Protestors march during a

The phrase "ICE Out" reverberated around the nation this weekend as protesters took to the streets, holding up signs and chanting in unison as they called for an end to the Trump administration's crackdown on immigration.

Protesters marked a second day of rallies and marches aftera nationwide strike on Fridayprompted a shutdown of schools, workplaces and businesses from coast to coast. As demonstrations kicked off Saturday, President Donald Trump said he instructed Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noemnot to intervene in protestsor unrest in Democratic-led cities unless local officials formally request assistance.

People in major US cities continue to voice their solidarity with Minneapolis, where the killings ofAlex PrettiandRenee Goodhave transformed the national conversation on immigration enforcement and appear to havedriven a tone shiftfrom the White House in recent days. Demonstrations have continued in cities such as Minneapolis, New York, Los Angeles, Portland and Austin over Friday and Saturday.

In the courts, several legal battles challenging Trump's immigration policies continue to play out, with a federal judge issuing a scathing opinion Saturday as he ordered the release of5-year-old Liam Conejo Ramosand his father from a Texas detention center.

Liam's detention became another flashpoint in the criticism over heavy-handed immigrationenforcement tacticsused by the feds and fueled mounting outrage from community members and officials alike.

Meanwhile, a different judgedenied a requestfrom Minnesota, St. Paul and Minneapolis to halt Operation Metro Surge – the federal immigration operation that has seen thousands of agents dispatched to the Twin Cities. Local and state officials sued the federal government earlier this month, calling the operation a "federal invasion" that involves warrantless arrests and excessive force.

While the Department of Homeland Security celebrated the ruling, which allows the operation to continue while the lawsuit plays out, city and state officials said they were "disappointed" by the decision while reasserting their commitment to pursuing the case.

Here's the latest:

  • Trump and local police narratives clash: Local and state governments will be responsible for protecting their own property, along with federal property, with federal officials serving as a backstop, the president said, while warning against attacks on law enforcement. He cited an incident in Eugene, Oregon, claiming protesters broke into a federal building and damaged property while police failed to intervene. But the city's police chief disputed that characterization of the response to the incident – which they declared a riot – saying officers ordered people to leave the area after breaches at entry points.

  • Liam Ramos to be released: US District Judge Fred Biery admonished the Trump administration as he ordered the preschooler and his father be released "as soon as practicable" and no later than Tuesday as their immigration case proceeds through the court system. The case against Liam – who has been detained for more than a week with his father – originated in "the ill-conceived and incompetently-implemented government pursuit of daily deportation quotas, apparently even if it requires traumatizing children," Biery wrote.

  • ICE "on notice" in Chicago: The city's Mayor Brandon Johnson on Saturday signed an executive order directing city police to investigate and document alleged misconduct by federal immigration officers with an eye toward prosecution. The move comes as nine local district attorneys launched a coalition this week to assist in prosecuting federal law enforcement officers who violate state laws.

  • Journalists released from federal custody: Former CNN anchor Don Lemon and independent journalist Georgia Fort were released Friday after being arrested in connection with a protest at a church in St. Paul, Minnesota. Lemon vowed to fight the charges against him, which include conspiring to violate someone's constitutional rights and violating the FACE Act.

  • Jail cooperation is key to federal drawdown: White House border czar Tom Homan announced Thursday he is working on a plan to eventually reduce the number of federal agents in Minnesota, but he said the move will rely on whether local authorities allow ICE to take custody of immigrants in prisons and jails. Within hours, Trump appeared to contradict him, denying claims he was not pulling back.

  • DOJ to investigate Pretti shooting: The Justice Department has opened a civil rights investigation into the shooting of Pretti, US Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said Friday. The announcement means the agency is looking into whether the DHS officers who shot Pretti violated the law and marks an expansion of the federal government's investigation into the matter. Later, Blanche said it was a "standard investigation by the FBI."

CNN's Holmes Lybrand, Elizabeth Wolfe, Lauren Mascarenhas, Ray Sanchez, Whitney Wild and Zoe Sottile contributed to this report.

For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Anti-ICE protests spread across the US this weekend as court battles deliver wins and losses for the Trump administration

The phrase "ICE Out" reverberated around the nation this weekend as protesters took to the streets, holding up signs and chanting...
He died in a jail cell, pleading for help. No one told his father why.

COMPTON, California – The man in the suit arrived in an unmarked car on a spring morning in 2020 with the worst news James Brown had ever heard.

His 30-year-old son Jamall was dead.

Brown hadn't heard from him in the days since he was detained on a parole violation. The man – a Los Angeles County deputy sent to notify Brown for the Riverside County Sheriff's Department – would only say that Jamall had been found unresponsive in a jail cell.

"It hit me like a hammer," Brown, 77, said recently. "How did he just die?"

James Brown poses for a photo in his living room at his home in Compton, Calif., Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2025.

For five years, asdetainee after detainee died in the custody of Riverside Sheriff Chad Bianco's jails, Brown kept asking that question.

Finally, in 2025, with the help of a reporter from the Desert Sun, a member of the USA TODAY Network, Brown began turning up answers.

First came the official answer, in a report released from Bianco's coroner's office: Jamall had refused treatment for his diabetes for days, the report said. He died from diabetic complications after or during a methamphetamine overdose.

But a trove of unreleased jailhouse video and detailed internal investigative reports that current and former sheriff's employees provided to Brown and the Desert Sun told a different story.

Those reports confirm that Jamall died of diabetic complications. But they indicate it wasn't because he was rejecting medical aid. The records and video say deputies and nurses ignored Jamall and failed to provide insulin to him for nearly two days. The jail's cameras recorded him saying he was afraid he was dying. They recorded him slipping into a coma in a pile of trash on the floor of his two-man cell. They recorded deputies and nurses looking at him while he lay unconscious, but not intervening. The reports said investigators found no drugs or evidence of them in the cell after his death.

A screen capture from Riverside County jail cell footage shows Jamall Brown in his cell a day before his death in custody of the Riverside County Sheriff's Department as he pleads for help to his cellmate 4:00 a.m. Sunday, March 15, 2020.

Investigators had collected evidence of the staff's failures within hours of Jamall Brown's death, the documents indicated. But for five years, no one told Brown.

Sheriff Chad Bianco and the department's media team didn't respond to requests for comment, including detailed questions about the findings reported in this story, including those in a 6-page administrative review that detailed deputies' failings in Jamall Brown's death.

James Brown says the sheriff's department has been hiding the truth about his son's death.

"My son left this life in agony," he said. "Just because you arrested someone doesn't give you the right to watch them die. I'm still shocked that a cover-up like this is possible."

The pain of living without a son

James Brown served as a military policeman in the Marine Corps and as president of the union that represents workers at the Compton Municipal Water Department, where he worked for about 30 years. He's retired now, but said seeking the truth behind his son's death from the Riverside County Sheriff's Office felt like a full-time job.

In a pile of Father's Day cards he keeps beside his favorite recliner in his Compton home is one Jamall wrote to him in 2018: "Being a father is more than just paying bills and putting food on the table. Once you have the responsibility, you are obliged to help nurture, guide and be a willing participant in every aspect of that child's life and you've been all that plus more for me."

Jamall concluded the greeting card message saying he couldn't imagine life without his father. Two years later, Brown faced the pain of living without his son.

A father's day card written by Jamall Brown to his father, James Brown.

Jamall had been arrested several times while growing up in Compton, a city just south of Los Angeles, and had completed a prison sentence for assault. His father said he was laboring to get his life back on track while living in a tough neighborhood that could easily derail him.

In spring 2020, Jamall travelled about 65 miles east to Moreno Valley, a large suburb in Riverside County, to be near a woman he was dating. His father was not confident Jamall had a steady place to stay and wasn't surprised when he got a call from him. Jamall asked if his dad could send him some money so he could get back to Compton to meet with his parole officer.

Later that evening, Brown heard his wife pick up the phone. Jamall had been arrested and she asked if he wanted to talk to him. Frustrated, Brown declined, assuming his son would be released in a couple of days.

A police report showed that a deputy patrolling a shopping center saw a man pushing a shopping cart with a suitcase in it. The deputy asked him if he was on probation. Parole, Jamall said.

The deputy searched Jamall and his belongings, finding insulin in his luggage and two ecstasy pills in his pocket.

"During my entire interaction with Brown, I did not notice any unusual behavior," the deputy wrote. "I instructed Brown to tell the nurse at the jail he was diabetic and insulin dependent. Brown stated he understood and would tell nursing staff."

Deaths in custody surge

About two years after Jamall Brown died, deaths in custody began to surge in Bianco's department. There were 19 in 2022 alone. An investigation by The Desert Sun and The New York Times of video and internal reports found thatdeputies had ignored detainees leading up to their deaths by suicide. The county's jails also had thehighest rate of homicide in the state. At one facility three people were killed by other detainees in a matter of four months. Evidence gathered by department investigators showed that deputies at that jail had not been properly trained to do mandatory security checks.

Public scrutiny mounted when a former jail captain sued the department, saying Bianco had pressured her not to participate in a civil grand jury investigation of jail conditions and retaliated against jail staff who spoke out about misconduct.

The video and internal reports of Jamall Brown's death, recently leaked to James Brown and The Desert Sun, provide the earliest evidence of the same deputy failures and policy violations amid the recent surge in deaths in the county jails.

Chad Bianco, who is both sheriff and coroner in Riverside County, has defended his department and criticized the state attorney general's investigation into jail deaths.

Internal documents show the jail's medical staff recorded that Jamall Brown was diabetic, insulin-dependent and required blood sugar monitoring. When he was booked, he did not appear under the influence and answered questions coherently, although he mentioned he suspected he might have a mental illness and was noted as a detainee who required extra monitoring.

He spent his first night in custody at the county's central jail in Riverside, where investigators later wrote he was seen eating, sleeping and acting ordinarily.

Transferred to the county's jail in Banning, he was placed in a cell with a camera constantly recording audio and video. A Desert Sun reporter obtained an hour of clips of the video, which recorded Jamall Brown's cell constantly from the evening of March 14, 2020, to the morning of March 16, 2020.  According to the video clips and a deputy's detailed written description of all 40 hours of footage, Brown never received treatment for his diabetes during the time he was at the Banning facility.

Internal records show that soon after Jamall Brown was taken to the hospital in cardiac arrest, the department's investigators began processing about three days of video evidence that captured him losing consciousness as his blood sugar spiked and his heart stopped on the concrete floor.

In jail, Brown died of a medical condition that he had been adequately treating even while unhoused in the days prior to his arrest – a fact department investigators discovered the same day he died.

March 14-15, 2020: First night in jail

On his first night at the Banning jail, video shows that on two occasions a deputy and a nurse opened a pill slot but closed it without speaking with Jamall Brown. Yet they recorded in documents repeatedly during his stay that he had refused medical care.

At 2 a.m., after hours with little food and no medication, the camera captured Brown rubbing his stomach and moaning. He walked unsteadily to the cell's toilet, bumping into the side of the bunk, and drank water before lying down.

A deputy walked by his cell, glancing in through the window before walking away. Minutes later, a deputy is heard on the cell's intercom calling his name and asking: "Do you want your diabetic check?" When Brown didn't answer, the deputy can be heard on video saying, "I'll take your silence as a no."

Exhaustion is a symptom that the body is slipping into diabetic ketoacidosis, as is increased thirst, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. A type one diabetic, like Jamall Brown, can begin experiencing this life-threatening condition after as little as 12 hours without insulin.

A screen capture from Riverside County jail cell footage shows Jamall Brown on his top bunk as he pleads for help from his cellmate around 6:00 a.m. Sunday, March 15, 2020.

Jamall Brown didn't stir when the lights turned on the next morning and breakfast was served. Hours later, he woke up confused about what time it was, saying he didn't think the door ever opened.

"Tell 'em I'm dyin', cellie," he said to his cellmate. "Please. Tell 'em I'm diabetic."

A deputy approached the cell, shining a light inside before walking away without interacting with Jamall Brown as he lay on his bunk.

"My stomach hurts bad," he is recorded saying at about 6 a.m. "You want me to die on you?" he said with a groan. "Please, somebody please," he pleaded. No deputy responded through the cell's intercom and his cellmate told him to be quiet.

March 15, 2020: Second day in jail

On his second day in jail without medication, Jamall Brown got off his bunk and attempted to walk around, appearing dizzy.

"Something's wrong," he's recorded on camera saying. Soon after, he can be seen losing his balance, falling against the wall and sliding down.

A screen capture from Riverside County jail cell footage shows Jamall Brown having collapsed from his stool shortly before noon, Sunday, March 15, 2020. From this point, footage did not show Brown standing again before a nurse and deputy found him laying on the ground, not breathing, 19 hours and 56 minutes later.

Over the next several hours, the camera captured Jamall Brown attempting to lift himself up but falling partially into the cell's toilet. He rolled under a table and fell again near a stool. When his cellmate brought in two lunch trays, Brown didn't respond.

Meanwhile, deputies proceeded with the jail's schedule as if nothing was happening. Several deputies walked by, asking if Brown was OK. A few times, Brown's cellmate responded, once saying, "Yeah, he's all right" and another time saying, "He's down and out, fool." Still, deputies left without helping.

March 15-16, 2020: Second night in jail

Jamall Brown spent his entire second night on the floor with labored breathing and minimal movement. At around 2 a.m., on March 16, a deputy used the cell's intercom to ask, remotely: "Brown, do you want to see medical?" He repeated it several times, urging him to respond while Brown didn't appear to move.

"No," his cellmate said.

"All right, thank you," the deputy said. Officials noted that exchange in jail records, saying Jamall Brown refused a diabetic check, though he had not said a word.

For the next seven hours, three more deputies walked past the cell multiple times without looking at or speaking with Jamall Brown, who was now virtually motionless on the floor. Internal reports and video show deputies passing the cell 33 times. Sometimes staff tried to speak to Brown and got no response. Other times they didn't stop at all.

A screen capture from Riverside County jail cell footage shows Jamall Brown laying on the ground in his cell groaning and motionless as a deputy passes by his cell door about an hour before Brown is found to not be breathing, Monday, March 16, 2020. The deputy walked by the doorway and glanced at Brown through the window but did not stop.

"All inmates were breathing and accounted for," one deputy wrote of a 6:30 a.m. security check. At this point Jamall Brown had been on the ground for about 24 hours. He had been without insulin for far longer. An hour later, the same deputy added: "Nothing appeared to be out of the ordinary."

Finally, another hour later, the same deputy and a nurse noticed Brown wasn't breathing.

Aftermath of a jail death

Within three hours of Jamall Brown's death, an internal-affairs sergeant was writing a different version of what had happened.

"Inmate Brown was type-1 diabetic and had refused all medication for several days," wrote John Lenton, a sergeant at the Professional Standards Bureau, which conducts internal affairs investigations. "He was being monitored by jail medical staff in regard to his meds refusal."

In a coroner's report completed months later in September 2020, Assistant Coroner Aimee Roberts repeated that Jamall Brown had refused treatment for his diabetes and added that he had also overdosed on methamphetamine. Though cameras showed Brown collapsing on the floor, Roberts wrote instead that he was "making strange movements" such as doing "head stands" against the wall.

Of hours of video reviewed for this story, the only thing resembling a head stand is when Jamall Brown fell against the wall at an awkward angle.

Dr. Alex Charmoz, the emergency room doctor who handled Jamall Brown's case, reported jail staff told him Brown had been acting "bizarre" and was "shaky or twitchy" before he was  brought to the hospital without a pulse. Charmoz said he was told he'd declined treatment for his diabetes. Charmoz wrote that his blood sugar was at 1,111 — more than 10 times the ordinary level — and that resulting diabetic complications had killed him. Charmoz did not respond to requests for comment for this story.

James Brown looks off into the distance while talking about his son's death while incarcerated in a Riverside County jail at his home in Compton, Calif., Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2025.

In 2025, James Brown received hundreds of pages of sheriff's department reports and video clips capturing his son's final days, materials that were also provided to The Desert Sun.

The reports reveal that, within days of his death, department administrators had collected a highly detailed account of how Jamall Brown was neglected. On March 18, 2020, a deputy completed a 38-page report summarizing the video footage showing him in his cell at the jail, including minute-by-minute descriptions of each of his movements as he lay dying on the cell floor. The department declined to release this report to The Desert Sun but did not dispute its authenticity.

"I want the public to know what really happened to my son," James Brown said. "These reports and video tell a completely different story than what they were trying to sell to me. They had the audacity to let someone die right in front of their eyes."

About a month after Jamall Brown died, Sgt. Marcus Schultz wrote an internal administrative report based on the jail cell video. He found that deputies had failed to perform security checks, monitor the camera as it captured an "inmate who was in medical distress," and inaccurately interpreted the dying man's inability to speak "as a refusal for medical care."

"The proper performance of fundamental, daily responsibilities could have possibly prevented inmate Brown's death," Schultz wrote.

His report was among the documents leaked to James Brown and The Desert Sun.

None of these findings were reported to the public, mentioned in the coroner report or reflected in the department's report on the death to state regulators.

About a month after Jamall Brown died, Riverside County Sheriff's Department Sgt. Marcus Schultz wrote an internal administrative report based on the jail cell video. Among other failures, he concluded that deputies had failed to properly perform security checks.

Another of Schultz's findings excluded from the public reports directly contradicts the department's death ruling: The emergency room doctor noted that the level of methamphetamine found in Jamall Brown's system was not reliable evidence that he had used the drug in jail or that he'd suffered an overdose.

"Due to limitations of the test, medical staff were unable to determine the amount of methamphetamine in Brown's system and were, therefore, unable to determine when he last used methamphetamine," Schultz wrote. His report does not state that methamphetamine had anything to do with Brown's death. It said there was no medical evidence to indicate he was a chronic drug user.

Department officials did not respond to questions about the discrepancy in these reports.

In the aftermath of Jamall Brown's death, Schultz noted, administrators began working to address insufficient security checks. Medical staff were ordered to make sure all refusals of medical treatment were made directly to them and documented.

"No longer will an attempted intercom communication be acceptable," he wrote.

A total of  10 deputies and three nurses failed to intervene when Jamall Brown was having a medical emergency over about two days in 2020. Employment records from 2023 show that all but two deputies captured by the cameras still worked for the department. The department did not respond to questions about the eight deputies are still employed.

Included in the leaked reports is Jamall Brown's death review presentation, which is supposed to be completed within 30 days of a death. It closely reflects what is captured in the video and in the leaked internal incident reports. The presentation does not state that Jamall Brown used drugs while in jail or that he died of an overdose.

James Brown holds up an old school photo of his son, Jamall Brown, at his home in Compton, Calif., Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2025.

While James Brown long ago accepted he'll never see his son again, learning the details of his mistreatment in the care of Riverside county officials has inflicted on him a new kind of pain. He said he sometimes has trouble sleeping when he imagines what his son experienced in his final moments. As he learned more and more disturbing details, he kept fighting to learn the truth. Not just for Jamall's memory, he said, but for all the other people who've had relatives die in the county's jails in the years since.

He said he'll continue to fight for transparency from the department in light of the video and reports he now has. He said the deputies and nurses that let this happen to Jamall need to be held accountable. And he hopes the department will implement real change that puts an end to similar deaths due to neglect.

"This is all a cover up," James Brown said. "They let my son die. They lied about it. It's hurt me to my heart."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Jail documents reveal how a son died on the floor, pleading for help

He died in a jail cell, pleading for help. No one told his father why.

COMPTON, California – The man in the suit arrived in an unmarked car on a spring morning in 2020 with the worst news Jame...
Iran considers EU armies as 'terrorist groups' in retaliatory move

DUBAI, Feb 1 (Reuters) - Iran considers as "terrorist groups" the armies of EU countries that listed the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps on the bloc's ​list of terrorist organisations, the speaker of the Iranian parliament said on ‌Sunday.

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The European Union marked a symbolic shift in its approach to Iran's leadership on Thursday by designating ‌the Revolutionary Guards as a terrorist organisation, following what turned out to be the Islamic Republic's bloodiest crackdown of protests since its establishment in 1979.

"By trying to hit the Revolutionary Guards... the Europeans actually shot themselves in the foot and once again ⁠made a decision against the ‌interests of their people by blindly obeying the Americans," the speaker, Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, told his fellow lawmakers, who all wore ‍Revolutionary Guards uniforms in support of the elite force.

"According to Article 7 of the law on countermeasures against the designation of the Revolutionary Guards as a terrorist organisation, the armies of ​European countries are considered terrorist groups."

Qalibaf said the national security parliamentary commission ‌would deliberate on the expulsion of EU countries' military attaches and follow up on the issue with the foreign ministry.

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Lawmakers shouted "Death to America, Shame on you Europe" after the speaker had finished his address.

The Revolutionary Guards issued a statement on Sunday saying that the EU's decision complicated "the path to constructive interaction and cooperation" while strengthening "confrontational ⁠approaches".

Set up after Iran's 1979 Islamic Revolution to ​protect the Shi'ite clerical ruling system, the Revolutionary ​Guards wield great sway in the country, controlling swathes of the economy and armed forces.

The EU's move comes as the United States ‍builds up its naval ⁠presence in the Middle East after President Donald Trump repeatedly threatened Iran if it did not agree to a nuclear deal or failed to ⁠stop killing protesters.

Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said on Sunday that if the U.S. attacked Iran ‌it would become a regional conflict, state media reported.

(Reporting by Dubai ‌NewsroomEditing by Christopher Cushing and Gareth Jones)

Iran considers EU armies as 'terrorist groups' in retaliatory move

DUBAI, Feb 1 (Reuters) - Iran considers as "terrorist groups" the armies of EU countries that listed the Islami...
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.

TV Squad

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…"

HBO Max

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...

NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty

People Demond Wilson in 'Sanford and Son.'  NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Demond Wilson, the actor best known for starring in the NBC sitcom Sanford and Son, has died at age 79

  • His son, Demond Wilson Jr., said his father died at his home in Palm Springs, Calif., on Friday, Jan. 30, following complications related to cancer

  • "I loved him. He was a great man," the actor's son said, announcing his dad's death

Demond Wilson, the actor best known for starring in the NBC sitcomSanford and Son,has died. He was 79.

Demond's son, Demond Wilson Jr., confirmed toTMZthat his father died at his home in Palm Springs, Calif., on Friday, Jan. 30, following complications related to cancer.

"I loved him," Demond told the outlet about his father. "He was a great man." (He did not elaborate on what kind of cancer his dad had.)

Representatives for Demond did not immediately respond to PEOPLE's request for comment on Saturday, Jan. 31.

Demond Wilson in 2016. Bobby Bank/WireImage

Bobby Bank/WireImage

Demond started acting in the 1970s with an uncredited role inCotton Comes to Harlem. He then took on small roles inAll in the Family,Mission: ImpossibleandRowan & Martin's Laugh-In, before he finally got his big break in 1972, when he was cast as Lamont Sanford inSanford and Son.

The show ran from 1972 to 1977. At the time, it was NBC's highest-rated show, according toTV Insider. The series' second season, in particular, was also rated television's second most-watched show, per the outlet.

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AfterSanford and Sonended, Demond, born Grady Demond Wilson, went on to play Raymond Ellis on the sitcomBaby… I'm Back, which ran from 1977 to 1978.

He also guest-starred on other popular shows at the time, includingThe Love BoatandToday's F.B.I.

Demond Wilson.  American Broadcasting Companies via Getty

American Broadcasting Companies via Getty

Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, the actor also starred in numerous films likeFull Moon High,The OrganizationandDealing: Or The Berkeley-to-Boston Forty-Brick Lost-Bag Blues.

In 1982, Demond signed on to star as sloppy roommate Oscar Madison in the TV seriesThe New Odd Couple.

However, the show lasted only one season, ending in 1983, and Demond then appeared to take a break from acting for a few years, later returning to the entertainment industry in the 1993 filmMe and the Kid.

His next role would come nearly a decade later, playing Morgan Rivers in the filmHammerlockin 2000, and he also took part in a brief acting stint on the TV seriesGirlfriendsfrom 2004 to 2005.

Demond then took another break from acting before returning one last time in what would be his final project, when he appeared inEleanor's Beach— a TV series that follows a woman who returns to her hometown to serve as a judge in juvenile court — in 2023, over 50 years after his first acting role.

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“Sanford and Son” Star Demond Wilson Dies at 79 Following Cancer Complications

NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty NEED TO KNOW Demond Wilson, the actor best known for starring in the N...

 

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