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Footage captured by ICE agent involved in shooting of Minneapolis woman surfaces

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Watch: Video filmed by ICE agent who shot Minneapolis woman has emerged

A video filmed by the US immigration agent who fatally shot a woman in Minneapolis on Wednesday has emerged, showing the moments before gunfire rang out.

The 47-second footage, obtained by conservative news outlet Alpha News, which is based in Minnesota, shows Renee Nicole Good sitting behind the wheel of her car and speaking to the officer.

US Vice-President JD Vance shared the clip on social media, commenting that the agent had acted in self-defence. Local officials have insisted the woman posed no danger.

Good’s wife has paid tribute to the 37-year-old, saying the pair were trying to support their neighbours when she was shot. Her death has sparked protests across the US.

President Donald Trump’s administration says Good tried to run over the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer in an act of “domestic terrorism” after blocking the road and impeding the agency’s work.

Democratic Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey has described that account as “garbage” based on the video footage.

The BBC has asked the homeland security department and the White House for comment on the new video that emerged on Friday.

The footage starts with the officer getting out of his car and filming Good’s vehicle and registration plate while he walks around the Honda SUV. A dog is in the backseat.

Good says: “That’s fine dude. I’m not mad at you.”

Her wife, Becca Good, is standing on the street filming the interaction with her mobile phone. She tells the ICE agent: “That’s OK, we don’t change our plates every morning just so you know. It will be the same plate when you come talk to us later.”

She adds: “You want to come at us? You want to come at us? I say go and get yourself some lunch, big boy.”

Another agent approaches Good on the driver’s side and uses an expletive as he says: “Get out of the car.”

The agent filming the clip moves in front of Good’s car as she reverses.

In a chaotic couple of seconds, she turns the wheel to the right and pulls forwards.

The camera jerks up to the sky. “Woah, woah!” a voice says, as bangs are heard.

In the final part of the video the car is seen veering down the road. The ICE agent swears.

Other clips released previously from the scene show the maroon SUV crashed into the side of the road after the woman was shot by the agent.

The officer appears to stay on his feet, and is later seen in other videos walking towards Good’s crashed car.

Federal officials say the agent was injured and treated in hospital. The FBI is investigating the incident.

An earlier video shows the incident from another perspective

The officer who fired on Good is Jonathan Ross, a veteran ICE agent who was previously injured in the line of duty when he was struck by a car.

When asked about the video at the White House on Friday, President Trump said: “You have agitators and we will always be protecting ICE, and we’re always going to be protecting our border patrol and our law enforcement.”

On Friday, Vance reposted the video on X, and defended the agent’s actions, saying: “The reality is that his life was endangered and he fired in self-defence.”

White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt also reposted the video, saying the media had smeared an ICE agent who had “properly defended himself from being run over”.

Good’s wife told local media the pair had gone to the scene of immigration enforcement activity to support neighbours.

“We had whistles,” Becca Good said. “They had guns.”

When speaking about Good – a mother-of-three, including a six-year-old son – she said “kindness radiated out of her”.

“We were raising our son to believe that no matter where you come from or what you look like, all of us deserve compassion and kindness,” she added.

Demonstrators turned out for a third night of protests on Friday over the killing of Good.

The Minneapolis Police Department told BBC News that at least 30 people were detained, cited and released after protests in the downtown area.

Photos showed protesters gathered outside a hotel in the city, believed to be where some ICE agents were staying.

Minnesota’s Department of Public Safety said it assisted police officers with arresting people suspected of unlawful assembly, after responding to an area around the Canopy Hotel in the city and giving dispersal orders.

The public safety department said it received “information that demonstrations were no longer peaceful and reports of damage to property”.

Minnesota Governor Tim Walz earlier said he had activated the state’s National Guard to help with security of the protests.

On Friday, Minnesota officials said they would open an inquiry into the shooting after saying they had been frozen out of the federal investigation.

Trump was asked by a reporter at the White House on Friday whether the FBI should share its findings with Minnesota, and said: “Well normally I would, but they’re crooked officials.”

Hennepin County’s top prosecutor Mary Moriarty and the state’s Democratic attorney general, Keith Ellison, said they were launching their own probe.

It came a day after the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension said the FBI had initially pledged a joint investigation, then reversed course.

One federal agency that is not looking into the shooting is the US justice department’s Civil Rights Division, which has in the past investigated alleged excessive use of force by law enforcement.

But prosecutors have advised its criminal section that there will be no investigation in this case, sources told the BBC’s US partner, CBS News.

Governor Walz, a Democrat, has accused the Trump administration of blocking state officials, but Vice-President Vance said it was a federal matter.

Sir Lucian Grainge criticizes companies for failing to respect artists’ work in 2026 memo on AI music and superfans

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Universal Music Group Chairman and CEO Sir Lucian Grainge has issued a stark warning about “irresponsible business models” in AI music, declaring that UMG will not tolerate deals that “devalue artists” and “promote the exponential growth of AI slop on streaming platforms.”

The comments appear in Grainge’s annual New Year memo to UMG staff, sent earlier today (January 8) and obtained by MBW, in which he celebrates a successful 2025 for the world’s biggest music rights company and its artists, while outlining strategic priorities for 2026.

“Validating business models that fail to respect artists’ work and creativity, and promote the exponential growth of AI slop on streaming platforms, is a grave disservice to artists, songwriters and all of us who work in music,” writes Grainge.

“Let me be clear: UMG will not stand by and watch irresponsible business models take hold, models that devalue artists, fail to provide adequate compensation for their work, stifle their creativity and ultimately, diminish their ability to reach fans.”

Notably, Grainge’s pointed language on this topic comes as UMG continues active litigation against AI music generator Suno, a company with which rival Warner Music Group settled and struck a licensing deal in November 2025.

(Sony Music, Germany’s GEMA, and Denmark’s Koda are all also actively suing Suno.)

“LET ME BE CLEAR: UMG WILL NOT STAND BY AND WATCH IRRESPONSIBLE BUSINESS MODELS TAKE HOLD—MODELS THAT DEVALUE ARTISTS, FAIL TO PROVIDE ADEQUATE COMPENSATION FOR THEIR WORK, STIFLE THEIR CREATIVITY AND ULTIMATELY, DIMINISH THEIR ABILITY TO REACH FANS.”

SIR LUCIAN GRAINGE, UMG

In the memo, Grainge positions UMG’s own AI strategy between what he characterizes as two “equally flawed” extremes: those who believe there should be no engagement with AI, and those who think “we should acquiesce to accepting whatever AI models are released, regardless of their ethicality.”

“When it comes to new technology, we engage, adapt and innovate,” he writes, citing decades of technological change in the music industry, “from the player-piano to the phonogram to radio to vinyl, cassette, MP3, downloads, ad-funded streaming into premium subscription”.

“At the same time, that approach must be thoughtful, strategic, commercial and nuanced,” Grainge adds.

AI PARTNERSHIPS AND NVIDIA ALLIANCE

The memo follows UMG’s recent announcement of a strategic partnership with AI computing giant NVIDIA, which Grainge describes as “first-of-its-kind” and aimed at fundamentally transforming “music discovery and fan engagement.”

Grainge notes that UMG became “the first media company to enter into AI-related agreements with established platforms such as YouTube, Meta, TikTok, and KDDI as well as with emerging AI entrepreneurs such as Udio, BandLab, Soundlabs, KLAY Vision, Splice and Stability AI” in 2025.

“With all of our agreements, we have simultaneously protected artists and songwriters and human creativity, spawned a new wave of creative innovation in music and developed new revenue streams and commercial opportunities,” he writes.

The memo emphasizes that UMG’s AI partnerships “place artists at the center of everything we do,” with NVIDIA quoted as saying the collaboration will proceed “responsibly, with safeguards that protect artists’ work, ensure attribution, and respect copyright.”

STREAMING 2.0 AND ARTIST-CENTRIC

The memo also highlights progress on UMG’s Streaming 2.0 initiative, with deals implemented with Amazon, Spotify and YouTube in 2025, and more agreements expected in 2026.

Grainge credits the company’s Artist-Centric initiative, launched three years ago, with accurately predicting “the dramatic increase in the volume of irrelevant uploads, including the rise of AI ‘slop.’”

“This ability to see around corners enabled us to anticipate this trend and protect our artists and songwriters by preemptively placing provisions in our agreements with DSPs that prevent AI slop from being counted in the same royalty pools as our artists and songwriters,” he writes.

Grainge confirms that these initiatives delivered on commitments outlined at UMG’s Capital Markets Day in September 2024, demonstrating the company’s “capability to effectively develop, harness and adapt strategies to the benefit of the entire music ecosystem.”

2026 PRIORITIES: SUPERFANS, DOWNTOWN, GLOBAL EXPANSION

Looking ahead, Grainge outlines several strategic priorities for 2026.

Superfans and retail expansion: A key focus will be serving superfans through “enhanced premium tiers” with DSP partners and emerging platforms focused on “special events and products for superfans, both virtually and in the physical world.”

In 2026 we will accelerate these efforts both by working with our established DSP partners on the launch of enhanced premium tiers for superfans, as well as by working with emerging platforms that are focused on special events and products for superfans, both virtually and in the physical world,” writes Grainge.

He also notes that UMG has “recently established a portfolio of retail stores in Tokyo, Madrid, New York and London as a complement to our growing D2C business.”

The company plans to scale this activity in 2026, “including the expansion of our experiential hospitality strategy and seamless integrations between virtual and IRL events for superfans.”

Independent services: A section of the memo is dedicated to services for independent labels. “It’s no secret that much of our company’s success is powered by our entrepreneurial culture and decentralized structure, so identifying and partnering with like-minded leaders and entrepreneurs will only help ensure our continued future success,” Grainge writes.

The memo also references the “anticipated closing” of UMG’s proposed $775 million acquisition of Downtown Music, which is currently being assessed by the European Commission. (UMG has proposed divesting Downtown’s Curve royalty accounting business to address EC concerns over the deal. The EC has until February 27 to make a decision).

“With the anticipated closing of our acquisition of Downtown Music, and by continuing to broaden our independent partner portfolio, we want to accelerate our efforts in providing best-in-class services to both independent entrepreneurs and labels,” says Grainge.

Global expansion: UMG will “continue to broaden our global presence in fast-growing markets through organic A&R within our growing network of local labels, as well as through partnerships and acquisitions of dynamic music companies in Africa, China, India and Southeast Asia.”

Grainge highlighted the recent news that Universal Music India has become a significant minority shareholder in Excel Entertainment, “a leading Indian film and digital content studio,” expanding opportunities for Indian artists and strengthening UMG’s position in original soundtracks.

You can read his note in full below:


Dear Colleagues:

Happy New Year!  I hope you all had a great holiday season with your loved ones and friends.  And welcome back to what I anticipate will be another exciting and historic year for all of us.

To give you some context as to why I think 2026 looks so promising, I’ll briefly describe for you the major opportunities we will be pursuing.  As I like to do this time of year, let’s take a look back at the last year to celebrate our artists and the incredible accomplishments we worked tirelessly to help them achieve, and to highlight some of the significant strategic advances we made last year in AI, our ongoing commitment to Streaming 2.0 and the contributions we collectively made with our Global Impact Team.

Artists’ Achievements:

Our single greatest investment every year is our investment into artists and the infrastructure we build to support them and amplify their creativity.  By combining talent, expertise, and long-term vision, our foundation of artist development consistently delivers lasting success.  In 2025, once again, that success was on full display.  The list of our artists and songwriters’ remarkable performances last year is so long that I had to detail it in a section at the end of this note given there are just so many deserved acknowledgements!

For now, though, here are just a handful of the global highlights:

  • On Spotify: we had four of the Top 5 Artists (Taylor Swift, The Weeknd, Drake and Billie Eilish); six of the Top 10 Albums and three of the Top 5 (KPop Demon Hunters Soundtrack, Billie Eilish HIT ME HARD AND SOFT, and Sabrina Carpenter Short n’ Sweet);  and six of the Top 10 Songs (with Lady Gaga & Bruno Mars “Die With A Smile” at No. 1 and Billie Eilish “BIRDS OF A FEATHER” at No. 2).  Seven of the of the Top 10 Global Artists are UMPG songwriters: Bad Bunny (No. 1), Taylor Swift (No. 2), The Weeknd (No. 3), Drake (No. 4), Billie Eilish (No. 5), Kendrick Lamar (No. 6), and Ariana Grande (No. 8).
  • On Apple Music: Our artists had seven of the Top 10 Songs globally, including four of the Top 5 (Kendrick Lamar & SZA “luther”; Lady Gaga & Bruno Mars “Die With A Smile”; Kendrick Lamar “Not Like Us”; and Billie Eilish “BIRDS OF A FEATHER”). Drake was the most streamed artist worldwidewhile Morgan Wallen’s I’m The Problem was the most streamed album. UMPG’s songwriters were represented across 15 of the Top 20 Songs globally, including “APT.” from ROSÉ & Bruno Mars at No. 1, and contributions to four of the Top 5.
  • On Amazon Music: UMG had all of the Top 5 Albums (KPop Demon Hunters, Morgan Wallen I’m the Problemand One Thing At A Time, Sabrina Carpenter Short n’ Sweet,  and Taylor Swift The Life of a Showgirl); seven of the Top 10 Artists, including the Top 3 (Taylor Swift, Morgan Wallen and Mrs. GREEN APPLE); seven of the Top 10 Most Requested Artists on Alexa (Taylor Swift, KPop Demon Hunters cast, Morgan Wallen, Lady Gaga, KAROL G, Billie Eilish and Eminem); seven of the Top 10 Vinyl Albums (Taylor Swift The Life of a Showgirl, Kendrick Lamar GNX, Taylor Swift reputation, Gracie Abrams The Secret of Us, Wicked: The Soundtrack, The Beatles Abbey Road and The Beatles Anthology Collection (2025 Remaster).
  • On TikTok:  Global Artist of the Year (KATSEYE) and seven of the Top 10; Track of the Year (“Pretty Little Baby” recorded by Connie Francis in 1962) and four of the Top 5; Most-Saved Artist of the Year (Taylor Swift); and Music Trend of the Year (“Anxiety” by Doechii).
  • On Deezer: UMG had the four Most-Streamed Artists (Lady Gaga, Taylor Swift, Billie Eilish and The Weeknd); nine of the Top 10 Albumssix of the Top 10 Songs; and the Most-Shared Song Worldwide (Lola Young’s “Messy”).

No other company—in music or any other sector of entertainment—has ever achieved such a level of success and done so with such consistency.  And it is you, the UMG team, that drives our historic success, year after year.  I’m so proud of you!

AI in 2025

As we all witnessed, AI became the dominant economic and cultural narrative last year—with the potential to disrupt aspects of many businesses.

While I fundamentally believe AI, deployed responsibly, can be a hugely beneficial commercial and creative driver for UMG and our artists, we cannot overlook the fact that AI’s blossoming ubiquity can also create challenges, particularly from those who act in disregard for the rights of artists, songwriters and other rightsholders.  Therefore, it’s important that music and artists don’t get lost in a global AI conversation.  The reality is that given the size of our industry compared to others grappling with the massive implications of AI (IT, healthcare, financial services, manufacturing and transportation to name a few)—we have punched way above our weight on the global stage to ensure that the interest of artists and music companies are front and center.  And we will continue to do so.  The opportunities AI can deliver kept us working tirelessly through the year and my personal commitment to the artist and songwriter community is that, in 2026 and beyond, music will remain central to the AI conversation in terms of technology, public policy and commercial opportunity.

Our proactive strategic approach to harnessing AI led UMG to be the first media company to enter into AI-related agreements with established platforms such as YouTube, Meta, TikTok, and KDDI as well as with emerging AI entrepreneurs such as Udio, BandLab, Soundlabs, KLAY Vision, Splice and Stability AI.

With all of our agreements, we have simultaneously protected artists and songwriters and human creativity, spawned a new wave of creative innovation in music and developed new revenue streams and commercial opportunities.   The substantial progress we made last year on multiple fronts makes me extremely optimistic about AI’s enormous positive potential in the years ahead.

Streaming 2.0

While our work in AI commanded much of the press’s attention, another important strategic advance of which I’m proud has been our continued progress in reaching “Streaming 2.0” agreements with our DSP partners.  These agreements encourage smarter consumer segmentation, accelerate geographic expansion, create greater consumer value and drive ARPU growth.  In 2025 we implemented Streaming 2.0 deals with Amazon, Spotify and YouTube, and we expect to enter into more such agreements in 2026.  At the same time, three years ago, when we announced our Artist-Centric initiative, we accurately predicted the fact that the dramatic increase in the volume of irrelevant uploads, including the rise of AI “slop,” could overwhelm DSPs.  This ability to see around corners enabled us to anticipate this trend and protect our artists and songwriters by preemptively placing provisions in our agreements with DSPs that prevent AI slop from being counted in the same royalty pools as our artists and songwriters (among other Artist-Centric components we’ve implemented to advance the interests of artists and reward the value they bring to these platforms).

Fueled by our Streaming 2.0 initiatives, I’m pleased that over the past year, we have delivered on the vision and commitments that we outlined at our Capital Markets Day in September 2024, with growth performance metrics that demonstrate our capability to effectively develop, harness and adapt strategies to the benefit of the entire music ecosystem.

Global Impact

Some of the most enthusiastic feedback I receive from you relates to the work we do with our Global Impact Team.  The work is a direct reflection of the passion and commitment of our colleagues around the world to create positive impact with efforts focused on mental health, sustainability, music education and community support.

Working closely with our partners—Mental Health Coalition, Project Healthy Minds and Music Health Alliance—we directed funding to organizations focused on creating and expanding mental health services to help individuals in communities across the music industry and around the world.

And our focus on the intersection of music and health and wellness has also led to innovative commercial opportunities for our artists, while helping their fans.  For example, in May we launched Sound Therapy with Apple Music, combining music from more than 250 of our participating artists using Sollos, our proprietary audio technology initiative, to help fans focus, relax and sleep.  Already, the performance of Sound Therapy has exceeded our expectations.

We also broadened our sustainability initiatives in 2025.  By partnering with innovative suppliers, reimagining manufacturing processes, and collaborating across the industry, UMG continued to reduce its share of global climate pollution in almost everything we do, from the merch and audio products we sell, to the electricity that powers our work.  And we joined as founding donors to EarthPercent, which mobilizes artists and the music industry to channel funding and raise awareness for high-impact climate and nature solutions around the world.

Over the course of the year, in collaboration with educational institutions, public school systems and nonprofit partnerships, we mobilized our artists, labels, employees and fans around programs and initiatives that foster the next generation of industry leaders.  We launched career pathway programs and major scholarships to bolster and support global access to free music education for young people around the world.

And when disaster struck, we were there to help, providing critical support to employees and community members including those impacted by the L.A. wildfires this time last year.

Honors and Awards

Our efforts in sustainability have been recognized by numerous organizations, including UMG’s being named by Newsweek as one of the “World’s Greenest Companies” and our winning the “ESG Transparency Award”, acknowledging our exceptional clarity and openness in sustainability reporting.

Recognizing our strong internal culture, we were named by Forbes as one of America’s Dream Employers—No. 1 in Media and Advertising and No. 5 overall out of 500 companies across multiple industries.

Finally, for the first time ever, I was so pleased for us that Time magazine honored UMG as one of the most influential companies in the world last year, the first recognition of a major music company in the list’s history.  That recognition specifically cited our commitment to defending artists’ rights, championing a more equitable, Artist-Centric streaming landscape for artists and songwriters, and shaping culture through the power of artistry.

2026 and Beyond

Of course, our central focus will continue to be—as it always has been—artist development and the industry-leading investment we make in artists, along with the global resources that support them.

And this year will also see us focusing much of our energy on growing our presence in broader touchpoints of our expanding industry, extending our geographic footprint, and continuing to lead the way in the development and growth of responsible AI.

Services to Independent Labels

We’ll be developing different models, structures and competencies to service and grow an increasingly vibrant diversity in music.  It’s no secret that much of our company’s success is powered by our entrepreneurial culture and decentralized structure, so identifying and partnering with like-minded leaders and entrepreneurs will only help ensure our continued future success while supporting the health of the entire music ecosystem.

With the anticipated closing of our acquisition of Downtown Music, and by continuing to broaden our independent partner portfolio, we want to accelerate our efforts in providing best-in-class services to both independent entrepreneurs and labels.

Streaming 2.0, Artist-Centric and the Superfan

A key part of our Streaming 2.0 initiative and Artist-Centric strategy is serving superfans and bringing them closer to our artists.  In 2026 we will accelerate these efforts both by working with our established DSP partners on the launch of enhanced premium tiers for superfans, as well as by working with emerging platforms that are focused on special events and products for superfans—both virtually and in the physical world.  For example, we have recently established a portfolio of retail stores in Tokyo, Madrid, New York and London as a complement to our growing D2C business, including our network of online artist and branded stores, which reached new heights this past year.  2026 will see additional scaling of this activity, including the expansion of our experiential hospitality strategy and seamless integrations between virtual and IRL events for superfans.  All of this activity is further evidence that the very definition of UMG is expanding, while our direct connection with music consumers is growing.

Global Footprint

We will continue to broaden our global presence in fast-growing markets through organic A&R within our growing network of local labels, as well as through partnerships and acquisitions of dynamic music companies in Africa, China, India and Southeast Asia.  This will include continuing to identify the most accomplished entrepreneurs and independent labels that will provide access to some of the best artists and music in those regions, but also the ability to grow the influence of those artists and their music in markets around the world.

And we’re already getting started.  Earlier this week, we announced that Universal Music India will become a significant minority shareholder in Excel Entertainment, a leading Indian film and digital content studio.  The deal will expand opportunities for Indian artists and strengthen our position in original soundtracks, which remain at the heart of India’s high-potential music market.

AI in 2026 and Beyond 

Of course, AI will continue to have an impact on global industries, including ours, and UMG will continue—as we have with every prior technological innovation—to lead in AI initiatives and sit at the big table where we can help shape the future of music.

On Tuesday we announced a first-of-its-kind alliance with NVIDIA, the world’s leading accelerated computing and AI company.  The scope of ambition behind this announcement is simple yet profound: to fundamentally transform the music experience, enriching and enhancing it for fans the world over.  And that transformation covers everything, from artist tools for music creation to music discovery and fan engagement.  NVIDIA articulated the relationship perfectly when they said, “we’re entering an era where a music catalog can be explored like an intelligent universe — conversational, contextual, and genuinely interactive… And we’ll do it the right way: responsibly, with safeguards that protect artists’ work, ensure attribution, and respect copyright.”  The fact that the most influential AI enterprises like NVIDIA are prioritizing partnerships with UMG in their media sector strategies suggests a clear recognition of the significant win-win potential in market-led solutions to harnessing AI innovation.  Our work with NVIDIA will be a multi-year partnership and, like our other AI initiatives, places artists at the center of everything we do.

I’m confident that our approach to AI is the right one, and differs meaningfully from two other approaches that are equally flawed.  Even as UMG leans into AI, there are some corners of the creative sector occupied by those who think there should be no engagement with AI.  Meanwhile on the other extreme, there are some who believe that the “genie is out of the bottle,” so we should acquiesce to accepting whatever AI models are released, regardless of their ethicality.

If we’ve learned anything over the prior decades, it’s that trying to smother emerging technology is futile… and as history has demonstrated, completely counterproductive!  The link between music and technology has been the fundamental growth driver of the music industry for more than a century from the player-piano to the phonogram to radio to vinyl, cassette, MP3, downloads, ad-funded streaming into premium subscription and so on.

That is why, when it comes to new technology, we engage, adapt and innovate.  Whether that’s being the first to embrace streaming and ad-funded models, or striking the first deals to monetize music on social platforms, we must lean in and take the reins in determining our future.

And that is exactly how we will continue to approach AI.

At the same time, that approach must be thoughtful, strategic, commercial and nuanced.  Validating business models that fail to respect artists’ work and creativity—and promote the exponential growth of AI slop on streaming platforms—is a grave disservice to artists, songwriters and all of us who work in music.  Let me be clear:  UMG will not stand by and watch irresponsible business models take hold—models that devalue artists, fail to provide adequate compensation for their work, stifle their creativity and ultimately, diminish their ability to reach fans.

Protecting our artists, our people, our company and our industry is not just a job to me, it’s a mission.

And it’s about something even bigger.  The importance of music to humanity throughout the world cannot be overstated.  Our role in partnering with artists to produce the most popular music on the planet has an impact that far exceeds our imagination.  The music artists create is—and always will be—an extraordinarily meaningful part of the lives of billions of people around the globe. Music is simply beautiful.

Since I was a teenager, I have spent my career investing in and fighting for artists, and I will never stop.  It is the privilege of my life to be able to do this work with all of you.  The more seismic the changes that come our way, the more energized I become.  Together, we continue to march on!

Welcome to 2026!

LucianMusic Business Worldwide

Israel orders the demolition of football pitch in the occupied West Bank | Newsfeed

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NewsFeed

Israeli authorities have issued a demolition order against a football pitch in a Palestinian refugee camp in the occupied West Bank. Al Jazeera’s Nida Ibrahim has been taking a look.

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Meagan Good and Jonathan Majors granted Guinean citizenship following DNA ancestry tests

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Makuochi OkaforBBC Africa

Mohamed Finando / Oxygen Africa Meagan Good (R) in a black-and-white jumpsuit and brown fedora, and Jonathan Majors (L) in a yellow jumper and beige slacks hold hands as they pose for the camera in front of a sign that reads: "Programme Simandou 2040." A Guinea flag hands furled on the far right of the frameMohamed Finando / Oxygen Africa

Husband and wife movie stars Meagan Good and Jonathan Majors have travelled to Guinea, where they have been granted citizenship after tracing their ancestry to the West African nation through DNA testing.

Majors, a star of Creed and Ant-Man, said becoming citizens would allow the couple to “bridg[e] the gap” and bring together their stories as entertainers and members of the African diaspora.

“We just want to say thank you so much,” added Good, best known for the film Think Like a Man, who said it was her first visit to Guinea.

Their citizenship ceremony was similar to other initiatives in the region to encourage people of African descent to reclaim their heritage and invest in the continent.

The event – a private cultural ceremony organised by the ministry of culture – took place at a tourist and cultural centre, Gbassi Kolo, on Friday.

Djiba Diakité, minister and chief of staff of the presidency, presented the passports to the two actors on behalf of President Mamadi Doumbouya.

Beside him stood General Amara Camara, minister and secretary-general of the presidency.

Guests were treated to a series of traditional dance and music performances, including on the djembe – a drum that draws many foreigners to Guinea to learn its rhythms.

Good, 44, and Majors, 36, began dating in May 2023 and tied the knot last year.

They married following a turbulent period in Majors’ life. In 2024, he was sentenced in the US to probation for assaulting his ex-girlfriend, British choreographer Grace Jabbari. He was mandated to complete a 52-week domestic violence intervention programme.

The actors landed at Conakry’s Gbessia International Airport in the early hours of Friday morning and were welcomed with great fanfare by officials and musicians.

During their stay in Guinea, the pair are scheduled to tour Boké, a coastal region with historic slave trade sites. It is not clear if they plan to invest in or move to Guinea.

Mohamed Finando / Oxygen Africa US actors Meagan Good and Jonathan Majors being welcomed at Conakry Gbessia International Airport.  They were presented with kola nuts. Kola nuts hold deep cultural significance in West Africa, symbolising hospitality, peace, friendship, and life.  They are used in crucial social rituals like weddings, funerals, and negotiations.   The couple are smiling, chatting and wearing relaxed clothing.Mohamed Finando / Oxygen Africa

Ahead of the ceremony, the stars were presented with kola nuts – a culturally symbolic gift of welcome

In recent years, several celebrities have taken up citizenships of countries in Africa.

It largely began in 2019 when Ghana launched “The Year of Return”, inviting those with African heritage to come home and invest. One of the most prominent stars to do so was Stevie Wonder in 2024.

Other notable examples have been US singer Ciara, who took Beninese citizenship last year, and Hollywood actor Samuel L Jackson, who acquired a Gabonese passport in 2020.

Guinea itself has a long history of welcoming activists and people from the African diaspora.

In the 1960s, South African singer Miriam Makeba and her husband, US civil rights activist and Black Panther leader Stokely Carmichael, moved to Guinea.

Makeba had been made stateless for her opposition to apartheid and after her marriage to Carmichael, who popularised the slogan “black power”, her US visa was revoked.

She was treated as an honorary Guinean citizen and cultural ambassador, while Carmichael, who took the name Kwame Ture, remained in Guinea even after their divorce, dying there in 1998.

Guinea has experience political turmoil in recent years – and under the junta that seized power in 2021 the country has become less open to dissent.

Coup leader Gen Mamady Doumbouya restricted the media and suppressed protests.

The country has recently returned to civilian rule following elections last month, won by Doumbouya with 87% of the vote.

Unlike other countries in the region that have experienced recent coups, Guinea has maintained relations with Western governments, particularly France.

The country is rich in minerals, including bauxite, iron ore, diamonds, gold and uranium, yet its people remain among the poorest in West Africa.

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Getty Images/BBC A woman looking at her mobile phone and the graphic BBC News AfricaGetty Images/BBC

InvestingPro’s Overvalued Warning Causes WeShop Stock to Plummet by 49%

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WeShop tumbles 49% after InvestingPro’s overvalued warning

Roy Jones Jr predicts Oleksandr Usyk will defeat Moses Itauma

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Roy Jones Jr has offered his take on a potential heavyweight clash between Oleksandr Usyk and Moses Itauma, firmly believing that the timing of their matchup could determine its result.

As the current bona fide king of his division, Usyk has left himself with very little to prove, but hopes to fight two or three more times before hanging up his gloves.

While nothing is yet confirmed, the Ukrainian is widely expected to face former world champion Deontay Wilder later this year, perhaps in April or May, after having claimed a fifth-round stoppage victory over Daniel Dubois in July 2025.

Back then, Usyk achieved his goal of becoming a three-time undisputed champion across two weight classes. He is now angling to defend his WBC, IBF and WBA titles against a commercially viable opponent in America, rather than the toughest test the division offers.

British heavyweight prodigy Itauma, meanwhile, finds himself on a vastly different trajectory following his first-round finish over Dillian Whyte in August.

Despite all the hype that surrounds this promising 21-year-old, Itauma is still yet to compete anywhere near the level of heavyweight phenom Usyk.

Instead, the precocious talent is now gearing up to face Jermaine Franklin, an opponent that is expected to offer more resistance than his previous opponents, on January 24.

For Jones, who recently spoke with Clubhouse Boxing, it is crucial that Itauma continues to build his experience incrementally, rather than entering a premature test against Usyk.

“[Whether Itauma can become a dominant force] depends on how well [he] understands that pressure; how bad he wants it.

“He can do anything he wants to do because he has all the ability, he’s very explosive [and] he does everything good.

“There’s nothing that should really stop him from becoming a world champion, except [by] moving too fast.

“If you put him in with Usyk right now, that’s moving too fast.”

Jone has previously told The Ring that matching the two up would be like ‘throwing Itauma to the wolves.’

The pair may never cross paths, though a ‘changing of the guard’ fight remains a possibility.

Unraveling the Origins of Cannabis for New Medical Breakthroughs

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Cannabis produces a complex suite of bioactive compounds, including tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and cannabidiol (CBD), but how these molecules evolved has long been a mystery. Now, new research has shed light on their origin story – and opened the door to innovative ways of harnessing these compounds for human medicine.

Researchers at Wageningen University & Research (WUR) in the Netherlands have experimentally traced how cannabis evolved the ability to synthesize THC, CBD and another major cannabinoid, cannabichromene (CBC), revealing new insights into the plant’s evolution and how we can harness its power.

In modern cannabis varieties, the proportions of these cannabinoids vary widely and are largely determined by the activity of corresponding synthase enzymes. The enzymes are also highly specialized products of a long evolutionary process and today’s types are far removed from those that existed millions of years ago.

Using ancestral sequence reconstruction, which reconstructs ancient proteins from modern genetic data, the team resurrected cannabinoid-producing enzymes from early cannabis ancestors. When expressed in the lab, the enzymes revealed which cannabinoids they could produce – and how their activity differed from modern versions.

What they found was that, unlike today’s highly specialized enzymes that produce specific cannabinoids, these ancient types were generalists, capable of creating multiple compounds – including THC, CBD and CBC – from a common precursor.

“What once seemed evolutionarily ‘unfinished’ turns out to be highly useful,” said WUR researcher Robin van Velzen, who led the study with his colleague Cloé Villard. “These ancestral enzymes are more robust and flexible than their descendants, which makes them very attractive starting points for new applications in biotechnology and pharmaceutical research.”

Of particular interest to the researchers, and to medicine more broadly, are the findings related to CBC. While most research into cannabis compounds has focused on THC and CBD, CBC is emerging as a potentially important but underexplored cannabinoid. Modern cannabis plants typically contain less than 1% CBC, making it difficult to study and produce at scale.

“At present, there is no cannabis plant with a naturally high CBC content,” said van Velzen. “Introducing this enzyme into a cannabis plant could therefore lead to innovative medicinal varieties.”

Preliminary studies have suggested that CBC has anti-inflammatory, anticonvulsant and antibacterial properties, among others, although its therapeutic potential remains far less studied than THC or CBD.

The team also found that the reconstructed ancestral enzymes were easier to produce in micro-organisms, such as yeast cells, than modern-day types, which mean they can be harnessed to synthesize cannabinoids more efficiently. This raises the possibility of producing rare cannabinoids without relying on plant cultivation, with implications for both research and drug development.

“Through rational engineering of these ancestors, we designed hybrid enzymes which allowed identifying key amino acid mutations underlying the functional evolution of cannabinoid oxidocyclases,” the team wrote. “Ancestral and hybrid enzymes also displayed unique activities and proved to be easier to produce heterologously than their extant counterparts. Overall, this study contributes to understanding the origin, evolution and molecular mechanism of cannabinoid oxidocyclases, which opens new perspectives for breeding, biotechnological and medicinal applications.”

The study was published in the Plant Biotechnology Journal.

Source: Wageningen University & Research

Examining the Antigovernment Protests in Iran

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new video loaded: A Look at Iran’s Antigovernment Protests

Protests have rocked Iran in recent weeks, and the country’s supreme leader has threatened to escalate a crackdown on demonstrators. Erika Solomon, our bureau chief for Iran and Iraq, discusses what’s fueling the protests with our senior writer Katrin Bennhold.

By Erika Solomon, Katrin Bennhold, Christina Thornell, Christina Shaman, Parin Behrooz and Sanjana Varghese

January 9, 2026

Trump proposes limiting credit card interest rates to 10% for one year

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President Donald Trump on Friday called for a one-year cap on credit card interest rates at 10%, effective Jan. 20, without specifying details.

“Please be informed that we will no longer let the American Public be ‘ripped off’ by Credit Card Companies that are charging Interest Rates of 20 to 30%, and even more, which festered unimpeded during the Sleepy Joe Biden Administration. AFFORDABILITY!” he wrote on social media.

It’s not clear whether credit card companies will respond to his call, or what actions he might take to force any change.

The post comes as the Trump administration intensifies efforts to demonstrate to voters that the president is addressing concerns about costs and prices that have emerged as a central issue in the November midterm elections.

During the 2024 presidential campaign, Trump pledged to seek limits on the interest credit card companies can charge.

Hours before his message on Friday, Senator Bernie Sanders, a Vermont independent, said on X: “Trump promised to cap credit card interest rates at 10% and stop Wall Street from getting away with murder. Instead, he deregulated big banks charging up to 30% interest on credit cards.”

In a letter last year to Sanders and Senator Josh Hawley, a Missouri Republican, a group of banking trade groups painted a dire outcome for consumers if the government ever capped interest rates on credit cards at 10%, as the senators had proposed.

“Many consumers who currently rely on credit cards would be forced to turn elsewhere for short-term financing needs, including pawn shops, auto title lenders or worse — such as loan sharks, unregulated online lenders and the black market,” the group wrote.

The Bank Policy Institute said in a report last year that “while the proposed cap is a well-intentioned effort to reduce the high debt burden some households are facing, it would harm consumers’ access to card credit.” The group also said such a move could force card issuers to reduce cardholder benefits, including lucrative rewards tied to purchases. 

Responding to Trump’s post on Friday, Hawley said on X: “Fantastic idea. Can’t wait to vote for this.”