The New York Times-The Morning Newsletter

"Shooting in Minnesota."

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Russ Roberts (https://trendsingeopolitics.blogspot.com).

The Morning
January 25, 2026

Good morning. Yesterday, federal agents shot and killed a man in Minnesota, setting off another day of intense protests and prompting more calls from officials to end ICE’s operations in the state. We have the latest on that story below.

Then, we have an introduction to a game from The Times, along with a tool to help you do better at it.

Federal agents in tactical gear and wearing gas masks pin down a person on the street in Minneapolis.
Federal agents confronting protesters in Minneapolis yesterday. David Guttenfelder/The New York Times

Another shooting

Border Patrol agents shot and killed a 37-year-old man in Minneapolis yesterday. The victim, Alex Jeffrey Pretti, was an intensive care nurse at a Veterans Affairs hospital. He was a U.S. citizen, the Minneapolis police chief said.

Federal officials sought to portray Pretti as a domestic terrorist, saying he had approached agents with a “semi-automatic handgun” and the intent to “massacre” them. But videos analyzed by The Times appear to contradict their account. They show Pretti holding a phone in his hand, not a gun, when agents take him to the ground and strike him. One agent appears to remove a gun from near Pretti’s right hip. At the same time, another agent unholsters his firearm and points it at Pretti’s back.

Federal officials released images of a handgun they said Pretti was carrying. The Minneapolis police chief said he had a valid firearms permit. Open carry is legal with a permit in Minnesota.

  • In a news conference, Mayor Jacob Frey accused the Trump administration of terrorizing his city. “How many more residents, how many more Americans, need to die or get badly hurt for this operation to end?” he asked.
  • Witnesses to the shooting provided sworn court filings that raised questions about the government’s description of what happened.
  • Chuck Schumer, the Senate minority leader, said Democrats would not support a government spending package if it included funding for the Department of Homeland Security.
  • Colleagues and acquaintances of Pretti’s were stunned by his death. They described him as a friendly neighbor and hardworking professional who was devoted to his patients.
  • This is at least the third shooting involving federal law enforcement agents in the city this month, including the killing of Renee Good on Jan. 7.
  • A Times reporter describes what he saw while reporting on the ICE surge in Minneapolis, as “a dark, dystopian future becoming reality.”
The Cross Bot logo.
Eden Weingart/The New York Times

Brain trainer

I am positively average at Scrabble. While I’m good with words, I don’t know the tricks. I haven’t memorized the two-letter combos that are never used in conversation. I can’t tell when I should try to make a little grid of short words versus a longer but lower-scoring word that opens up the board. I’m clueless about defense.

Now comes Cross Bot, a companion to The New York Times’s game Crossplay. It’s the coach I didn’t realize I was yearning for, providing a succinct postgame rundown of what you did right and what you missed.

Crossplay, released in the United States on Wednesday, is The Times’s first foray into two-player games. It’s a cousin of Scrabble and Words With Friends, with tweaks to the board, the dictionary and the rules. Plus, the miracle that is Cross Bot. The bot tells you how you — and your opponent — rated on a scale of 1 to 99 in strategy and luck, and who was more in control of the game at each turn. It walks you through four key moves in each game. Throughout, it’s encouraging:

Though you didn’t win, you made strong moves.

The best moves, like MAZIER and OOZE, played a higher-scoring Z.

MOXIE was a better move. It scores the same points this turn, but helps you score more next turn.

Darn, I love the word “moxie” — how did I miss that one?

The humans behind the bot

A Crossplay board with the Cross Bot logo below and a black button with the words “play again.”
The New York Times

A trio of Times journalists who are also computer programmers — Tom Giratikanon, Eve Washington and Asmaa Elkeurti — worked with the Games team to build Cross Bot over the past 14 months. Along the way, Eve had to teach herself a new computer language, Go, which sped up the bot 300-fold.

Powered by 40 million simulated games and 20,000 lines of code, the tool analyzes 15 million possible moves for each game in three seconds. (It was made by humans, with no help from generative A.I.)

After playing a couple dozen games — against my husband, my teenage daughter and strangers named Lynda, Slowige and Uncle Eli — I sat down with Tom to learn more.

Jodi: How do you start on a project like this?

Tom: There’s a lot of academic research about games like this. What we can do well is apply the theoretical research to your specific game as a player.

It’s a lot of math, a lot of data. We can’t even actually look at every single possibility. But based on the letters you have, it is pretty good at saying what words you can form this turn, what words you can form next turn. Are you left with good letters or not, and what’s left in the bag.

I’m fascinated by the 1-99 rubrics on strategy versus luck. If I lose and see that my luck score was way lower than my opponent’s, I feel better.

Eve developed formulas to calculate luck. If you’re consistently drawing really tough letters, it’ll know. Same if you consistently get good tiles — all the blanks, all the S’s.

For the strategy score, we use “chance to win.” Let’s say it’s early on and there’s a range of good moves. The worst gives you a 40 percent chance, the best, 60 percent. If you pick the 60 percent move, you get a strategy score of 99.

Humans are actually pretty good at this game. There’s hundreds of possible moves every turn, and most people find a solid one. (The average strategy rating by Friday was 53.)

Movin’ on up

About one million people downloaded Crossplay in the 48 hours after its U.S. release. Tom analyzed an early sample of completed games, and found that the top 5 percent ended at 400 points or more.

That made me feel pretty good. My own average score so far is 312, my highest 444. Friday afternoon, I beat Lynda on the final turn. Bravo! said the bot. Way to turn it around and win.

My best move was SHIRAZ, for 115 points. (I should pour myself a glass!) It had a triple-letter on the Z, a triple-word, and a side word of SICS. My average move scores 24, up from 22 when I started. Thank you, Cross Bot.

Puzzles, brain teasers, solving tips and more, shared with love from the New York Times Games team.

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THE LATEST NEWS

Winter Storm

A person jogs along Beale Street in Memphis with a dog.
In Memphis yesterday. Brad J. Vest for The New York Times

International

Other Big Stories

THE SUNDAY DEBATE

The internet obsessed over a rift in the Beckham family after Brooklyn Beckham, the eldest son of David and Victoria Beckham, criticized his parents in a series of Instagram posts. Who do you think was in the right?

Brooklyn. “He sounds like a young man who’s just had enough, who wants to get on with his life, his new marriage and who wants to make his own decisions without his parents’ interference,” Carole Malone writes for Express.co.uk.

David and Victoria. “His act of independence was to attack the two people who gave him limitless opportunities, which he used to become a part-time model, second-rate photographer and failed soccer player,” Aaron Patrick writes in The Nightly of Australia.

FROM OPINION

The post-World War II order has helped foster global cooperation. The U.S. should rebuild its alliances to tackle the challenges of this century, writes John Kerry, the former secretary of state.

Here is a column by M. Gessen on state terror.

The Times Sale: Our best rate for readers of The Morning.

Save now with our best offer on unlimited news and analysis as part of the complete Times experience: $1/week for your first year.

MORNING READS

A man wearing a red shirt, black pants and yellow shoes on the side of a steel-and-glass building.
Alex Honnold climbing the Taipei 101 Skyscraper in Taiwan. Ann Wang/Reuters

“King Kong in the city”: Skyscraper climbers describe what it’s like to scale a building.

White House makeover: Take a look at 10 areas Trump has transformed in the “People’s House.”

Your pick: The most-clicked link in The Morning yesterday was about a young family’s search for a home in Southern California.

SPORTS

Women’s soccer: Trinity Rodman scored a goal in her first game as captain of the U.S. women’s national team. The U.S. defeated Paraguay 6-0.

N.B.A.: Luka Doncic led the Los Angeles Lakers to a 116-110 win over his former team, the Dallas Mavericks, in Dallas.

BOOK OF THE WEEK

This is the cover of “Half His Age,” by Jennette McCurdy.

“Half His Age,” by Jennette McCurdy: A novel about a 17-year-old’s sexual relationship with her middle-aged creative writing teacher will not be everyone’s cup of tea. But Jennette McCurdy’s assured, provocative follow-up to her 2022 best-selling, equally provocative memoir, “I’m Glad My Mom Died,” cements her standing as a talented writer. Here McCurdy, a former child actor who starred in Nickelodeon shows like “iCarly” and “Sam & Cat,” whisks us to Hollywood’s polar opposite: an unglamorous corner of Anchorage, where her protagonist, Waldo, subsists on microwave dinners, a Victoria’s Secret paycheck and cursory attention from her mother (in that order). Enter Mr. Korgy — married father, bloviator on film and literature with a capital L — whom Waldo fixates on as an antidote to her own disaffection and loneliness. Moral and criminal issues aside (a heavy lift, admittedly), McCurdy’s articulates the vulnerability of girlhood with guts, humor and just the slightest whisper of warmth.

THE INTERVIEW

A short black-and-white video of Chloé Zhao.
Chloé Zhao Devin Oktar Yalkin for The New York Times

This week’s subject for The Interview is the director Chloé Zhao, whose film “Hamnet,” an adaptation of Maggie O’Farrell’s historical novel about the death of Shakespeare’s titular young son, was nominated for eight Academy Awards, including best picture and best director.

In Shakespeare’s time, the period in which “Hamnet” is set, the death of a child was a more common occurrence than it is now. I assume that as a result people had a different perspective on what it meant to lose a child. I’m curious if you think it’s possible to recreate older emotional perspectives.

I think about that all the time. Maggie O’Farrell said that she doesn’t believe it’s possible that the grief is any less, and I tend to agree, because even though things are so different, our biology hasn’t changed. The desire that we have to protect a child will not change. However, the stories we attach to that pain might be different. You know, I recently trained to be a death doula.

Really?

I just finished Level 1 training in the U.K. In one of the training sessions, we had to research Indigenous cultures from around the world, how they deal with death and dying both today and in the past. You can see that the grief of losing a loved one doesn’t change. However, the societal understanding of death and the space it gives to grief and how it’s embedded in the culture and the medicalization of death have shifted so much. In the modern world, when death is no longer seen as a natural part of life — because now it’s about staying alive as long as we can — there’s almost shame around death.

I want to rip up all my questions and ask more about you wanting to be a death doula! Why are you interested in becoming one?

Because I have been terrified of death my whole life. I still am. And because I’ve been so afraid I haven’t been able to live fully. I haven’t been able to love with my heart open because I’m so scared of losing love, which is a form of death. And because I’m so scared of it, I have no choice but to start to develop a healthier relationship with it, or the second half of life would be too hard. It shouldn’t be this terrifying that I can’t even live.

Read more of the interview here.

THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE

A digital illustration shows a soldier on the battlefield with a square reticle around him, with the headline "Dawn of the A.I. Drones."
Illustration by Rob Farmer

Read this week’s magazine.

THE MORNING RECOMMENDS …

Stay safe in the frigid cold. Experts offer their advice.

Transport your mind with some historical fiction featuring rebellious characters.

Fix your own stuff. A simple set of tools can go a long way.

MEAL PLAN

Salmon on top of rice in a bowl. Slices of avocado, cucumber radishes and nori are positioned on the edges of the bowl.
Johnny Miller for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Samantha Seneviratne.

A few weeks into the new year, are you sticking with your healthy eating resolutions? Emily Weinstein’s Five Weeknight Dishes newsletter has recipes to help you out, starting with Andy Baraghani’s sticky miso salmon bowl, a favorite of Times editors and readers alike.

NOW TIME TO PLAY

Here is today’s Spelling Bee. Yesterday’s pangram was fettuccine.

Can you put eight historical events — including the debut of MTV, one of the first roller skates and some of the first known cave art — in chronological order? Take this week’s Flashback quiz.

And here are today’s Mini CrosswordWordleSudokuConnections and Strands.

Thanks for spending part of your weekend with The Times.

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