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Thursday, June 11, 2026

‘My mayor Muslim, my bagel’s Jewish’: who’s behind the Knicks chant uniting New York?

 

‘My mayor Muslim, my bagel’s Jewish’: who’s behind the Knicks chant uniting New York?

“A viral chant celebrating the New York Knicks’ success in the NBA finals has become an unofficial anthem for the city. The chant, originating from a TikTok video by Knicks fan Ahnaf Hossain, highlights the city’s diversity and unity. While the video’s marketing by Kalshi has been acknowledged, its success is attributed to its catchy, positive message and its connection to hip-hop culture.

a side-by-side image showing a man smiling on the left and chanting while holding up four fingers on the right
Ahnaf Hossain. Photograph: Kalshi

The New York Knicks are 3-1 up in the NBA finals, one game away from winning the championship for the first time since the 1970s. The mood in New York is electric, the city is strewn with blue and orange, crowds roar outside Madison Square Garden, and – at least last week – a viral chant has become a new unofficial New York City anthem:

My mayor Muslim

My bagel’s Jewish

My Christian Dior

Knicks in four

After the team’s loss on Sunday, the last line is no longer viable – no team can now win the series in four games – but the chant has taken on a life of its own thanks to MD Ahnaf Hossain, a 23-year-old Knicks fan who shouted the bars in a Kalshi-branded TikTok video after a Knicks win last week. The New York Times called the lines “pure New York City poetry”, but the viral clip has spread far beyond the city limits, with 7.4m views on TikTok and the words appearing on T-shirts and hats.

Last night Hossain was again filmed on the streets of New York with an updated version, which reflected the reality of the series and one Knicks fan celebrating in the Vatican:

My mayor still Muslim

My bagel’s still Jewish

The pope’s on our side

Knicks in five

What is it about these lyrics that has propelled their rise? There’s Kalshi’s marketing power, of course – the video appeared on a channel where a Kalshi-branded robot interviews fans, trying to copy the viral formula of the more organic New York man-on-the-street channel Sidetalk.

There’s the positivity of the lines amid so much toxicity on social media. And there’s the easy sense of unity in a world that direly needs it, especially after a mayoral contest in which Zohran Mamdani’s opponents attempted to pit religious identities against each other. “I grew up with Jews, Muslims, Haitians, Pakistanis, Bengalis,” Hossain told the Washington Post. “I just had to bring everyone together.”

The lyrics also build on hip-hop tradition, says AD Carson, a rapper and associate professor of hip-hop at the University of Virginia. “Hip-hop is ultimately as mimetic as any popular cultural product can be.”

The first line is reminiscent of the Young Jeezy song My President, released in 2008 amid the rise of Barack Obama, which features the line “My president is Black, my Lambo’s blue”; the next year, after Obama’s inauguration, a Jay-Z remix of the song featured similar lyrics: “My president is Black, my Maybach too.”

The Dior line, as Hossain has acknowledged, references the rapper Pop Smoke’s hit Dior. (Both Pop Smoke, who died in 2020, and Jay-Z are New Yorkers.) And the final line – a prediction of victory for a favored team in a set number of games – is also a familiar trope. “What the four lines are borrowing from – it’s a pretty rich, pretty fertile cultural text,” Carson says. What feels like an “offhand viral video moment” reveals “the capacity of rap – even a cappella rap lyrics – to hold information”.

a man shoots a basketball into a hoop as another tries to defend
New York Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns shoots as San Antonio Spurs guard Stephon Castle defends during an NBA finals game. Photograph: Al Bello/Pool Getty Images/AP

The lines also appear to have a direct predecessor: commentators have pointed out that tweets from May and early June use virtually the same language. Hossain told the Post he hadn’t seen the tweets. But how much would it matter if he had? “It’s hard to ever have a conversation like this about culture without discussing the politics of intellectual property,” Carson says. “I absolutely believe this is related to mimetic culture, which is to say he may not have seen the tweets and still could be influenced by them in the same way that ‘My mayor is Muslim’ seems to reference My President.”

But that’s not the only source of controversy over the video. Others have pointed out that it is essentially an ad for Kalshi. The prediction market company is the source of the original clip, which was reposted by an X account with a bio that promotes the site. Kalshi later posted a follow-up interview with Hossain, who said he was drawn to the “iconic green mic”. Kalshi gifted him an actual Dior scarf, during the second interview.

Kalshi has since acknowledged “smart marketing” was behind the video, but remained vague about exactly how the clip was set up, telling Front Office Sports “it was also organic … we didn’t go find him and say, ‘Hey, come talk into this mic.’ He found us and then we connected to make the second video.”

Jeff Hancock, founding director of the Stanford Social Media Lab, says marketing is part of the clip’s success, but it doesn’t explain all of it. He sees three ingredients at work: first, it’s all about New York, which remains the country’s biggest media market, second “it fits a moment, it’s funny, it’s engaging, it’s short and simple”. And finally, there’s the marketing behind the scenes, typically “some hidden engagement machine in which both the algorithms and some coordinated behavior” – related accounts that may be paid for highlighting and reposting a clip – serve to boost it. Of course, this doesn’t always succeed, which speaks to the potency of the chant. “They probably tried to do this kind of thing dozens of times, and it’s rare for it to go viral,” Hancock says.

Hossain himself seems to be taking his newfound celebrity in his stride – he’s mostly focused on the games and the impact they’re having on New York. He told the New York Times on Monday: “I think the sportsmanship is bringing a type of love we haven’t seen in the city for a long, long time.”

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Iran War Live Updates: Trump Threatens Iran Amid Prolonged Peace Talks; U.S. and Iran Trade Strikes - The New York Times

Iran War Live Updates: After U.S. and Iran Exchange Strikes, Trump Issues New Threat

"President Trump said Iran would “pay the price” for taking “too long to negotiate” an agreement to end the war.

A large gathering of people at night. Many are holding up cellphones with the flashlights switched on. Others are waving flags.
A rally in Tehran on Monday after Iran and Israel exchanged strikes.Credit...Arash Khamooshi/Polaris for The New York Times

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Here’s the latest.

President Trump threatened Iran again on Wednesday, warning that Tehran would “pay the price” for taking “too long to negotiate a deal” to end the war, a day after he said a peace deal was imminent, and hours after the United States and Iran exchanged strikes.

As Mr. Trump alternates between threatening to reignite the monthslong conflict and promising peace, neither is happening, leaving it unclear how or when the war will end and prolonging the turmoil in the Middle East.

Mr. Trump made his comments on social media hours after the U.S. military said its jets had hit Iranian targets in response to the downing of an American Apache helicopter near the Strait of Hormuz on Monday. Iran has not admitted or denied downing the helicopter, but its Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps said the American strikes had been conducted “under false premises.”

IRIB, the Iranian state broadcaster, reported that the U.S. attacks hit drinking water facilities in the Bamani district of Sirik County, in the southern Hormozgan Province, cutting off water for thousands of people. Video footage of the damage, published by IRIB, was verified by The New York Times, though The Times could not verify that it was a water system that was struck. U.S. Central Command did not respond to a request for comment on the report.

In retaliation, Iran said it had launched attack drones against U.S. naval targets in Bahrain and fired missiles at American military facilities in Jordan. The extent of any damage was not immediately clear, though officials in the countries said that the strikes had been intercepted.

The resumption of bombardments came hours after Mr. Trump said that a deal to end the war with Iran could be signed within days. The president has made such claims repeatedly, though there has been no clear sign of progress in negotiations.

A delegation of Qatari officials arrived in Iran on Wednesday to discuss efforts to negotiate a deal, according to a regional official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive matters. Qatar, alongside Pakistan, has served as a key mediator between Iran and the United States in diplomatic efforts to end the war.

Here’s what else we’re covering:

  • Persian Gulf: The Jordanian military said it had intercepted five missiles launched from Iran toward a region that includes the Muwaffaq Salti base, which has been used for U.S. air operations. Bahrain’s military said it had taken out several Iranian drones and missiles. And the Kuwait Army said its air defenses had intercepted hostile targets. The Revolutionary Guards claimed to have caused damage at U.S. bases, but that claim could not immediately be verified.

  • Lebanon: Israel deepened its assault across southern Lebanon on Tuesday in attacks it said were aimed at Iran-backed Hezbollah militants after an exchange of strikes between Iran and Israel ended the previous day. In the southern city of Tyre, at least eight people were reported to have been killed after the Israeli attacks.

  • Economic impact: U.S. consumer prices rose 4.2 percent in May compared to a year earlier, the highest pace of inflation since April 2023, amid the stalemate over Iran. Oil prices also jumped on Wednesday. Read more ›

  • Nuclear talks: The Trump administration’s negotiations with Tehran have focused on four major elements of a nuclear agreement that U.S. officials say would grind Iran’s program to a halt for about 15 years."

Iran War Live Updates: Trump Threatens Iran Amid Prolonged Peace Talks; U.S. and Iran Trade Strikes - The New York Times

CPI Report Live Updates: Inflation Jumps 4.2% as Iran War Intensifies Price Pressures - The New York Times

Live Updates: Inflation Jumps as Iran War Intensifies Price Squeeze

"Consumer prices rose at a faster rate for a third-straight month in May, to 4.2 percent annually, as the energy shock put more pressure on the U.S. economy.

Annual change in C.P.I.

Note: Data is seasonally adjusted year-over-year change in the Consumer Price Index. October 2025 is missing because of the government shutdown.

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Keith Collins/The New York Times

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What to know about the report.

U.S. inflation accelerated for a third-straight month in May amid a stalemate in negotiations to end the war with Iran, adding to the price pressures confronting consumers.

The Consumer Price Index report rose 4.2 percent in May from a year earlier, new data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics showed on Wednesday. That is up from a 2.4 percent annual increase before the conflict in the Middle East started in February and is the fastest pace since April 2023. Over the course of the month, overall prices jumped 0.5 percent.

Energy prices drove the bulk of the increase in May, rising 3.9 percent over the month. Once those were stripped out alongside food prices, the “core” index rose 2.9 percent on a year-over-year basis. Core prices rose 0.2 percent for the month, a 0.2 percentage point decrease from April’s monthly rate.

Energy costs have been spilling into categories where they make up a large chunk of the ultimate price tag, including food and airline fares, which rose 2.7 percent in May and are up 26.7 percent since this time last year. Hotel rates also increased 0.5 percent, in a possible indication of impact from the World Cup, although the hospitality industry has been disappointed in demand for rooms.

For the Federal Reserve, which will vote next week on whether to change interest rates, the most important question is whether stickier categories like manufactured goods and services — the core inflation — are also being affected. This core reading was slightly softer than expected, and it may reassure monetary policymakers that they can stand pat for now, even though the labor market appears to be strengthening.

The war in the Middle East is not the only factor pushing prices up. The data center boom has created demand for the memory chips that go into nearly all consumer electronics, reversing a long slide in the cost of technology. And a persistent drought has thinned out production of some crops and livestock, especially beef.

The main factor keeping a lid on prices: consumers, who have by now spent their tax refunds and have lately seen smaller increases in their paychecks. Annual increases in average hourly earnings have now fallen behind inflation for two months in a row. If some categories are not accelerating, it could be because shoppers simply lack the ability to pay more. 

“Weakening of pricing power tells you something about how the seller was thinking about their final consumer, and that tells you a little bit about growth,” said Atsi Sheth, chief credit officer at Moody’s Ratings. “Despite the still relatively low unemployment, the household’s capacity to consume is eroding.”

CPI Report Live Updates: Inflation Jumps 4.2% as Iran War Intensifies Price Pressures - The New York Times