Jalen Brunson’s championship parade gesture squashes New York’s beef with children’s TV character

19 Jun 2026 • 9:36 PM MYT
HITC
HITC

Health IT, electronic records, medical office duties, music/culture, and ed-tech.

Image from: Jalen Brunson’s championship parade gesture squashes New York’s beef with children’s TV character
Photo by XNY/Star Max/GC Images

Jalen Brunson used the Knicks’ championship parade to settle one of the strangest side stories of New York’s title run: the city’s temporary feud with Elmo.

The Finals MVP had already delivered the trophy.

Then he helped a children’s TV character get back in Knicks fans’ good graces.

Jalen Brunson ends Knicks feud with Elmo

During the Knicks’ ticker-tape parade through Lower Manhattan, Brunson was seen holding an Elmo plush with a sign that read “Forgive me PLEASE.”

The visual instantly landed because Knicks fans had been jokingly furious with the Sesame Street character since the start of the NBA Finals against the San Antonio Spurs.

The trouble began when Elmo posted: “Elmo hopes both teams have fun!” with four basketball emojis. That was harmless enough in normal circumstances, but New York did not view neutrality kindly while the Knicks were chasing their first championship since 1973.

Because Sesame Street is famously tied to New York, fans treated Elmo like a local who had refused to back the home team. The replies quickly turned ruthless, with Knicks supporters calling him a traitor and demanding he pick a side.

The bit only grew after the Knicks won the title. During the celebrations, fans were seen carrying a plush Elmo head mounted on a spike, with “traitor” written across it, turning the children’s character into an absurd symbol of playoff betrayal.

Knicks fans accept Jalen Brunson Elmo truce

Brunson’s parade gesture changed the tone. As the face of the championship team, he had enough authority to vouch for Elmo in front of the fanbase.

Image from: Jalen Brunson’s championship parade gesture squashes New York’s beef with children’s TV character
Photo by XNY/Star Max/GC Images

Social media reaction quickly shifted from mock outrage to acceptance. Fans joked that if Brunson was willing to forgive Elmo, New York could move on too.

That made the moment a perfect snapshot of the Knicks’ parade. The day was built around history, but it also had the kind of weird city-specific jokes that only New York can turn into a full storyline.

Brunson had every reason to keep the focus on himself. He won Finals MVP, led the Knicks to a 4-1 Finals win over the Spurs, and became the central figure in ending a 53-year drought.

Instead, he spent part of the parade holding a red plush toy, asking for mercy from the most intense fanbase in basketball.

The Knicks got their championship. Elmo got his pardon. New York got one more ridiculous parade memory to add to a title celebration that already felt larger than sports.

Read more: