David Alan Grier, Lili Taylor join Season 2 of Peacock’s ‘Poker Face’ premiering May 8

David Alan Grier at the Critics Choice Awards 2025. SANTA MONICA^ USA. February 07^ 2025

Peacock has announced that David Alan Grier, Lauren Tom, Lili Taylor, Natasha Leggero and Richard Kind have joined Season 2 of the mystery-drama Poker Face, joining the previously announced Melanie Lynskey, Jason Ritter, Alia Shawkat, Carol Kane and David Krumholtz. Season 1 of the series premiered on Peacock in 2023 and earned four Emmy nominations (including one win for guest star Judith Light).

Executive producer Rian Johnson’s mystery-of-the-week series stars Natasha Lyonne as Charlie Cale, a de facto detective with an extraordinary ability to tell when someone’s lying.  Tony Tost is the show-runner, with Lyonne also an executive producer. Johnson and Lyonne wrote in a joint statement teasing the new season: “Charlie Cale is back on the run, and in Season 2 we’ve taken her journey to the next level one murder mystery at a time. From minor league baseball to big box retail, from funeral homes to alligator farms and even a grade school talent show, Charlie navigates her crime solving existential road-trip with deadpan wit, human empathy, and her signature uncanny lie-detecting ability.”

The streamer had previously-released first-look images from the upcoming 12-episode season, which features additional guest stars including:  Awkwafina, Ben Marshall, B.J. Novak,  Cliff “Method Man” Smith, Corey Hawkins, Cynthia Erivo, Davionte “GaTa” Ganter, Ego Nwodim, Gaby Hoffmann, Giancarlo Esposito, Haley Joel Osment, Jason Ritter, John Cho, John Mulaney, Justin Theroux, Kathrine Narducci, Katie Holmes, Kevin Corrigan, Kumail Nanjiani, Margo Martindale, Menalie Lynskey, Patti Harrison, Sam Richardson, Sherry Cola and Simon Rex.

Peacock also revealed the premiere date for Season 2 of Poker Face, and shared a new teaser trailer with the caption: “New lies detected 😏 #PokerFace Season 2 arrives May 8 on Peacock.”  The preview shared glimpses of Season 2 guest stars Cynthia Erivo, John Mulaney, Katie Holmes, Giancarlo Esposito, Awkwafina, Justin Theroux, Cliff “Method Man” Smith, Taylor Schilling, Kumail Nanjiani and Melanie Lynskey.

Editorial credit: Featureflash Photo Agency / Shutterstock.com

ARREST/FIRE REPORT APRIL 21

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The Northwest Regional Corrections Center reported the arrest of the following

Galileo Antonio Valdez, 30, of Borup, for a Probation Violation

James Arthur Tupa, 67, of Grand Forks for Obstruction the Legal Process

Samuel Duncan Gilchrist Dozier, 25, of Crookston for DUI

Justin A. Tejada, 37 of East Grand Forks, for Third degree DUI with one aggravating factor.

Cory Alexander Shuler, 36 of Grand Forks, third degree possession scheduled one or two narcotic, LSD, MDA, or MDMA in a school, park, or public housing zone.

Larry James Demuth, 20 of Crookston, for domestic assault, misdemeanor.

Krista Lee Dahl, 31 of Thief River Falls, for third-degree DUI with one aggravating factor.

The post ARREST/FIRE REPORT APRIL 21 first appeared on KROX.

ARREST/FIRE REPORT APRIL 21

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The Northwest Regional Corrections Center reported the arrest of the following

Galileo Antonio Valdez, 30, of Borup, for a Probation Violation

James Arthur Tupa, 67, of Grand Forks for Obstruction the Legal Process

Samuel Duncan Gilchrist Dozier, 25, of Crookston for DUI

Justin A. Tejada, 37 of East Grand Forks, for Third degree DUI with one aggravating factor.

Cory Alexander Shuler, 36 of Grand Forks, third degree possession scheduled one or two narcotic, LSD, MDA, or MDMA in a school, park, or public housing zone.

Larry James Demuth, 20 of Crookston, for domestic assault, misdemeanor.

Krista Lee Dahl, 31 of Thief River Falls, for third-degree DUI with one aggravating factor.

The post ARREST/FIRE REPORT APRIL 21 first appeared on KROX.

Crookston City Council to meet on Monday, April 21

The Crookston City Council will meet on Monday, April 21 at 5:30 p.m. in the Council Chambers at City Hall.

The council will be asked to approve the minutes from the April 7 meeting, bills and disbursements for $400,016.48, and license renewals for gas fitters for Pettus Plumbing & Piping Inc., and Elite Refrigeration Heating & Air Conditioning for 2025.
The council will also be asked to approve ABDO to provide the classification and compensation study and accept the Minnesota State Airport Fund grant agreement with MnDOT contract #1058083. They will be asked to approve awarding a hangar construction contract at the Crookston Municipal Airport and Short Elliot Hendrickson (SHE) to provide professional services regarding the hangar construction.
The last items on the consent agenda will have the council declaring a police vehicle as surplus property and Clifton Larson Allen, LLP (CLA) to provide assistance to the 2024 audit preparations.

There will be one public hearing regarding the Unmanned Aerial System (UAS) or drone program.

The regular agenda will include the approval of City Hall Summer hours of Monday through Thursday from 7:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and Friday’s from 7:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. from Memorial Day to Labor Day.
The council will introduce an ordinance entitled “Regulations of Cannabis Business” in the City of Crookston, calling for a public hearing.
The final item on the meeting agenda is a resolution regarding the authorization to make repairs to the Crookston Community Swimming Pool. Lunseth Plumbing and Heating has given a quote of $17,852.18 to make repairs to the heat exchanger at the pool.

CROOKSTON WAYS AND MEANS COMMITTEE MEETING AGENDA
The Crookston Ways and Means Committee (City Council and Department Heads) will meet after the City Council meeting. The agenda items are a Cannabis discussion and a planning session for the City Administrator for the year.

The post Crookston City Council to meet on Monday, April 21 first appeared on KROX.

UMC Men’s Golf finishes 5th at the NSIC Golf Championships

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The University of Minnesota Crookston Men’s Golf team moved up one more spot to finish fifth place out of nine teams in the Northern Sun Conference Men’s Golf Championship in Adams Pointe Golf Course in Blue Springs, Missouri.  UMC shot a three-round total of 890 while Concordia-St. Paul won the meet with an 862.

UMC was led by Marc Borafull (Soph., Spain), who shot a first-round 80, bounced back with a 69 and 68 for a three-round 217 to finish fifth place and was named to the NSIC All-Conference team.
Lukas Justesen (Sr. Detroit Lakes) shot a three-day total of 219 and dropped five places to finish in a tie for seventh place.
Connor Czirjak (Soph. Calgary, Alberta) shot a first round 79 before finishing with a pair of 74’s for a 227, which was a tie for 25th place.
Andrew Wilhelm (Soph. Fargo, ND) shot a first-round 80 and finished strong with a 74 and 75 for a 229, finishing 31st place.
Layton Bartley (Sr. Fargo, ND) shot a first round 82 and finished with a 77 and 74 to finish with a 233, good for 34th place.

Bemidji State’s Logan Schoepp was the medalist with rounds of 68, 71, and 70 for a 209. That was one stroke better than Thomas Gutzmer of Concordia-St. Paul.

The post UMC Men’s Golf finishes 5th at the NSIC Golf Championships first appeared on KROX.

UMC Softball hosts Minot State – on KROX

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The University of Minnesota Crookston Golden Eagle Softball team has won four games in a row and is looking for two more big wins today as they host the Minot State Beavers in a Northern Sun Conference doubleheader at the UMC Softball field.
UMC is
7-13 in the NSIC and 19-28 on the year and is currently in 11th place. The top 10 teams make the conference tournament so each game is a big game the rest of the season for UMC. Minot State is 14-8 in the NSIC and 26-19 overall and in sixth place in the NSIC.
KROX will broadcast the first game of the doubleheader on the radio, with a RiverView Health pre-game show at 11:30 a.m. and the first pitch at Noon.

GAME ONE –

FIRST INNING

SECOND INNING –

THIRD INNING

FOURTH INNING

FIFTH INNING
 

SIXTH INNING

SEVENTH INNING

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 R H E
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UMC

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Pitching IP H R ER BB K
Alexa Guilford-UMC
Evie Stuck-UMC

Game two –

FIRST INNING

SECOND INNING

THIRD INNING

FOURTH INNING

FIFTH INNING

SIXTH INNING

SEVENTH INNING

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 R H E
Minot
UMC

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Pitching IP H R ER BB K
Evie Stuck -UMC (WP)
Kailee Pollard-UMC

The post UMC Softball hosts Minot State – on KROX first appeared on KROX.

UMC Baseball hosts #8 MSU-Mankato in a doubleheader

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The University of Minnesota Crookston Golden Eagle baseball team struggled against the #8 ranked Minnesota State Mankato Mavericks on Friday and looks to bounce back today with a doubleheader beginning at Noon at the UMC Baseball Field.
UMC is 15-13 in the NSIC and currently in seventh place in the standings. First place Mankato is 25-3 in the NSIC and 33-4 overall.

FIRST INNING

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THIRD INNING

FOURTH INNING

FIFTH INNING

SIXTH INNING

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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 R H E
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Game 2


SECOND INNING

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FIFTH INNING

SIXTH INNING

SEVENTH INNING

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 R H E
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Pitching IP H R ER BB K

The post UMC Baseball hosts #8 MSU-Mankato in a doubleheader first appeared on KROX.

Tanya Kildal named RiverView’s first Employee of the Month in 2025

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Tanya Kildal is a go-to person in RiverView’s Diagnostic Imaging Department. Her co-workers use words like “essential’’ and “backbone’’ to describe her. Now, they can add “Employee of the Month’’ to her description, as she is the first to be honored with the award in 2025.

Having worked as an imaging technologist in the department since June 2002, Kildal is a wealth of knowledge and is always willing to help and share information with newer co-workers. After 23 years, the Crookston native can’t imagine herself anywhere else. “RiverView is like a second home to me, and my co-workers are like a second family.’’

She enjoys scrapbooking, dog sitting, and going to the lake with her family in her free time.

The post Tanya Kildal named RiverView’s first Employee of the Month in 2025 first appeared on KROX.

UMC to hold its 50th Annual Bedding Plant Sale

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Celebrate half a century of growing with the University of Minnesota Crookston horticulture program as they host their 50th annual bedding plant sale starting April 23 with a substantial selection of student-grown flowers, vegetables, herbs, and hanging baskets. A portion of the proceeds from the plant sale go to the students’ horticulture club and recruitment for the program. U of M Crookston has the only four-year horticulture degree program in the entire state of Minnesota, and its students get real, hands-on learning experiences in campus gardens, greenhouses, and the great outdoors.

Dates and times for sale are April 23-25 (9 a.m. to 5 p.m.), May 2 (9 a.m. to 5 p.m.), May 3 (Commencement Sale 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.), May 8-9 and 15-16 (9 a.m. to 5 p.m.), and May 23 (9 a.m. to 2 p.m.) in the production greenhouse. The greenhouse is located on the northeast side of the U of M Crookston campus across from the Sargeant Student Center parking lot A and Valley Technology Park on County Road 71.

Horticulture Club advisor and Lab Services Coordinator Theresa Helgeson says the prep for the plant sale includes all aspects of growing and is tied to the university’s commercial spring crops class. “Over the years we have tried to match plant selection based on what the industry puts on the market,” Helgeson explained. “While the students in the class help with all of this, we also utilize our student workers to help as well. The end result is beautiful marketable plants to sell.”

“With the funds generated from our sales, we are able to cover labor and supply costs,” she added. “We also are able to utilize the funds for new equipment and recruitment efforts for the Horticulture program.” The sales and support from both northwest Minnesota and northeast North Dakota has been “overwhelming”, Helgeson pointed out. She adds the connections students, faculty, and staff have been able to create through the plant sale have been ‘vital’, and she and others are thankful they’ve been able to carry out the mission of retired professor Roger Wagner, who started the annual plant sale.

Wagner, who was the head of the horticulture program for 30 years, remembers the start of production horticulture on campus and the very first bedding plant sale, which was “unbelievable.” “I’ll never forget the first sale; we didn’t publicize it as we didn’t want to be in competition with anybody,” Wagner recalled. “The first sale was to be at 1 p.m. and a serious crowd had developed out the door, so we opened the doors and sold out immediately. It turned 1 p.m. and we were already sold out.”

“We started the opportunity for students to develop production skills and be responsible, knowing seed identification and caring for the plants,” he added. “It was developing ownership skills for production and to produce a quality product.”

U of M Crookston horticulture alumni reside all over the country, some running their own greenhouses or providing sales for large companies. Wagner says the connections made between himself and his students was “something special” and he remains connected to them even today. “I loved those students and those students loved me,” he shared. “One of the highlights was when I received the John Tate Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Advising and was invited down to campus. I had students that drove all night to the reception. It was special.”

Wagner added he has former students that still call him and, in particular, he built a unique connection with Helgeson, who was one of his students. He occasionally visits her classes to provide advice and expertise to her students. “This bond, you can’t imagine,” Wagner continued. “I would meet students anywhere. I have students out there that are so successful, it warms my heart. And the letters that would come from parents would almost bring tears to your eye, how thankful they were. That was the atmosphere.”

In the classroom, Wagner not only taught his students about horticulture but also how to be a good leader and shepherd. “I told the students they need to be leaders and that there were two kinds of people in this world, the laborer that goes home at 5 o’clock and the shepherd that leaves after the last plant is watered,” Wagner explained.

“Students would leave the program and be prepared to go into the industry,” he added. “I was thanked by Gordon Bailey of Bailey Nurseries (St. Paul) for providing quality students, and he said every student that would come down there under my guidance he would hire them ‘on the spot’ because he wanted someone accountable.”

In his retirement years, Wagner is still doing research, making bird houses, growing plants, flowers, and produce, and shipping them across the country.

For more information about U of M Crookston’s horticulture program, visit https://crk.umn.edu/academics/horticulture

The post UMC to hold its 50th Annual Bedding Plant Sale first appeared on KROX.

UMC Baseball hosts #8 ranked MSU-Mankato – on KROX

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The University of Minnesota Crookston Golden Eagle baseball team has a big three-game series this weekend, hosting #8 ranked Minnesota State Mankato. The Northern Sun Conference series starts today with one game at 3:00 p.m. at the UMC Baseball field. The game will be on KROX Radio with the RiverView Health pre-game show at 2:30 p.m.
UMC is 15-12 in the NSIC and 18-19 overall. Mankato is 24-3 in the NSIC and 32-4 overall.

GAME ONE –

FIRST INNING

SECOND INNING

THIRD INNING

FOURTH INNING

FIFTH INNING

SIXTH INNING

SEVENTH INNING

EIGHTH INNING

NINTH INNING

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Mankato
UMC

For UMC-

Pitching IP H R ER BB K

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