it's part of the reason we're able to do this now."

As a reporter, Sawyer says the public response to the outlet's work, sharing stories and images, has lifted her spirits. Readers see it as public service journalism. Still, she could use a break. She and her husband, Star Tribune photographer Aaron Lavinsky, have a baby daughter and make sure to stagger their coverage. They can't both be tear-gassed or arrested at the same time; who makes the daycare pickup?

"I think both residents and journalists in this town are running on fumes," she said. "We're tired of being in the international spotlight and it's never for something positive. People are trying their best to get through this moment with grace."

David Bauder writes about the intersection of media and entertainment for the AP. Follow him athttp://x.com/dbauderandhttps://bsky.app/profile/dbauder.bsky.social.

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