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I was in the stands for Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime show. Here’s what it was like.

  • I was at Levi’s Stadium when Bad Bunny performed his historic Super Bowl halftime show.
  • We missed the surprise cameos from Pedro Pascal and Cardi B.
  • The crowd absolutely lost it when Lady Gaga appeared.

“Look for us on TV!” I told my parents before my fiancé and I headed to Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California, for our very first Super Bowl.

“Oh, we’re not going to watch the game,” they replied. “But can you text us before Bad Bunny comes on?”

This year’s Super Bowl halftime show might have been even more anticipated than the Big Game. And after a lackluster performance from the New England Patriots against the Seattle Seahawks, it was clear that the real star of Sunday was Bad Bunny.

Here’s what it was like to watch his halftime show from the Super Bowl stands.

Right after the first half came to an end, dozens of crew members rushed to prepare the field.

Staff members rolled out carts with the tufts of grass.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

We got a sneak peek at Bad Bunny’s set as we watched people wheel out carts with tall tufts of grass, a nod to the sugarcane fields of his native Puerto Rico.

Everyone in the stands laughed as we watched extras dressed as grass walk by.


Super Bowl halftime set up

Extras dressed as grass added to the scenery.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

I assumed the extras were going to dance, but they were actually added to accommodate rules for protecting the natural grass at Levi’s Stadium.

Bruce Rodgers, who has produced the Super Bowl halftime show for the past two decades with his company Tribe Inc., told Wired that the NFL limited how many carts could be wheeled out onto the football field. So the team decided to dress up performers to help re-create the lush greenery of Vega Baja, Bad Bunny’s hometown.

Andrew Athias, one of the extras, told Business Insider that the grass costume weighed 40 pounds. He flew to California from the East Coast and spent two weeks in rehearsals to be part of the field cast.

“I got paid $18.70 per hour for the gig, but I would’ve done it for free,” he said.

Once the stage was set, we realized our seats were the farthest away from the performance.


Super Bowl halftime set up

Most of the performance took place on one end of the football field.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

La Casita, a major stage piece from Bad Bunny’s “No Me Quiero Ir De Aquí” residency, arrived at the end zone for the Super Bowl halftime show — just not the one we were behind!

Still, the excitement was palpable as Bad Bunny kicked off his 15-minute performance with “Tití Me Preguntó.” One guy in front of me even started FaceTiming his friend, holding the phone so she could watch the entire show.

We caught parts of the halftime show with the help of one of the stadium’s jumbotrons…


Super Bowl halftime show

We watched a lot of Bad Bunny’s performance via a jumbotron.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

Bad Bunny walked through the tall grass, passing by various set pieces that paid homage to Puerto Rico — including stands selling Coco Frio and piraguas — at the start of his performance.

From the stands above, all we could see were the tops of the grass. However, a jumbotron directly across from our seats showed us what fans at home were seeing on their TV screens.

… but sometimes it only showed stock images.


Superbowl Halftime Show

One of the stock images on the jumbotron.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

Everyone around me was confused when the jumbotron in front of us kept cutting away from Bad Bunny to show random images, including some leaves and a cityscape.

People quickly realized that the screen behind us was still showing the halftime show, so we wondered if the stock images were due to a technical issue.

When I rewatched the show at home, I noticed our jumbotron was often visible on camera. I’m not an expert in production design, but I figure the decision might have been made to make it look less distracting in the telecast.

We completely missed the surprise cameos.


Cardi B and Jessica Alba during the Super Bowl halftime show

Multiple celebrities were dancing in Bad Bunny’s casita during the halftime show.

Christopher Polk/Billboard via Getty Images

I found out that stars including Cardi B, Alix Earle, Pedro Pascal, and Jessica Alba made a quick surprise cameo during the halftime show, thanks to excited texts from my friends who were watching from home.

But there was no missing Lady Gaga.


Bad Bunny and Lady Gaga perform at the 2026 Super Bowl.

Bad Bunny and Lady Gaga perform at the 2026 Super Bowl.

Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

Lady Gaga was also a total surprise for the fans in the stands, and I just about lost it when she appeared to sing a salsa version of “Die With a Smile.”

Alas, I have no pictures of this moment because I was too busy crying tears of joy.

The surprise halftime wedding went by in a flash.


A couple got married during Bad Bunny's halftime performance.

A couple got married during Bad Bunny’s halftime performance.

JOSH EDELSON / AFP via Getty Images

Watching the couple say “I do” from the stands was a quick but special part of the show, especially when it was later revealed via ESPN that the couple had originally invited Bad Bunny to their wedding — only for him to invite them to get married during his Super Bowl performance instead.

Bad Bunny and his dancers ran across the football field for the parade of the Americas.


Superbowl Halftime Show

We could spot all the flags from our seats in the stands.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

The show made its way over to our side of the football field as Bad Bunny’s backup dancers carried flags from countries in North and South America.

The show ended with fireworks and a powerful statement.


Superbowl Halftime Show

The grand finale of the Super Bowl halftime show.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

“The only thing more powerful than hate is love,” the sign read, evoking Bad Bunny’s statement during his Grammys acceptance speech the week prior.

The stadium erupted as Bad Bunny began singing “DTMF,” his message emblazoned for all to see — no matter where we were sitting.

As fireworks lit up California’s slowly darkening blue sky, I knew I had just watched something historic.

And yes, my parents loved it.




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Dan Geiger

Eric Schmidt-backed data center venture is negotiating a major deal with Google

Bolt Data and Energy, a data center development firm that was cofounded late last year by former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, is negotiating a deal that would allow it to begin construction on a large data center project it is planning in West Texas.

Schmidt’s firm is in discussions with Google, his former employer, according to two people with direct knowledge of the talks. The tech giant, one of the leaders in the race to develop and commercialize artificial intelligence, is considering a commitment of 250 megawatts, according to one of the people. The other person said it was too early to characterize the exact size of the potential transaction because it was still under discussion.

The sources spoke on the condition of anonymity because the potential transaction is still being arranged and the talks are confidential.

“We don’t comment on rumors,” a Google spokeswoman told Business Insider, declining to comment further. Google announced last year that it plans to build $40 billion of cloud and AI infrastructure in Texas by 2027.

The potential deal highlights how Big Tech is racing to secure the power, physical infrastructure, and land needed to fuel AI, even as the costs and financial risks of those bets loom.

In December, Bolt completed its first funding round, raising $150 million from investors, including $50 million from Texas Pacific Land Corporation, a public company that owns large tracts of land in West Texas. As part of the investment from TPL, Bolt will develop data centers on land in TPL’s portfolio.

A presentation detailing Bolt’s development plans, shared with Business Insider, said that TPL’s land would give it access to abundant power and water for cooling. These commodities have become increasingly strained as data center development has boomed around the country.

The presentation states that Bolt’s development would begin with an “initial 250 megawatt facility” and expand in 250-500 megawatt increments into a 5 gigawatt campus.

Bolt’s plan is one of several large-scale projects that have been envisioned in Texas to cater to the AI race. Fermi, a public company co-founded by former Texas governor and US Energy Secretary Rick Perry, has plans for an 11-gigawatt campus in Amarillo.

In December, Business Insider revealed that Amazon had pulled back a $150 million cash advance it had pledged as part of a preliminary deal to anchor the project. Fermi’s disclosure of the reimbursement of that advance caused its stock to fall by 50%. Fermi’s CEO, Toby Neugebauer, told Business Insider that although Amazon had reclaimed its advance, the negotiations for it to take space with Fermi were still ongoing.

Major bank lenders who extended $38 billion to finance the construction of data center campuses in Shackleford County, Texas, and Port Washington, Wisconsin, for Oracle and OpenAI, meanwhile, have had difficulty selling off pieces of the huge loan to other banks and investors. Those troubles stem, in part, from worries about whether Oracle’s credit will be strained by its massive AI spending.

To help allay concerns, Oracle announced it would raise as much as $50 billion in debt and equity in 2026 to continue to pursue its AI buildout while also maintaining “a solid investment-grade balance sheet.”

Last week, Alphabet, Google’s parent company, revealed in its fourth-quarter earnings report that it plans to spend between $175 and $185 billion on capital expenditures in 2026, roughly double its outlay in 2025. The spending is being done largely to pay for AI equipment and infrastructure.

A record wave of spending has been announced by big technology companies on AI this year, including Amazon’s disclosure during its earnings last week that it would spend $200 billion alone this year.




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Every movie Margot Robbie has been in, ranked from worst to best by critics

  • Margot Robbie has been acting for years, and some of her movies are higher-rated than others. 
  • According to critics, Robbie’s best films include “Barbie,” “Birds of Prey,” and “I, Tonya.”
  • However, she’s also starred in critical flops like “Terminal” (2018) and “Suicide Squad” (2016).  

Over the years, Australian actor Margot Robbie has been in many movies, from leading hit franchises to taking on smaller roles in critical misses.

She he even made Forbes list of highest-paid actors in 2023, in large part due to her starring role in the successful “Barbie” movie that debuted that same year.

Ahead of her upcoming starring role alongside Jacob Elordi in “Wuthering Heights,” here’s a look at all the movies she’s been in, ranked from worst to best based on critic scores on Rotten Tomatoes.

Note: All scores were current on the date of publication and are subject to change. Films with no score, documentaries, and some made-for-TV flicks were not included in this list.

Robbie’s lowest-rated film is “Terminal” (2018).

Margot Robbie in “Terminal.”

RLJ Entertainment

Rotten Tomatoes score: 22%

Summary: In the neo-noir thriller “Terminal,” Robbie stars as Annie, a waitress who leads a dark double life.

In a sprawling city, Annie’s life intersects with a teacher (Simon Pegg) battling a terminal illness and a contractor (Mike Myers) who employs a pair of hitmen. 

She kicked off her turn as Harley Quinn in “Suicide Squad” (2016).


suicide squad movie

Margot Robbie in “Suicide Squad.”

Warner Bros.

Rotten Tomatoes score: 26%

Summary: In the action thriller “Suicide Squad,” intelligence officer Amanda Waller (Viola Davis) releases Gotham’s most dangerous villains from jail under the caveat that they complete a deadly mission that could be their last.

The villains include Joker (Jared Leto), Deadshot (Will Smith), Killer Croc (Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje), Diablo (Jay Hernandez), and Harley Quinn (Robbie). 

She stepped back in time for “Amsterdam” (2022).


Christian Bale, Margot Robbie, and John David Washington in

“Amsterdam” is set in the 1930s.

20th Century Studios

Rotten Tomatoes score: 31%

Summary:  Based on the real-life “Business Plot,” the 1930s comedic thriller follows three friends (Christian Bale, Robbie, John David Washington) as they witness a murder, become suspects, and uncover a conspiracy.  

Robbie starred as Jane Clayton in “The Legend of Tarzan” (2016).


the legend of tarzan

Margot Robbie in “The Legend of Tarzan.”

Warner Bros.

Rotten Tomatoes score: 36%

Summary: Years after leaving the jungle behind, Tarzan (Alexander Skarsgård) and his wife Jane (Robbie) are called back on a mission for the Parliament in the action-adventure film “The Legend of Tarzan.”

Once they return to the jungle, they realize that they have become pawns of the greed-driven Captain Leon Rom (Christoph Waltz). 

She was Audrey in “Slaughterhouse Rulez” (2018).


slaughterhouse rulez 2018

Margot Robbie has a small role in the horror-comedy.

Sony Pictures International

Rotten Tomatoes score: 38%

Summary: A sinkhole with dark roots appears at an elite school, unleashing a series of gruesome murders. 

Robbie has a small role in the art-house horror-comedy.

Robbie played Sarah in “A Big Bold Beautiful Journey” (2025).


A Big Bold Beautiful Journey

Margot Robbie and Colin Farrel in “A Big Bold Beautiful Journey.”

Sony Pictures

Rotten Tomatoes score: 37%

Summary: This fantastical romance follows single strangers Sarah (Robbie) and David (Colin Farrell) on a journey through their respective pasts.

The actress was Jess in the crime thriller “Focus” (2015).


Focus 2015 movie

Margot Robbie in “Focus.”

Warner Bros. Pictures

Rotten Tomatoes score: 55%

Summary: With notes of comedy and drama, the crime thriller “Focus” follows con artist Nicky Spurgeon (Smith) as he attracts the attention of low-level grifter Jess Barrett (Robbie).

After Nicky takes Jess under his wing, the two attempt to pull off the biggest con of their lives. 

She appeared as Nellie in “Babylon” (2022).


Margot Robbie in Babylon smoking a cigarette and lying down

Margot Robbie in “Babylon.”

Paramount Pictures

Rotten Tomatoes score: 57%

Summary: The period comedy-drama follows the rise and fall of multiple dreamers in the 1920s as Hollywood makes its transition from silent pictures to films with sound.

She was Allison Wells in the drama “Dreamland” (2019).


Dreamland 2019

“Dreamland” is a dramatic thriller.

Romulus Entertainment

Rotten Tomatoes score: 58%

Summary: In the dramatic thriller “Dreamland,” Eugene Evans (Finn Cole) faces poverty after the devastation of the Dust Bowl and is on the brink of losing his family’s farm.

Determined to make money, Evans decides to find and capture elusive bank robber Allison Wells (Robbie) and reap the reward. 

In “Mary Queen of Scots” (2018) Robbie portrayed Queen Elizabeth I.


margot robbie mary queen of scots

Margot Robbie as Queen Elizabeth I.

Liam Daniel/Focus Features

Rotten Tomatoes score: 62%

Summary: In the historical drama “Mary Queen of Scots,” young royal Mary (Saoirse Ronan) returns to Scotland to claim her place on the throne and faces opposition from her cousin Queen Elizabeth I (Robbie).

As pressure mounts on both sides, the two women face off in a battle of wills for the future of their respective lands. 

Robbie voiced Flopsy in “Peter Rabbit” (2018).


peter rabbit

“Peter Rabbit” debuted in 2018.

Sony Pictures Entertainment

Rotten Tomatoes score: 64%

Summary: An animated re-imagining of the beloved Beatrix Potter books, “Peter Rabbit” follows the adventures of mischievous Peter (voiced by James Corden) and his friends Flopsy (voiced by Robbie), Mopsy (voiced by Elizabeth Debicki), and Cottontail (voiced by Daisy Ridley) as they tease gardener Mr. McGregor (voiced by Gleeson). 

She was Daphne Milne in “Goodbye Christopher Robin” (2017).


goodbye christopher robin fox searchlight

Domhnall Gleeson and Margot Robbie in the film.

Fox Searchlight

Rotten Tomatoes score: 64%

Summary: Based on a true story, “Goodbye Christopher Robin” centers on author A.A. Milne (Domhnall Gleeson) and the pressure he faces to write new material after he returns home from war.

Inspired by his son’s imagination and his wife Daphne’s (Robbie’s) support, Milne begins writing children’s books about a curious young boy and his teddy-bear friend Winnie the Pooh. 

She was Kayla Pospisil in the drama “Bombshell” (2019).


Bombshell Margot Robbie

Margot Robbie as Kayla Pospisil.

Lionsgate

Rotten Tomatoes score: 67%

Summary: Based on the Fox News sexual-harassment scandal, the drama “Bombshell” follows news anchor Megyn Kelly (Charlize Theron) as she attempts to deconstruct the more toxic elements of her workplace with the help of Gretchen Carlson (Nicole Kidman) and Kayla Pospisil (Robbie). 

The actress played Tanya in “Whiskey Tango Foxtrot” (2016).


whiskey tango fox trot

Margot Robbie as Tanya in “Whiskey Tango Foxtrot.”

Paramount Pictures

Rotten Tomatoes score: 68%

Summary: Set in 2003, the comedic drama “Whiskey Tango Foxtrot,” is based on memoir by journalist Kim Barker (Tina Fey) and her life overseas as a war correspondent in Pakistan and Afghanistan.

While there, Barker develops a bond with BBC correspondent Tanya Vanderpoel (Robbie) and Scottish photographer Iain MacKelpie (Martin Freeman). 

She voiced the rabbit again in “Peter Rabit 2: The Runaway” (2021).


Peter Rabbit 2

The “Peter Rabbit” sequel debuted in 2021.

Sony Pictures Entertainment

Rotten Tomatoes score: 68%

Summary: A sequel to “Peter Rabbit,” this book-inspired film follows Peter (voiced by Corden) as he tries to shake his mischievous reputation.

Robbie once again voiced Flopsy. 

In the romantic comedy “About Time” (2013) she was Charlotte.


About Time

Lydia Wilson and Margot Robbie in “About Time.”

Universal Pictures

Rotten Tomatoes score: 71%

Summary: “About Time” is a romantic comedy in which Tim Lake (Gleeson) realizes he has the ability to travel through time.

At the behest of his father (Bill Nighy) Tim resolves to use time travel to solve his bad luck with dating and falls in love with Mary (Rachel McAdams) in the process. 

Robbie has a supporting role in the film as Charlotte, the best friend of Tim’s little sister. 

Robbie played Celine Joseph in “Suite Française” (2014).


Suite Francaise

Margot Robbie in “Suite Française.”

The Weinstein Company

Rotten Tomatoes score: 75%

Summary: “Suite Française” is a romantic drama set in 1940s France during World War II. In it, Lucile Angellier (Michelle Williams) awaits news of her husband from the front lines.

As the war drags on, Lucile develops unexpected feelings for German soldier Bruno Von Falk (Matthias Schoenaerts). 

Robbie had a supporting role in the film as Celine Joseph, one of Lucile’s tenants. 

Robbie also appeared in the comedy-drama “Asteroid City” (2022).


A still from Asteroid City of two men on the phone in different locations

A still from “Asteroid City.”

Universal

Rotten Tomatoes score: 76%

Summary: Wes Anderson’s “Asteroid City” — adapted from a story he wrote with Roman Coppola — showcases a Junior Stargazer/Space Cadet convention in the 1950s as it’s spectacularly disrupted by events around the world.

The film stars Scarlett Johansson and Maya Hawke and is filled with other celebs, including Robbie. 

Critics enjoyed her as Harley Quinn in “Birds of Prey” (2020).


birds of prey harley quinn

Margot Robbie as Harley Quinn.

Claudette Barius/DC Comics

Rotten Tomatoes score: 79%

Summary: A sort of follow-up to “Suicide Squad,” “Birds of Prey (and the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn)” has Robbie return as Harley, who is bouncing back from a nasty breakup with the Joker.

Coming into her own, Harley assembles a crew of vigilantes to rise up against the villainous Roman Sionis (Ewan McGregor). 

In “The Wolf of Wall Street” (2013) she was Naomi Lapaglia.


wolf of wall street

Margot Robbie in “The Wolf of Wall Street.”

Paramount Studios

Rotten Tomatoes score: 79%

Summary: In the electrifying drama “The Wolf of Wall Street,” stockbroker Jordan Belfort (Leonardo DiCaprio) allows greed to corrupt his ambition as he climbs the corporate ladder of Wall Street.

But distraction lays everywhere on his path to success, from drugs and parties to the dazzling Naomi (Robbie).

The actress played Ann Burden in “Z for Zachariah” (2015).


z for zachariah

Margot Robbie as Ann Burden.

Roadside Attractions

Rotten Tomatoes score: 80%

Summary: Set in a distant dystopian future, “Z for Zachariah” Ann Burden (Robbie) is led to believe that she’s the only person left on the planet after a devastating nuclear war.

But everything changes when she meets fellow survivors Loomis (Chiwetel Ejiofor) and Caleb (Chris Pine). 

Robbie depicted Sharon Tate in “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” (2019).


once upon a time in hollywood margot robbie

Margot Robbie as Sharon Tate.

Sony Pictures

Rotten Tomatoes score: 86%

Summary: Set in Los Angeles in 1969, movie star Rick Dalton (DiCaprio) and his stunt double Cliff Booth (Brad Pitt) struggle to remain relevant as Hollywood makes room for younger stars like Sharon Tate (Robbie).

On a strange night, their three lives converge as the group of cult-like people referred to as the Manson “family” make murderous plan.

She has a brief cameo in “The Big Short” (2015).


Margot Robbie in the big short

Margot Robbie in “The Big Short.”

Paramount Pictures

Rotten Tomatoes score: 89%

Summary: Based on the 2010 book by Michael Lewis, “The Big Short” follows three investors who bet against the US mortgage market … right before the housing market pops.

Robbie in makes a brief cameo in the film, breaking down popular Wall Street terms and lingo from a bathtub.

Robbie is the titular lead in “Barbie” (2023).


barbie singing in the car

Margot Robbie as Barbie.

Warner Bros.

Rotten Tomatoes score: 88%

Summary: Robbie stars as Barbie alongside Ryan Gosling as Ken as the two venture into the real world and also realize things in Barbie Land may not be as perfect as they seem.

She once again played Harley Quinn in “The Suicide Squad” (2021).


Margot Robbie as Harley Quinn in The Suicide Squad

Margot Robbie as Harley Quinn in “The Suicide Squad”

Warner Bros.

Rotten Tomatoes score: 90%

Summary:  Once again, Robbie played Harley Quinn in this DC film. In it, a dangerous team of supervillains is assembled for a top-secret mission.

The actress starred as Tonya Harding in “I, Tonya” (2017).


i, tonya

Margot Robbie as Tonya Harding.

YouTube/Neon

Rotten Tomatoes score: 90%

Summary: Based on a true story, the drama “I, Tonya” traces the life of skating legend Tonya Harding (Robbie) from promising Olympic athlete to the central figure in a criminal investigation after one of her skating competitors is attacked. 

Note: All scores were current on the date of publication and are subject to change.




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Stacked column chart

Big Tech capex growth may be far slower than it looks — thanks to this overlooked metric

Big Tech’s latest capex projections have shocked investors. Look beneath the headline numbers, though, and spending may actually be growing far more slowly.

That’s according to new research on Monday from analysts at RBC Capital Markets.

Amazon, Google, Meta, and Microsoft are expected to spend almost $600 billion this year on data centers, chips, networking, and other related gear to meet surging AI demand.

On the surface, this may look like a relentless acceleration, but RBC’s analysis suggests these growth numbers are being flattered by an unusual culprit: runaway memory prices.

The RBC analysts found that soaring prices for data center memory chips — including DRAM, high-bandwidth memory (HBM), and NAND flash — could account for about 45% of the dollar growth in cloud capital expenditures for 2026. Crucially, most of that increase isn’t coming from companies buying dramatically more hardware, but from paying much more for the same components, the analysts said.

RBC estimates that data center memory spending across the top 10 hyperscalers will jump from about $107 billion in 2025 to roughly $237 billion in 2026. That $130 billion increase would represent about 45% of total capex growth at those companies. Even more striking, around three-quarters of the memory spend increase — roughly $98 billion — is attributable purely to higher prices, not higher unit volumes.

The price shock is severe. TrendForce projections cited by RBC show DRAM prices more than doubling in 2026, while NAND prices are expected to rise more than 85%. Memory has become one of the most constrained inputs in AI infrastructure, as advanced GPUs require large amounts of high-performance DRAM and HBM, while AI data centers consume massive quantities of flash storage.

When RBC strips memory out of the equation, Big Tech’s spending surge looks meaningfully different. Excluding memory costs, capex growth is projected to drop to about 40% in 2026, down from roughly 80% growth in 2025. That’s still a strong expansion, but far less explosive than the raw capex totals imply.

The analysts described this as “a notable deceleration,” while adding that “it’s not necessarily cause for alarm.”

RBC argued that underlying AI investment remains robust, but warned that memory pricing is now the biggest wild card for capex trends heading into 2027.

In effect, Big Tech may be spending vastly more on some equipment — without building proportionally more — as the AI arms race collides with an overheated memory market.

Sign up for Business Insider’s Tech Memo newsletter here. Reach out to me via email at abarr@businessinsider.com.




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I ranked 13 fast-food double cheeseburgers from worst to best. My favorite was one of the cheapest.

Updated

  • We ranked double cheeseburgers from 13 fast-food chains to see which one reigns supreme.
  • 7th Street Burger, the smallest chain, blew me away with its saucy smash burger.
  • I thought In-N-Out’s famous Double-Double was great value and delicious.

Double the patties can mean double the deliciousness, but not all fast-food double cheeseburgers are created equal.

For a definitive ranking, I tried practically every double cheeseburger on the market to determine which one was best based on taste and value.

I tried double cheeseburgers from McDonald’s, Wendy’s, Burger King, Shake Shack, White Castle, Whataburger, P. Terry’s, Five Guys, Cook Out, Checkers, Sonic, 7th Street Burger, and In-N-Out.

Here’s every fast-food double cheeseburger ranked from worst to best.

My least favorite double cheeseburger was from Burger King. It cost me $4.09.

Burger King’s double cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

The burger was under $5, but I’m not sure it was worth the price.

It comes with two of the chain’s beef patties, American cheese, pickles, mustard, and ketchup on a sesame-seed bun.


burger king double cheeseburger

Burger King’s double cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

It comes with one slice of cheese.

This burger was super filling, but I liked the other burgers I tried more.


burger king double cheeseburger

Burger King’s double cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

Right away, I tasted the thick beef patties. The burger had traveled a little more than 15 minutes from my local Burger King to my apartment, but the meat was still juicy and the cheese nicely melted.

The pickle slices were thick and crunchy, and I enjoyed the sesame-seed bun, which added a nice textural element. But I thought there was just a little too much ketchup, which will likely vary depending on who’s making your burger that day.

It was also a little heavy for my liking. It filled me up a little more than I had anticipated before jumping into the rest of the burger comparison. Still, for a burger that costs just under $4, that might be more of an asset than a hindrance if you want a filling, inexpensive lunch.

Next was Wendy’s double cheeseburger, which the chain calls a Double Stack. I ordered it for $4.49.


wendys meal

Wendy’s double cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

It was about the same price as the burgers from McDonald’s and Burger King, though it landed squarely in the middle in terms of value.

A Wendy’s double cheeseburger comes with two junior-size hamburger patties, American cheese, ketchup, mustard, pickles, and sweet onion.


wendys meal

The Wendy’s Double Stack.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

The toppings looked a little stingy, and they were clustered in the middle of the sandwich. I would have liked to see them more spread out.

The burger bun was fluffy and light, and the toppings had a ton of flavor.


wendys meal

Wendy’s double cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

But I had to get a few bites in to reach the toppings in the center.

The toppings themselves were amazing. I thought the pickles were the most flavorful out of the burgers I tried, and I liked the use of an onion ring rather than diced onion, although I would’ve liked more.

The McDonald’s double cheeseburger cost me $5.99.


The author holds a mcdonalds double cheeseburger

McDonald’s double cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

It was slightly more expensive than Wendy’s version but had more toppings. It came with an extra slice of American cheese plus chopped onions, and I thought it was still relatively affordable.

The double cheeseburger from McDonald’s comes with two beef patties, pickles, chopped onions, ketchup, mustard, and two slices of American cheese.


mcdonalds double cheeseburger

McDonald’s double cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

I was interested to see if the added toppings would amp up the flavor.

I thought the ingredients came together well in this burger, but the bun was a little lackluster.


mcdonalds double cheeseburger

McDonald’s double cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

The bun held everything together and was a good size, but it was a little too soft and didn’t have a lot of flavor on its own. But I enjoyed the amount of condiments and didn’t find them overpowering.

The chopped onions added a lot of flavor, and the burger patties were juicy despite being thinner than the Burger King ones. I liked the added cheese, but didn’t think it was necessary.

Next up was the double-meat Whataburger with cheese.


whataburger double cheeseburger in paper packaging on blue background

Whataburger double meat burger with cheese.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

It costs $8.75 at a Whataburger in Austin, excluding tax and fees.

I ordered it with a large bun, American cheese, grilled peppers and onions, pickles, and ketchup.


whataburger double cheeseburger

Whataburger double meat burger with cheese.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

The burger was a decent size and I could see the gooey cheese peeking out from underneath the soft potato bun. 

Unlike the other double cheeseburgers, this burger had sliced jalapeño peppers that I imagined would add quite the kick.


open whataburger double cheeseburger

Whataburger double meat burger with cheese.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

The ingredients definitely set this burger apart from the others.

I thought the burgers had a delightfully crispy texture to them, and the toppings added a ton of flavor.


bitten into whataburger double cheeseburger

Whataburger double meat burger with cheese.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

The bun was light and fluffy, but I did think the burger patties could have been a little thicker and juicier.

Coming in ninth was the double cheeseburger from P. Terry’s Burger Stand, a regional chain I visited in Austin.


p terrys double cheeseburger

P. Terry’s double cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

The burger cost $5.25, making it one of the cheaper burgers I tried.

Despite being less expensive than the Whataburger double cheeseburger, the P. Terry’s burger was larger.


p terrys double cheeseburger

P. Terry’s double cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

I ordered it with pickles, onions, ketchup, mustard, and American cheese.

I again thought the cheese could have been more melted, but the size definitely made up for that small detail.


p terrys double cheeseburger

P. Terry’s double cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

One of the benefits of ordering from P. Terry’s is that you can easily customize your burger and add a number of toppings, including grilled onions, the chain’s special sauce, tomato, lettuce, and more.

I thought the burgers were juicy and the pickles had a tart crunch to them.


bitten into p terrys double cheeseburger

P. Terry’s double cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

The bun was slightly underwhelming, but I thought it was an excellent, large burger with tons of flavor, especially for the low price. I also thought the mustard really came through and added a lot to the burger.

The double cheeseburger from Shake Shack was the second most expensive burger I tried.


shake shack double cheeseburger in paper wrapping on blue background

Shake Shack double cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

I paid $13.89 for a double cheeseburger. I could customize my toppings, but I went with pickles, onions, and Shack sauce.

Right away, I thought the burger was massive.


shake shack double cheeseburger in paper wrapping on blue background

Shake Shack double cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

The burger patties were perfectly crispy on the outside and covered in gooey melted cheese. The pickles also looked large and homemade. It was even heavy to pick up.

The toppings were generous and the chain’s signature Shack sauce, which is a mayo-based sauce with a slight mustard flavor, made it really tasty.


shake shack double cheeseburger in paper wrapping on blue background

Shake Shack double cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

The cheese was thick and perfectly melted.

However, biting into the Shake Shack burger was a little overwhelming, in my opinion.


bitten into shake shack double cheeseburger in paper wrapping on blue background

Shake Shack double cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

The burger was huge, which was both an asset and a hindrance. I struggled to get through more than a few bites.

However, despite being the second most expensive burger, I thought it was worth the price. The burger patties were much thicker than the other burgers I tried, and the toppings took it over the edge in terms of flavor.

Overall, I was impressed … but stuffed.

In seventh place was the double-decker burger with cheese from Checkers.


checkers double cheeseburger

Checkers double cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

The burger has since been replaced with the Big Buford, which has all the same ingredients but a bakery-style bun instead of a sesame-seed bun. The burger costs $8.39 at my local Checkers in Brooklyn.

I thought this burger was a little pricey for the size.


checkers double cheeseburger

Checkers double cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

It was smaller than my hand, though it did include a variety of toppings like tomato, lettuce, and red onion.

The burger also comes with American cheese, dill pickles, ketchup, mustard, and mayonnaise on a toasted bun.

The burger patties were very juicy, and the toppings tasted fresh.


checkers double cheeseburger

Checkers double cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

I also thought the American cheese was very tangy and flavorful. Overall, I enjoyed the combination of flavors. However, the price prevented this burger from ranking higher. 

I also tried the double cheese slider from White Castle.


white castle double cheeseburger on blue background

White Castle double cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

White Castle sliders tend to be eaten in pairs, so I ordered two. Each burger cost me $3.69, so I ended up paying $7.38.

The burgers were small but packed with flavor.


white castle double cheeseburger on blue background

White Castle double cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

The burgers smelled strongly of onions and condiments the second I removed them from the bag.

The amount of toppings on each burger was generous.


white castle double cheeseburger on blue background

White Castle double cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

The pickles were crunchy and flavorful. Though the burgers each had a bun sandwiched in the middle of the burger, it wasn’t too bready — instead, it allowed the flavors to really come together while still being filling.

I was blown away by the cheeseburgers from White Castle, a result I admittedly wasn’t expecting.


white castle double cheeseburger on blue background

White Castle double cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

As the cheapest and smallest burgers, I was expecting them to be a little lackluster. However, I found that good things definitely come in small packages. The onions, condiments, and pickles were flavorful, but it was the beef that really impressed me.

The small-but-mighty burger was one of the most flavorful out of the ones I tried, easy to eat, and perfectly priced. 

My fifth-favorite double cheeseburger was from Five Guys.


five guys cheeseburger

Five Guys cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

Five Guys doesn’t technically have a “double cheeseburger” — its regular cheeseburgers already come with two slices of cheese and two beef patties.

My burger cost $13.55, excluding taxes and fees, making it the most expensive burger I tried.

I was able to customize my toppings, but I ordered the burger with pickles, grilled onions, ketchup, and mustard.


five guys cheeseburger

Five Guys cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

Right away, I noticed that the toppings were generous. The pickle slices were large, and none of the toppings cost extra to add.

The burger was large without being too intimidating.


five guys cheeseburger

Five Guys cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

I thought it was a perfect size. It required two hands to pick up and eat, but it wasn’t as heavy as the burger from Shake Shack. Slices of melted American cheese coated each burger, and there wasn’t so much sauce that it dripped out from underneath the sesame-seed buns.

The burger patties were crispy on the outside but juicy on the inside.


five guys cheeseburger

Five Guys cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

I thought the pickle slices were thick, crunchy, and tart. I also really enjoyed the choice of a sesame-seed bun — it added a bit of texture to each and every bite.

The grilled onions also really impressed me. They were soft and almost caramelized, adding a lot of flavor that I didn’t get from any other burger.

My fourth-favorite double cheeseburger came from Sonic Drive-In.


sonic double cheeseburger in tin foil wrapping on blue background

SuperSonic double cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

The SuperSonic double cheeseburger was the only burger I tried that came with lettuce and tomato. Since this was the default option, I decided to try it with these toppings rather than specifically remove them. 

The burger cost me $9.75, excluding taxes and fees.

The burger came with a hearty serving of shredded lettuce, tomatoes, two slices of cheese, diced onions, pickles, mayonnaise, and ketchup.


open faced sonic double cheeseburger in tin foil wrapping on blue background

Sonic double cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

Unlike Sonic’s quarter-pound double cheeseburger, which comes with two junior patties, the full-size burger has a combined half-pound of meat. 

The bun was perfectly soft but still held the sauce-covered burger together.


bitten into sonic double cheeseburger in tin foil wrapping on blue background

Sonic double cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

The ingredients tasted fresh and vibrant. The tomato wasn’t too watery, the lettuce was crisp, and the burgers tasted well-seasoned and juicy. Plus, the burger was a very generous size. 

However, despite all these accolades, I thought the price was a little steep compared to what I got from Cook Out and In-N-Out.

My third-favorite double cheeseburger came from Cook Out, a regional chain I visited in South Carolina.


cook out double cheeseburger

Cook Out big double burger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

You can order a “big double” from Cook Out any way you wish, but I ordered mine with cheese, ketchup, mustard, onions, and pickles. It cost me $4.99, not including tax.

The burger came wrapped in foil and featured two juicy patties.


cook out double cheeseburger

Cook Out big double burger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

It also had thick slices of fresh onion and large pickle spears layered on top of the burger.

For the price, I thought the burger was out of this world.


cook out double cheeseburger

Cook Out big double burger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

The cheese slices were thick and tangy, and the burger was perfectly moist and medium-rare. It was also very large, and, after already eating dinner, I struggled to get through more than a few bites, though I kept wanting to go back for more.

At an amazingly low price, this burger definitely earned the second-to-top spot on my ranking.

My second favorite came from 7th Street Burger, a smaller chain based in New York City.


7th street burger double cheeseburger

7th Street Burger double cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

7th Street Burger is a small chain of quick-service burger restaurants with 19 locations in New York, New Jersey, and Washington, DC.

Since it opened in 2021, the chain has quickly grown a reputation for its no-frills approach to smash burgers, which feature crispy patties, gooey cheese, and the chain’s signature sauce.

I ordered a double cheeseburger, which comes with two beef patties, American cheese, onions, pickles, and house sauce on a Martin’s potato bun. It cost $11.21, excluding tax and fees.

There wasn’t much customization to do for this burger — you can’t order it with lettuce or tomato.


7th street burger double cheeseburger

7th Street Burger double cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

However, this burger was perfect exactly as the chain designed it. The burger patties were delightfully crispy on the outside yet managed to stay juicy.

Melted slices of cheese oozed between the two thin, expertly griddled, and charred beef patties, all smothered in the chain’s signature sauce, a creamy, tangy take on classic burger sauce.

The burger was served on a pillowy-soft potato roll, which kept things simple.


7th street burger double cheeseburger

7th Street Burger double cheeseburger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

There were no lettuce or tomato slices to cut through the rich, savory indulgence, but that only added to the burger’s savory flavor. I didn’t miss the opportunity to customize my burger with additional toppings. It was probably the best smash burger I’ve ever had.

With pickles and onions to round out the flavor, the double cheeseburger offered a satisfying, nostalgic flavor that elevated the classic smash burger experience.

In my opinion, the best double cheeseburger I tried was the famous Double-Double burger from In-N-Out.


in n out double double, fries, and drink on blue background

In-N-Out Double-Double burger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

It cost me $4.90, which I thought was an excellent deal for the large burger sitting in front of me. One of the first things I noticed was how thick the burger patties were — they were much thicker than other burgers I tried at a similar price point.

Most Double-Double burgers come with lettuce, tomato, onions, and spread.


in n out double double on blue background

In-N-Out Double-Double burger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

To keep my burger similar to the other burgers I tried, I ordered it with onions, pickles, and spread, which I thought tasted similar to Thousand Island dressing.

The first thing I noticed about the In-N-Out burger was how juicy the burger patties were, followed by the incredible layers of cheese.


bitten into in n out double double on blue background

In-N-Out Double-Double burger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

The cheese slices were perfectly melted and coated each part of the burger, something I couldn’t say about any other burger I tried.

The bun was perfectly soft and held everything together perfectly, while the special spread had my mouth watering for another bite.

Of all the burgers I tried, I thought the In-N-Out double cheeseburger packed the most flavor for the best price.


bitten into in n out double double on blue background

In-N-Out Double-Double burger.

Erin McDowell/Business Insider

When it came to a double cheeseburger, the West Coast chain really nailed it. The burger was beyond flavorful, the perfect size, and, in my opinion, very good value for money.

The next time I’m in a state with an In-N-Out, I know where I’ll be filling my burger craving.




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Is AI to blame for your job loss?

Who (or what) is to blame?

That’s the question laid-off workers are grappling with in the aftermath of losing their jobs. The No. 1 suspect is often artificial intelligence, but connecting the dots on how that led to their firing isn’t always clear.

Jacob Zinkula has spoken to dozens of laid-off workers who are trying to piece together why they were let go.

Some might deem those efforts fruitless. (Congrats on figuring it out! You’re still unemployed.)

A better understanding helps inform the next career move, and plenty of people could use that. This January saw more layoffs than any January since 2009.

Further muddying the waters is companies’ reluctance to say AI drives layoffs. When Amazon made its first round of deep cuts last fall, many speculated it was due to AI. But CEO Andy Jassy said it was about “culture,” not AI or costs.

It’s one thing to lose your job because of tech. It’s another to hear you don’t have the personality for it.

The way I see it, AI impacts layoffs in three main ways.

AI took my job: While the most direct, it’s also the least common these days. There aren’t many examples of AI doing everything a human can at work. In most cases, there’s still a need for some human interaction.

As much as it stinks to lose your job this way, at least it’s a clear sign you need to change what you’re doing. AI isn’t coming for your job. It’s already here.

AI makes my job a lot easier: This applies to just about everyone. AI can’t automate everything you do, but it can sure carry a lot of the load. At first glance, that seems like a good thing. But if AI enables you to do more with less, your company has the same benefit.

Sure, some will position it as an opportunity to supercharge their employees to drive more business. The more likely outcome is that this is an opportunity to reduce headcount.

The silver lining is that your job is still needed. There are just fewer opportunities out there, and you need to get really good at managing AI to get them.

We need to pay for this AI somehow: The most frustrating of the three. AI isn’t directly impacting your job at all, but those tech bills aren’t going to pay themselves. If you fall into this bucket, chances are you weren’t driving a ton of revenue for the firm. (After all, why kill a cash cow when money is tight?)

It’s a hard pill to swallow. However, it could serve as a wake-up call for how you approach your next gig. Like it or not, AI is the way forward for most companies. So if you’re not helping a business reach that goal, you might need to reconsider what you’re doing in the first place.




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SpaceX ran a Super Bowl ad — a first for Elon Musk’s business empire

  • SpaceX ran its first Super Bowl ad on Sunday, promoting its Starlink internet service.
  • It’s the first time any of Elon Musk’s companies have run an ad at the Super Bowl.
  • Tesla and SpaceX have avoided traditional advertising in the past, but that is beginning to change.

SpaceX has made its Super Bowl debut ahead of a potential record-breaking IPO.

The rocket company ran its first Super Bowl ad for its Starlink satellite internet on Sunday, the first time any of Elon Musk’s companies have run an ad at the showpiece event.

The 30-second spot features audio from a speech by legendary science-fiction author Arthur C. Clarke, set to footage of SpaceX’s Falcon 9 and Starship rocket boosters returning to Earth.

It shows Starlink operating in a series of remote locations and touts the satellite internet service’s mission of “fast, affordable internet, available everywhere.”

The ad marks a departure for Musk’s companies, which have in the past shunned advertising in favor of using the billionaire’s outspoken public persona for publicity.

Tesla reportedly laid off its entire marketing team during widespread workforce cuts in 2024, while SpaceX has typically relied on eye-catching rocket tests, such as its Starship booster catch, to boost its public profile.

Both companies have started running advertising in recent years across a number of platforms, including Musk’s X, and Starlink has previously featured in Super Bowl ads run by partners such as T-Mobile.

SpaceX running its own stand-alone Super Bowl ad is a significant development, with 30-second ad slots costing between $8 million and $10 million on average this year, per broadcaster NBCUniversal.

It comes as SpaceX gears up for a public offering later this year that could value the rocket company at as much as $1.5 trillion.

Last week, Musk announced that SpaceX would merge with his AI startup xAI, in a move the world’s richest man said would help launch a network of solar-powered orbital data centers to train powerful AI models.

SpaceX’s recent success has been driven in large part by Starlink, which uses a constellation of more than 9,000 low-orbit satellites to provide wireless internet. In December, the company said Starlink has 9 million customers and is active in 155 countries.




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AI agents failed at real-world consulting tasks — but Mercor’s CEO says they’re still on track to replace consultants

New research suggests an AI agent can’t fully replace a human consultant — at least for now.

Mercor, the AI training giant, tested how well leading AI models, acting as agents, performed real-world consulting, banking, and legal tasks.

The models failed most of the time, but Mercor’s CEO, Brendan Foody, told Business Insider that the results tell only part of the story.

The consulting tasks in Mercor’s APEX-Agents benchmark were designed to simulate real management consulting work, based on expert surveys and input from consultants at McKinsey, BCG, Deloitte, Accenture, and EY.

Across all task categories, the AI agents successfully completed the tasks less than 25% of the time on the first try. Given eight attempts, the agents could only complete 40% of the tasks. For the management consulting tasks, OpenAI’s GPT 5.2 initially performed the best, completing nearly 23% of the tasks on its first attempt. Anthropic’s Opus 4.6, released this week, performed even better at nearly 33%.

While many of the tasks were not completed, Foody said the success rate for GPT 3 was only 3%, compared to 23% for GPT 5.2. Anthropic’s model went from 13% to 33% on consulting tasks in a matter of months. Foody said he expects the success rate of the models to be closer to 50% by the end of the year.

“These are some of the hardest tasks in the economy that people pay millions of dollars to consulting firms to do, and the models are finally being able to do them with an incredible rate of progress,” Foody said.

AI has already disrupted the consulting industry, changing the way firms hire and make money, but the likelihood of agents displacing consultants grows as the models continue to improve.

McKinsey chief Bob Sternfels recently said the prestigious management consulting firm had 60,000 employees, 25,000 of which were AI agents.

Sternfels recently said it’s the first time in McKinsey’s history that the company is able to grow without growing its head count.

Where AI agents fail in consulting tasks

The frontier models Mercor tested included those from OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic, among others.

One example consulting task instructed the AI agent to “analyze category consumption patterns and market penetration using the Category Penetration Score methodology for PureLife’s portfolio strategy,” asking for several specific outputs in response. The AI agents failed to produce an accurate response.

“No model is ready to replace a professional end-to-end,” the findings concluded.

Mercor found the AI agents were great at research and pretty good at data analysis, Foody said.

Where they consistently got tripped up was on longer-horizon tasks — the longer it would take a human to complete a task, or the more steps it took, was the biggest indicator that the model might have a hard time.

Unlike a human, Foody said, the models struggle to understand where in a specific file system they should look for the right information, so they often end up looking at the wrong files. They struggle with the planning side of figuring out how to work with multiple tools and cross-referencing files at the same time.

For tasks that can be done in an hour or less or that only require the use of a single tool, the models perform relatively well.

Foody said the agents are almost like interns, where they might have a 50% pass rate, and the partner is still noticing a lot of issues in the work.

Frank Jones, a former KPMG consultant who now works as an expert contractor for Mercor, said in his experience training AI, he’s found the models can get close at certain tasks, but that some human refinement is often needed.

He also said the models need very specific prompts because they don’t always understand common expectations or phrases in consulting, like “client-ready.”

“Most consultants, they know what that means. But for AI, I think there’s a lot of nuance in that,” he said.

The AI models are quickly improving

According to Foody, continuing to improve the models doesn’t require a breakthrough — it requires more and better training, which the frontier labs are already investing heavily in.

“That’s why we have so much revenue,” he said, adding, “We’re in the business of replacing human judgment.”

Mercor, whose clients have included OpenAI, Anthropic, and Meta, secured a funding deal in the fall that valued the company at $10 billion. Mercor employs more than 30,000 contractors around the world who help train AI models through tasks like rewriting chatbot responses. Foody previously said the company grew its revenue in 2025 by 4,658%.

Foody said he believes consulting, and especially lower-level roles, are among the jobs he’s confident will be displaced by AI. He said the next version of the AI agents benchmark will expand to evaluate the whole value chain of a professional services firm: “Instead of evaling the analyst, we’re evaling McKinsey itself.”

Right now, he says Mercor’s AI agent benchmark tells an appealing story for McKinsey, because the company could say it shows they can use AI to add value but not replace humans.

“The next version of APEX tells a very scary story for McKinsey,” he said, adding, “In the coming two years, we’re going to have chatbots that are as good as the best consulting firm.”




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Details you missed in Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl LX halftime show

  • On Sunday, Bad Bunny took the stage at Levi’s Stadium for the Super Bowl LX halftime show.
  • The show was full of nods to Puerto Rico and included subtle political and cultural statements.
  • Here are some details from Bad Bunny’s halftime performance that you might have missed.

Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl LX halftime show was more than a hit-filled performance — it was a carefully staged cultural statement.

Beyond the headline moments, the show was packed with intentional details, from visual symbolism to casting choices, that were easy to miss in real time.

We’ve rounded up the moments you might not have caught, and why they mattered.

Bad Bunny’s “Ocasio 64” jersey

Bad Bunny wore Zara for his Super Bowl halftime performance.

Bob Kupbens/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Bad Bunny — born Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio — wore a white Zara football jersey emblazoned with his last name, “Ocasio,” and the number “64.”

The number set off widespread online speculation about its meaning, with theories ranging from personal and musical references to Hurricane Maria, but no definitive explanation has been confirmed.

The cameos


Bad Bunny and Lady Gaga at the Super Bowl halftime show.

The halftime performance featured several celebrity cameos.

Christopher Polk/Billboard via Getty Images

Bad Bunny’s halftime show featured several celebrity cameos from the likes of Lady Gaga, Ricky Martin, Pedro Pascal, Cardi B, Karol G, Jessica Alba, and Young Miko.

Lady Gaga appeared in a blue dress and sang a salsa rendition of her chart-topping hit “Die With a Smile,” while fellow Puerto Rican native Ricky Martin took to the stage to perform Bad Bunny’s “Lo Que Pasó a Hawaii.”

Maria Antonia Cay, known as Toñita, also made a cameo, briefly appearing onstage to hand Bad Bunny a drink. She runs Caribbean Social Club in Williamsburg, one of the last Puerto Rican social clubs in New York City.

An actual wedding


A couple got married during Bad Bunny's halftime performance.

A couple got married during Bad Bunny’s halftime performance.

JOSH EDELSON / AFP via Getty Images

A couple featured in Bad Bunny’s performance actually got married during the set, league sources confirmed to ESPN.

The outlet said that the couple had originally invited Bad Bunny to their wedding. Instead, the singer invited them to get married during his show.

The power lines


Bad Bunny's halftime set featured electricity poles as stage props.

Bad Bunny’s halftime set featured electricity poles as stage props.

Kevin Sabitus/Getty Images

During his performance of “El Apagón,” a song whose title translates to “the power outage,” Bad Bunny leaned into the track’s themes about the frequent blackouts in Puerto Rico.

The stage featured his dancers dressed as jíbaros, or traditional Puerto Rican farmers, who began climbing utility poles that sparked and exploded.

The dancers dressed as plants


A dancer dressed as a plant for Bad Bunny's halftime show.

The halftime show featured dancers dressed as plants.

San Francisco Chronicle/Hearst Newspapers/San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images

Bad Bunny brought Puerto Rico to Levi’s Stadium by covering the stage in greenery inspired by Vega Baja, where he grew up.

In another stadium, that kind of lush landscape would typically be created by wheeling carts of plant props onto the field, Bruce Rodgers, whose company Tribe Inc. handled the show’s production design, told Wired.

But NFL rules limited how many carts could be used to protect Levi’s Stadium’s natural grass, so the team dressed performers as plants to get the same effect, Rodgers said

Boricua pride on display


Bad Bunny's halftime performance featured references to Puerto Rico, such as a piragua stand.

Bad Bunny’s halftime performance featured various references to Puerto Rico, including a piragua stand.

Patrick T. Fallon / AFP

Bad Bunny’s halftime performance featured several cultural symbols of Puerto Rico, including sugar cane fields, a piragua stand, and a casita.

The billboard message at the end of the performance


A billboard at the end of Bad Bunny's halftime performance.

The billboard at the end of Bad Bunny’s halftime performance was a reference to his Grammys speech.

JOSH EDELSON / AFP

As fireworks lit up the sky to mark the end of Bad Bunny’s halftime performance, a stadium screen displayed the message, “The only thing more powerful than hate is love.”

The quote echoed a line from the singer’s Grammy acceptance speech last week.

While accepting the award for best música urbana album, Bad Bunny called out ICE.

“We’re not savage,” he said. “We’re not animals. We’re not aliens. We are humans, and we are Americans.”

Later that night, Bad Bunny also made history as the first artist to win Album of the Year with an all-Spanish record.




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Aditi Bharade

I flew across the country to be dancing grass at Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime show

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Andrew Athias, 33, a Philadelphia-based digital marketer and content creator. It has been edited for length and clarity.

I was one of the 500 bunches of dancing grass at Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime show. I got paid $18.70 per hour for the gig, but I would’ve done it for free.

I’m a big Bad Bunny fan. I’ve been to three of his concerts since my girlfriend introduced me to him in 2021.

I found the grass gig through a company called Backlit, which handles finding extras for the halftime show. I found it last year when I saw Kendrick Lamar at the Super Bowl halftime show, but I forgot about it until Bad Bunny was announced as Super Bowl’s headliner in October, and I decided to apply.

I was one of the few crazy people to fly over from the East Coast to be part of the field cast. I flew out to San Francisco from Philadelphia in the middle of a snowstorm and have been out here for two weeks, rehearsing for the big day, and it has been worth it.

Job description: Be athletic

The requirements for the role were pretty basic. You had to be no taller than six feet, no shorter than five feet seven inches, and of an athletic build.

The listing said we had to be able to wear a 40-plus-pound costume and to be comfortable dancing in proximity with other performers for long periods. Other than that, we had to measure every part of our body from head to toe, elbow to floor, shoulder to clavicle, etc. Those were the only requirements.

They didn’t tell us we’d be wearing a grass costume and kept it super vague.

12-hour rehearsals with a 40-pound grass costume

My part was actually really easy. They just told me where to stand, and they said, “Don’t move. Stand here and be one with the grass.”

The suits were heavy and uncomfortable. Every now and again, you’ll have a blade of plastic grass going places where grass should not go. Fortunately, we were given some protective goggles.

There were definitely times when we were wearing the suits for about six or seven hours because they had to make alterations. There were about eight practices in total, with the last three lasting 12 hours each.

But the production crew did their best to make this suit as wearable as possible; they listened to every complaint and tried to fix it.

And getting to see behind the scenes of the production was a treat.

It was really cool to see Bad Bunny perform just a foot away. But because he was in LA for the Grammys during some of our rehearsals, the crew had a Bad Bunny stand-in they called “Good Rabbit.”

An electrifying atmosphere


Bad Bunny performs onstage during the Apple Music Super Bowl LX Halftime Show at Levi's Stadium on February 08, 2026 in Santa Clara, California.

Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime performance.

Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Roc Nation



One of the other things they asked for in the application was whether you had marching band experience or experience in the entertainment industry. I was in a collegiate a capella group, so I’m not scared of performing in front of big crowds.

But it’s definitely different when you have a stadium full of people vibing, moving, grooving to Bad Buddy’s music.

I spent about $2,600 on flights, hotels, and a rental car for the two weeks. I’m a content creator without a full time job now, so I didn’t have to take any paid time off for this.

The hardest part of the gig was keeping quiet

The hardest part of the whole thing wasn’t the long hours or the heavy costume, but rather keeping quiet about it. They made us sign an NDA to not talk about it or post anything on social media for two weeks.

So when I saw people posting about what his setlist was going to be, it was so hard to have so much knowledge and power and not be able to do anything with it.

I told only a very small handful of people that I was going to San Francisco and would be involved in the half-time show.

I didn’t tell them what I was dressed as. I didn’t tell them where to look for me on the field. All I said was, “You’re going to see me. You just didn’t know that you saw me.”




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