
Zohran Mamdani did not need to make a grand point about how complicated sports viewing has become. All he had to do was explain how he watches the Knicks.
During the Knicks’ 2026 playoff run, NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani has become one of the most visible supporters in the city. But his latest comment struck a chord because it sounded less like a politician and more like an ordinary fan just trying to find the game.
In a clip shared by Acyn and widely circulated among Knicks fans, Mamdani admitted he does not have cable and has been relying on friends’ passwords or heading to public places to watch the games.
That is the whole story. It is why the comment resonated. Mamdani’s situation is not unique to him. It is what thousands of fans are dealing with every week.
Zohran Mamdani’s Knicks comment is not complicated

When a mayor of New York comments on a major sports moment, it is tempting to overthink what it means. This one does not need that.
Mamdani was direct. He said he felt great about the Knicks, admitted he did not have cable, and explained that sharing logins or finding a bar had become part of how he watches games.
That is not a scandal. It is not a mystery. It is just a familiar part of life in a sports market where fans are often left to figure out access on their own.
The striking part is who is saying it. You would expect the mayor to be as plugged in as anyone. Yet even Mamdani sounds like a fan scrolling through apps or texting friends to see where the game is on.
Knicks fans know exactly why this happens
For local fans, watching the Knicks is not as simple as opening one app. MSG Network holds the local broadcast rights, which immediately limits access for anyone without traditional cable.
Cord-cutters do have options. Gotham Sports streams MSG content, and MSG+ offers another paid subscription. But that does not make things straightforward.
Fans still have to juggle local broadcasts, national games, and streaming exclusives spread across multiple platforms.
NBA League Pass does not solve the problem for fans in New York, either. In-market restrictions mean fans cannot always watch live local games through the league’s own service.
So fans adapt. They share logins. They meet at friends’ places. They head to bars or scroll through group chats to find out who has access to the right stream.
Mamdani’s public Knicks fandom makes the point sharper
Mamdani has not just mentioned the Knicks in passing. He has woven them into his public image.
He also used team-style imagery in campaign materials, with the Knicks reportedly sending a cease-and-desist over a Knicks-themed campaign ad.
During the playoffs, he has continued to appear around Knicks moments, including a low-key appearance when he attended Game 2 at Madison Square Garden. This is not a new angle for him. It is part of how he is already seen by the city.
That context matters because it shows he is not name-dropping the Knicks for effect. The team is already part of how he is recognised in New York.
But the password-sharing comment landed because it felt honest. Mamdani may be the mayor, but what he described is the same thing fans have been dealing with as sports viewing becomes more fragmented.
Sometimes the simplest explanation is the right one. Watching the Knicks in New York should be easy. In 2026, even the mayor makes it sound like a group effort.
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