The Headlines - 3 Things to Know About the TikTok Deal, and a New Protest Tactic in Minnesota

Episode Date: January 23, 2026

Plus, your Friday news quiz. Here’s what we’re covering:TikTok Strikes Deal for New U.S. Entity, Ending Long Legal Saga, by David McCabe and Emmett Lindner‘Enough Is Enough’: Hundreds of Minn...esota Businesses Take Stand Against ICE, by Pooja Salhotra and Jazmine Ulloa3 People Arrested Over Protest of Minnesota Pastor Linked to ICE, by Jacey Fortin and Lauren McCarthyVoters Are Split on Deportations but Disapprove of ICE, Poll Finds, by Jennifer Medina and Ruth IgielnikMore Than 160 Million People Are in the Path of the Storm Set to Sweep the U.S., by Amy GraffWhat’s Behind the Staggering Drop in the Murder Rate? No One Knows for Sure., by Shaila Dewan and Lazaro GamioOscar Nominations: ‘Sinners’ Breaks Record With 16, by Brooks Barnes and Nicole SperlingTune in every weekday morning, and tell us what you think at: theheadlines@nytimes.com. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe via your favorite podcast app here https://www.nytimes.com/activate-access/audio?source=podcatcher. For more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app.

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Starting point is 00:00:02 From the New York Times, it's the headlines. I'm Tracy Mumford. Today's Friday, January 23rd. Here's what we're covering. After a high-stakes, years-long legal saga, the Chinese company that owns TikTok has struck a deal to create a new U.S. version of the social media app. Under the agreement, the company ByteDance has brought in a group of non-Chinese investors who will now help run the platform for its 200 million-plus American users. Here are three things. know about the deal.
Starting point is 00:00:39 First, why is there a deal at all? Back in the pandemic, as the app surged in popularity, U.S. lawmakers started to worry that it could be a national security risk, with the Chinese government potentially able to access personal information about Americans or feed them propaganda. That eventually led to a law that was supposed to have banned TikTok if it didn't break off from bite dance by early last year. But President Trump delayed enforcement of that law multiple times, while he got personally involved in putting together a new arrangement of investors. So the second thing to know, who are those investors?
Starting point is 00:01:20 Bite Dance is still actually the biggest player, owning about 20% of the new venture. Other leading stakeholders include some major investment firms, and Oracle, the cloud computing giant. Several of those new owners have ties to Trump, like Oracle's billionaire CEO Larry Ellison, who's made frequent visits to the White House. It is the latest example of the Ellison family's rapidly expanding influence over news and entertainment in the U.S. At this point, Larry and his son David control Paramount, which includes CBS, and are making a play for Warner Brothers Discovery. And the third thing, what does this all mean for people who use TikTok?
Starting point is 00:02:01 The short answer, it is too early to tell. You do not have to download a new app, and ByteDance will still be licensing its powerful recommendation algorithm to the American TikTok. But the new ownership will have the power to moderate content on the app, deciding which videos to leave up or take down. That's raise concerns among some experts and TikTok users that the new owners could try to influence what people see, potentially showing more posts aligned with the Trump administration's views. We are not going to shop. We are not going to work.
Starting point is 00:02:44 We are not going to school on Friday, January 23rd. Today in Minnesota. We are shut down all the business in Mall 24 on Friday. Hundreds of businesses are expected to close across the state as part of a general strike in protest of the Trump administration's ramped up immigration enforcement. Don't show up to work. Don't spend no kind of money. We ain't going to the Mall of America.
Starting point is 00:03:07 We're not going to no burger. King, we ain't doing none of that. It comes as Minnesotans have been pushing back for weeks on the surge of federal agents there. The government has sent as many as 3,000, and their operation has led to thousands of arrests and at least two shootings, including the killing of Renee Good by an ICE officer. Local officials have called the deployment an invasion, as agents have fanned out in neighborhoods and used aggressive tactics, breaking car windows and deploying pepper spray in people's faces. At one point, they dragged a man who turned out to be a U.S. citizen out of his house in his underwear in the snow.
Starting point is 00:03:45 In another case that's gotten national attention this week, they detained a five-year-old boy as he was coming home from pre-K with his dad. School officials said he was the fourth child in the district to be detained recently. Good afternoon, everybody. How are we doing? With the state on edge, Vice President J.D. Vance traveled to the Twin Cities yesterday. I wanted to meet with business leaders, with ICE officers, with local law enforcement to try to understand a little bit better what's going on so that we can tone down the temperature a little bit, reduce the chaos. Vance said that he thought federal agents were doing a, quote, incredible job, and that the unrest in the city was the result of a failure of cooperation by state and local officials. In another update on the protests, the Justice Department arrested three people over a demonstration at a church in St. Paul. after they went there to demand that one of the pastors resign, believing he works for ice.
Starting point is 00:04:40 It's a rare instance of the federal government directing the arrests of nonviolent protesters. President Trump wrote online that he'd seen footage of them interrupting the church service, saying, quote, they are troublemakers who should be thrown in jail or thrown out of the country. The Justice Department also tried to charge former CNN journalist Don Lemon, who was at the scene reporting on it. But sources tell the Times a federal magistrate judge refused to approve that criminal complaint. Meanwhile, a new Times-Syana poll shows that while roughly half of voters support President Trump's deportations, 61% said ICE had gone, quote, too far in their tactics. That includes nearly one in five Republicans.
Starting point is 00:05:29 Well, we have waited for winter weather, and boy, are we going to get it going into Across the U.S. Winter storm watches now up for a large portion of North Texas. People are bracing for a major winter storm. Road crews in Missouri are out preparing for these storms. It could hit almost half the country's population with a mix of snow and sleet. I am sure New York and our entire corridor here is going to be next. The storm is expected to get going this afternoon in the Rockies
Starting point is 00:06:06 before moving east across the country over the weekend. meteorologists say some regions could get a foot or more of snow. And after that, an intense freeze. The wind chill in North Dakota, for example, could drop as low as minus 50 degrees. One meteorologist told the times, it's going to be hazardous for humans to step outside. Further south, the big concern is freezing rain. State and local officials are preparing for the possibility of trees, power lines, and roads being covered in heavy ice, causing travel delays. There's also concern about the power grid. Experts are drawing comparisons to another massive winter storm in Texas five years ago that led to extensive blackouts and left around 200 people dead. A new analysis of crime data from across the country is pointing to a remarkable milestone. 2025 will likely register as having the lowest national homicide rate in more than a century, according to the nonpartisan Council on Criminal Justice, which crunched the numbers.
Starting point is 00:07:15 The drop is part of an overall decrease in violent crime that's been happening for years, apart from a temporary surge during the pandemic. Experts say there's no one clear answer for why crime rates have been falling, but they have a wide range of educated guesses. Some point to the phasing out of lead gasoline back in the 70s, which had impaired brain development. Some other possible factors, the growing use of surveillance cameras, new policing techniques, more programs that give teenagers summer jobs, better mental health treatment, or even the country's aging population.
Starting point is 00:07:52 One professor who studies crime told the times that changing habits, like more screen time, could also be playing a role, saying American society is, quote, becoming much less face-to-face, which is sort of a requirement for violence. And finally, You keep dancing with the devil. One day he's going to follow you home. The big wow out of the Oscar nominations this year was that the vampire movie, Sinners,
Starting point is 00:08:25 broke the record for most nominations ever, beating out the previous three-way tie of Titanic, La La Land, and All About Eve. Thank you, Sonsei, thank you. Viva la Revolution! The movie, one battle after another, about a scrappy crew rising up against authoritarianism, was close behind. Both are the kind of movies Hollywood has mostly stopped making.
Starting point is 00:08:50 Big budget original stories instead of sequels, spin-offs, etc. In fact, the studio executives who originally backed sinners and won battle after another were widely expected to lose their jobs for taking those swings. The biggest snub in the nominations, according to the Times' pop culture reporter Kyle Buchanan, is that the wicked sequel got none, zero. even after the first installment got a bunch. And one of the major, hmm, really's, according to Kyle?
Starting point is 00:09:27 F-1, the race car movie featuring Brad Pitt driving real fast and taking his shirt off, walked away with a Best Picture nomination. Did you win something? Broom Vroom. The Oscar ceremony will be March 15. Those are the headlines. If you'd like to play the Friday News Quiz, it is just after these credits.
Starting point is 00:09:49 This show is made by Will Jarvis, Jan Stewart, and me, Tracy Mumford. Original theme by Dan Powell. Special thanks to Isabella Anderson, Larissa Anderson, Zoe Murphy, Paula Schumann, and Chris Wood. Now, time for the quiz. We've got a few questions for you about stories the Times has been covering. Here we go. First up.
Starting point is 00:10:18 In Greenland and Denmark, President Trump's recent threats to seize the Arctic Island sparked protests. Some of the people out on the streets wore red hats. that look like the ones Trump made famous, and they do have the same MAGA initials, but in this case, M-A-G-A stands for something else. Your question, what do the hats say? A hint? It's make America what?
Starting point is 00:10:53 The answer? Make America go away. When we made it funny enough, we showed maybe five, and I gave a lot of way to friends and so on, and they say, ah, that's funny. The man who designed the hats told the Associated Press he first made a batch last year, but they weren't really a bestseller until recently when Trump amped up his threats. Now the designer is trying to keep up with a new flood of online orders.
Starting point is 00:11:24 Next question. In the past few years, as GLP1 drugs like OZEMPIC have become more and more popular, they've had unexpected side effects for American businesses. junk food companies are scrambling as people crave less processed food, and some wedding dress designers are seeing a surge in customers asking for last-minute alterations after losing weight. Now, a new report says that one industry in particular could potentially save hundreds of millions of dollars thanks to the drugs.
Starting point is 00:11:56 What industry is it? A hint? You might say these American companies are united on trying to, to cut costs. The answer? The U.S. airline industry. According to the study by a financial services firm, the country's four biggest airlines, including American and United, could save as much as $580 million a year on fuel because of lighter passengers. Quick bonus question. Roughly, what percentage of Americans say they have taken a GLP1 drug? The answer? About 20%.
Starting point is 00:12:44 And last question. The iconic fashion designer Valentino died this week. Over his decades-long career, he dressed some of the most famous women in the world. The mayor of Rome once said about him, In Italy, there is the Pope and there is Valentino. I've got a few questions for you about some of his big fashion moments. See if you can name whose dresses he designed. His dress is something very, very important in my life.
Starting point is 00:13:13 She make me famous in United States. This former First Lady wore a cream lace Valentino dress when she got married again in 1968. Next one. This red dress. She's actually wearing a red tight. I mean, seriously, this is incredible. Head to toe burgundy.
Starting point is 00:13:30 Burgundy. This style icon famously wore one of his designs in 1992 amid a very public separation from her husband. And it did not exactly adhere to a traditional royal dress code. And? And the Oscar goes to... When this actress won her first ever Oscar in 2001, she was wearing a black and white Valentino.
Starting point is 00:13:51 So I thank you for really making me feel. So... I love that up here. So that was in order a first lady, a style icon bucking traditional royal dress, and the actress who took home the trophy for, and this is kind of a big hint, playing Aaron Brockovich.
Starting point is 00:14:13 The answers. Jackie Onassis in the wedding dress. Princess Diana in a knee-length, burgundy number, and Julia Roberts celebrating her big win. I'll just leave you here with my personal favorite Valentino fact that I learned. Apparently when he traveled, he regularly brought five of his beloved pugs along with him on his private jet.
Starting point is 00:14:34 And when he got to his destination, there would be a car in his motorcade specifically for the pub. That's it for the news quiz. Our email is The Headlines at NYTimes.com. I'm Tracy Mumford. We'll be back on Monday.

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