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The best photos and details you missed from the 2026 Oscars

  • The 2026 Oscars took place at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles on Sunday.
  • The live show documented much of the fun, but it didn’t capture everything from the awards ceremony.
  • There were A-list meetups and fashion choices that celebrated the nominated films.

The 2026 Oscars were an awards show for the books.

From a tie in the live action short category to an appearance from Anna Wintour, the Academy Awards, held at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles on Sunday, didn’t disappoint.

The live show on ABC captured much of the night’s fun, but some exciting moments may not have made it to TV. There were fashion choices that nodded to the nominated films, hugs between celebrity attendees, and even a sibling meetup.

Here are the best moments you missed from the 2026 Oscars.

Michael B. Jordan looked giddy as his Oscar was engraved.

Michael B. Jordan at the Oscars in March 2026. 

John Shearer/98th Oscars/Getty Images The Academy via Getty Images

After Jordan won the Oscar for best actor for his performance in “Sinners,” he took his trophy to have his name engraved.

He was all smiles as the award was personalized, even pumping his fist for a photo.

The “Sinners” star also shared a hug with Leonardo DiCaprio after his big win.


Leonardo DiCaprio and Michael B. Jordan at the Oscars in March 2026.

Leonardo DiCaprio and Michael B. Jordan at the Oscars in March 2026. 

Kevin Winter/Getty Images

DiCaprio was also nominated for best actor at the 2026 Oscars for his performance in “One Battle After Another.” Still, he didn’t seem at all disappointed that Jordan won the award instead.

DiCaprio hugged Jordan after he gave his acceptance speech.

Jack O’Connell brought a vampire flair to the red carpet with fake teeth.


Jack O'Connell at the Oscars in March 2026.

Jack O’Connell at the Oscars in March 2026. 

Gilbert Flores/Penske Media via Getty Images

O’Connell played the vampire Remmick in “Sinners,” and he paid homage to the character at the Oscars by wearing prosthetic fangs with his red-carpet attire.

It was an eerie and festive touch for the big night.

“Sinners” director Ryan Coogler also nodded to the movie with his style, though in a subtler way.


Zinzi Evans and Ryan Coogler at the Oscars in March 2026.

Zinzi Evans and Ryan Coogler at the Oscars in March 2026. 

Roger Kisby/The Academy via Getty Images

At first glance, you might miss the guitar and treble clef braided into the side and top of “Sinners” director Ryan Coogler’s hair for the Oscars.

Blues music plays a big role in “Sinners,” so the guitar was a perfect way for Coogler to celebrate the film with his style. Tyzanna B. braided Coogler’s hair for the occasion.

Jessie Buckley took inspiration from Grace Kelly for her Oscars dress.


A side-by-side of Grace Kelly at the Oscars in 1956 and Jessie Buckley at the Oscars in 2026.

Jessie Buckley’s gown was inspired by a dress Grace Kelly wore. 

Bettmann/Contributor/John Shearer/WireImage/Getty Images

Buckley, who won the best actress Oscar for “Hamnet” on Sunday, wore a custom Chanel gown to the event.

The pink-and-red dress took inspiration from the Edith Head gown Grace Kelly wore to the Oscars in 1956. The off-the-shoulder bodice created a similar silhouette to the wrap Kelly wore with her gown.

The Oscar winner was also photographed sharing a hug with her “Hamnet” costar.


Jacobi Jupe and Jessie Buckley at the Oscars in March 2026.

Jacobi Jupe and Jessie Buckley at the Oscars in March 2026. 

Roger Kisby/The Academy via Getty Images

Jupe played the titular role and Buckley’s son in the film.

The pair squeezed each other tightly amid the fanfare of the Oscars.

Another film duo, Teyana Taylor and Chase Infiniti, posed for a photo during the ceremony.


Teyana Taylor and Chase Infiniti at the Oscars in March 2026.

Teyana Taylor and Chase Infiniti at the Oscars in March 2026. 

Roger Kisby/The Academy via Getty Images

Taylor, who was nominated for best supporting actress, plays Infiniti’s mother in “One Battle After Another,” though they never appear on screen together.

Infiniti sat behind Taylor during the Oscars, and she leaned forward to press her cheek to Taylor’s for a photo.

Emma Stone and her husband, Dave McCary, were caught breaking into their snack boxes.


Emma Stone and Dave McCary at the Oscars in March 2026.

Emma Stone and Dave McCary at the Oscars in March 2026. 

Roger Kisby/The Academy via Getty Images

Nominated for best actress for “Bugonia,” Stone brought McCary as her date to the Oscars.

Mid-show, they whipped out snack boxes that seemed to be provided at the event, each holding a bag of what appeared to be SkinnyPop popcorn.

Jacob Elordi stopped by the front row to greet Nicole Kidman.


Jacob Elordi at the Oscars in March 2026.

Jacob Elordi at the Oscars in March 2026. 

Kevin Winter/Getty Images

Elordi leaned over the front row to get to Kidman, who sat in the second row, kissing her hand as Demi Moore smiled at them.

Elordi was nominated for best supporting actor for “Frankenstein” at the 2026 Oscars.

Pedro Pascal also looked thrilled to see Kidman.


Pedro Pascal at the Oscars in March 2026.

Pedro Pascal at the Oscars in March 2026. 

Michael Buckner/Penske Media via Getty Images

Pascal grinned at Kidman when they ran into each other at the Oscars.

Kidman also seemed happy to see Pascal, jumping for joy at the sight of him.

Timothée Chalamet got a visit from his sister during the show.


Pauline Chalamet and Timothée Chalamet at the Oscars in March 2026.

Pauline Chalamet and Timothée Chalamet at the Oscars in March 2026. 

John Shearer/98th Oscars/Getty Images The Academy via Getty Images

Although Chalamet brought his girlfriend, Kylie Jenner, as his date to the Oscars, she wasn’t the only one of his loved ones in attendance. His sister, Pauline Chalamet, was also there.

The “Sex Lives of College Girls” star and “Marty Supreme” best actor nominee posed for a photo together near the stage.

Kylie Jenner looked thrilled to be sitting near Elle Fanning at the Oscars.


Kylie Jenner and Timothée Chalamet greet Elle Fanning at the Oscars in March 2026.

Kylie Jenner and Timothée Chalamet at the Oscars in March 2026. 

Patrick T. Fallon / AFP via Getty Images

As Jenner and Chalamet found their seats in the front row of the Oscars, they spotted Elle Fanning sitting just one row behind them. Fanning and Jenner were seated together at multiple awards shows in 2025, after Fanning and Chalamet starred in “A Complete Unknown.”

At the 2026 Oscars, Fanning clapped her hands together when she saw them, while Jenner seemed to cheer at her friend.

Jenner referenced herself with her keyhole Oscars dress.


Timothée Chalamet and Kylie Jenner at the Oscars in March 2026.

Timothée Chalamet and Kylie Jenner at the Oscars in March 2026. 

John Shearer/98th Oscars/Getty Images The Academy via Getty Images

Jenner accompanied Chalamet to the Oscars in a sparkly gown from Schiaparelli. The dress had a low, scooped neckline and a keyhole cutout on the bodice.

The dress might look familiar to Jenner’s fans, as it’s a red version of a Schiaparelli dress she wore to a 2023 fashion show.

In a Vogue “Life in Looks” video posted in December 2025, Jenner called the silver version her “favorite look of all time” and said she thought about rewearing it.

“Any time I’m trying to figure out what to wear to an event, I’m like, ‘Should I just wear the keyhole dress again? I think I need another moment in this dress, or maybe another color,'” she said in the video.

Schiaparelli’s creative director, Daniel Roseberry, posted the clip of Jenner talking about the dress to his Instagram story on Sunday, seemingly confirming that the red version was a direct result of Jenner’s request for another keyhole gown.

Zendaya and Robert Pattinson didn’t walk the red carpet, but they posed for a photo together backstage before presenting an award.


Robert Pattinson and Zendaya backstage at the Oscars in March 2026.

Robert Pattinson and Zendaya backstage at the Oscars in March 2026. 

Richard Harbaugh / The Academy via Getty Images

Ahead of their April film “The Drama,” Zendaya and Robert Pattinson presented the Oscar for best director together.

Neither actor walked the red carpet at the 2026 Academy Awards, but they did pose for a photo together backstage.

Pattinson wore a black tuxedo, while Zendaya took the stage in a chocolate brown, one-shoulder gown from Louis Vuitton with daring side cutouts.




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Pentagon official details the ‘holy cow’ moments that sparked rift with Anthropic

The Pentagon’s R&D chief said the Department of Defense was “scared” about Anthropic shutting off access to its AI during a critical moment.

During an appearance on the “All-In Podcast” posted on Friday, Undersecretary of Defense for Research and Engineering Emil Michael detailed two pivotal moments that culminated in the Pentagon formally designating Anthropic as a supply chain risk, effectively blacklisting one of the nation’s largest AI companies.

One of those instances, Michael said, was when Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei suggested that the impasse over how the Pentagon could deploy the AI startup’s models could be bridged with a phone call, even if it came during “a decisive moment.”

“I was giving these scenarios, these Golden Dome scenarios, and so on,” Michael said on “All-In Podcast,” describing President Donald Trump’s signature missile defense initiative.

“And he’s like, ‘Just call me if you need another exception.’ And I’m like, “But what if the balloon’s going up at that moment and it’s like a decisive action we have to take? I’m not going to call you to do something. It’s not rational.”

It’s not entirely clear what Anthropic would object to in the hypothetical Michael said he posed, though the implication is that some Golden Dome systems could have autonomous modes that fire weapons.

In the current US missile defense system, AI’s role is to provide rapid situational awareness and recommendations for human operators. AI could rapidly assess whether a detected launch poses a threat and recommend weapons to destroy it. Decisions on whether to listen to the recommendations are then made by air defense commanders.

Elsewhere in the interview, Michael said that part of the impasse with Anthropic is that he “can’t predict for the next 20 years what all the things we might use AI for.”

Michael, who was previously a top executive at Uber, said the department’s concerns about Anthropic began to escalate after the US conducted a targeted raid on Venezuela to capture Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. The assault raised major questions about sovereignty, and congressional democrats questioned the decision not to seek approval for the deployment of US forces.

In the wake of the raid, Michael said that an unnamed Anthropic executive called a Palantir executive to ask whether Anthropic’s AI models had been used to carry it out. The Pentagon accesses Anthropic’s AI models through a government cloud that is operated by Amazon Web Services and then run by Palantir, Michael said. (On February 27, President Donald Trump ordered federal agencies to stop using Anthropic’s AI, though that directive came with a six-month phase-out period.)

Michael said Palantir officials were so alarmed by Anthropic’s questions that they alerted him.

“I’m like, ‘Holy shit, what if this software went down, some guardrail kicked up, some refusal happened for the next fight like this one, and we left our people at risk,” Michael said, alluding to the US’s current war against Iran.

As talks grew heated, Michael said he felt like Anthropic turned the discussion “into a PR game” by publicly raising concerns about how the terms the Pentagon sought would not adequately account for potential misuse. Amodei has confirmed that Anthropic was particularly worried about the risks posed by fully autonomous weapons and how powerful AI models could be abused to spy on American citizens.

During the heated back-and-forth, Michael publicly called Amodei a “liar” with “a God-complex.”

On Thursday, the Pentagon said it formally notified Anthropic that it was declaring the company and its products to be a supply chain risk, the first time in history that label had been applied to a US company.

Amodei responded that his AI startup had “productive conversations” with the Pentagon in recent days, but Michael later said that no discussions were ongoing.

Anthropic has suggested it will challenge the designation in court, especially since Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has said it prevents any defense contractor from doing business with Anthropic.

Asked about why the Pentagon went so far, Michael said the designation was not “punitive.”

“If their model has this policy bias, let’s call it, based on their constitution, their culture, their people, and so on,” he said. “I don’t want Lockheed Martin using their model to design weapons for me.”

Earlier this week, a Lockheed spokesperson said it would follow Trump and the Pentagon’s direction on whether it would continue to use Anthropic’s products. Michael also called out Boeing, describing how the airplane manufacturer could use Anthropic’s AI for non-defense tasks.

“So, Boeing wants to use Anthropic to build commercial jets — have at it,” he said. “Boeing wants to use it to build fighter jets. I can’t have that because I don’t trust what the outputs may be, because they’re so wedded to their own policy preferences.”

While Michael was critical of Anthropic, he praised xAI and Elon Musk for agreeing to the department’s terms, allowing it to deploy AI “for all lawful uses.”

Michael also praised OpenAI and its CEO, Sam Altman, for working with the Pentagon to quickly stand up another AI system capable of operating in classified settings, so the department can phase out Anthropic.

Altman and OpenAI have received significant blowback online for agreeing to work with the Pentagon. Altman publicly urged the department not to label Anthropic a supply chain risk.

“To his credit, I called him and said, ‘I need a solution if this thing goes sideways. I need multiple solutions. I’d like you to be one of them,” Michael said. “And he’s like, ‘Okay, well, what can I do for the country?’ I was like, ‘I need to get you up running as soon as I can.'”




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Kelsey Baker, Military and Defense Reporting Fellow

Medal of Honor pilot was hit repeatedly by machine-gun fire during the Maduro raid, Trump says, revealing mission details

President Donald Trump shared vivid details Tuesday night of the firefight that erupted as an American helicopter reached Nicolás Maduro’s compound during the US raid into Venezuela last month.

As the Chinook helicopter carrying elite US ground troops and piloted by Chief Warrant Officer 5 Eric Slover approached what the president had previously described as a fortress, “enemy machine guns fired from every angle,” Trump said during his State of the Union Address.

“Eric was hit very badly in the leg and hip,” the president said as he awarded the military’s top valor award, the Congressional Medal of Honor, to Slover.

Immediately following the January 3 raid to capture the then-president of Venezuela, Trump said that a helicopter got hit “pretty hard” and that “a couple of guys were hit.” Official details of the injuries were limited. His speech on Tuesday shed new light on what happened that night.


US Air Force crew chiefs watch as F-35A Lightning II's taxi following military actions in Venezuela in support of Operation Absolute Resolve, Jan. 3, 2026.

Stealth fighters and supersonic bombers were among the aircraft involved in the mission.

US Air Force Photo



After numerous American warplanes, including advanced stealth fighters, suppressed Venezuela’s air defense network, helicopters carrying ground troops moved in, approaching Maduro’s fortified compound.

Slover’s helicopter encountered “two machine gunners who escaped the wrath of the previous planes,” Trump said. As the bullets hit the aircraft, Slover “absorbed four agonizing shots, shredding his leg into numerous pieces,” he continued. “He was gushing blood.”

Helicopter pilots rely on both a control stick and floor pedals for maneuvering. Most helicopters have one main rotor and a small tail rotor to keep them from spinning, but a Chinook has two large rotors that balance each other.

Despite his serious wounds, Slover managed to maneuver his helicopter into position so that onboard gunners could “take care of business” and “eliminate the threat,” the president said, crediting Slover with “saving the lives of his fellow warriors from what could have been a catastrophic crash, deep in enemy territory.”

After landing, Slover told his co-pilot, who was also wounded but not as gravely, to “take over,” saying, “I’m about ready to pass out.” A total of seven US troops were injured during the raid.


US First Lady Melania Trump presents US veteran Captain E. Royce Williams with the Medal of Honor

US First Lady Melania Trump was involved in presenting US veteran Captain E. Royce Williams with the Medal of Honor.

ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS / AFP via Getty Images



During his State of the Union address, Trump also presented a second Medal of Honor to centenarian US Navy pilot E. Royce Williams, a veteran of World War II and the Korean and Vietnam Wars.

Three years ago, Williams was awarded the Navy Cross for “extraordinary heroism” in a Korean War air battle in which he was outgunned and outmatched in his F9F Panther by Soviet MiG-15 fighters but still managed to shoot down four of them.

The 1952 dogfight was classified for decades.

The Congressional Medal of Honor is usually awarded in solemn, less politically charged ceremonies at the White House. The award can take years, or even decades, as was the case for Williams, to be bestowed. It requires eyewitness accounts and has strict criteria. Other valor awards, such as the Navy Cross or Silver Star, can occasionally be upgraded to a Medal of Honor, a notoriously lengthy process.

The top award is bestowed upon troops engaged against an enemy of the US or an “opposing foreign force,” according to the military’s awards manual.

That the medal was awarded during the State of the Union elicited reactions from some veterans online who felt that the timing dampened the gravity of the award’s significance.

During the event, Trump reiterated his previously stated desire to receive the Medal of Honor.

“I’ve always wanted the Congressional Medal of Honor, but I was informed, I’m not allowed to give it to myself,” Trump told the crowd. “I wouldn’t know why I’d be taking it, but if they ever open up that law, I will be there with you someday.”




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All the details you might have missed in the first season of ‘A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms’

In Martin’s “The Hedge Knight,” Dunk offers to take Egg under his wing while traveling across the realm.

Egg’s father, Maekar, is offended by the very suggestion. Egg is a crown prince, after all; he can’t wander around Westeros, bald and vulnerable, trailing after a hedge knight he met less than a week ago. After Dunk delivers his final pitch, Maekar takes a long pause, then walks away without saying a word.

In the next scene, Egg suddenly materializes and says that he’s gotten his father’s blessing to squire for Dunk.

The novella is told from Dunk’s perspective, so the reader is left to speculate about why Maekar changed his mind.

In the show, however, it’s made explicit that Egg lied. He defied his father’s wishes, choosing to follow Dunk rather than return with his family to their comfy royal life.

“He’s failed with his eldest two sons. Aegon is his last chance to create a legacy that is fit for the throne,” Sam Spruell, who plays Maekar, said of the change. “[Egg] leaving is a kind of rejection of that.”

Parker also said it was a natural extension of Maekar’s character. Thus far, Maekar has proven incapable of raising his children, but he’s still a prideful man who can’t bear to cede control.

“I actually do think he really does love his children. I do think he cares about them, even though he’s not able to raise them well, he still wants to,” Parker said of Maekar. “The idea of letting Egg go off with someone else just felt like too much for me. It felt like he could reasonably say no in this moment, even though he knows it would be better for Egg.”




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FBI ups reward in Nancy Guthrie case to $100,000 and shares new details about a suspect

  • The FBI released new details on a suspect in Nancy Guthrie’s disappearance.
  • The suspect was described as a male of average build, seen carrying an Ozark Trail Hiker Pack.
  • The FBI also doubled the reward for information on the case.

The FBI has upped its reward in the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie and shared new details on a suspect.

The agency is offering $100,000, up from $50,000, for information that leads to Guthrie’s location or to the arrest and conviction of anyone involved in her disappearance, the FBI said Thursday.

Guthrie, the 84-year-old mother of “Today” show host Savannah Guthrie, has been missing since February 1. Authorities have said Guthrie, who has limited mobility and takes a daily medication for a heart condition, was abducted from her home near Tucson, Arizona.

The FBI said Thursday that identifying details about the suspect had been confirmed, describing him as a man of average build, about 5 feet and 9 to 10 inches tall. He was seen in doorbell camera footage wearing a black backpack identified as a 25-liter Ozark Trail Hiker Pack.

On Tuesday, the FBI and the Pima County Sheriff’s Department released images from Guthrie’s Nest doorbell camera showing a person at her door wearing a full ski mask. Authorities said the person was “armed.”

This is a breaking news story. Check back for updates.




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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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Details you may have missed in the 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics opening ceremony

  • The 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics officially began with the opening ceremony on Friday.
  • The performances highlighted Italy’s legacy of music, fashion, arts, and culture.
  • Team USA’s opening ceremony outfits, designed by Ralph Lauren, featured patriotic touches.

Athletes and spectators filled Milan’s San Siro Stadium to kick off the 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics on Friday.

Parts of the opening ceremony also took place across three other sites in Cortina, Predazzo, and Livigno, representing how Olympic events will be held across Italian regions.

The ceremony’s performances featured nods to Italian history and culture, and other countries added patriotic details to their opening ceremony uniforms.

Here are some details you may have missed.

This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.

In the opening dance, two dancers dressed as angels evoked “Psyche Revived by Cupid’s Kiss,” a sculpture by Italian artist Antonio Canova.

Italian ballet dancers Antonella Albano and Claudio Coviello danced in the opening ceremony of the 2026 Winter Olympics.

WANG Zhao/AFP via Getty Images

Dancers dressed as musical notes took over the stage in a tribute to Italian opera composers Giuseppe Verdi, Giacomo Puccini, and Gioachino Rossini.


Matilda De Angelis performs with three actors dressed as the great masters of Italian Opera, Giuseppe Verdei, Giacomo Puccini, and Gioachino Rossini.

Dancers in the opening ceremony of the 2026 Winter Olympics.

Maja Hitij/Getty Images

Colorful costumes represented numerous aspects of Italian arts, culture, cuisine, and architecture in a vibrant crescendo.


Opening Ceremony dancers.

Actors dressed as symbols of Italian fashion in the opening ceremony of the 2026 Winter Olympics.

Elsa/Getty Images

Mariah Carey sang a mashup of the Italian song “Volare” with her hit “Nothing Is Impossible.”


Mariah Carey at the 2026 Olympic opening ceremony.

Mariah Carey at the opening ceremony of the 2026 Olympics.

Elsa/Getty Images

Models walked into the stadium wearing Giorgio Armani suits in the colors of the Italian flag.


Models wearing Giorgio Armani suits.

Models in Giorgio Armani suits at the 2026 Winter Olympics.

Dean Mouhtaropoulos/Getty Images

Aerialists performed between two rings representing the city of Milan and the mountains of Cortina d’Ampezzo.


Aerialists in the 2026 opening ceremony Olympics.

Aerialists in the opening ceremony of the 2026 Olympics.

Andreas Rentz/Getty Images

The two rings eventually fused with others to form the iconic five-ring symbol of the Olympics.


The Olympic rings at the opening ceremony.

The Olympic rings were lit up with fireworks at the 2026 opening ceremony.

WANG Zhao / AFP

During the Parade of Nations, flagbearers from each country carried signs designed to look like blocks of ice.


A block of ice during the Olympic opening ceremony.

Team Greece at the opening ceremony of the 2026 Winter Olympics.

Carmen Mandato/Getty Images

Team Brazil’s outfits, designed by Moncler, included shorts made of the same material as their puffy coats.


Team Brazil in puffy shorts at the 2026 Olympics opening ceremony.

Flagbearer Lucas Pinheiro Braathen of Team Brazil during the opening ceremony of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics.

Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images

Designer Stella Jean created bold uniforms for Haiti’s Olympic team inspired by the art of Edouard Duval Carrié.


Team Haiti's flagbearers at the 2026 Winter Olympics opening ceremony.

Members of Team Haiti at the 2026 Winter Olympics opening ceremony.

Maddie Meyer/Getty Images




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12 details you might have missed in Melania Trump’s documentary

  • Melania Trump’s documentary, “Melania: Twenty Days to History,” premiered in theaters on January 30.
  • It follows Melania Trump in the 20 days leading up to the 2025 inauguration.
  • The “very private” first lady was deeply involved in the film’s creation, producer Marc Beckman told Business Insider.

First lady Melania Trump is no stranger to cameras, but this time, she’s the one calling the shots.

Her new documentary, “Melania: Twenty Days to History,” provides a glimpse into her life and work during the 20 days leading up to President Donald Trump’s 2025 inauguration.

It was released in theaters on Friday. After its theatrical run, “Melania” will stream on Amazon, which paid $40 million for the film and a forthcoming docuseries set for release this summer.

The first lady served as both its star and producer.

“She’s a very private and very selective person as to who she speaks to and what she does,” Marc Beckman, Melania Trump’s senior advisor and a producer of the film, told Business Insider. “We thought that this would be the appropriate opportunity to share a little bit more, to open the lens a little bit more into her family life, her career, and her philanthropy, all as she becomes first lady of the United States of America again.”

Beckman said that the first lady was deeply involved in the film’s creation.

“She participated not just with the creative direction, but in production and post-production,” Beckman said. “She was in the edit room. She was helping with color correction. She was very much involved with music selection — every song was selected by her.”

Critics largely panned “Melania” for not offering major revelations and for lacking journalistic rigor due to Trump’s oversight. Instead, they felt like it largely focused on surface-level moments from her life.

Still, there were some new details we learned about Trump’s life from the documentary, from how she left her mark on her husband’s inaugural address to insight into her favorite musical artists, and there were some surprising cameos.

Melania Trump is a Michael Jackson fan.

Melania Trump listens to Michael Jackson in the car.

PRAKASH SINGH/AFP via Getty Images

The film opens with “Billie Jean” by Michael Jackson playing over aerial footage of Mar-a-Lago. The song reappears later as Melania Trump sings along while riding in the car and names it her favorite Michael Jackson hit.

She described Mar-a-Lago as her “refuge from the outside world, a place where I can exhale.”


Mar-a-Lago.

Mar-a-Lago.

Joe Raedle/Getty Images

“Melania” follows Melania Trump as she divides her time between Trump Tower in New York City, Mar-a-Lago in West Palm Beach, Florida, and Washington, DC.

The Florida estate holds special meaning for the first lady, who remembers it as the place “where Baron took his swim lessons with his grandfather, played golf with his father, and took his first tennis lesson with me.”

At President Jimmy Carter’s funeral, Melania Trump was also mourning the first anniversary of her mother’s death.


Donald and Melania Trump at Jimmy Carter's funeral.

Donald Trump and Melania Trump at Jimmy Carter’s funeral.

Haiyun Jiang/Pool/Getty Images

Carter’s funeral was held on January 9, 2025, one year to the day after the death of Melania Trump’s mother, Amalija Knavs.

“Grief comes in waves when you lose someone who means so much to you. I will be sitting in the Washington Cathedral, paying respect to President Carter, but I know my beloved mother will be on my mind,” she said in the film’s voiceover.

During a dress fitting, designer Herve Pierre revealed a closer look at her inauguration gown, which he constructed with no visible seams.


Donald Trump and Melania Trump at an inaugural ball.

Donald Trump and Melania Trump at an inaugural ball.

Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images

In the film, Pierre said the seams on the dress were entirely hidden beneath the black band zigzagging across it.

“You don’t give the recipe,” he said. “It’s like a mystery.”

First lady Brigitte Macron of France made a surprise cameo in the documentary.


Brigitte Macron and Melania Trump.

Brigitte Macron and Melania Trump in 2019.

REGIS DUVIGNAU/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

The film showed a video call between Macron and Melania Trump, where they spoke about working together on her Fostering the Future and Be Best initiatives focused on children’s well-being.

“My next step and my next goal is to foster relationships and work on it with like-minded leaders and establish a coalition,” Melania Trump said. “And when we do, I hope you will join me.”

“With pleasure. I go everywhere with you,” Macron said.

The film also featured an appearance by Queen Rania of Jordan.


Queen Rania of Jordan with Melania Trump at the White House in 2017.

Queen Rania of Jordan and Melania Trump.

Pool/Getty Images

In the days leading up to her return to the White House, Melania Trump also recruited Queen Rania of Jordan for her coalition during a meeting at Mar-a-Lago.

The film included a meeting with Aviva Siegel, a released Israeli hostage who was held by Hamas.


Aviva Siegel.

Former Hamas hostage Aviva Siegel.

FABRICE COFFRINI/AFP via Getty Images

Aviva Siegel was held for 51 days before being released on November 26, 2023, as part of a temporary ceasefire deal brokered by the Biden administration. In the documentary, Melania Trump comforted Siegel and pledged Donald Trump’s support for releasing the remaining hostages, including Siegel’s husband, Keith Siegel.

“I know that once he’s commander in chief, I know that’s his priority. I’m sure of it,” Melania Trump said.

One of the final title cards of the film reads: “Melania Trump played a key role in securing the release of Keith Siegel after 484 days as a hostage in Gaza, just 12 days after the inauguration.”

The first lady revealed what she was thinking about right before entering the Capitol Rotunda for the inauguration.


Melania Trump at the Capitol Rotunda.

Melania Trump at the Capitol Rotunda on Inauguration Day.

Kenny Holston-Pool/Getty Images

“Walking into the Capitol Rotunda, I felt the weight of history intertwined with my own journey as an immigrant — a reminder of why I respect this nation so deeply,” she said in the film’s narration. “Everyone should do what they can to protect our individual rights. Never take them for granted because in the end, no matter where we come from, we are bound by the same humanity.”

As the first naturalized US citizen to serve as first lady, Melania Trump has previously spoken about her “arduous” pathway to citizenship.

She said she was “relieved” when the inaugural parade was moved indoors to the Capitol One Arena.


Melania Trump at Capital One Arena.

Melania Trump at the Capital One Arena.

Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images

Though the move was due to frigid temperatures in Washington, DC, on Inauguration Day, Melania Trump said she preferred an indoor space for security reasons after her husband survived an assassination attempt in July 2024.

“Being in a more secure and closed space brought a certain peace of mind,” she said.

Melania Trump contributed to Donald Trump’s inaugural address.


Donald Trump delivers his inaugural address.

Donald Trump’s inaugural address.

SHAWN THEW/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

In a scene toward the end of the film, Donald Trump was shown practicing an inauguration speech as Melania Trump watched.

“My proudest legacy will be that of a peacemaker,” he said.

“And unifier,” Melania added.

Her addition made it into the final draft of Donald Trump’s inauguration speech.

The film ends with a behind-the-scenes look at Melania Trump’s official White House portrait shot by photographer Régine Mahaux.


Melania Trump's official White House portrait.

Melania Trump’s official White House portrait.

Régine Mahaux/The White House

Mahaux, who has photographed the Trump family for over 20 years, describes Melania Trump as “very reserved, but deeply intentional.”

“I think what people don’t always see in her is a curiosity that she has for the world,” she told Business Insider. “I think the documentary reflects her sense of duty, her discipline.”

Mahaux also took Melania Trump’s White House portrait during Donald Trump’s first term in 2017.

“The first portrait was about discovering her new duty and her new role, and now this time, the portrait was an affirmation,” Mahaux said. “She really knew what she was. She was really embracing it and ready to get to work.”




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Meta delays release of new mixed reality glasses code-named ‘Phoenix’ in order to ‘get the details right’

Meta is delaying the release of new mixed reality glasses code-named “Phoenix.”

The company planned to release the new device in the second half of 2026, but it is pushing back its timeline to the first half of 2027, Maher Saba, VP of Reality Labs Foundation, wrote in a Thursday memo to employees, which was seen by Business Insider.

In a separate memo, also viewed by Business Insider, metaverse leaders Gabriel Aul and Ryan Cairns said moving the release date back is “going to give us a lot more breathing room to get the details right.”

They added, “There’s a lot coming in hot with tight bring-up schedules and big changes to our core UX, and we won’t compromise on landing a fully polished and reliable experience.”

Meta declined to comment.

The “Phoenix” mixed reality glasses, which were previously reported on by The Information, have a goggle-like form factor and are connected to a puck to help power them, according to two employees who have seen the device and spoke anonymously as they are not authorized to talk to the press.

The two employees said the model looks similar to Apple’s mixed reality glasses Vision Pro. There was some skepticism among leaders about the puck, but they chose to keep it to help keep the glasses lighter and more comfortable, and to prevent it from overheating, they said.

Saba said in the memo that at a recent meeting with CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Reality Labs (RL) leaders received feedback on their plans for 2026, which he said “focused on making the business sustainable and taking extra time to deliver our experiences with higher quality.”

“Based on that, many teams in RL will need to adjust their plans and timelines,” he added. “Extending timelines is not an opportunity for us to add more features or take on additional work.”

Meta also plans to release a new “limited edition” wearable device code-named “Malibu 2” in 2026, according to Saba.

Meta is starting work on its next-generation Quest device, a product that Aul and Cairns wrote will be focused on immersive gaming, and represent a “large upgrade” in capabilities from its existing devices, and “significantly improve unit economics.”

In October, Meta reorganized its metaverse unit and tapped Aul, who led products for Meta Horizon, and Cairns, who was previously in charge of virtual reality hardware, to co-lead its efforts, Business Insider previously reported. The company is now considering budget cuts of up to 30% within its Reality Labs division, which could impact employees working on its virtual spaces platform, Horizon Worlds.

The company has also expanded its AI hardware push by acquiring Limitless, a startup that makes AI-powered pendant devices, the company announced Friday.

Have a tip? Contact this reporter via email at jmann@businessinsider.com or Signal at jyotimann.11. Use a personal email address and a nonwork device; here’s our guide to sharing information securely.




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A Ferrari and over 480 takeout orders: FBI details spending spree of Netflix director in $11 million fraud case

In March of 2020, Netflix infused $11 million into a production company to complete the first season of “White Horse,” a futuristic sci-fi series it hoped to bring to its platform.

Carl Rinsch — the director, writer, and showrunner of “White Horse” — never finished the 12 episodes he was supposed to deliver.

But a short time after he got the cash, Rinsch spent millions of dollars on furniture, cars, credit card bills —  and a whole lot of takeout.

According to testimony at his criminal trial on Thursday, Rinsch spent a total of $9.14 million through a personal bank account with funds originally earmarked to finish “White Horse,” which had the production codename “Conquest.”

The spending included more than 480 food deliveries from Postmates and Uber Eats during a six-month span in 2022, according to a spreadsheet entered into evidence. The spreadsheet showed Rinsch sometimes making a dozen separate food purchases each day.

The most expensive category, FBI agent Michael Naccarelli testified, was for furniture, for which Rinsch spent $3.36 million.

Rinsch also spent $2.4 million on cars — including a Ferrari and Rolls-Royces — and $1.8 million on American Express bills, according to Naccarelli. He also spent money on hotels, jewelry, and art, Naccarelli said.

“Rinsch described the Ferrari as “a birthday gift to myself” in a 2021 text message to his personal assistant, which was shown to jurors later Thursday.

Attorneys for Rinsch told jurors at his trial in Manhattan federal court that the “White Horse” debacle is a civil business dispute — not criminal financial fraud.

They say Rinsch, who previously directed “47 Ronin,” starring Keanu Reeves, is a “creative genius” who was overwhelmed by the demands of directing, writing, and producing “White Horse” and left to flounder by the streaming company.

Days after Netflix sent $11 million to a bank account for Rinsch’s production company, he moved $10.5 million to a personal Wells Fargo bank account, according to Naccarelli and records entered into trial evidence.

The director then moved portions of the funds to a Kraken cryptocurrency exchange account, as well as other bank accounts, before ultimately transferring $13.7 million to a personal Bank of America account.

With his Kraken account, Rinsch purchased about a dozen different cryptocurrencies, including Dogecoin, Etherium, Bitcoin Cash, and the stablecoin Tether, trial records show.

In April 2022, Rinsch’s Dogecoin holdings were worth about $755,000, and his Etherium tokens about $939,000, according to Naccarelli.

While a financial advisor previously testified in the trial that Rinsch’s stock investments went badly, Naccarelli said the director’s cryptocurrency investments were profitable.

“The trades performed very well,” Naccarelli said as Rinsch — wearing a three-piece black suit and a patterned pink tie and matching pocket square — nodded slightly.

Allen Grove, an FBI agent who testified after Naccarelli, said Rinsch considered himself a major Dogecoin trader when they met in April 2023 regarding a dispute over one of Rinsch’s furniture purchases in Paris.

“Mr. Rinsch described to me that he became wealthy during the pandemic by investing in Dogecoin,” Grove testified. “He described himself to me as ‘The Dogecoin Whale.'”

Rinsch said in an earlier deposition, which was shown to jurors on Thursday, that his purchases of four Rolls-Royces were meant for the production of “White Horse,” and not for personal use. Netflix wrote off the production as a loss in 2020.

“That would be fraud otherwise,” Rinsch said in the deposition.




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