Welcome to the Weekend Briefing. We’re covering a national reckoning over race, the state of the coronavirus and a guide to Pride Month celebrations. |
| Erik Branch for The New York Times |
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1. Calls for racial justice have touched seemingly every aspect of American life. |
The killing of George Floyd, a black man who died after a white police officer knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes despite pleas that he could not breathe, prompted institutions and individuals to confront enduring forms of racial discrimination. Above, protesters in Louisville, Ky. |
From Merriam-Webster revisiting its entry on racism to the swift resignations of major figures in business and entertainment, what started as a renewed demand for police reform has become a country’s awakening. And all in less than three weeks. |
But those who have been in the trenches for decades fighting racism in America wonder how long the soul searching will last. The police killing of Michael Brown in 2014 resulted in widespread protests and calls for change, and yet the outcry did not result in fundamental police reform. |
| Erik S Lesser/EPA, via Shutterstock |
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2. A black man died after a white police officer shot him at a Wendy’s in Atlanta on Friday night, prompting the resignation of the city’s police chief and more protests. |
The authorities said the man, Rayshard Brooks, 27, had run from the police after failing a sobriety test and taking an officer’s Taser during a struggle with him. Video appeared to show that Mr. Brooks had fired the Taser toward the officer, who was chasing Mr. Brooks before he was killed. |
Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms said she did “not believe that this was a justified use of deadly force.” |
| Anna Moneymaker/The New York Times |
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The Trump campaign’s decision to hold a rally on June 19 — the date in 1865 when enslaved Africans in Galveston, Texas, learned from Union soldiers that they were free — in Tulsa, the site of one of the country’s deadliest outbreaks of racist violence, generated sharp criticism. The rally will take place a day later. |
| Ben Margot/Associated Press |
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Thousands of Americans have been sickened by the virus in new outbreaks, particularly in the Sun Belt and the West. As of Friday, coronavirus cases were climbing in 22 states amid reopenings. Arizona, Texas and Florida are reporting their highest case numbers yet. |
California and Washington have reopened in a more incremental way, but have still seen an uptick in cases. Outdoor dining in San Francisco, above, began on Friday. Here’s where cases are rising the fastest. |
| Kriston Jae Bethel for The New York Times |
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5. The search for Joe Biden’s running mate is ramping up. |
Mr. Biden’s advisers have been in touch with roughly a dozen women — the most diverse set of possible vice-presidential candidates in history — and some eight or nine are already being vetted more intensively. |
Among the contenders: Senators Kamala Harris, Elizabeth Warren and Tammy Baldwin; as well as Representative Val Demings of Florida and Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms of Atlanta, who have recently grown in prominence. |
Mr. Biden, pictured earlier this week, is facing pressure to find someone who represents a racial, geographic, generational and ideological balance — a nearly impossible task. |
| Fabián Mattiazzi/Epa-Efe, via Shutterstock |
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6. “Harry Potter” fans are reimagining a world without its creator, J.K. Rowling. |
“We created the magic and community in that fandom,” one fan said. “That is ours to keep.” |
Ms. Rowling’s comments came during a Pride Month with an increased focus on the voices of the black L.G.B.T.Q. community. And while Pride events may look and feel very different this year, many are still happening. Here are some of the most notable, with details on when and how to tune in. |
| Steve Helber/USA Today Sports, via Reuters |
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7. A race in Homestead, Fla., today will be the first since NASCAR banned the Confederate flag from flying at its events. |
But some fans are furious at Darrell Wallace Jr., above, the sole African-American driver in the group’s top racing series, who fought for the ban in the wake of the killing of George Floyd. They view the Confederate flag as part of their Southern heritage — not a symbol of racism — and an integral part of the sport. |
| Robert Frank, The Andrea Frank Foundation |
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8. Robert Frank crossed America by car in 1947 search of broader horizons. What he found fascinated and disturbed him. |
“That trip I got to like black people so much more than white people,” he told The Times Magazine in 2015. |
He selected “Trolley — New Orleans,” above, for the cover of his eye-opening book of 83 photographs, “The Americans,” published in 1959. The photograph is all about division, and each portrait within the composition tells its own story. We broke it down frame by frame. |
9. “My husband has started saying ‘woo!’ to everything in quarantine, and it makes me want to scream.” |
After months of sheltering at home, we wanted to know how people who are living together — romantically or otherwise — have fared with sharing so much time and space. Here are 18 stories of isolating together. |
| Chris Burkard |
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A centuries-old Sikh tradition meets a skyrocketing need for food aid, Bob Dylan on his new album and mortality, and free land programs in surreal places like Talkeetna, Alaska, above, are among the great stories we have this week. |
Your Weekend Briefing is published Sundays at 6 a.m. Eastern. |
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