Allianz Field to host its first musical event, a two-day dance music festival in June

posted in: Society | 0

Five years after it opened to the public, St. Paul’s Allianz Field will finally host its first musical event in June.

Breakaway Minnesota, a two-day electronic dance music festival, will take place June 28 and 29 on the lawn outside the soccer stadium in Midway. Illenium, Kaskade, Slander and Knock2 will headline the 24-act lineup, which also includes Minnesotans Caiked Up, Jkatz, Spirit Motel and Timetwofly. Tickets are priced from $999 to $70 and go on sale at 10 a.m. Friday via breakawayfestival.com.

Stadium officials “had a lot of good momentum” toward booking musical acts after opening in 2019, said Zacharia Litzelswope, director of events and guest experience.

“And then COVID happened,” Litzelswope said. “That put a damper on our efforts.”

While soccer will always be the main focus at Allianz Field, officials are eager to bring music into the mix. To that end, they’ve been working with the California-based company Terrapin Station Entertainment, which helps 10 MLS leagues around the country book live music in their venues.

“They’ve been helpful in building key relationships to get into the music space,” Litzelswope said. That includes helping facilitate Breakaway Minnesota.

“We’re excited to host a really awesome event that’s had success around the country,” he said. “We’re always looking for new and engaging content.”

The Breakaway festival brand began in Ohio in 2016 and has since expanded into multiple cities across the country. This year will stand as Breakaway’s biggest to date, with festivals in 10 cities, two of which are also new markets alongside St. Paul. More than 100,000 fans attended Breakaway events in 2023.

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MyPillow evicted from warehouse after $217K in rent unpaid, but Lindell says ‘We’re fine’

posted in: News | 0

A court ordered the eviction Wednesday of MyPillow from a suburban Minneapolis warehouse that it formerly used, but company founder and prominent election denier Mike Lindell said that it’s just a formality because the landlord wants to take the property back.

Lindell denied in an interview with the Associated Press that the eviction was another sign of his money woes. He said his financial picture is actually improving after a credit crunch last year disrupted cash flow at MyPillow after the company lost one of its major advertising platforms and was dropped by several national retailers.

“We’re fine,” he said.

Lindell faced a setback last month when a federal judge affirmed a $5 million arbitration award in favor of a software engineer who challenged data that Lindell said proves China interfered in the 2020 U.S. presidential election and tipped the outcome to Joe Biden. Lindell acknowledged in January that Fox News stopped running MyPillow commercials amid a billing dispute.

Lindell confirmed Wednesday that MyPillow owes around $217,000 to Delaware-based First Industrial LP for rent for the facility in Shakopee. He said MyPillow no longer needed the space and removed its remaining property from the warehouse last June before subleasing the space to another company through December.

Another company was going to start subleasing the space in January but backed out and “left us all stranded,” he said. MyPillow offered to find another tenant, he said, but the landlord just wanted to take back control of the warehouse instead. The $217,000 is for unpaid rent for January and February, he said. He also said MyPillow continues to lease space elsewhere.

The Star Tribune reported that a Scott County judge held a hearing Tuesday on the warehouse owner’s request to formally evict MyPillow, which did not contest the landlord’s request.

“MyPillow has more or less vacated but we’d like to do this by the book,” attorney Sara Filo, representing First Industrial, said during the hearing, the newspaper reported. “At this point there’s a representation that no further payment is going to be made under this lease, so we’d like to go ahead with finding a new tenant.”

Judge Caroline Lennon filed the eviction order Wednesday.

Lindell, who continues to propagate former President Donald Trump’s lies that the 2020 election was stolen from him, in part by rigged voting machine systems, still faces defamation lawsuits by two voting machine companies. Lawyers who were originally defending him in those cases quit over unpaid bills.

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Duluth takes billionaire Kathy Cargill’s profane Cheerios remark, and runs with it

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DULUTH, Minn. — Days after the Wall Street Journal published Minnesota billionaire Kathy Cargill’s disparaging remarks about Duluth and its mayor, a couple of community members are taking action.

And it’s a food fight, of sorts.

They launched the Duluth Cheerio Challenge, a call to ramp up donations to local food shelves and human services agencies in the final days of Minnesota FoodShare Month.

Chum, the Damiano Center, Union Gospel Mission and the Salvation Army are accepting dollar and food donations online and at their sites. Also, an additional drop-off is available from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. until Friday at the Duluth Labor Temple, 2002 London Road.

Cereal is one of the most requested nonperishable items at Chum. It’s also expensive and difficult to regularly obtain in large quantities, so the Cheerio Challenge comes at the perfect time, said Scott Van Daele, director of distributive services.

In Saturday’s Wall Street Journal article, Cargill described Duluth as a “small-minded community,” and she said Mayor Roger Reinert had “peed in his Cheerios” by requesting to discuss plans for several properties her entity, North Shore LS LLC, purchased and demolished in the Park Point neighborhood.

Community members responded on social media with memes. Comment threads stretched far and wide. Reinert eventually posted on X, formerly Twitter, “For the record … I’m more of a pancakes guy. #IYKYK,” with a picture of a short stack and bacon, as he prepared to ride along in a snowplow during a late-winter storm.

Duluth resident Chad McKenna published a blog post, “We take our Cheerios with almond milk.” Friends contacted McKenna, he believes, because of the blog post and because he has 16 years of experience in labor movement organizing. And he hit the ground running.

On Monday, McKenna created a Duluth Cheerio Challenge graphic, video and Facebook page. By Tuesday, the page had more than 700 members, and the video had been viewed more than 7,000 times.

McKenna said he and other organizers are amazed at how quickly the effort gained traction.

“This effort is not meant to be snarky. We’re being sort of playful with what happened,” said McKenna, an event organizer. “This shows Duluth is a big, small town in a lot of ways.”

Duluth’s never-ending can-do spirit and enthusiasm to help a neighbor in need impresses Van Daele, who said he continues to be proud to be part of this community.

Deb McLaughlin, a Park Point resident, said the Duluth Cheerio Challenge is turning something “negative and rude” into a really sweet and positive effort. McLaughlin and her husband are longtime Chum donors, and rather than sending cereal, she said they intended to support with an online contribution.

Asked if she’d heard the Cheerios phrase before, McLaughlin called it “the oddest thing” and said she looked it up in an online dictionary of idioms.

“If I remember correctly, it’s a phrase used to refer to when somebody’s already having a bad day, and it gets worse,” she said.

Whatever is the opposite of peeing in Cheerios, it’s clear Duluth’s doing that.

Chum suggests donations

Financial donations can go further than food. For every dollar donated, Chum can get $3 worth of sustenance through Second Harvest, wholesalers and distributors, Van Daele said. A $5 donation is four meals, and $10 feeds a child for one weekend during the summer.

If donors aren’t able to purchase cereal, consider these nonperishable pantry staples:

Canned fruit
Canned vegetables
Canned soups
Canned tuna
Peanut butter
Dry pasta
Canned spaghetti sauce
Macaroni and cheese

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Trump ally Jeffrey Clark was adamant about fraud in 2020 election despite evidence, superior said

posted in: Politics | 0

By GARY FIELDS (Associated Press)

WASHINGTON (AP) — The second day of the disciplinary hearing for former Justice Department official Jeffrey Clark painted a picture of someone who, despite numerous attempts by his superiors to convince him otherwise, remained adamant that there were irregularities and fraud in the 2020 election that required deeper examination.

Testifying before the three-member Board of Responsibility, then-acting Attorney General Jeffry Rosen said he and Richard Donoghue, the acting No. 2, met multiple times with Clark in the aftermath of the 2020 presidential election to change his stance regarding how the department should handle allegations of voter fraud.

Clark is accused of attempting to engage in dishonest conduct during his role in the aftermath of the last presidential election. At issue is a letter he drafted in the aftermath of then-President Donald Trump’s 2020 presidential election loss and attempt to overturn the 2020 election. The letter said the department was investigating “various irregularities” and had identified “significant concerns” that may have impacted the election. He was trying to convince Rosen and Donoghue to send the letter to Georgia.

In one meeting the men held with Clark, they asked why he was pushing an issue that was outside his purview and role as then acting head of the department’s civil division.

“Mr. Clark wasn’t very forthcoming. He just indicated these were his ideas. He thought they were good ones,” Rosen said.

The pair tried to explain why the department had concluded that while there was fraud and misconduct in the election it was not enough to have cost Trump the election. In addition, the men learned Clark had spoken with Trump, a violation of department policy on who should have contact with the White House.

Rosen said the meeting ended with Clark saying, “Well, I thought these were good ideas, but if you don’t like them, then okay.” Rosen and Donoghue thought Clark had accepted their explanation and the issue was closed.

That was not the case. Clark’s continued his efforts and maintained contact with Trump.

Rosen changed tact and at one point Clark received a classified briefing from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence over one concern he’d had.

But his efforts continued, along with his contact with Trump.

Clark had wanted an intelligence briefing from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence on one allegation he had heard. Rosen and Donoghue decided to grant him the access and also suggested he speak with the U.S. Attorney in Georgia on how he had pursued allegations there.

“He had expressed interest in the ODNI report, so I thought that was a way to both prevent him from giving poor advice to the president and perhaps to see why it was that the rest of the department had the position we had,” Rosen testified.

Clark did not waiver, disagreeing with the report. He did not contact the U.S. Attorney.

The issue reached a head when Trump considered firing Rosen and replacing him with Clark. That was averted when the senior leaders at the Justice Department and lawyers within the White House said they would quit if Trump took that step.

Rosen’s testimony took up most of the day, although Clark was called to testify by Hamilton Fox III, the disciplinary counsel at the hearing, over the objections of Clark’s attorneys, who indicated their client had made clear he would invoke privilege.

Clark answered the initial question about when he joined the Washington, D.C., bar and about his work history up until his time at the Justice Department.

He invoked several privileges, including executive privilege, law-enforcement privilege, deliberative-process privilege, attorney-client privilege and the Fifth Amendment, which protects people from providing self-incriminating testimony, during more than 30 minutes of questioning from Fox, focusing on the letter and Clark’s role in the aftermath of the election.

At one point, following Fox’s questioning, board member Patricia Mathews asked who Clark’s client was for his invocation of attorney-client privilege and Clark responded, “President Trump. The head of the executive branch. The sole and the unitary head of Article Two, the executive branch of the United States government.”

One of his lawyers interceded and asked that Clark continue invoking the privileges he used during the rest of questioning.

Clark is facing criminal charges in Georgia for his role in the attempt to overturn the election there. Trump is one of the co-defendants.

Clark could be sanctioned, including being disbarred. He can appeal any action taken against him to the D.C. Court of Appeals.

Clark’s attorney, Harry MacDougald, has said the action being taken against his client for engaging in the normal back and forth between lawyers would have a chilling effect on the profession.

The case resumes Thursday with defense witnesses.