John Mulaney Urgently Cancels Minneapolis Shows in Wake of ICE Shooting

The Twin Cities were already on edge after the fatal ICE shooting of Renee Nicole Good. Then came another jolt: comedian John Mulaney announced he was pulling the plug on his Minneapolis shows, saying the city’s grief and unrest made it impossible to go on with business as usual. It wasn’t a flashy PR move—just a blunt, human reaction to a community in crisis.

A City in Turmoil after ICE Shooting

Minneapolis has been through hell before, and this week felt like another chapter in a book nobody wants to keep reading. Protests erupted after an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer shot and killed Good, a local mother and poet, during what officials described as a large-scale immigration crackdown.

Crowds clashed with federal agents, streets filled with sirens, and the city’s mood shifted from tense to volatile. As Variety reported, Minneapolis was facing “large demonstrations after an ICE officer shot and killed a local mother and poet.” It wasn’t just another news cycle—it was a wound reopening.

A Heartbreaking Decision: “Doesn’t Sit Right With Me”

Mulaney was scheduled to perform three nights at The Armory as part of his “Mister Whatever” tour. But on Thursday, he took to Instagram and told fans he couldn’t, in good conscience, ask thousands of people to gather downtown while the city was in such a raw, unstable state.

“What’s happening in your city is heartbreaking,” he wrote regarding the ICE shooting. He added that he “hate[s] to postpone shows in a town going through such awful challenges and such grief, because it feels unfair to the audience.” But the line that really cut through the noise was this one. “I don’t feel comfortable asking thousands of people each night to leave their homes, gather at the venue, and then make their way home when the situation is so unsafe.”

That’s not a comedian trying to score points. That’s a guy looking at a city in pain and saying, “Yeah, no, this isn’t the time.”

Fans React: Disappointed, But Understanding

Sure, some people were bummed. You don’t buy tickets to a Mulaney show because you want a quiet night in. But the overwhelming response online was supportive. People understood that safety comes first, and that the city’s emotional bandwidth was already stretched thin. Mulaney acknowledged the disappointment directly. “I know a fun stand-up show could be a nice distraction, but it doesn’t sit right with me to put anyone at risk.”

That’s a tough needle to thread—balancing empathy with responsibility—but he managed it with the same grounded sincerity that’s made him one of the most respected voices in comedy.

John Mulaney: Rescheduled Dates and What Comes Next

The shows aren’t gone forever—they’re just pushed back. Tickets for the postponed dates will be honored for April 10, 11, and 12. Fans who can’t make the new dates can request refunds through Ticketmaster.

But the bigger question isn’t about comedy schedules. It’s about what happens next in Minneapolis. The ICE shooting has already sparked national outrage, and the city is bracing for continued protests, investigations, and political fallout. Mulaney’s decision won’t fix any of that—but it does reflect the gravity of the moment. When a city is grieving, sometimes the most respectful thing you can do is step back and let people breathe.

A Comedian Who Read the Room

In an era where celebrities often bulldoze ahead with their plans no matter what’s happening around them, Mulaney did something refreshingly simple: he paid attention. He listened. He responded to the ICE shooting like a human being instead of a brand.

And maybe that’s why his words landed so heavily. They weren’t polished. They weren’t strategic. They were just honest. “What’s happening in your city is heartbreaking.” Sometimes that’s all that needs to be said.