Here's a closer look at the Kansas City Chiefs' tomahawk chop, including how it began and the controversy that surrounds it ...
Avoiding offense with a sports team name isn’t complicated. Why can’t Kansas City do it?
As Kansas City celebrates the Chiefs’ third consecutive Super Bowl appearance, the team name, logo, and some problematic fan ...
Ms. Smith was among the country’s most renowned Native artists, crafting pieces that incorporated Indigenous images and ...
But fan practices like the “tomahawk chop,” which started in ... Despite them being banned inside the stadium, some fans still wear Native American-inspired headdresses and face paint at ...
NFL franchise the Kansas City Chiefs received their name in May 1963 - one which they owe, amid some controversy, to former mayor Harold Roe Bartle.
The controversy carries over into the whole performance, as Chiefs fans routinely coat themselves in war paint and feathered headdresses, which are typically related to racist caricatures of Native ...
Plus: A heartwarming story of sports unity, why we need Black History Month, self-driving vehicles and more.
From the column: "'I find it incredibly offensive.' Doesn’t everyone? Shouldn’t everyone? If no, why not? And what does it ...
Native activists hold signs calling on the Kansas City professional football team to drop its racist mascot at a press conference at the Nuwu Art Gallery + Community Center in Las Vegas, Nevada, on ...
I’ve got an idea for a new football franchise: the Brooklyn Jews. Our mascot will be a rabbi, clad in a black hat and a long ...
But as a non-Native homeowner living on one of four roads entangled in a dispute over right-of-way easements between the Lac ...