callie ahlgrim headshot 2023

Bad Bunny didn’t need to sing in English at the Super Bowl to make a statement about America

When Bad Bunny took the field at the 2026 Super Bowl for a historic, joyful halftime show, he wore a jersey with his Latino heritage stitched into its very fabric.

It’s an apt metaphor for his performance, which eschewed explicit anti-ICE statements (he covered that at the Grammys, anyway) in favor of celebration with a side of symbolism.

Nods to the Puerto Rican singer’s motherland were peppered throughout the set, which was designed to evoke the US territory’s signature aesthetics, from sugar cane fields to a storefront labeled “La Marqueta” (a slang term for market) and various vendors selling tacos and piraguas (shaved ice). While performing “El Apagón,” a song about the frequent blackouts and infrastructure issues affecting Puerto Ricans, Bad Bunny brought this symbolism to the forefront, waving the Puerto Rican flag.

He also proclaimed in English, “God bless America,” and brandished a football printed with the phrase “Together, We Are America.” He added in Spanish, “We’re still here.” (Puerto Rico is a US territory, and Puerto Ricans are American citizens.)

It was a stark and knowing contrast to the Latinophobia and anti-immigrant messaging hawked by the Trump administration. So much so that President Donald Trump complained online about Bad Bunny’s performance and his choice to sing primarily in Spanish.

“The Super Bowl Halftime Show is absolutely terrible, one of the worst, EVER! It makes no sense,” Trump wrote on Truth Social after Bad Bunny left the stage. “Nobody understands a word this guy is saying.”

For those who understand visual storytelling, however, Bad Bunny’s performance made perfect sense. He didn’t need to say “ICE out” or declare an explicit political opinion. In keeping with the recent tradition of Super Bowl halftime shows, Bad Bunny used iconography to take a stand instead.

Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl performance is part of a new halftime show tradition

Bad Bunny’s performance shares DNA with Beyoncé and Kendrick Lamar’s Super Bowl appearances, both of which used bold imagery to make strong statements.

Beyoncé’s surprise appearance at Coldplay’s 2016 Super Bowl halftime show became famous — and, to some, infamous — for the iconography present in her performance of her then-new single, “Formation.” In the midst of Trump’s first presidential campaign, Beyoncé and her backup dancers wore outfits that channeled the Black Panther Party, an organization formed amid the ’60s Civil Rights Movement that fought for Black liberation.


Beyoncé performs at the 2016 Super Bowl.

Beyoncé performs at the 2016 Super Bowl.

Robert Beck/Sports Illustrated via Getty Images



The song itself isn’t explicitly political. But as a celebration of identity and legacy that features lyrics about Beyoncé’s parents, her daughter, and her features (“I like my negro nose with Jackson 5 nostrils”), Beyoncé performing it — with visual references to the song’s themes in her and her dancers’ costumes, to boot — was innately political.

It’s not that Beyoncé is allergic to making explicit political statements: She famously performed in front of the word “Feminist” at the 2014 VMAs, and sang “Votin’ out 45, don’t get out of line” on her 2022 album “Renaissance,” referring to Trump as the 45th president. But when the NFL hosts musicians for the night, they’ve lately preferred make their statements symbolic rather than overt.

Last year, Kendrick Lamar followed suit during his own Super Bowl halftime show, outfitting himself and his dancers in red, white, and blue. Although Lamar kept the music focused on his own enemies and triumphs, he used audacious visual language to pose broader, poignantly relevant questions: Who’s allowed to claim patriotism? What does it mean to be an American, especially in times of oppression and conflict?

Bad Bunny’s performance raised similar questions, but offered simpler, more optimistic solutions. For the finale, he was surrounded by backup dancers, band members, and other performers holding flags from around the world; when he proclaimed “God bless America,” he listed out all the countries in both North and South America.

Bad Bunny is not a politician, nor can he single-handedly cure the world of hatred and division. Still, for a brief moment, on a small square of American turf, he chose to use the stage to show millions of people what that could look like.




Source link

K-pop-It-Boy-Joshua-Hong-continued-his-US-charm-offensive.jpeg

K-pop It Boy Joshua Hong continued his US charm offensive at the Super Bowl

  • Joshua Hong of Seventeen was spotted at the Super Bowl.
  • Last month, he became the first male K-pop star to walk the Golden Globes red carpet.
  • The LA-born singer is a member of Seventeen, one of the highest-earning K-pop bands in the market.

The Joshua Hong US charm offensive is just getting started.

“It’s my first time at the Super Bowl. So excited to be here,” Hong, a vocalist from the K-pop boy band Seventeen, said in a video released by the NFL. He also wished the players on both teams good luck.

Hong was one of the scores of celebrities, from Travis Scott to Jay-Z, who descended on San Francisco for the championship game between the New England Patriots and the Seattle Seahawks. He had teased fans that he would show up at the Super Bowl hours before game day kicked off in earnest, posting selfies of himself from the car on the way to the stadium.

In another video released on the NFL’s official X account, the Los Angeles-born singer walked onto the field in a preppy outfit, soaking up the game day vibes and snapping some photos.

Hong had been spotted in the front row of Thom Browne’s fashion show in San Francisco two days before the Super Bowl festivities. He’s working with the California-based United Talent Agency to secure acting gigs, continuing the band’s push to expand his career stateside.

His Super Bowl appearance comes weeks after he made K-pop history as the first male idol to walk the Golden Globes red carpet in January. Hong was spotted rubbing shoulders with the stars of the hit show “Heated Rivalry” backstage.

Seventeen is one of K-pop mega-agency Hybe’s biggest moneymakers. The 13-member boy band is in the middle of its world tour and heads to Southeast Asia next. Their label mates, BTS, will return after a prolonged hiatus on March 21 with the album “Arirang.”




Source link

Shuby headshot

Elon Musk said we’d reach Mars in 2026. Now, he says SpaceX is building a city on the moon.

Elon Musk’s SpaceX just overhauled its to-do list.

In an X post on Sunday, the CEO said that the company is shifting its focus from Mars to creating a “self-growing city” on the moon.

“It is only possible to travel to Mars when the planets align every 26 months (six month trip time), whereas we can launch to the Moon every 10 days (2 day trip time),” Musk wrote. “This means we can iterate much faster to complete a Moon city than a Mars city.”

The announcement is a big departure from Musk’s previous comments about reaching the red planet this year.

In 2020, the SpaceX CEO said he was confident that the company would land humans on Mars by 2026.

“If we get lucky, maybe four years,” Musk said at an awards show in 2020. “We want to send an uncrewed vehicle there in two years.”

The space company has historically delayed ambitious projects because of their complexity and regulatory challenges. Last week, the company delayed the Artemis 2 moon mission, the first human moon mission in more than 50 years.

Mars is still part of the plan

In Sunday’s post, Musk added that SpaceX would continue building a Mars city, starting in five to seven years.

“But the overriding priority is securing the future of civilization and the Moon is faster,” he wrote.

Last week, Musk announced that SpaceX would acquire xAI, his AI company behind the chatbot Grok. XAI purchased the social media platform X in March 2025.

The CEO wrote that SpaceX’s xAI acquisition would create “the most ambitious, vertically-integrated innovation engine on (and off) Earth, with AI, rockets, space-based internet, direct-to-mobile device communications and the world’s foremost real-time information and free speech platform.”

In the memo, Musk shared plans to have “self-growing bases” and factories on the moon. He also mentioned having “an entire civilization on Mars.”




Source link

Some-Kalshi-transfers-are-delayed-during-the-Super-Bowl.jpeg

Some Kalshi transfers are delayed during the Super Bowl

  • Kalshi said it experienced delays in fund transfers due to a Super Bowl traffic surge.
  • Kalshi’s cofounder said on X that users’ “money is safe and on the way.”
  • Kalshi and Polymarket are benefiting from a sharp interest in prediction markets.

Kalshi said that some transfers on its prediction markets app are delayed because of the high volume of traffic during the Super Bowl.

“Some deposits are delayed because of the amount of traffic and deposits we’re getting,” Kalshi cofounder Luana Lopes Lara wrote on X on Sunday evening. “Your money is safe and on the way, it will just take longer to land.”

On X, some Kalshi users said that they felt relieved to receive an explanation for why their deposits did not go through. Others demanded a refund, saying they saw no point in placing bets if the money didn’t arrive until halftime.

The company saw a significant spike in platform volume on Sunday. In an X post, Kalshi said it saw over $325 million in volume less than an hour before the championship game started.

Kalshi, founded in 2018, lets users bet on the outcome of events such as elections, sports matches, and economic indicators. For the Super Bowl, people could bet on the outcome of the New England Patriots versus the Seattle Seahawks game, as well as on which commercials would run and which song Bad Bunny would play first during his halftime show.

The startup and its rival, Polymarket, are winners of a big surge in interest in prediction markets. In addition to scheduled events, users can now also bet on questions ranging from the popularity of Labubu dolls to Elon Musk’s net worth.




Source link

Here-are-the-19-best-Super-Bowl-LX-ads.jpeg

Here are the 19 best Super Bowl LX ads

  • The Seattle Seahawks and New England Patriots will compete in Super Bowl LX on Sunday.
  • Many advertisers are using comedy and celebrities to navigate the tense political climate.
  • Here is a roundup of the best ads we’ve seen, so far.

Although the Seattle Seahawks and New England Patriots will face off in Super Bowl LX, they’re not the only ones competing on Sunday.

Super Bowl advertisers are also going head-to-head during the annual championship to vie for viewers’ attention and, ultimately, their wallets.

“CMOs are under so much pressure,” Kerry Benson, SVP of Kantar, told Business Insider. “They have to prove ROI in these ads.”

The tense political climate has spurred many advertisers to play it safe, relying on comedy and celebrities. Others, though, took big swings. Hims & Hers highlighted healthcare inequality in an ad called “Rich People Live Longer,” while William Shatner — aka “Will Shat” — appears in a cheeky Kellogg’s Raisin Bran ad heralding fiber.

Here is a roundup of the best Super Bowl LX ads, so far.

Raisin Bran

Kellogg’s hired actor William Shatner (“Will Shat”) for a tongue-in-cheek Raisin Bran advertisement celebrating fiber.

Bud Light

In Bud Light’s ad, singer Post Malone, former NFL player Peyton Manning, and comedian Shane Gillis are among a group of wedding guests who chase a beer keg down a steep hill.

Squarespace

Actor Emma Stone appeared distraught throughout Squarespace’s noir Super Bowl ad because the domain name she wanted was unavailable.

Dove

Dove celebrated young girls in sports with a catchy, music-driven ad that heralded body positivity.

Pringles

Pop star Sabrina Carpenter went on the hunt for love in Pringle’s Super Bowl ad, which showed her adventures with a boyfriend — dubbed “Pringleleo” — made out of chips.

Instacart

Actor Ben Stiller and singer Benson Boone donned flashy suits in an ’80s-inspired performance for Instacart’s Super Bowl ad. The pair sang and flipped across the stage, to varying degrees of success.

Fanatics Sportsbook

Kendall Jenner joked about the “Kardashian Curse” and betting against her former basketball player boyfriends in an ad for Fanatics Sportsbook.

Pepsi

Pepsi used the Super Bowl as an opportunity to mock its competitor, Coca-Cola, a brand known for its polar bear mascots. In the ad, one of Coca-Cola’s polar bears spirals after participating in a blind taste test and chooses Pepsi as the winner.

Taika Waititi, who directed the ad, plays the polar bear’s therapist.

He Gets Us

The Christian ad campaign “He Gets Us” encouraged viewers to reflect on the pressure to want more, whether that be material things, social media likes, money, or beauty treatments.

“The one that dies with the most toys, wins!” the ad says

Novartis

Novartis, a Swiss pharmaceutical company, tapped several NFL tight ends — including former Patriots player Rob Gronkowski — to promote prostate cancer screenings.

Xfinity

Xfinity leaned into audience nostalgia with an ad inspired by “Jurassic Park,” in which computer systems have crashed and strong WiFi is needed to save the day.

Laura Dern, Sam Neill, and Jeff Goldblum all reprised their roles for the ad.

Bosch

Guy Fieri’s larger-than-life personality and spiked bleached hair have made him a hit with audiences for over two decades, but he toned down his style in Bosch’s new Super Bowl ad.

“I’m just a guy,” Fieri says.

Redfin x Rocket Mortgage

Redfin and Rocket Mortgage focused on human connection and community-building rather than celebrities in their ad.

TurboTax

Actor Adrien Brody played a TurboTax expert in the company’s ad, but, given his background in dramatic roles, struggled to find the right tone.

Uber Eats

Matthew McConaughey overstepped boundaries while trying to convince Bradley Cooper that the Super Bowl is just a ploy to sell food.

Oakley Meta

A Rolodex of athletes, and influencer iShowSpeed, showed off Oakley Meta Performance AI glasses while chasing thrills.

Amazon Alexa

Actor Chris Hemsworth is panicked when he discovers his wife, Elsa Pataky, using Alexa+ over fears the AI could one day try to kill them.

During the ad, Hemsworth shows all the absurd ways that could happen.

Claude

Anthropic used its Super Bowl ad to promote Claude, its AI assistant and large language model. However, the company didn’t miss the opportunity to mock OpenAI and its new ChatGPT ad feature.

Hims & Hers

Hims & Hers’ Super Bowl ad spotlighted healthcare inequality in America. The ad included a character that resembled Amazon billionaire Jeff Bezos.




Source link

My-kids-are-growing-up-near-their-cousins-Its-priceless.jpeg

My kids are growing up near their cousins. It’s priceless.

Occasionally, when it comes up in conversation that I have five children, I’m met with surprise and sometimes, a little bit of shock.

And while I understand that five may seem like a lot of kids in some regards, in my neck of the woods, it’s really not that uncommon. In fact, my sister-in-law has seven children, so in comparison, my brood is the small one.


chaunie brusie family

The author has five kids.

Courtesy Chaunie Brusie



All in all, with kids ranging in age from a few months to 17, my kids are a part of a close-knit cousin clan of 15 and counting.

Having a lot of cousins nearby can be costly for birthdays and the holidays, but for everyday life, the fact that my kids have those relationships truly feels priceless.

Cousin sleepovers are the ultimate form of fun in my family

I love the simple happiness my kids get from spending time with their cousins, and it feels like such a gift. In a world where it feels like everyone is trying to sell me something or make me pay for “fun” experiences for my kids, knowing that what they love most in the world is just being at home with their cousins feels almost too good to be true sometimes. Honestly, I wish I could recapture that level of pure joy in my own adult life again.

I will be honest with you: having 10 kids in my house at once does mean I have to do a lot of post-play cleanup (and right now, we’re currently cycling through a stomach bug passed along over our cousin sleepover), but it’s always worth it for how much fun the kids have.

Playdates are an instant party

Aside from the sleepovers our kids can usually talk us into, having a sister-in-law with seven kids is also very convenient for me as a mom. All it takes is her family to come over for birthdays and special occasions, and we have an instant, built-in party.

It really works out for me, especially because each of my kids has an instant playmate in their cousin who is their age.

For instance, my son is the only boy in our family, but because he has two male cousins near his age, he gets the fun boy time he misses out on at home. And my youngest daughter has a large five-year gap with her own siblings, so she gets to experience the fun of playmates her age, too.

My oldest girls don’t have cousins their ages, so they have missed out on some level of the cousin fun, but even as teenagers, they love all their cousins, and they have a special relationship with all the littles that is beautiful in its own way. It’s so fun watching the younger girls look up to them, and my girls are always so gracious, letting the littles do their makeup and hair and playing with them when they are together.

I hope they’re always close

Right now, my kids are incredibly lucky with the time they get with their families. They see both sides of their families regularly, with weekly breakfasts, time at church, all holidays and special occasions, sports events, and random visits, just for fun. My husband and I both live within 30 minutes of almost all of our own siblings and parents, so to my kids, close-knit families are the norm.

While my kids are incredibly close with their cousins right now, I know those relationships might change as they get older. People can grow apart, family members will most likely move away, and things can happen.

But no matter what their relationships look like in the future, I do believe that the close-knit relationships and the memories they are creating together will shape them. Belonging somewhere matters, both as a child and as an adult, and I hope that the feeling of being loved as part of a big family sits somewhere inside them as they grow.




Source link

I-found-a-Bottega-Veneta-bag-at-the-thrift-store.jpeg

I found a Bottega Veneta bag at the thrift store. I paid $8, and it’s worth $3,000.

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Kristen Boelen, the founder of Lunch Break Vintage. It has been edited for length and clarity.

I have been thrifting since the moment I could drive. Back then, I was into higher-end things that were out of my budget, and I’d go thrift shopping to find similar items that I could afford. That habit carried on through college and beyond, including when I was most recently working as an art director for a wine and spirits company. While working there, I’d thrift on my lunch breaks.

I’d find stuff for myself, as well as one-of-a-kind items that didn’t fit. I wanted someone to take that stuff. So I began selling items on Whatnot.

I’d thrift on my lunch break from work, and then on the weekends I’d go live and sell my pieces. My business grew from there, and I named it Lunch Break Vintage, which I began full time in February 2025.

I scored a luxury designer bag during a recent shopping trip

In December 2025, I was at a thrift store in the San Francisco Bay Area. It was a normal Wednesday, which is the day this particular thrift store opens for the week, and when I always try to go. It was very empty that day.


Woman posing for photo on mirror

Kristen Boelen thrifts three times a week every week.

Courtesy of Kristen Boelen



Two woven leather bags caught my eye. You see woven leather bags all the time. There are so many Bottega Veneta dupes. I didn’t really think much about it, just that one of them looked exceptionally nice.

I first noticed the hardware, then the leather slouching and hanging. I could tell it was soft leather. When I picked it up, it was heavy — designer leather bags have a weight to them because of the hardware. I opened it up and saw the logo. You can see in the video that I posted that’s the moment my jaw drops. The leather inside was really soft and buttery too; that’s always a sign a bag is legitimate.

I know they sort through and send a lot of the higher-end pieces to an online audience. It seemed unrealistic that someone wouldn’t have set it aside. I thought, if they had put it out there, it must not be real.

I used technology to help confirm my suspicions

I took a photo of it and put it into Google Lens, and found on Vestaire Collective there was the exact same bag and color. That clued me into the style name and that it had been retired. There’s a video of me going, “Oh my God, oh my God, oh my God,” once I figured out where the serial tag was. I got out of there as quickly as possible, paying $8 for the bag.


Bottega Veneta purse

Kristen Boelen found a $3,000 purse for $8.

Courtesy of Kristen Boelen



I later had it authenticated through an app I use called Authentic Detective. It will give you a certificate of authenticity. Online research says the bag is valued at around $3,000.

I’m keeping the bag for myself. It’s something that will be passed down for generations. I had so many comments on the video saying that the bag was ugly, but I love it.

Scoring finds at the thrift store takes a little skill — and luck

I thrift all the time because I now do this for a living, but I think consistency is key. I thrift at least three times a week, every week. It’s also important not to just pick up what is trending. A good secondhand item has to check all the boxes for me, and I really care about quality, always looking for natural fibers. I focus on what makes people feel elevated and the kinds of secondhand pieces they can keep in their closets forever.

Don’t believe that middle-of-nowhere places are garbage. Some of my best, coolest, most unique pieces have come from middle-of-nowhere stores.




Source link

The-Safer-Bowl-With-tensions-running-high-Super-Bowl-advertisers.jpeg

The Safer Bowl: With tensions running high, Super Bowl advertisers avoid politics and play for laughs

In a charged political climate where even small missteps can spark a brand backlash, many of this year’s Super Bowl advertisers are sticking with the safest bet in the playbook: comedy and celebrities.

Much like last year’s Super Bowl, the vast majority of the big game ads released so far are playing it safe. Advertisers hope that A-list stars will be a shortcut to attention in the crowded field of commercials, and that humor will leave audiences feeling uplifted and warm toward their brand.

“In general, advertisers want to play it safe,” said Peter Daboll, head of North America at the creative testing platform DAIVID. “There’s a high anxiety level here in the US, and people are probably very afraid of triggering anything.”

Viewers aren’t in the mood to be preached to, he added, and even heartwarming ads that might have performed well in Super Bowls past could come across as too “syrupy” and fall flat.

Of the Super Bowl LX trailers and teasers the TV measurement platform iSpot has tested with its consumer panel so far, 63% triggered “funny” reactions from viewers. The highest “funny” score right now goes to Bud Light for its “Keg” ad, which features Shane Gillis, Post Malone, and Peyton Manning flailing down a hill in an attempt to catch up with a runaway beer keg.

Other ads hoping to raise a chuckle:

  • Andy Samberg stars as “Meal Diamond” for Hellmann’s, performing a “Sweet Caroline” parody in a deli to customers, including Elle Fanning.
  • Fanatics Sportsbook tapped a self-deprecating Kendall Jenner to mock the “Kardashian Curse,” the internet conspiracy that dating members of the family ruins an athlete’s game.
  • Instacart’s vintage-style ad features actor Ben Stiller and singer Benson Boone in a high-energy— and ultimately calamitous — musical performance about choosing the perfect banana.
  • Novartis is making itself the butt of Super Bowl joke ads, with NFL players telling viewers to “relax your tight end” and get a blood test for prostate cancer.
  • Comcast’s Xfinity reunites some of the original “Jurassic Park” cast to suggest that many of the famous dinosaur park’s problems could have been avoided with better WiFi.
  • Anthropic is taking a swipe at OpenAI over its decision to bring ads to ChatGPT.
  • Even the heartwarming story of a Budweiser Clydesdale horse helping a bald eagle learn how to fly ends with a joke about getting misty-eyed.

The cast of celebrities in the commercial breaks will range from Sabrina Carpenter for Pringles to Emma Stone for Squarespace and Guy Fieri for Bosch.

Mark Gross, cofounder of the ad agency Highdive, which has produced several Super Bowl campaigns over the years, said the Hollywood landscape had changed and that celebrities are now more open to appearing in commercials than in previous years.

“It’s the job of us at ad agencies and marketers to tell great, original stories that stand out without just hiring the celebrity first and expecting that to do the work for you,” he added.

Highdive worked on a Super Bowl commercial for Lay’s this year.

Money talks

There’s a lot at stake.

The Super Bowl remains one of the last mass-reach media advertising destinations. Last year’s Super Bowl averaged a record-high US audience of 127.7 million viewers, per Nielsen, the TV ratings company.

The average price for 30 seconds of airtime during Super Bowl LX was $8 million, with some spots selling for more than $10 million, according to this year’s big game broadcaster, NBCUniversal. Then there are the millions of dollars spent on talent fees, production, and media buys to amplify the ad after the game ends.

“CMOs are under so much pressure,” said Kerry Benson, SVP of creative strategy at the data and analytics company Kantar.

“They have to prove ROI in these ads,” she said, referring to return on investment.

The rewards can be handsome if brands play their Super Bowl strategies right.

In 2024, Kantar found that Super Bowl ads delivered an average return on investment of $8.60 for every $1 spent, making them 20 times more effective than regular TV ads. Benson said this reflects the size of the audience during the game and all the supporting activity and discussion around a Super Bowl campaign.

A different approach

Not every brand is adopting the comedy-and-celebrity playbook.

Rocket and Redfin’s ad amplifies the emotion with a stirring Lady Gaga cover of Mr. Rogers’ “Won’t You Be My Neighbor?” The spot leans into a moment of heightened division in many US communities, highlighting the importance of small acts of kindness and human connection.

Elsewhere, Hims & Hers’ “Rich People Live Longer” spot strikes a provocative tone about US healthcare inequality, featuring a couple of characters that resemble Jeff Bezos and the biohacker Bryan Johnson.

“When you are challenging a system that has been broken for generations, the work cannot feel familiar or safe,” said Hims & Hers chief design officer, Dan Kenger. “The creative has to feel disruptive because that’s what is needed to change the status quo of healthcare.”

Anselmo Ramos, creative chairman at the advertising agency GUT, is nostalgic for ads that didn’t lean on celebrity as a shortcut to success — Apple’s “1984,” Budweiser’s frogs, the Geico caveman, and the E-Trade baby. He’s also hoping to see more bold, anthemic spots in the sea of comedic commercials.

“I’m missing executions with a brand purpose, with a clear point of view,” Ramos said. “We need them more than ever.”

This story has been updated with additional information.




Source link

My-husband-and-I-started-doing-adult-paint-by-numbers-to-get.jpeg

My husband and I started doing adult paint-by-numbers to get off our phones. The hobby’s benefited us more than we expected.

I’m stuck in a doomscrolling loop again.

My algorithm drags me down the rabbit hole of videos people posted to social media to declare 2026 as the year they … get off social media.

I see more and more videos with mass declarations to “go analog” and focus on screen-free activites. The irony is thick, but with the world on fire around me the sentiment has appeal.

I’m not naive enough to think this movement is new or will last in any meaningful way, but participating seems like a nice way to take a breath and find some good in the rubble.

As I watch another video and then one more, an idea starts to take root. What if I start a new hobby to get off my phone, even if just for a little while each day?

And what if my husband joins me?

Although it felt out of our comfort zone, we bought paint-by-number kits


Table with paints, papers with partially painted artwork

I started doing paint-by-number canvases with my husband.

Tawnya Gibson



When I share this idea with my husband, he brings up the idea of buying paint-by-number kits that are designed for adults.

It’s far out of our comfort zone. But before either of us have a chance to talk ourselves out of this, we pop into an art store.

We both decide to buy larger canvases mostly to have a longer-term project, not because we are certain we have the right abilities. About $30 later, we’re still wondering what we are thinking.

When we get home, we bring down a folding table from our office. It’s just the right height to share as we sit on our loveseat, water, brushes, and paper towels between us.

Keeping our paints separated, we turn on reruns of “New Girl,” grab our reading glasses and glob the colors on our canvases — him a streetscape of Brooklyn, me a skyscape of London — both quietly hoping they’ll be nice enough to hang on our bedroom wall when we’re done.

These nights off our phone become our lifeline to feeling lighter, like when we were first married


Man and woman wearing hats, smiling

It’s nice that a simple hobby has helped us talk and laugh more.

Tawnya Gibson



Several things soon become clear. First, we may have overestimated our abilities and how difficult an adult paint-by-number could be.

Next, we are taking vastly different approaches to the task. I am starting with the larger areas, swirling my brush and not coming close to the canvas edge until the very last minute, desperate to not make a mistake.

My husband goes for the smaller details in the darkest color. He has read all the instructions. I’ve tossed mine straight into the recycle bin.

Our personalities are similar until they aren’t. I have a need to catastrophize before I build a plan. My husband is logical with a more black-and-white way of thinking. I feel these differences highlighted as we paint.

Over the span of two or three episodes of “New Girl,” I’ve delayed starting, given up, and restarted a dozen times. My sky looks terrible, punctuating my lack of artistic talents.

I declare total disaster in between every laugh, fret about running out of pink sky No. 12, and stop long before the last episode of the night comes to an end.

Still, we continue painting night after night.

The progress is slow and neither of us are sure when we’ll be done. But something happens on the nights we choose painting over retreating with phones in hands: Our home is kinder. We talk. We laugh.

The stress of getting the strokes within the lines is the lighter type of stress we used to have when our marriage was young.

On our way to bed, we stand up. Assess. Comment on our progress and sleep a little easier.

We’re remembering what it’s like to do something with no goal or agenda. We’re enjoying our time together less online.

Maybe when we’re all done, I’ll post a picture in a hazy filter and show off my pink-skyed London, mistakes on full display — a little analog badge to celebrating remembering how to live.




Source link

Take-a-look-inside-an-NFL-stadium-in-the-chaotic.jpeg

Take a look inside an NFL stadium in the chaotic hours leading up to game day

  • A few times each year, NFL stadiums like Mercedes-Benz Stadium have events on consecutive nights.
  • Crews have to strip and repaint the field, clean up confetti, and make food for thousands of people.
  • Take a look at how crews prepare Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta for game day in just 18 hours.

A few times each year, NFL stadiums pull off a logistical feat that most fans never see.

When venues like Atlanta’s Mercedes-Benz Stadium, home of the Falcons, host major events on consecutive nights, crews race against the clock to transform the space in less than a day — repainting the field, clearing confetti, cleaning the stands, and prepping food for tens of thousands of people.

Here’s a behind-the-scenes look at how Mercedes-Benz Stadium gets ready for kickoff in just 18 hours.

As soon as the final whistle blows, the clock starts ticking to reset Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta for its next event.

Staff have to move stages and prepare the field for the next game.

Jeffrey Moustache/Joseph Funk/Business Insider

To prepare the field for an NFL game in less than 18 hours, crews have to strip and repaint the field, clean 2 million square feet of stadium space, and fire up thousands of meals in crowded kitchens, all in a matter of hours.

Cleanup starts with collecting all of the confetti dropped onto the field during the last game.


mercedes-benz stadium

Crews cleaned up millions of pieces of confetti off the field.

Jeffrey Moustache/Joseph Funk/Business Insider

The first step in clearing the field and prepping for it to be painted with the Falcons’ logo is collecting roughly 5 million pieces of confetti launched from confetti cannons.

Beyond raking, crews use vehicles fitted with large nets to collect every piece of confetti.


mercedes-benz stadium

A truck with a net used to collect confetti.

Jeffrey Moustache/Joseph Funk/Business Insider

Cleanup crews use rakes, leaf blowers, and utility vehicles fitted with large nets to collect every last piece — even the smallest piece of debris can interfere with repainting the turf.

Groundskeepers deploy a P-Rex machine to scrub paint from the field’s logos and end zones.


mercedes-benz stadium behind the scenes

A P-Rex machine helped scrub the field of logos from the previous game.

Jeffrey Moustache/Joseph Funk/Business Insider

The paint removal process takes around one to two hours to complete.

To speed things up, P-Rex machines spray a cleaning solution onto painted logos and use spinning brushes and a vacuum to remove the paint.

The process is surprisingly precise. Too many chemicals can soak the turf, and too much pressure can permanently damage the field.

While the field is being scrubbed, teams of clean-up workers fan out across the stadium’s 2 million square feet.


mercedes-benz stadium

Crews fanned out across the stadium to clean up waste.

Jeffrey Moustache/Joseph Funk/Business Insider

Every area has to be cleared of waste, including the private suites, locker rooms, kitchens, and stadium bowl seating.

What fans leave behind adds up fast.


mercedes-benz stadium

Trash left behind in the seating bowl.

Jeffrey Moustache/Joseph Funk/Business Insider

In the seating bowl, workers hand-pick everything from aluminum cans and plastic bottles to food containers and pom-poms, with each person assigned a specific type of waste to speed up sorting.

By the end of the cleanup process, crews will have collected hundreds of thousands of pounds of trash.

Pressure-washing crews move in right behind them to clear away spilled drinks, dirt, and other residue.


mercedes-benz stadium

Pressure washers were used to clean the seating bowl after waste was collected.

Jeffrey Moustache/Joseph Funk/Business Insider

After trash is collected from the stands, power-washing crews race behind the waste-collecting crews, scrubbing away spills and sticky residue before the next crowd arrives.

Trash flows nonstop into the stadium’s Resource Recovery Room, where workers sort bags of trash by hand.


mercedes-benz stadium

The Resource Recovery Room in Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

Jeffrey Moustache/Joseph Funk/Business Insider

Even though waste is pre-sorted, each bag still has to be inspected.

The goal: recycle or compost 96% of all waste generated during the event.

Then, repainting begins, with crews tackling the center logo and the end zones first.


mercedes-benz stadium

Workers painted the center logo and the end zones first.

Jeffrey Moustache/Joseph Funk/Business Insider

Once paint is removed from the field, the turf must completely dry before repainting can begin.

Grounds crews use this small window of time to prep stencils and get ready to tackle the “hot areas” of the field — the center logo and the end zones — which are the most time-consuming.

Crews use a large stencil to speed up the painting process.


mercedes-benz stadium

A large stencil was used to paint the Falcons logo.

Jeffrey Moustache/Joseph Funk/Business Insider

The logo is hand-painted using spraying machines that ensure accuracy.

Crews have to pay special attention to the sidelines and end zones to ensure everything is up to code before kickoff.

By midnight, all painting is finally finished.

Mercedes-Benz Stadium’s food operation is more complex than just hamburgers and chicken tenders.


mercedes-benz stadium

Kitchen staff must handle food production for concessions, suites, and more.

Jeffrey Moustache/Joseph Funk/Business Insider

About 100 cooks prepare different menus for concessions, suites, catering, and eight all-inclusive clubs — some serving up to 1,000 people.

At this game, the stadium’s food team sold more than 25,000 hot dogs, 10,000 slices of pizza, and over 5,000 pounds of wings.

Kitchen staff have just a few hours of rest after a big game before they’re back preparing food for the next night.


people preparing food at mercedes-benz stadium

Cooks had just a few hours of rest before prepping for the next night.

Jeffrey Moustache/Joseph Funk/Business Insider

The menu changes for every event, and food is largely prepared in a central kitchen and distributed to multiple secondary kitchens throughout the stadium.

Kitchen staff rely on production boards to keep everything organized.


mercedes-benz stadium

Production boards with the team and menus for the following event.

Jeffrey Moustache/Joseph Funk/Business Insider

Executive chef Matt Cooper told Business Insider that having detailed boards allows him to keep track of his massive team and ensure everything runs smoothly.

“This is the magic behind everything we do,” he said. “We have all the chefs, all the supervisors, junior sous chefs, all the cooks, and we’re able to kind of move the pieces around. It’s a big kitchen, a lot of space, and I love being able to kind of visualize and see the whole team.”

By 10 a.m., concessions are up and running. Not long after, barbecue platters are delivered to the private suites.


mercedes-benz stadium

Workers delivered barbecue platters to private suites before the gates open to fans at 11 a.m.

Jeffrey Moustache/Joseph Funk/Business Insider

At the same time, club spaces are stocked with fruit and sandwich trays, employees place fan giveaway items on every seat inside the stadium, and excitement builds for kickoff.

Eighteen hours after the last crowd left, the stadium is once again full of screaming fans.


mercedes-benz stadium

The entire process of resetting the stadium took 18 hours to complete.

Jeffrey Moustache/Joseph Funk/Business Insider

Lights flash, cameras roll, fans cheer, and players take the field, with most of the stadium’s attendees oblivious to the overnight operation that made it all happen.

When the final whistle blows, it’s mere hours before employees at Mercedes-Benz Stadium start planning for the next event.


Source link