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Photos show how the Times Square ball has evolved over its 117-year history

31 December 2024 at 14:03
The Times Square Ball prepped atop One Times Square in December 1999.
The ball was redesigned for the year 2000.

TIMOTHY A. CLARY/Staff/AFP via Getty Images

  • In the US, a popular way to celebrate New Year's Eve is to watch the ball drop in Times Square.
  • The tradition started in 1907, when the ball was made of iron and wood.
  • After multiple redesigns, today's ball weighs 11,875 pounds and features 2,688 crystal panels.

2024 is coming to a close. So, as we reflect on all this year had to offer — the Paris Olympics, "Cowboy Carter," and "Wicked" may come to mind — it's time to ring in 2025 with a bit of fun.

Different countries are known for their own unique traditions to celebrate and bring good energy into the new year. In Denmark, for example, people celebrate New Year's Eve by breaking plates. Meanwhile, in Italy, it's tradition to wear red underwear. And of course, in the US, it's common to watch the Times Square ball drop.

The ball drop has been a New York City tradition for over a century, symbolizing new beginnings. But the ball itself has changed drastically since its original debut in 1907; then, it was crafted from iron and wood, measured 5 feet in diameter, and weighed 700 pounds, according to Times Square's website.

In contrast, today's ball is made with crystal, measures 12 feet in diameter, weighs 11,875 pounds, and is lit by more than 30,000 LEDs.

Whether you're one of the brave people who have traveled to New York City to watch the ball drop live, or you're planning to watch it from the comfort of your couch, here's a look back at how the tradition started and the Times Square ball's 117-year history.

Before the Times Square ball was invented, people would gather downtown at Trinity Church to hear the bells chime.
A street view of Trinity Church in lower Manhattan at night.
People in New York City would celebrate the new year by listening to the bells at Trinity Church.

Roy Rochlin/Contributor/Getty Images

Before the ball's invention, people in New York City would gather outside Trinity Church in Lower Manhattan to hear the bells chime at midnight, PBS reported.

But after The New York Times moved offices to Midtown's Longacre Square — promptly renamed Times Square — in the early 1900s, the company started a midnight firework display to encourage people to celebrate farther north.

The fireworks were later banned by the city's police department, so Adolph Ochs, then-owner and publisher of The New York Times, commissioned the company's chief electrician, Walter Palmer, "to find a new light display," PBS reported.

The first Times Square ball dropped in 1907 to ring in 1908 and was made of iron and wood.
A black-and-white photo of Times Square, circa 1908.
The first Times Square ball dropped in 1907.

Universal History Archive/Contributor/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Palmer was inspired by a 19th-century maritime method of timekeeping, which involved dropping a ball at a certain time to help mariners ensure their timepieces were accurate, PBS reported.

The first Times Square New Year's Eve ball was built by Jacob Starr, an immigrant metalworker. It weighed 700 pounds, measured 5 feet in diameter, and featured 100 light bulbs.

Artkraft Strauss, Starr's company, was in charge of lowering the ball at midnight with an elaborate pulley system. When it dropped for the first time to ring in 1908, it started a tradition that remains more than 100 years later.

In 1920, the ball was redesigned and made of wrought iron.
A large crowd of people gathered in Times Square on New Year's Eve in 1926.
Crowds of people gathered in Times Square on New Year's Eve in 1926.

Bettmann/Contributor/Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

Midway through the '20s, a less heavy ball replaced the original iron and wood one.

The new ball weighed 400 pounds and was made of wrought iron, per Times Square's website.

In 1942 and 1943, no ball was dropped in Times Square due to World War II.
A large crowd of people gathered in Times Square to welcome the year 1943 despite the dim-out.
New York City participated in a dim-out to ring in 1943.

Bettmann/Contributor/Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

1942 and 1943 are the only years to date that the Times Square ball was not dropped to ring in the new year.

At the time, the US was engaged in World War II and New York City participated in a dim-out to protect the city from attacks, according to the Museum of the City of New York.

The dim-out didn't keep crowds away, though, on New Year's Eve, people still gathered in Times Square.

In 1955, the ball was recreated and made entirely of aluminum.
Superintendent of One Times Square Russ Brown checks his watch with the Times Square ball illuminated in the background in 1980.
The aluminum Times Square ball was used from 1955 until 1980.

David Handschuh/AP Photo

The new ball was made of aluminum and only weighed 150 pounds, which is the lightest it's ever been.

It was used until 1980, as seen in the photo above, behind Russ Brown, then-superintendent of One Times Square.

From 1981 to 1988, the aluminum ball was transformed into an apple.
Then-Mayor of New York City Ed Koch gave a thumbs up before he flipped a switch to test the "Big Apple Ball" on December 24, 1981.
Then-Mayor of New York City Ed Koch tested the "Big Apple Ball" in December 1981.

Lederhandler/AP Photo

From 1981 to 1988, the Times Square ball was transformed into the "Big Apple Ball," complete with red light bulbs and a green stem to resemble an apple for the "I Love New York" marketing campaign, according to Times Square's website.

When the campaign ended, the ball returned to its white light bulbs along with a few upgrades.
A close-up view of the Times Square Ball in December 1995.
The "I Love New York" campaign ended after 1988 and the ball returned to its traditional state.

Bebeto Matthews/AP Photo

The traditional aluminum ball returned in 1989 and was upgraded in 1995 to include aluminum skin, rhinestones, and strobes.

But perhaps the most important upgrade was the addition of computer controls that lowered the ball at midnight.

The aluminum ball dropped for the last time in 1998.

Ahead of the year 2000, the Times Square ball was completely transformed and redesigned using crystal.
The Times Square Ball prepped atop One Times Square in December 1999.
The ball was redesigned for the year 2000.

TIMOTHY A. CLARY/Staff/AFP via Getty Images

To celebrate the turn of the millennium, the ball was redesigned by Waterford Crystal.

Each year, some of the 2,688 crystal panels are replaced; these new panels are designed and hand crafted to reflect a theme, Reuters reported in 2022.

For the ball's 100-year anniversary in 2007, it was upgraded with LEDs.
The Times Square ball lit in a rainbow of colors as someone takes a picture in December 2007.
The Centennial Ball featured more than 9,500 LEDs.

Curtis Means/Contributor/NBC Newswire/NBCUniversal via Getty Images

In 2017, the 2007 ball — known as the Centennial Ball — was displayed at Ripley's Believe It or Not in Times Square.

At the time, Stacy Shuster, then-director of marketing and sales at Ripley's New York, told Untapped New York that the 2007 ball featured 672 Waterford crystal triangles and 9,576 Philips Luxeon LEDs.

In 2008, the "Big Ball" was created to sit permanently atop One Times Square.
The Times Square ball was lit to resemble the American flag for July 4, 2020.
The Times Square ball is visible year-round.

Noam Galai/Contributor/Getty Images

The ball can be seen on display year-round, just like it was here in July 2020.

2020's New Year's Eve ball was another showstopper despite the major changes to the tradition.
The Times Square ball waiting to drop to ring in 2021.
In 2020, no crowds were present to watch the ball drop.

COREY SIPKIN/Contributor/AFP via Getty Images

In 2020, Times Square was closed to the public on New Year's Eve due to the COVID-19 pandemic. But the ball was still the star of the show.

The ball weighed 11,875 pounds and was 12 feet in diameter. As well as the usual 2,688 Waterford Crystals, it had 32,256 LED lights and displayed 16 million vibrant colors.

2021's ball drop was also scaled back, only allowing 15,000 spectators in comparison to its usual 58,000 people, and in-person viewers were required to wear masks and show proof of vaccination.

The ball was updated as a part of Waterford's "Gift of Wisdom" design for 2022.

Ahead of 2023, new crystals were added and COVID-related restrictions were dropped.
New crystals for the Times Square ball.
New crystals for the Times Square ball.

Selcuk Acar/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

Nearly 200 new Waterford crystals were installed on the ball ahead of 2023's arrival with the theme, the "Gift of Love," Reuters reported. The crystals feature circles of intertwining love hearts.

And ahead of 2024, the ball was given a "new bow tie lighting pattern" in honor of Times Square's former nickname as "the bow tie," CBS reported.

Now, the Times Square ball will complete its final drop before being replaced in 2025.
The Times Square ball was lit and tested on December 30, 2024, in shades of green, blue, and white.
The Times Square ball will be replaced in 2025.

Alexi Rosenfeld/Contributor/Getty Images

This year's ball includes crystal triangles with two new designs, according to Times Square 2025 organizers: the "One Times Square" crystal design and the "Ever" crystal design.

The One Times Square design "features long linear cuts with a circle near the top" to represent the pole and building where the ball drop takes place.

Meanwhile, the Ever design "consists of three pairs of interlocking rings surrounded by diamond facets that provide the setting for the letter E" in honor of One Times Square becoming a new destination for vow ceremonies in 2025, according to organizers.

Michael Phillips, president of Jamestown (which owns One Times Square), told CBS that the current ball "will go onto the lower floors of the building as part of an immersive arts and culture exhibit" and that the new iteration will be "much more digitally interactive."

Read the original article on Business Insider

25 of the best sports photos of the year

31 December 2024 at 09:15
Simone Biles smiling and yelling as she holds her gold medal at the team ceremony for the Artistic Gymnastics Women's Team Final at the Olympics.
Team USA's Simone Biles celebrated winning gold in the artistic gymnastics women's team final.

Naomi Baker/Staff/Getty Images

  • Getty Images released its top sports photos of 2024.
  • Photographers captured athletes from around the world as they competed in the Olympic Games.
  • Beyond Paris, the sports world stayed active, with the Super Bowl, Euros, World Series, and more.

Olympic years are a particularly special time for sports, and 2024 was no different.

As crowds gathered in Paris to watch their favorite athletes compete, the world's biggest stars rose to the occasion. From Simone Biles' triumphant return to the Olympic stage to Julien Alfred winning Saint Lucia's first Olympic medal, the events in Paris captured much of the sport world's attention this year.

And yet, there were still so many more moments to celebrate.

Michael Heiman, VP of global sport at Getty Images, told Business Insider, "It was a busy year. The summer Olympics is always kind of at the height of the sports calendar, the four-year cycle," adding, "But the other thing is that stuff doesn't stop just because it's an Olympic year."

As the ninth-largest industry in the world — worth $2.65 trillion, according to the Global Institute of Sport — sports smashed new barriers this year, and photographers were there to capture the emotions and history-making moments.

The growth of women's sports was particularly impactful in 2024, and is only gaining momentum. More than 18 million people watched Iowa and South Carolina compete in the NCAA women's basketball championship, the WNBA secured an 11-year media rights deal worth about $2.2 billion, and women's sports merchandise alone is estimated to be worth $4 billion.

As the world raises its expectations for sport in 2025, here's a look at 25 of Getty's top 100 sport photos of the year.

On February 2, competitors in the AlUla Tour in Saudi Arabia passed the largest mirrored building in the world, Maraya.
A pack of bike riders in front of the Maraya, the world's largest mirrored building, during the fourth stage of the AlUla Tour cycling race.
Riders passed the largest mirrored building in the world, Maraya, during the fourth stage of the AlUla Tour.

Anne-Christine POUJOULAT/Contributor/AFP via Getty Images

British rider Simon Yates, 31, won the overall race with a time of 18 hours, 37 minutes, and five seconds.

Team Kazakhstan competed at the World Aquatics Championships in Doha on February 9.
Kazakhstan's artistic swimming team competing at the Doha 2024 World Aquatics Championships. The photo was taken with an underwater remote camera.
Team Kazakhstan competed in the Mixed Team Free Final at the Doha 2024 World Aquatics Championships.

Quinn Rooney/Staff/Getty Images

Heiman told BI that the World Aquatics Championships in Doha was the first major event where Getty used its new underwater robotic camera.

"This is a camera we spent the last two years developing," he said, adding that the first version was built in 2015.

To capture the action, the camera was put underwater "a few days" before competition, then photographers were "able to fully control it like a video game" from the pool deck or in the media center.

"What the photographers are really looking for is to tell the story of artistic swimming. It's beautiful from above, but so much happens underwater and you see just all the coordination that it takes to lift this athlete up," Heiman said.

He added, "But really using the reflection that you get from the water above to kind of make this mirror image, it really speaks to what all it takes, everything that goes into performing some of these sequences."

Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift shared a kiss after the Kansas City Chiefs won the Super Bowl on February 11.
Travis Kelce, #87 of the Kansas City Chiefs, kissed Taylor Swift after winning Super Bowl LVIII as the crowd moved around them.
Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce kissed his girlfriend, Taylor Swift, after winning the Super Bowl.

Ezra Shaw/Staff/Getty Images

Of course, it's hard to talk about sports in 2024 without mentioning Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift, and one of their biggest moments was the kiss they shared after the Chiefs defeated the San Francisco 49ers 25-22 in overtime to win Super Bowl LVIII.

As one of two Getty Images photographers allowed on the field after the game, "Ezra [Shaw] was tasked with finding Travis and staying as close to Travis as possible, which is really, really hard in this environment," Heiman said.

"There's tons of people, everyone's pushing. You have security, you have other members of media, you have TV, and [Shaw] was just able to get in the right place and get this kind of, the guy wins the game, he gets the girl kind of photo, which was iconic and seen by everyone," he added.

The World Aquatics Championships also saw Annika Bornebusch of Team Denmark compete in the women's 20-meter high dive on February 14.
Annika Bornebusch of Team Denmark executing a dive during round three of the women's 20-meter high divie event at the Doha 2024 World Aquatics Championship with the city behind her.
Team Denmark's Annika Bornebusch competed in the women's 20-meter high dive.

Adam Pretty/Staff/Getty Images

Bornebusch appeared to defy gravity as she completed one of her dives.

Team Australia's Rhiannan Iffland ultimately won the competition with 342 points.

Chase Dougherty competed at The American Rodeo in Arlington, Texas, on March 9.
Chase Dougherty riding Mandate, competing in a bull riding event during The American Rodeo by Teton Ridge.
Chase Dougherty competed at The American Rodeo.

Al Bello/Staff/Getty Images for Teton Ridge

Dougherty was one of four competitors to advance to the bull-riding finals, which was won by Creek Young.

In addition to competing at The American Rodeo, some of Dougherty's 2024 career highlights include winning the Western Stampede, the Santa Maria Elks Rodeo, and the Sisters Rodeo. He's also a one-time qualifier for the National Finals Rodeo.

On March 13, photographer Phil Walter mounted a camera on a canoe to capture New Zealand's Finn Butcher racing ahead of the Olympics.
Finn Butcher paddling his canoe during a Paris NZOC Canoe Slalom Selection Announcement. Droplets of water surround the frame so that Butcher is seen in the center.
Photographer Phil Walter placed a camera on the front of athlete Finn Butcher's canoe.

Phil Walter/Staff/Getty Images for NZOC

Thanks to Getty Images' partnership with the New Zealand Olympic Committee, Heiman said photographer Phil Walter was able to "mount a waterproof small action camera on the front of this canoe" in order to "really give you insight into what these athletes are kind of experiencing as they come down the course."

He added that the end result is a credit to collaborating with the athlete and organizers to ensure that everything was safe and not impeding performance.

Butcher went on to compete in his first Olympic Games in Paris, where he won gold in the inaugural men's kayak cross event.

Joseph Manu of the Sydney Roosters scored a try during a March 28 match.
Joseph Manu of the Sydney Roosters scored a try (that was later disallowed) during a match against the Penrith Panthers. Manu was in an upside-down position when he scored.
Joseph Manu's score was later disallowed.

Cameron Spencer/Staff/Getty Images

The acrobatic score was later disallowed, and the Roosters' opponent, the Penrith Panthers, went on to win the match 22-16.

The Carolina Hurricanes' Dmitry Orlov hit the New York Rangers' Jonny Brodzinski during the second round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs on May 11.
Dmitry Orlov, #7 of the Carolina Hurricanes, hit Jonny Brodzinksi, #22 of the New York Rangers, during the third period of game four of the second round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs. The hit caused  Brodzinski's legs to fly into the air, turning his body upside down.
Dmitry Orlov hit Jonny Brodzinski during game four of the second round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs.

Bruce Bennett/Staff/Getty Images

Orlov hit Brodzinski in the third period of the game. The Hurricanes won the game 4-3 to keep their Stanley Cup hopes alive, bringing the series to 3-1.

The Rangers went on to win the series four games to two.

Photographer Sean M. Haffey captured Cole Houshmand competing in the Shiseido Tahiti Pro on May 30.
Cole Houshmand of the US riding a wave in round 16 at the SHISEIDO Tahiti Pro.
Photographer Sean M. Haffey shot surfer Cole Houshmand competing in the Shiseido Tahiti Pro.

Sean M. Haffey/Staff/Getty Images

Unlike other surfing events where photographers can shoot from the beach, Heiman said the Shiseido Tahiti Pro requires photographers to capture the action from small boats since the waves break about a kilometer off shore.

He added that while there were plenty of "amazing photos during Paris," he wanted to highlight this one because it's "about the preparation."

"You know, [Haffey's] out on the water for 12 hours. There's tons of spray," Heiman said, adding, "What kind of protection do you need for your cameras? What lenses do you need? How does the sunlight work? So, we sent [Haffey] to cover the Tahiti Pro before Paris as a preparation for Paris. So when we got there, we knew exactly what we wanted to do and what we needed to do."

Novak Djokovic slid for a shot during a fourth round French Open match on June 3.
Novak Djokovic sliding into a split while going for a forehand shot during a fourth-round French Open match against Francisco Cerundolo.
Novak Djokovic competed in the fourth round of the 2024 French Open.

Clive Mason/Staff/Getty Images

Djokovic fought through a right knee injury to defeat Argentina's Francisco Cerundolo during a fourth round match at Roland-Garros.

However, he withdrew from the competition the following day.

Richard Riakporhe landed an upper cut on Chris Billam-Smith during the WBO World Cruiserweight Title fight on June 15.
Richard Riakporhe landing an uppercut against Chris Billam-Smith during the WBO World Cruiserweight Title fight.
Chris Billam-Smith and Richard Riakporhe competed in the WBO World Cruiserweight Title fight.

Richard Heathcote/Getty Images

Billam-Smith went on to win the fight by a unanimous decision after 12 rounds.

The Florida Panthers' Matthew Tkachuk lifted the Stanley Cup after defeating the Edmonton Oilers in game seven on June 24.
Matthew Tkachuk, #19 of the Florida Panthers, lifting the Stanley Cup.
Matthew Tkachuk lifted the Stanley Cup after the Florida Panthers' game seven win.

Carmen Mandato/Staff/Getty Images

The Panthers won their first Stanley Cup with a 2-1 game seven victory.

Tkachuk told reporters after the game, "It's not a dream anymore. It's not a dream, it's reality. I can't believe it. I can't believe it."

On July 14, Spain celebrated its Euro final win.
A general view inside the stadium as Spain celebrated their win in the UEFA Euros. Confetti fell from the sky as a rainbow of lights and pyrotechnics went off.
Spain won the Euro 2024 final 2-1 against England.

Alex Pantling - UEFA/Contributor/UEFA via Getty Images

Spain defeated England 2-1 to win the Euros, with the game-winning goal coming from Mikel Oyarzabal in the 86th minute.

On July 14, Carlos Alcaraz won his second consecutive Wimbledon championship title.
Carlos Alcaraz raised his arms in celebration after winning Wimbledon.
Carlos Alcaraz defeated Novak Djokovic to win Wimbledon.

Julian Finney/Staff/Getty Images

The 21-year-old from Spain defeated Novak Djokovic in straight sets to win his second consecutive Wimbledon title and his fourth overall Grand Slam.

Pistol shooter Kim Yeji won the Olympic silver medal in the women's 10-meter air pistol final on July 28.
A close-up of Kim Yeji of Team Republic of Korea preparing to shoot in the Women's 10-meter Air Pistol Final at the Olympics.
Kim Yeji won silver in the women's 10m air pistol final.

Charles McQuillan/Stringer/Getty Images

While the internet remained focused on Kim's eyewear, a hidden detail in her competition look was her daughter's stuffed elephant toy.

Simone Biles celebrated winning the artistic gymnastics women's team gold medal on July 30.
Simone Biles smiling and yelling as she holds her gold medal at the team ceremony for the Artistic Gymnastics Women's Team Final at the Olympics.
Team USA's Simone Biles celebrated winning gold in the artistic gymnastics women's team final.

Naomi Baker/Staff/Getty Images

Biles, alongside Jordan Chiles, Suni Lee, Jade Carey, and Hezly Rivera, brought home the gold in the women's team final.

In Paris, Biles added four medals to her Olympic count, bringing her total to 11, with seven golds, two silvers, and two bronzes to make her the most decorated gymnast in American history.

On August 3, Julien Alfred of Saint Lucia won her country's first Olympic medal — and it was gold.
Julien Alfred of Saint Lucia leading the way in the women's 100-meter final during the Olympic Games. Team USA's Sha'Carri Richardson and Melissa Jefferson trailed behind.
Photographer Richard Heathcote captured this moment using a camera mounted to a broadcast rig.

Richard Heathcote/Staff/Getty Images

Though Heiman said this photo doesn't necessarily look unique, it is because the technology used to capture it was actually five years in the making.

The process started in 2019 at the World Athletics Championships in Doha when the company first communicated with the event's broadcaster about mounting a camera on their rig.

After a small action camera didn't yield the desired quality, they decided to move forward with a bigger camera that was used in Paris and was wirelessly triggered by photographer Richard Heathcote, who was in the media center.

"[Heathcote] was actually our robotics photographer, so while he was shooting this picture, he was also manning two robots that are in the roof, following the action with a little joystick," Heiman said, adding that Heathcote also had a foot pedal controlling a camera. "So all in, there's about 15 remotes on this moment, and [Heathcote's] controlling kind of all of them, as I kind of joke, ends up like a drummer, right?"

"It's just a really good composition. You have the Olympic rings, you have Paris in there, you know where it is, you see the purple lights in the background, all the nation's flags in the background. It's just a really amazing athletics photo and a really unique one," Heiman said.

Photographer Hector Vivas created a layered image of the jumping individual final on August 6.
A digital composite image of the Jumping Individual Final on day eleven of the Olympic Games in Paris.
Photographer Hector Vivas captured and layered moments from the jumping individual final.

Hector Vivas/Stringer/Getty Images

"One of the ideas that Hector [Vivas] came up with was he wanted to shoot the Games with this technique he's been working on called layering, and that's really, you set a camera up at one spot, it stays fixed, so it's and then you shoot as the event unfolds," Heiman said, noting that Vivas decided when to fire the shutter each time.

"Every time I look at it, I find a new part of it that I didn't see before," Heiman added, comparing the photo to pages of "Where's Waldo?"

Algerian boxer Imane Khelif kissed her gold medal on August 9.
Imane Khelif of Algeria kissed her gold medal as silver medalist Liu Yang of Team People's Republic of China (left) and bronze medalist Nien Chin Chen of Team Chinese Taipei (right) look on.
Algerian boxer Imane Khelif won the gold medal in Paris.

Richard Pelham/Stringer/Getty Images

Throughout the Olympics, Khelif was ridiculed after misinformation about her sex was spread.

However, despite the scrutiny, she went on to win the gold medal in the welterweight boxing event. Khelif wrote on Instagram, "From dreams to reality, the journey is gold. Proud to stand at the top for my country and the ones who believed. The fight never stops, only gets stronger."

Australian breaker Raygun gave the crowd a memorable performance on August 9.
B-Girl Raygun of Team Australia competing at the Olympic Games as a panel of judges watched.
Australian B-girl Raygun competed at the 2024 Olympics.

Ezra Shaw/Staff/Getty Images

Rachael Gunn, also known by her B-girl name Raygun, also received a lot of attention online for her performance at the 2024 Olympics.

Though she was eliminated during the round-robin stage of the competition, her moves were instantly documented as memes and she became the subject of misinformation.

Gunn retired from competitive breaking in November.

Team USA's Stephen Curry launched a shot over Team France's Victor Wembanyama during the men's basketball Olympic final on August 10.
Stephen Curry, #4 of Team USA, shoots over Victor Wembanyama, #32 of Team France, during the Men's Basketball gold medal match at the Olympics.
Team USA defeated Team France 97-87.

Ezra Shaw/Staff/Getty Images

Standing at 6-foot-2, Curry launched his shot over 7-foot-3 Wembanyama.

The US won the game 98-87, and Curry finished with 24 points and five assists.

Poland's Kinga Dróżdż reacted after winning the category A wheelchair fencing semifinal at the Paralympics on September 3.
Kinga Dróżdż screaming after beating Eva Andrea Hajmasi during the Women's Sabre Category A Semifinal during the Summer Paralympic Games.
Dróżdż won the women's sabre category A semifinal.

Steph Chambers/Staff/Getty Images

According to the International Wheelchair & Amputee Sport Federation (IWAS) Wheelchair Fencing, category A fencers "have good trunk control."

Dróżdż defeated Eva Andrea Hajmasi of Hungary 15-12 in the women's sabre category A semifinal to advance to the final.

There, she won the silver medal after losing to Haiyan Gu.

On October 11, Thorbjørn Olesen played a shot on the 18th hole during round two of the FedEx Open de France.
Thorbjørn Olesen of Denmark swings his golf club during the second round of the FedEx Open de France 2024. In the photo, Olesen is standing on what appears to be a cliff and is backlit completely with orange sunlight behind him.
Denmark's Thorbjørn Olesen played a shot on the 18th hole at the FedEx Open de France.

Warren Little/Staff/Getty Images

Olesen tied for second place with Yannik Paul, Sam Bairstow, and Jeff Winther, all of whom scored 15 under.

English golfer Dan Bradbury came in first place with a score of 16 under par.

Freddie Freeman hit a walk-off grand slam in game one of the World Series on October 25.
Freddie Freeman, #5 of the Los Angeles Dodgers, dropped his bat and celebrated after hitting a walk-off grand slam during game one of the World Series. His teammates and fans celebrated in the background.
LA Dodgers first baseman Freddie Freeman, #5, hit a walk-off grand slam in game one of the World Series.

Maddie Meyer/Staff/Getty Images

Freeman's home run in the bottom of the 10th inning gave the Los Angeles Dodgers a win against the New York Yankees in game one of the World Series.

The Dodgers went on to win the series four games to one.

Ironman athletes competed in the swimming leg of the World Championship race on October 26.
An aerial view of people swimming during the VinFast IRONMAN World Championship.
Photographer Ezra Shaw used a drone to capture part of the VinFast Ironman World Championships.

Ezra Shaw/Staff/Getty Images for IRONMAN

Heiman said that photographer Ezra Shaw used a drone to take this image of Ironman competitors, which takes a lot of preparation.

"He has to go photograph the actual venue. He's not just there operating a drone, so he needs to get there, set it up, fly it, take his pictures, come down, and then go on to probably the athletes coming out of the water to get on the bikes," Heiman said.

Read the original article on Business Insider

20 of the hottest proptech startups in 2024, according to venture capitalists

Vishwas Prabhakara (left), Georgianna W. Oliver (center), Alex Israel (right).
Vishwas Prabhakara, left, Georgianna W. Oliver, center, and Alex Israel, right, lead some of the buzziest real-estate tech startups in the country.

Courtesy of HoneyHomes, Tour24, Metropolis.

  • Real-estate tech startups aim to make tasks from property management to homebuying more efficient.
  • We surveyed 10 venture capitalists to identify the hottest proptech companies of the year.
  • Some of the firms are modernizing real estate by digitizing analog processes, sometimes using AI.

The frozen housing market meant tough times for the proptech — or property technology — industry.

As the market starts to thaw, however, things are looking up for firms that seek to use technology to digitize, automate, or otherwise improve legacy processes in the worlds of residential and commercial real estate.

Business Insider asked 10 venture-capital investors who focus on real-estate and construction technology to nominate the most exciting, promising, and talked-about proptech startups in 2024.

The 20 companies on the final list reveal the breadth of the proptech universe.

Take Steadily, a firm trying to digitize insurance underwriting for real-estate investors, a process that has historically taken a lot of paperwork and time — only to result in policies with steep premiums. Another startup, Arcol, aims to make producing 3D architectural drawings faster and easier. A third, Conservation Labs, uses an AI-powered sensor to detect if water is leaking or being wasted in a building to prevent damage and protect the environment.

In the first half of 2024, venture funding for proptech companies dropped 14.3% from the same period a year prior. Funding totaled $4.37 billion, down from $5.1 billion during the same period in 2023 and dramatically less than the $13.13 billion invested in the first six months of 2022, according to the Center for Real Estate Technology & Innovation (CRETI), which surveyed 1,088 proptech startups.

Certain niches, however, hold promise. In 2024, VC investments in AI-powered proptech companies reached a record $3.2 billion, CRETI reported earlier this month.

Here are 20 of the buzziest proptech companies in 2024, presented alphabetically. The companies' fundraising numbers are from PitchBook to ensure a consistent data source.

Did we miss a company you think is disrupting the industry? Send reporter Jordan Pandy an email at [email protected].

Agora

City: New York City and Tel Aviv

Year founded: 2019

Total funding: $64.31 million

What it does: Agora is a financial software firm that helps real-estate investors process payments, keep track of tax records, raise money, and generally organize data.

Why it's hot: The firm, which raised a $34 million Series B round in May, said it helps landlords and developers with much-needed modernization.

"Real estate is the largest asset class in the world. However, the market still relies on legacy software providers, inefficient workflows, outdated, fragmented systems, and manual, tedious work," Asaf Raz, Agora's head of marketing, told Business Insider.

"Investors expect a digital-first experience — they're tech-savvy and need access to information quickly. Firms can't work without it, and clients need a platform like Agora more than ever," Raz said.

A challenge it faces: Real-estate investors are still grappling with relatively high interest rates, which makes it harder to borrow money and scale up, and the relatively high price of materials, which makes it tougher to renovate or upgrade properties. Those market forces could make customers more reluctant to spend money on new software.

Agora CEO Bar Mor told business news site Pulse 2.0 earlier this month, however, that Agora might still appeal to customers because its suite of products could help them "enhance efficiency and save costs."

Arcol
Six headshots of men on Acrol team
The team behind Arcol, which allows architects to build and work together on 3D models.

Acrol

City: New York

Year founded: 2021

Total funding: $5.1 million

What it does: Arcol is a web browser-based design tool predominantly used by architects to create and collaborate on 3D models of buildings and explore their feasibility.

Why it's hot: Architects — Arcol's target audience — have traditionally relied on software design tools like AutoCAD and Revit, which require paid licenses and aren't as collaborative. Arcol has set out to solve that issue with a browser-based format easily shared and edited by anyone involved in a building project.

"These people are core to our society; they're literally building the built world, yet they hate using their tools," said Paul O'Carroll, the son of an architect and founder of Arcol. "The design tool we use to design buildings, we want to rethink for the browser to be collaborative and to be performant."

So far, demand is high. Arcol, run by a team of six, has a waitlist of over 18,000 users, O'Carroll said.

A challenge it faces: There are several other startups in the BIM, or Business Information Modeling, space. Competing with established players like Revit could take a lot of time and money, according to AEC Magazine. (AEC stands for architecture, engineering, and construction.)

Also, Arcol is currently only useful to architects during the conceptual modeling phase, and the company hopes to expand the tool to help with other stages of construction.

Branch Furniture
A woman and two men posing for a picture
From left, Branch Furniture's Verity Sylvester, Greg Hayes, and Sib Mahapatra.

Branch Furniture

City: New York City

Year founded: 2018

Total funding: $11.76 million

What it does: Branch Furniture sells office products, like chairs and desks, to businesses and directly to consumers.

Why it's hot: The company's first iteration sold office furniture the old way: B2B, catering to employers outfitting a huge space who would often purchase items in bulk. After the pandemic changed how (and how often) workers occupied offices, Branch pivoted to sell to regular people — wherever they work.

"We launched our D2C business to cater to the future of work, which was definitively hybrid, both during COVID and after — and that's where we sit today," Sib Mahapatra, cofounder of Branch Furniture, told Business Insider.

Branch's ergonomic chair is a bestseller with a 4.6 rating out of five with over 6,000 reviews — it's rated among the best in its category by Business Insider, Architectural Digest, and Wired for its adjustability and sleek design.

In addition to desk chairs — in colors that range from a standard black to salmon-y orange hue called "poppy," the company also sells desks and lamps to outfit a home office. Its inventory includes meeting tables and even phone booths ($6,395) for more commercial office spaces.

A challenge it faces: Branch's products are physical, so it's been plagued by supply-chain delays. Branch is also up against competitors in the good-looking-furniture-that-is-also-comfortable arena, including Herman Miller and Steelcase — though Branch's offerings are often cheaper.

The company is also gaining ground regarding velocity, or the speed at which new products are developed and released.

"We're learning a lot about the pace of iteration in our product category," Mahapatra said. "It's definitely not software, but the benefit is that you get more time to really get things right and to iterate with purpose, and you end up being a little bit more deliberate about how you iterate the product — it just takes longer."

BuildCasa
A photo of two men, both with salt-and-pepper-hair, with one wearing a light gray hoodie and the other with glasses and a gray fleece jacket over a gray shirt
BuildCasa cofounders Ben Bear, left, and Paul Stiedl.

BuildCasa

City: Oakland, California

Year founded: 2022

Total funding: $6.67 million

What it does: BuildCasa helps California homeowners subdivide their lots — thanks to new state laws — and then connects them with local builders who pay the homeowners for a portion of their land and then build new housing on it.

Why it's hot: The national housing crisis is particularly acute in California, which recently passed a series of laws to encourage more building. While others look to transform construction to make cheaper housing, BuildCasa uses technology instead to find more buildable lots in desirable locations like San Francisco and San Jose.

Most massive home-building companies focus on large, master-planned communities, often far from city centers. BuildCasa's vision, said its founders Ben Bear, CEO, and Paul Stiedl, CPO, is to become a large homebuilder focused instead on finding land in already desirable cities and suburbs.

The company works with homeowners to subdivide their land, creating a new, buildable lot. Those lots can then be sold to a local real-estate developer to build on, or BuildCasa can work in partnership with a local builder to erect and then sell a completed home.

A challenge it faces: New laws have simplified the process of subdividing lots, but building in infill areas still requires technical expertise and good relationships with local officials. Building on these smaller lots may be becoming easier, but it still isn't easy.

Conservation Labs
A headshot of a man
Conservation Labs founder and CEO Mark Kovscek.

Conservation Labs

City: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Year founded: 2018

Total funding: $14.68 million

What it does: Conservation Labs developed a smart water sensor that can identify leaks and wasteful water use. The H2know sensor uses machine learning to decode sounds in water pipes and translate them into insights for commercial property owners, including restaurants and hotels.

Why it's hot: The startup is at the intersection of two buzzy topics: AI and sustainability. H2know trains on thousands of hours of water pipe acoustics so that, over time, it becomes more accurate in detecting leaks and inefficient water use in buildings. Customers use that information to fix problems and conserve water, saving them money on utility bills while lowering their overall carbon footprint. Some 20% of home energy use goes to heating water.

"There's a very strong relationship between net-zero carbon emissions and water consumption," said Mark Kovscek, founder and CEO of Conservation Labs.

He added that H2know has detected leaky toilets in nearly every building in which it's installed. Some large properties are wasting 1 million gallons of water a year, he said.

A challenge it faces: H2know starts at $129, and it could be hard to convince cash-strapped commercial real estate owners to spend money to install sensors when the office market is struggling in many parts of the US.

Kovscek said the goal is to scale up to 100,000 sensors installed as soon as possible, or five times what Conservation Labs is currently on track to sell this year. To support that growth, the company needs to hire some of the "best and brightest" data scientists and engineers to further develop the machine-learning platform that underpins H2know, Kovscek said.

Constrafor
Two men in Times Square.
Constrafor cofounders CTO Douglas Reed, left, and CEO Anwar Ghauche.

Constrafor

City: New York

Year founded: 2019

Total funding: Almost $380 million

What it does: Large general contractors use Constrafor's software to onboard and pay their subcontractors on time — sometimes before the contractors themselves get paid by the clients. Contractors can also use the software to help purchase the supplies and services needed to complete a construction project on time and within budget.

Why it's hot: There's the money raised. In November, Constrafor announced that it raised $14 million in Series A funding as well as a $250 million credit facility.

The issues the firm is trying to address are also key. Construction is booming across the US, thanks in part to President Joe Biden's $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill. The rise of AI is also leading to a corresponding increase in the construction of data centers.

The actual process of construction, however, can often be long and complicated. That's why Constrafor's role as a one-stop shop appeals to large general contractors.

"So far, everyone has been focused on just building a very, very small point solution," said Anwar Ghauche, Constrafor's founder. "We're combining multiple different workflows, multiple different departments, all on the same platform."

The main challenges it faces: Next up: Constrafor must try to convince subcontractors to subscribe and pay for its software, too.

Gauch added that Constrafor's contractor clients can face cash-flow crunches. Those can lead to delays on important projects.

After Hurricanes Helene and Milton severely damaged parts of Florida, North Carolina, and other parts of the Southeast, Constrafor launched a disaster relief effort that would allow local contractors who are part of rebuilding efforts "to overcome delays, purchase materials, and ensure timely payment for their teams."

Ease Capital
Three headshots of men
Ease Capital's Ryan Simonetti, Guillermo Sanchez, and Charlie Oshman.

Ease Capital

City: New York

Year founded: 2022

Total funding: $13.95 million

What it does: Ease Capital helps private equity firms and large investors lend to smaller apartment landlords. It uses data and technology that allow the biggest players to lend $5 million to $50 million in deals that would typically be too small for them.

Why it's hot: Sophisticated private lenders usually focus on the largest apartment complexes, meaning that most apartment-building owners have to turn to banks and agencies to borrow money to purchase or refinance properties. However, current high rates have dramatically slowed bank and agency lending and the large private lenders usually won't lend for small—and medium-sized projects.

Ease uses data and technology to make it easier and more efficient for these large lenders to lend on smaller deals when the need is the highest. In 2023, the company announced a $450 million partnership with major real estate owner and asset manager Taconic Capital Partners, and has already announced multiple successfully originated loans.

CEO Charlie Oshamn told Business Insider earlier this year that the company is often seeing up to $1 billion in loan requests a month. Unlike other firms, which provide an estimated rate upfront that could potentially change over months of negotiation, Ease Capital sticks to its initial offering, eliminating the guessing game for potential clients.

A challenge it faces: Though the founding team has successfully launched other major proptech businesses, like flexible office and event space provider Convene and real-estate data firm Reonomy, it still needs to prove itself as a lender.

Habi
Two people posing in an office full of people working.
Brynne McNulty Rojas, CEO and cofounder of Habi, left, and Sebastian Noguera Escallon, president and cofounder.

Habi

City: Colombia and Mexico

Year founded: 2019

Total funding: $564 million

What it does: Habi has built Latin America's largest proprietary database and utilizes AI-based pricing algorithms to facilitate transactions and financing for homebuyers and sellers. Habi also buys and sells homes, offers mortgages, and posts and publicizes listings of properties for sale.

Why it's hot: The company operates in Colombia and Mexico without centralized MLS. MLS, or multiple listing services, are databases designed to help real estate brokers identify available homes for sale. These systems are abundant in the US, whereas they are scarce in Latin America. Without an MLS, it means homebuyers and sellers in Colombia and Mexico have difficulty knowing which properties are available for sale, their prices, and their listing and pricing history.

By gathering and sharing information on more than 20 million homes, Habi has addressed a critical need in these countries' real estate sector, establishing itself as an authority on housing in the region.

"We've become a household name for low and middle-income sellers and consumers and brokers in Mexico and Colombia," Brynne McNulty Rojas, CEO and cofounder of Habi, told Business Insider.

A challenge it faces: A combination of factors, including shifting economic and political conditions, has stalled the growth of Latin America's real-estate market. To achieve the same level of ubiquity as Zillow in the US, Habi must get real-estate brokers and sellers to list their properties on its platform and entice buyers to use it.

HoneyHomes
Professional headshot of Vishwas Prabhakara in a Honey Homes polo
Vishwas Prabhakara, Founder and CEO of Honey Homes

Courtesy of Honey Homes

City: Lafayette, California

Year founded: 2021

Total funding: $21.35 million

What it does: Founder Vishwas Prabhakara envisions Honey Homes as a "primary care physician for your home." For a monthly fee, a dedicated handyman will come once or twice a month to knock off "lightweight" home improvement projects like fixing a leaky faucet, installing a new ceiling fan, or repainting a room.

Why it's hot: With a cooling housing market, Prabhakara believes many homeowners are staying in their homes longer and interested in investing resources in — and enjoying — the property they currently have.

The main challenge it faces: Homeowners who already hire their preferred handymen may not be willing to pay for a service that sends new people, and bigger projects might require more specialized repair professionals. Then there's the cost and current smaller scale of the company: Subscriptions start from $295 a month, or $3,940 a year, according to the company website. The service is only available in parts of San Francisco and the Bay Area, Los Angeles, Orange County, and Dallas, according to the site.

Impulse Labs
A headshot of a man.
Impulse Labs CEO and founder Sam D'Amico.

Impulse

City: San Francisco

Year founded: 2021

Total funding: $25 million

What it does: Impulse Labs made a battery-powered induction cooktop that, unlike most of its competitors, which may require an electrical upgrade, can plug into a standard 120-volt outlet. The cooktop can boil water at lightning speeds, and sensors hold heat levels steady even at high temperatures.

Why it's hot: Impulse Labs founder Sam D'Amico said the cooktop offers a better cooking experience than gas burners while promoting more climate-friendly homes. Cooking with gas emits pollutants like methane, benzene, and carbon monoxide, which harm our health and the planet. But it can cost thousands of dollars to rewire a home for an electric induction stove. Impulse Labs' induction cooktop avoids those pollutants and the cost of home retrofits.

The battery in Impulse Labs' stove also stores enough power to make three meals if the power goes out, D'Amico said.

"One of the cheapest ways to deploy battery storage is in the appliances we have to buy anyways," he added.

The main challenge it faces: The cooktop costs $5,999. The price is high, D'Amico said, but similar to other premium appliances. The price is lower if buyers qualify for tax breaks and rebates from federal and state governments, as well as some utilities. It's also only a cooktop — not a full stove — but D'Amico said the company eventually wants to sell a suite of appliances that can be a whole-home battery solution. Impulse Labs is accepting pre-orders, with plans to ship in the first quarter of 2025, according to its website.

Keyway
Two men posing at a table
Keyway cofounders CEO Matias Recchia, left, and COO Sebastian Wilner.

KeyWay

City: New York City

Year founded: 2020

Total funding: $43 million

What it does: Keyway uses machine learning and AI to aid institutional investors in sourcing, underwriting, and managing portfolios of properties.

Why it's hot: Companies that use AI have become commonplace today, but Keyway believes it is ahead of the pack in adopting and applying AI technology to real-estate investing.

"We were very early on in the AI game in 2020, and I think we've built a really strong backend of data with lots of APIs that allows us to integrate very segregated data very fast," CEO and cofounder Matias Recchia told Business Insider. "The fact that we built our system in a modular way also allows us to customize our product to a lot of our customers — so it's really not one solution fits all."

The main challenge it faces: New technology like Keyway can be hard to push on seasoned real-estate investors as they're used to using old-school methods like manually sourcing, underwriting, and managing portfolios.

"We're merging two cultures that are very different," Recchia said. "The real-estate industry requires a lot of proof to show them that data can really help them make better decisions. So there's a little bit of a culture shift that we're bringing to real estate as we sell them these tools and we partner with them."

Latii
A headshot of a man.
Latii cofounder and COO Juan Pascual.

Latii

City: Brooklyn, New York

Year founded: 2023

Total funding: $8.82 million

What it does: Latii is a sourcing platform that uses AI-powered tools to help North American-based architects and contractors save up to 60% by connecting with Latin American, southern European, and northern African window and door fabricators.

Why it's hot: Architects often include custom windows and doors in their designs, but hiring contractors and craftspeople overseas can cost their property-owning clients thousands of dollars. The architects who work with Latii, however, can source materials faster and at lower costs, cofounder and CEO Santiago Bueno told Business Insider.

"We're able to produce either equal or higher quality products at a less expensive rate," Bueno said.

In October, Latti announced that it had raised $5 million in seed-round funding, which it will use to expand in the Pacific Northwest, Mountain states, and the New York tri-state area.

The main challenge it faces: When working with fabricators in Latin America, challenges can arise in managing certifications, enforcing warranties, and overcoming language barriers. The region's use of the metric system can also be difficult for North America-based architects to navigate.

Lessen

City: Scottsdale, Arizona

Year founded: 2020

Total funding: $713.8 million

What it does: Lessen's software allows commercial and residential landlords to track maintenance needs, connect with service providers, and buy products.

Why it's hot: In August, Inc. magazine named Lessen the fastest-growing private software company in the US, citing its $1.1 billion valuation.

The valuation preceded a major acquisition in 2023: Lessen spent $950 million to buy property maintenance management firm SMS Assist in what the Commercial Observer called the largest proptech acquisition in history.

Lessen's software is widely used, handling 3 million work orders a year across 250,000 properties, according to Fifth Wall, an investor in the firm. Lessen also launched Lessen Advantage Marketplace, which allows its landlord customers to buy materials like glass, floors, and doors and find better insurance and loan rates.

The main challenge it faces: Like many real-estate firms, Lessen faces an overall slowdown in both the commercial and residential sectors, with mortgage rates remaining elevated. One big potential client base for Lessen is office building owners and property managers, but the office market right now is struggling, with vacancies around the US at record highs.

"We typically grow hand-in-hand with our clients, serving them in additional properties and markets as they expand. So, for example, interest rates can influence growth in some areas of our business," said Michael Tanner, senior vice president of marketing at Lessen.

A dearth of tradespeople is also a challenge for the company's platform that connects them to landlords, Tanner said.

Finally, the firm competes in a crowded market of competitors offering software for landlords, including Stessa, AppFolio, TenantCloud, and more.

Metropolis
A professional headshot of a man. folding his arms
Metropolis CEO and cofounder Alex Israel.

Metropolis

City: Santa Monica

Year founded: 2017

Total funding raised by the company: $1.93 billion

What it does: Metropolis uses a computer vision platform powered by artificial intelligence to enable checkout-free payment at parking facilities. After registering their vehicles on the Metropolis app, customers can simply drive in and drive out without the hassle of paying with credit cards or ticket machines.

Why it's hot: Metropolis announced its acquisition of SP Plus, the largest parking network in North America, for $1.5 billion in October 2023 and closed the deal in May 2024. The move allowed Metropolis to rapidly scale its technology and reach 50 million customers across 4,000 locations.

"We've seen success and are continuing to scale and grow because Metropolis' checkout-free experiences give people the gift of time back, so they can spend it on the things that matter the most," cofounder and CEO Alex Israel told Business Insider.

The main challenge it faces: Israel said that most of the parking payments and transactions in the world are still analog.

"We envision a future where checkout-free payments travel with you, but scaling this technology across industries is complicated — it requires remarkable proprietary technology and boots on the ground," he said.

PredictAP
Two men posing.
PredictAP CEO and founder David Stifter, left, and president and cofounder Russell Franks, right.

PredictAP

City: Boston

Year founded: 2020

Total funding: $13.17 million

What it does: PredictAP makes real estate invoice processing simple and easy. It uses AI to code invoices quickly.

"So the accounting rules can become very complicated in commercial real estate at big companies," said CEO and founder David Stifter, describing the journey of how an invoice is processed.

He said an invoice would come in first, and someone would need to determine which accounting rules to apply. Predict AP will be useful at this stage because the AI will understand and use the accounting rules correctly. Then, it will go through the rest of the accounts payable process, a department responsible for paying vendors for services or goods at the company. Then, someone will approve it and then pay for it.

Why it's hot: Predict AP serves every corner of the real estate sector. The company said its customers are publicly traded companies that own real estate, private companies that own and operate real estate, or customers who provide services for those big companies.

The company has been able to help AP specialists and property managers face difficulties entering invoices because it takes a lot of time and effort.

"We're able to help folks with that difficult task of coding invoices and it's particularly painful in real estate where there's a lot of complexity," said CEO and founder David Stifter. He added: "Nobody wants to be typing 15-digit invoice numbers; that's not fun."

Russell Franks, the president and cofounder of Predict AP, added to his comments and noted that Predict AP could process an invoice in 30 to 40 seconds faster than the normal processing time of five to 10 minutes.

The main challenge it faces: The company shared that it is hard to find funding in this tough economy, and it is not easy to grow and expand.

Propexo
Three men posing.
Propexo CTO Nikolas Johnson, left, COO Ben Keller, center, and CEO Remen Okorua, right.

Propexo

City: Boston

Year Founded: 2022

Total funding: $7.97 million

What it does: Propexo's unified API, or application programming interface, helps other real-estate tech companies quickly and easily integrate with property-management systems.

Why it's hot: Real-estate tech companies use APIs to integrate with data from external sources, like lead generation systems or rent roll systems.

However, existing APIs and the technology around them are outdated.

That means companies lose time and money that could be used to develop their product while trying to integrate with these APIs, said COO Ben Keller.

Propexo's unified API improves the developer experience by making the integration process simpler, faster, and cheaper. "We're really the first engineering infrastructure product in the proptech ecosystem," said Keller.

The main challenge it faces: It's not easy to convince property managers and owner-operators to change how they've been running their businesses for many years.

In August, the Department of Justice filed an antitrust lawsuit against RealPage, alleging that the property-management software company allows landlords to coordinate and unfairly keep rents high. This is causing some landlords to rethink how they handle and process information, according to trade publication Multifamily Dive.

Rent Butter
A headshot of a man.
Christopher Rankin, Rent Butter's cofounder and CTO.

Rent Butter

City: Chicago

Year founded: 2020

Total funding: $4 million

What it does: Rent Butter has created an alternative tenant screening process that gives landlords a more comprehensive view of applicants' financial history.

Why it's hot: Landlords have historically relied on static credit reports and background checks when evaluating potential tenants. Doing so creates a barrier for applicants with financial difficulties early in their adult lives, as credit scores are a difficult metric to improve.

Rent Butter is trying to eliminate that barrier and change the narrative around who is a "good" candidate by providing landlords with additional information that can more accurately assess a person's financial reliability.

Their application connects to an applicant's bank account, credit history, and employment, criminal, and rent payment history to provide a detailed one-page report highlighting their financial behaviors and potential risks.

"Our whole approach is: How do we show who the person is today — not who they were seven or 10 years ago," cofounder and CTO Christopher Rankin told Business Insider.

The main challenge it faces: Rent Butter partners with landlords, rather than selling directly to consumers, which makes scaling a challenge. Most landlords already have a tenant-vetting process, so it could be hard to convince them to change to Rent Butter.

Shepherd
Three men posing on a couch
Shepherd CTO Mo El Mahallawy, left, CEO Justin Levine, center, and Chief Insurance Officer Steve Buonpane, right.

Shepherd

City: San Francisco

Year founded: 2021

Total funding: $22.27 million

What it does: Shepherd is a Managing General Underwriter (MGU) leveraging tech to make underwriting commercial construction insurance more efficient. It also wields data to create more informed risk selection and price recommendations, often leading to upfront and long-term savings for policyholders.

Why it's hot: Insurers partner with MGUs to provide clients with insurance, with the MGU underwriting policies for clients and selling to potential policyholders. Shepherd adapts the typical MGU model by cutting the underwriting process from weeks to hours and incorporating risk assessment tech into its platform, making it a one-stop shop for insurers and clients. By working faster and putting these services in one place, Shepherd can better serve construction companies and insurers while fostering more involved relationships.

The main challenges it faces: Both insurance brokers and potential clients have some healthy skepticism about a new model for commercial construction insurance, so it falls on Shepherd to earn their trust to gain their business.

Steadily
Darren Nix poses for a headshot
Darren Nix, founder and president of Steadily.

Courtesy of Steadliy

City: Austin

Year founded: 2020

Total funding: $60.1 million

What it does: Steadily is a digital insurance company for real-estate investors that promises a "faster, better, and cheaper" underwriting experience.

Why it's hot: Steadily founder Darren Nix first encountered the outdated nature of insurance underwriting, trying to find quotes for his own rental property in Chicago.

Terrible customer service and shockingly high quotes stopped him in his tracks.

"It was like rolling back the clock to the mid-1990s," he told Business Insider. Focusing on selling insurance to real-estate investors has helped Steadily grow to about 140 employees across Austin and Kansas City, Missouri.

In November, Steadily announced it had started to actively write new business on its own insurance carrier. "Nothing says 'we believe in the product we've built' more strongly than underwriting risk as the carrier," Nix said in a statement.

The main challenge it faces: Steadily has started selling insurance to short-term-rental investors, which presents different challenges than underwriting more traditional, longer-term rentals.

The market represents significant growth — accounting for nearly 20% of Steadily's current business — but the pricing is tricker.

"The people coming in and out of those properties don't take care of them at the same level of responsibility," Nix explained. "One of the things that a host can do to demonstrate that they are a good insurance risk is to point to their Airbnb or VRBO history and show that they're a super host, they take great care of their property, they don't host ragers."

Tour24
Founder Georgianna W. Oliver.
Tour24 founder Georgianna W. Oliver.

Courtesy of Tour24.

City: Medfield, Massachusetts

Year founded: 2020

Total funding: $20.35 million

What it does: Tour24 is an app that lets prospective tenants take self-guided apartment tours without a leasing agent present.

Why it's hot: In many cities, renting an apartment can be cutthroat, with open-house lines and bidding wars to nab a good unit at a reasonable price.

More than ever, people are deciding on places to live quickly — sometimes even committing before they've even seen the unit because they aren't able to schedule a walkthrough that jives with their working hours.

Tour24 allows users — who are ID- and credit card-verified — to tour apartments when leasing agents aren't available, such as on evenings and weekends.

"We are seeing that certainly millennials really prefer self-guided experience," Georgianna W. Oliver, the founder of Tour24, told Business Insider.

Oliver said many of their leasing-agency clients offer Tour24's self-guided tours as well as leasing agent-led tours and virtual tours — and have given feedback that the more options they give potential renters, the better.

"People have the options," she said. "And they really like having the options."

The main challenge it faces: Since the worst part of the COVID-19 pandemic, many individual leasing agencies have been offering some version of a self-guided tour on their own with their own video Tour24 also competes with other self-guided rental-tour apps like Rently and CareTaker.

Tour24 seems to be holding its own: The startup announced in October that it raised $5 million in a Series B round, noting that it had doubled in size in 2024 to reach 525,000 units across over 2,060 multifamily properties.

Read the original article on Business Insider

25 things you won't believe are turning 25 in 2025

2 January 2025 at 08:39
international space station 2000
The International Space Station's first live-in crew arrived in 2000.

NASA/Getty Images

  • It's hard to believe it's been 25 years since the turn of the century.
  • Famous songs like Bon Jovi's "It's My Life" and NSYNC's "Bye Bye Bye" were released in 2000.
  • The camera phone and eHarmony are turning 25, too.

In the year 2000, no one could've predicted the impact Jennifer Lopez's green Versace dress, "American Psycho," or Coldplay would have on pop-culture history.

In the 25 years since, Lopez has remained in the public eye, Austin Butler is set to star in an "American Psycho" remake, and Coldplay has gone on to release a slew of popular songs from "Viva la Vida" and "Clocks" to "A Sky Full of Stars."

Though the year 2000 may seem like it wasn't that long ago — especially with Gen Z's attempts to revive Y2K fashion — daily life looked significantly different: The average tank of gas cost $1.52, movie tickets cost $5.39, and Instagram was a decade from invention.

So, with the arrival of 2025, here's a look back at some of the music, books, film, TV, tech, and newsworthy events that first captured our attention 25 years ago and have held on ever since.

The world's first camera phone was introduced 25 years ago.
Yuko Ozawa displayed a third-generation mobile phone in 2002.
A 2002 version of the J-phone.

YOSHIKAZU TSUNO/Contributor/AFP via Getty Images

Although camera phones are common today, the first phone for sale with a camera was released in 2000. The phone was called J-SH04, and it had just a 0.1-megapixel resolution.

A 2002 version of the J-Phone is pictured above.

The first "The Sims" game is turning 25, too.
Electronic Arts executive producer Rod Humble introduced "The Sims 3" in 2010; the first "The Sims" came out in 2000.
"The Sims" was introduced in 2000.

Michal Czerwonka/Stringer/Getty Images

The popular computer game, "The Sims," made its debut on February 4, 2000, and since then, the franchise has sold 200 million game copies, The Washington Post reported in 2020.

One of the most recent editions of the game, "The Sims 4: Life and Death," was released on October 31, 2024.

The teen clothing brand Hollister opened in 2000.
The Hollister store sign, circa 2024.
Hollister opened in 2000.

Peter Dazeley/Contributor/Getty Images

In 2000, Abercrombie & Fitch launched a new brand called Hollister, geared toward teenagers. The clothing store markets itself as laid-back attire, inspired by California's relaxed lifestyle.

Today, there are more than 500 Hollister stores worldwide.

The popular dating website eHarmony launched in 2000.
An eHarmony log-in page on a cell phone.
eHarmony was created in 2000.

Ted Soqui/Contributor/Corbis via Getty Images

Before there was Tinder or Bumble, clinical psychologist Dr. Neil Clark Warren created eHarmony, a website designed to help you meet your perfect match.

The site initially had users answer more than 450 questions to help them better enter long-term relationships. Since then, the site has cut down its questions, but remained one of the top online dating services. In 2017, for example, eHarmony had 750,000 paid subscribers and 10 million active users.

NSYNC's "Bye Bye Bye" was released on January 17, 2000.
Lance Bass, Joey Fatone, JC Chasez, Chris Kirkpatrick, and Justin Timberlake of NSYNC attended the 42nd Annual Grammy Awards in 2000.
"Bye Bye Bye" was released in January 2000 as the lead single from NSYNC's third album, "No Strings Attached."

Bob Riha Jr./Contributor/Getty Images

In January 2000, boy band NSYNC released "Bye Bye Bye" as the lead single for their album "No Strings Attached."

The song reached No. 4 on the Billboard Hot 100 list, and the music video became a cultural phenomenon, staying in first place on "Total Request Live" for 25 days. It was even nominated for video of the year at MTV Video Music Awards.

Ricky Martin's hit single "She Bangs" is also turning 25.
Ricky Martin performing in Paris in 2000.
Ricky Martin released "She Bangs" in 2000.

Pool BENAINOUS/SCORCELLETTI/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images

Twenty-five years ago, Ricky Martin released "She Bangs," and the single climbed the charts. It reached 12th place on the Billboard Hot 100 and stayed there for 18 weeks.

"I Hope You Dance" by Lee Ann Womack was also released 25 years ago.
Lee Ann Womack performing on "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno" on August 17, 2000.
Lee Ann Womack's song "I Hope You Dance" won the Country Music Award for single of the year.

Paul Drinkwater/Contributor/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images

When Lee Ann Womack released her country single "I Hope You Dance" in 2000, it became a hit. It reached the top spot on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, and she earned a Country Music Association Award for single of the year.

Baha Men's "Who Let the Dogs Out" also turns 25 this year.
Members of Baha Men posed at the nominations for the 43rd annual Grammy Awards.
Baha Men released "Who Let the Dogs Out" in 2000.

Richard Corkery/Contributor/NY Daily News via Getty Images

When Baha Men first released "Who Let the Dogs Out," it flopped, barely reaching the top 40. But slowly, the single gained popularity in the early 2000s, as the catchy lyrics and tune caught on.

Bon Jovi carried their career into the new decade with "It's My Life," released May 8, 2000.
A close-up of Bon Jovi performing at Party in the Park 2000.
Bon Jovi released "It's My Life" in 2000.

Sven Hoogerhuis/Contributor/BSR Entertainment via Getty Images

In the '80s and '90s, Bon Jovi released massive hits like "Livin' on a Prayer" and "You Give Love a Bad Name," but the band released another hit single in 2000: "It's My Life." The song eventually climbed to the top of the charts, carrying the band into another decade of success.

Coldplay's debut album, "Parachutes," came out in July 2000.
Chris Martin of Coldplay performing at Cardiff University in October 2000.
Coldplay released their debut studio album, "Parachutes," in 2000.

Western Mail Archive/Mirrorpix/Contributor/Getty Images

Bandmates Chris Martin, Will Champion, Jonny Buckland, and Guy Berryman released their debut studio album, "Parachutes," in July 2000 under the name Coldplay.

The album featured the song "Yellow," which remains a fan-favorite.

The fourth book in the "Harry Potter" series, "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire," was released in July 2000.
A young child wearing a wizard hat and glasses gets "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire" as another child looks on.
J.K. Rowling released "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire" in 2000.

Erik S. Lesser/Liaison/Contributor/Getty Images

Following the success of her three other books in the "Harry Potter" series, JK Rowling published her fourth book, "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire," in the summer of 2000.

In 2020, Screen Rant reported that the book has sold about 65 million copies, making it the second-most popular book in the series.

Twenty-five years since the book's release, the franchise is still extremely successful, with a film series, amusement rides at Universal Studios, a show on Broadway, and an upcoming TV series.

However, Rowling herself has been the subject of controversy in recent years.

It's been 25 years since Julia Quinn released the first two books in the "Bridgerton" series, "The Duke and I" and "The Viscount Who Loved Me."
The cast and crew of "Bridgerton" posed at the season three world premiere in 2024.
Quinn released "The Duke and I" in 2000; the show released its third season in 2024.

Kristina Bumphrey/Contributor/Variety via Getty Images

In the nearly 25 years since their release, Quinn's books have become the source material behind one of Netflix's most popular series to date: "Bridgerton."

The show, and its spinoff series, "Queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story," attracted 189 million views in the first half of 2024, with season three of "Bridgerton" accounting for 92 million in less than two months following its releases in May and June.

Season four is currently in the works.

"Erin Brockovich," starring Julia Roberts, came out in 2000.
Julia Roberts attended the premiere of "Erin Brockovich" in March 2000.
Roberts won the Academy Award for best actress for her role in "Erin Brockovich."

Munawar Hosain/Fotos International/Contributor/Getty Images

"Erin Brockovich" is a biographical film about the real-life woman — played by Julia Roberts — who battled a California power company after it was accused of polluting a city's water. The film was nominated for five Academy Awards, including best picture. Roberts took home the Oscar for best actress.

The movie "Almost Famous" is turning 25.
Kate Hudson attended the premiere of "Almost Famous" in September 2000.
Kate Hudson starred as Penny Lane in "Almost Famous."

Steve Eichner/Contributor/Getty Images

"Almost Famous" became a cultural juggernaut when it came out in 2000. The movie follows a high schooler who's writing an article for Rolling Stone about a new rock band.

It features an all-star cast, including Kate Hudson, Billy Crudup, Frances McDormand, Anna Paquin, and Zooey Deschanel. The film went on to be nominated for four Academy Awards, but it only took home one for best original screenplay.

Christian Bale took on the iconic role of Patrick Bateman in "American Psycho," released in April 2000.
Christian Bale on the set of "American Psycho."
Christian Bale played Patrick Bateman in "American Psycho."

Eric Robert/Contributor/Sygma via Getty Images

Twenty-five years ago, a then 26-year-old Christian Bale starred as Patrick Bateman, a banking exec who moonlights as a psychopathic killer, in "American Psycho." The movie quickly became a cult classic — in 2013, the film was even turned into a Broadway musical.

The first "Scary Movie" was released in July 2000.
Ana Faris as Cindy in "Scary Movie."
Anna Faris played Cindy in "Scary Movie."

Dimension Films

In the summer of 2000, "Scary Movie" was released to parody the most popular horror films of the time, including "Scream," "Sixth Sense," and "The Blair Witch Project." It went on to be a success, launching Anna Faris' acting career and sparking multiple sequels.

In October 2024, Marlon, Shawn, and Keenan Wayans announced they're returning to the franchise for "Scary Movie 6."

It's been nearly 25 years since Russell Crowe played Maximus in Ridley Scott's "Gladiator."
Russell Crowe as Maximus in a fight scene from "Gladiator."
"Gladiator" was released in 2000.

Archive Photos/Stringer/Getty Images

In 2000, Russell Crowe starred as Maximus, a vengeful Roman general, in "Gladiator." The following year, the film was nominated 12 times at the Academy Awards, winning best picture. Crowe also took home the trophy for best actor.

Its sequel, "Gladiator II," was released in 2024 and starred Paul Mescal, Pedro Pascal, Joseph Quinn, and Denzel Washington.

In August 2000, "Bring It On" was released.
Gabrielle Union as Isis in "Bring It On."
Gabrielle Union played Isis, captain of the East Compton Clovers, in "Bring It On."

Universal Pictures

In 2000, Kirsten Dunst and Gabrielle Union starred as rival cheerleading captains Torrance and Isis in the hit teen movie "Bring It On."

The success of the film prompted several sequels in the following years.

"Survivor" made its debut in May 2000.
The 16 contestants from the inaugural season of "Survivor" posed for a photo in Los Angeles before leaving for filming.
"Survivor" has aired for 47 seasons since its debut in 2000.

Monty Brinton/Contributor/CBS Photo Archive/CBS via Getty Images

"Survivor" premiered on CBS on May 31, 2000. In the reality TV competition, strangers are placed in a remote and isolated location, then they have to find food and shelter, while also competing in challenges.

Each contestant is voted off the island one by one until there's only one standing survivor. That person wins $1 million. Over the last 25 years, "Survivor" has had 47 seasons, all of which have been hosted by Jeff Probst.

Another CBS show, "Big Brother," also debuted 25 years ago.
Julie Chen Moonves posed at the Us Weekly and Pluto TV's Reality TV Stars of the Year event in October 2024.
Julie Chen Moonves has hosted all 26 seasons of "Big Brother."

Jon Kopaloff/Stringer/Getty Images

After "Survivor," CBS premiered another hit reality competition show in July 2000: "Big Brother."

The series follows a group of strangers who are forced to live together in a house while under constant surveillance. They compete in challenges and, in the end, one person wins $500,000.

Through the years, the show became increasingly popular, prompting spin-offs like "Celebrity Big Brother." So far, there have been 26 seasons, all hosted by Julie Chen Moonves.

2025 also marks the 25th anniversary of Jennifer Lopez's iconic sheer green Versace dress.
Jennifer Lopez wore a sheer tropical-print Versace dress to the 2000 Grammys.
Lopez wore this sheer, green, printed Versace dress to the Grammys in 2000.

J. Vespa/Contributor/WireImage/Getty Images

In a February 2024 "Life in Looks" interview with Vogue, Lopez said that her stylist at the time, Andrea Lieberman, asked her not to wear the dress.

"My stylist was like, 'Please don't wear it. Somebody else has worn it,''" Lopez said, adding, "I was like, 'Well, you bought it, and it looks the best, so I'm going to wear it.' And so I did. And it caused quite a stir."

Lopez isn't wrong — the world has her and that dress to thank for Google Image Search, according to former Google CEO Eric Schmidt.

It's also the 25th anniversary of the 2000 World Series — dubbed the "Subway Series" — as the Yankees took on the Mets.
Mariano Rivera jumped into the air after the Yankees won game five of the 2000 World Series.
The New York Yankees beat the New York Mets in the 2000 World Series.

Ken Sawchuk/Contributor/Newsday LLC/Newsday RM via Getty Images

In the end, the Yankees became champions, winning its third consecutive World Series four games to one.

Venus Williams will also celebrate the 25th anniversary of her first Wimbledon women's singles final win.
Venus Williams smiled and held her Wimbledon trophy after defeating Lindsay Davenport in the women's singles final in 2000.
Venus Williams won her first Wimbledon single's title in 2000.

Clive Brunskill/Staff/ALLSPORT/Getty Images

At just 20 years old, Venus Williams lifted the Wimbledon trophy for the first time in her career after defeating Lindsay Davenport.

Williams went on to win the Wimbledon singles' trophy four more times. She also has won six Wimbledon doubles titles.

It's been 25 years since the legendary 2000 presidential election, which ended with a Supreme Court case.
Then presidential candidates Al Gore and George W. Bush shook hands after their first debate in October 2000.
Al Gore and George W. Bush ran for president in 2000.

DON EMMERT/Contributor/AFP via Getty Images

Twenty-five years later, it's easy to forget how close the 2000 presidential election was.

Democratic nominee Al Gore and Republican nominee George W. Bush went head to head, but on election night, it was unclear who won.

With the votes so close in Florida, the state ordered a recount. After a slew of legal fights around the recount in Florida, the Supreme Court decided that the initial results would be counted, giving Bush the election. He won by a .009% margin, or 537 votes.

The International Space Station is also celebrating a 25-year milestone: Its first live-in crew arrived in 2000.
The International Space Station floating in orbit on September 18, 2000.
The first crew to reside on the ISS arrived in 2000.

NASA/Newsmakers/Handout/Getty Images

Although President Ronald Reagan ordered NASA to build the International Space Station in 1984, it wasn't until 2000 that people actually lived on it.

Bill Shepherd, Yuri Gidzenko, and Sergei Krikalev became the first three to reside on the ISS and live there for several months. Since then, more than 270 people from over 20 countries have visited the ISS, according to NASA.

Read the original article on Business Insider

What Christmas looks like in every state

23 December 2024 at 14:08
Runners at the Las Vegas Great Santa Run in 2021.
Some people in Nevada participate in the Las Vegas Great Santa Run.

Bryan Steffy/Contributor/Getty Images

  • People across the US celebrate Christmas differently.
  • Drive-thru light displays are popular in Connecticut, Louisiana, and West Virginia.
  • Meanwhile, Alabama and Idaho are known for having lavish Christmas trees in front of their capitols.

The song goes, "It's beginning to look a lot like Christmas everywhere you go. " The best part is that Christmas can look a little different as you travel from coast to coast.

Sure, there are traditional symbols like Christmas trees, snowmen, and candy canes, but each state puts its own local twist on the festive celebrations.

Whether you're planning to spend your holiday on the sunny beaches of Hawaii with Shaka Santa and his wife Tutu Mele or ice skating at Rockefeller Center in New York, here's a peek at how each state makes the holidays special.

Alabama
The Alabama state capitol with a Christmas tree lit in front of it.
Alabama lights a Christmas tree in front of its capitol.

Nagel Photography/Shutterstock

It's been widely reported that Alabama became the first state to make Christmas a legal holiday in 1836.

These days, the state celebrates with a tree outside the state capitol in Montgomery, Alabama.

Alaska
A general view of Santa Claus House in North Pole, Alaska. A red sleigh sits in the snow in front of the store.
Santa Claud House is located in North Pole, Alaska.

Kit Leong/Shutterstock

In 1952, Con and Nellie Miller set up a trading post outside Fairbanks, Alaska, and called the town North Pole. The Miller family built Santa Claus House, a general goods store there.

Arizona
A cactus covered with Christmas lights.
Some people in Arizona decorate cacti for Christmas.

Jeff Greenberg/Contributor/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

In the Arizona desert, some people decorate cacti for the Christmas season.

In 2018, the Associated Press reported that a family in Phoenix built their Christmas tree from a cactus skeleton. They called it a "Phoenix Christmas tree."

Arkansas
The "Lights of the Ozarks" in downtown Fayetteville, Arkansas.
The "Lights of the Ozarks" will be on display through January 1, 2025.

Gunnar Rathbun/Shutterstock

Every year, Fayetteville, Arkansas, hosts the "Lights of the Ozarks" Christmas light display.

This year, the display will be up from November 22 to January 1, and according to ExperienceFayetteville.com, it's free to visit every night until 1 a.m.

California
A view of Sleeping Beauty's Castle at Disneyland at night, lit up and decorated for the holiday season.
Disneyland is transformed into a winter wonderland for the holiday season.

AaronP/Bauer-Griffin/Contributor/GC Images/Getty Images

California is home to the original Disneyland, which hosts several Christmas-themed events during the holiday season.

This year, through January 6, the park will be transformed into a winter wonderland. Even Sleeping Beauty's Castle gets the holiday treatment with wreaths and lights of its own.

Colorado
Denver City Hall lit up with red, blue, green, and gold Christmas lights.
Denver lights up city hall for the holidays.

Sean Xu/Shutterstock

Every year, Denver turns into a holiday wonderland for an event known as "Mile High Holidays."

Throughout November and December, the city is decorated with a 110-foot-tall LED light tree, while the botanical garden and zoo are transformed with lights.

Connecticut
The Setti family home in Norwalk, Connecticut, decorated with lights for Christmas with a large crowd out front.
The Setti family decorated their home into a Christmas village for 26 years.

Brownie Harris/Contributor/Walt Disney Television via Getty Images

In 2021, software company Porch conducted a study that found that people in Connecticut spend the most time decorating the exteriors of their homes, using an average of seven hours and 36 minutes to do so.

One of the most popular houses to visit was that of the Setti family in Norwalk, who decorated their home into a Christmas village for 26 years before retiring in 2014.

Delaware
Two large Christmas trees decorated with ornaments with Nemours Estate in the background.
Nemours Estate is decorated for Christmas annually.

BigDaveBo/Shutterstock

Nemours Estate is typically decked with elaborate Christmas decorations in Wilmington, Delaware.

According to the estate's website, visitors can tour the 77-room 20th-century mansion, the Chauffeur's garage, and the gardens, complete with their holiday displays through December 29.

Florida
A large Christmas tree in Universal Studio Park in Orlando. People in the park are walking in the foreground.
Universal Studios is decorated for the holidays.

pauloalberto82/Shutterstock

Universal Studios in Orlando transforms for the holidays every year with holiday lights, Christmas trees, and other festive decor.

In the Wizarding World of Harry Potter section, guests can sip hot butterbeer while the Grinch hangs around Seuss Landing.

Georgia
An aerial view of people ice skating at Atlantic Station near downtown Atlanta.
"Skate the Station" is open until January 15.

dgdigital/Shutterstock

Every year, Atlanta hosts "Skate the Station," where a large, temporary ice skating rink is installed at Atlantic Station.

This year's rink is in operation through January 15.

Hawaii
Shaka Santa and Tutu Mele statues in Hawaii.
Shaka Santa and Tutu Mele are holiday staples in Honolulu.

Yi-Chen Chiang/Shutterstock

Shaka Santa and his wife, Tutu Mele, are fixtures of the holiday season in Honolulu.

Every year, the pair of 21-foot statues are placed in front of city hall or Honolulu Hale. The city is also known for the "Honolulu City Lights" celebration.

Idaho
A Christmas tree lit with purple lights in front of Idaho's statehouse.
Every year, a Christmas tree is lit in front of Idaho's statehouse.

Charles Knowles/Shutterstock

Every year, Idaho's state Christmas tree is lit in front of the statehouse in Boise.

According to a local news station, this year's tree is a 36-foot-tall blue spruce that weighs about 3,750 pounds.

Illinois
People shopping at the Christkindlmarket in Chicago.
Christkindlmarket is popular in Chicago.

Scott Olson/Getty Images

Chicago and Aurora, Illinois, will host the Christkindlmarket this year.

It's the 28th year the market has been held in Chicago, and over those years, it's become a popular attraction for residents looking to buy gifts, ornaments, and food from around the world.

Indiana
An aerial view of the Soldiers and Sailors Monument decorated with Christmas lights.
The Soldiers and Sailors Monument will be decorated until January 12.

TheMann00/Shutterstock

Indianapolis decorates the Soldiers and Sailors Monument with 4,784 Christmas lights to make it look like a giant Christmas tree in an event known as the "Circle of Lights."

Iowa
A view of Rand Park covered in snow. Rand Park is where the City of the Christmas Display of Lights is located.
The City of Christmas Display of Lights is located at Rand Park in Keokuk, Iowa.

Richard K. Gates/Shutterstock

Keokuk, Iowa, hosts the "City of Christmas Display of Lights", a light display in Rand Park that visitors can drive through.

About 20,000 cars drive through the park annually to see more than 150 light displays, including the nativity scene, Santa's workshop, reindeer, and elves.

Kansas
The carousel at Botanica, The Wichita Gardens, pictured here in October.
The carousel at Botanica, The Wichita Gardens, is a popular attraction.

photojohn830/Shutterstock

Botanica, The Wichita Gardens, is a public garden that hosts the holiday light show "Illuminations."

"Illuminations" features up to two million lights and has music, carousel rides, treats, and an opportunity to see Santa Claus. This year's display will be available through January 4.

Kentucky
A blurred photo of people ice skating at Triangle Park in Lexington, Kentucky.
Ice skating is available at Triangle Park in Lexington, Kentucky.

Irina Mos/Shutterstock

Visitors of Lexington, Kentucky's Triangle Park, can enjoy an ice skating rink through January 20, 2025.

Louisiana
Light up displays at City Park's Celebration in the Oaks in New Orleans.
The Celebration in the Oaks is a Christmas light display in New Orleans.

Elliott Cowand Jr/Shutterstock

"Celebration in the Oaks" is an annual tradition where the city of New Orleans covers 25 acres of New Orleans City Park in Christmas lights.

The display spans the Park, Botanical Garden, Storyland, and the Carousel Gardens Amusement Park.

Maine
A Christmas tree made from lobster traps and lit up in Rockland, Maine.
Rockland, Maine, is known for building a Christmas tree from lobster traps.

Robert F. Bukaty/AP

Since Maine is known for its lobster, it's fitting that residents build special Christmas trees focused on the sea creature.

In 2018, Rockland, Maine, residents built the world's largest tree out of lobster traps, reaching 40.5 feet. The tree included 155 lobster traps, 180 lobster buoys, and 2,500 lights, News Center Maine reported.

Maryland
Houses in Baltimore's Hampden neighborhood lit up with Christmas lights and decorations.
Houses in Baltimore's Hampden neighborhood participate in "Miracle on 34th Street."

Patrick Semansky/AP

The Hampden neighborhood of Baltimore attracts visitors every year thanks to its elaborate Christmas decorations, which are displayed in a display called "Miracle on 34th Street."

Almost all the homes on the block are covered in Christmas lights, candy canes, Santa dolls, and other holiday displays.

Massachusetts
Blurred ice skaters with decoratively lit trees in the background.
Boston is decorated in Christmas lights.

Charles Krupa/AP

Boston transforms during the holiday season, with hundreds of Christmas lights covering the trees in the Public Garden, Copley Square, the Prudential Center, and the Common.

Michigan
A lion made of lights at the Detroit Zoo.
The Detroit Zoo hosts "Wild Lights" throughout the holiday season.

Davslens - davslens.com/Shutterstock

Millions of lights become the focal point at the Detroit Zoo's "Wild Lights" event. According to its website, the zoo features more than 500 immersive displays. Some of the massive light displays include a lion, whale, fox, and snake.

Minnesota
The Canadian Pacific Holiday Train lit up with decorations.
The Canadian Pacific Holiday Train visits towns in Minnesota.

Debra Anderson/Shutterstock

Decorated in various Christmas lights, the Canadian Pacific Holiday Train stops in more than 20 towns throughout Minnesota to raise money, awareness, and food donations for local food banks and pantries.

Though visitors can't actually ride the train, they're treated to a concert of holiday songs and popular originals. Some of this year's performers include Alana Springsteen, American Authors, Clerel, and Tiera Kennedy.

Mississippi
Christmas lights depict Santa Claus fishing from a boat.
Biloxi, Mississippi, residents are known to decorate their boats for Christmas.

Carmen K. Sisson/Shutterstock

While most of the country decorates houses for Christmas, some residents in Mississippi decorate their boats with Christmas lights and other holiday decor.

The boaters show off their festive vessels at the Biloxi Beach Water Boat Parade, culminating in a fireworks show over the water.

Missouri
Christmas decorations at the historic Union Station of Kansas City.
Union Station in Kansas City, Missouri, is decorated for Christmas.

Logan Bush/Shutterstock

Union Station in Kansas City, Missouri, is decorated with Christmas lights, falling snowflakes, a Christmas tree, and toy trains for the holiday season.

People also come to the station to take in the holiday-themed shows, which include piano recitals, pageants, and caroling.

Montana
The snowcapped Swan Range Mountains in Bigfork, Montana.
Volunteers in Bigfork, Montana, decorate the town for the holidays.

Scott Wilson Photography/Shutterstock

Volunteers in Bigfork, Montana, called the Bigfork Elves, are known for decorating the town yearly.

According to Bigfork.com, the volunteers "deck the town with over 10,000 feet of garland and lights" and have been active in the area for over 40 years.

Residents also gather for a tree-lighting ceremony and host other festive events.

Nebraska
Buffalo Bill Ranch State Historical Park; the house is white with green trim.
"Christmas at the Cody's" is an annual celebration at the mansion of "Buffalo Bill" and Louisa Cody.

Kevin Kipper/Shutterstock

"Christmas at the Cody's" is an annual celebration at the mansion of "Buffalo Bill" and Louisa Cody in North Platte, Nebraska.

The property is part of the Buffalo Bill Ranch State Historical Park, and guests can enjoy Christmas lights, carols, and horse-drawn carriage rides.

Nevada
Runners at the Las Vegas Great Santa Run in 2021.
The Las Vegas Great Santa Run is held annually.

Bryan Steffy/Contributor/Getty Images

In 2019, Business Insider named Las Vegas one of the most festive places to spend the holidays, and the annual Las Vegas Great Santa Run might be part of the reason.

The event draws thousands of people dressed in Old Saint Nick costumes to the city's downtown area to run or walk the course.

New Hampshire
A house in New Hampshire with extravagant Christmas decorations.
People in New Hampshire spend the most time decorating for Christmas.

Andrew Matthews - PA Images/Getty Images

Though residents in Connecticut win for most time spent on exterior decorations, New Hampshire residents spend the most time decorating overall, with an average of 17 hours dedicated to the activity, according to Porch.

Loudon, New Hampshire, is also home to the Gift of Lights, a 2.5-mile drive with hundreds of light displays.

New Jersey
People re-enacting George Washington's crossing of the Delaware River.
Some people in New Jersey participated in a re-enactment of George Washington's crossing of the Delaware River.

Mel Evans/AP

Christmas Day looks a bit different for some in New Jersey because they re-enact George Washington's famous crossing of the Delaware River.

The event starts at the Washington Crossing Historic Park in Pennsylvania and ends in Trenton, New Jersey, just as the former president did in 1776.

New Mexico
The town plaza of Mesilla, New Mexico, decorated with Christmas lights and a Christmas tree.
Mesilla, New Mexico, hosts an annual Christmas Eve celebration.

TopGum Photography/Shutterstock

Every Christmas Eve, the streets leading to the Mesilla town square are lined with paper lanterns.

The square is also decorated in lights, as local choirs sing Christmas tunes, visitors enjoy holiday treats, and a vigil is held for fallen service members of the local fire department.

New York
The Christmas tree at Rockefeller Center lit in 2024.
The Christmas tree in Rockefeller Center is a popular tourist attraction.

Selcuk Acar/Contributor/Anadolu via Getty Images

Rockefeller Center was completed in 1939 and has since become one of New York City's most popular tourist destinations. Millions of people visit the Christmas tree every year.

According to NBC, the tree is completed with a 900-pound Swarovski star with 70 spikes, 3 million crystals, and plenty of lights.

North Carolina
A Christmas tree farm in North Carolina.
North Carolina produces the second-most Christmas trees in the country.

Chuck Burton/AP

According to a 2022 report by the USDA, North Carolina produces the second-most Christmas trees of any state in the US, with more than 3 million trees.

North Dakota
Williston, North Dakota, decorated for Christmas with lights that read "Williston."
Williston, North Dakota, celebrated its 10th Christmas tree lighting.

Eric Gay/AP

This year, Williston, North Dakota, celebrated its 10th annual Christmas tree lighting ceremony with a 41-foot-tall Colorado Blue Spruce.

In addition to the tree lighting, guests enjoyed a bonfire, music, and fireworks.

Ohio
The front of the house from "A Christmas Story."
The house from "A Christmas Story" is still standing in Cleveland.

Jason Miller/AP

"A Christmas Story" was released in 1983 and quickly became a cult classic during the holidays.

The house seen in the movie is still standing in Cleveland, and across the street, there's a museum that houses props, costumes, and other artifacts from the film.

Oklahoma
A red truck drives in Purcell's Christmas Parade in Oklahoma. People lined the streets and a Christmas tree stands in the background.
The Purcell Christmas Parade is held annually.

Kit Leong/Shutterstock

Every year, the Heart of Oklahoma Chamber of Commerce hosts the Purcell Christmas Parade in Purcell, Oklahoma.

One key detail for parade participants: No one can dress up as Santa Claus — that responsibility belongs to the Heart of Oklahoma Chamber of Commerce.

Oregon
A Christmas tree farm covered in snow in Willamette Valley, Oregon.
Oregon is the top producer of Christmas trees in the US.

Jacquie Klose/Shutterstock

Beating out North Carolina for Christmas tree production is Oregon.

According to the USDA, the "Beaver State" produced more than 4.5 million Christmas trees in 2022 to earn the top spot in the country.

Pennsylvania
People gathered at the Christmas Village at LOVE Park in Philadelphia.
LOVE Park hosts Philadelphia's annual Christmas Village.

Bo Shen/Shutterstock

In Philadelphia's Love Park, you'll find the Christmas Village, an open-air market with small business owners' booths, a Ferris wheel, treats, and the second-annual Festival of Trees fundraiser for the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.

Rhode Island
An interior room in The Elms mansion in Newport, Rhode Island.
The Elms mansion in Newport, Rhode Island, is decorated for Christmas.

Dan Hanscom/Shutterstock

Newport is known for its famous mansions like The Breakers, The Elms, and Marble House.

The Preservation Society of Newport County welcomes visitors every year inside these homes to tour the Christmas decorations. You will find wreaths, poinsettias, white candles, and elaborate Christmas trees inside.

South Carolina
A panned-up view of the Greenville County Courthouse. The top of a Christmas tree is in the frame, too.
Greenville, South Carolina, hosts the annual Poinsettia Christmas Parade.

Carrie A Hanrahan/Shutterstock

The Poinsettia Christmas Parade has been a Greenville, South Carolina, tradition for over 75 years.

This year, the best walking group award was given to the Bike Walk Greenville "Poinsettia Pedalers and Pedestrians."

South Dakota
The South Dakota state capitol was decorated in 2011 with a variety of Christmas trees and snowflakes hanging from the ceiling.
The South Dakota state capitol decorated in 2011.

Amber Hunt/AP

According to Travel South Dakota, the state's "Christmas at the Capitol" tradition started in 1981 with 12 Christmas trees and now features almost 100 trees decorated by different organizations, cities, and businesses.

Tennessee
The exterior of the Gaylord Opryland Resort decorated with Christmas lights.
The Gaylord Opryland Resort has hosted "A Country Christmas" for 41 years.

rylansamazingphotography/Shutterstock

Business Insider's Priyanka Rajput reported that the Gaylord Opryland Resort in Nashville has hosted "A Country Christmas" for 41 years.

To celebrate the holidays, the hotel prepares for six weeks to decorate the space with everything from life-size ice sculptures and hand-tied ribbons to elaborate Christmas trees.

Texas
A crowd of people watched a firework show at the AT&T Performing Arts Center's "Reliant Lights Your Holiday" festival.
The AT&T Performing Arts Center hosts the "Reliant Lights Your Holiday" festival.

Brandon Wade/AP

The AT&T Performing Arts Center in Dallas hosted the "Reliant Lights Your Holiday" festival earlier this month. The free event included live music, local vendors, a drone show, fireworks, cookie decorating, and more.

Utah
The interior of the Mormon Tabernacle on Temple Square.
The Tabernacle Choir at Temple Square performs an annual Christmas concert.

JHVEPhoto/Shutterstock

Founded in 1847, the Tabernacle Choir at Temple Square (previously known as the Mormon Tabernacle Choir) tours the world for most of the year but returns to Salt Lake City for its annual Christmas concert.

This year's guest artist is Tony Award winner Ruthie Ann Miles.

Vermont
A decorated street with shops in downtown Woodstock, Vermont.
Woodstock, Vermont, was named one of House Beautiful's "most charming Christmas towns."

James Kirkikis/Shutterstock

House Beautiful named Woodstock, Vermont, one of 2024's "most charming Christmas towns" in the US.

One of its attractions is Wassail Weekend, a festival with a parade, Christmas tree lighting, caroling, ice skating, and more.

Virginia
The Williamsburg Inn decorated in Christmas lights; the building is reflected in an outdoor fountain.
The Williamsburg Inn decorated for Christmas.

Christopher W Becke/Shutterstock

Williamsburg, Virginia, is known for having a variety of festive activities, including markets, fireworks shows, performances, and Busch Gardens Christmas Town.

Washington
The Seattle Christmas Market with a Christmas tree in the foreground and the Space Needle in the background.
The Seattle Christmas Market is held annually.

Wolfgang Kaehler/Contributor/LightRocket via Getty Images

Like other major cities, Seattle hosts an annual Christmas market with artisans, food, drinks, and more. The city also participates in SantaCon, a bar crawl where people dress up as Santa.

West Virginia
A view of the Ohio River with Wheeling Suspension and Fort Henry Bridges in the background in Wheeling, West Virginia.
The "Oglebay Winter Festival of Lights" features over 100 light displays.

Marianne Campolongo/Shutterstock

The "Oglebay Winter Festival of Lights" dates back to 1985 and takes place in Wheeling, West Virginia. Today, it includes more than 100 light displays across 300 acres, WBOY-TV reported, and this year's display also features lights choreographed to music.

Wisconsin
A vintage steam engine at the Mid-Continent Railway Museum in North Freedom, Wisconsin.
At the Mid-Continent Railway Museum, visitors can ride two festive trains.

Helene Woodbine/Shutterstock

At the Mid-Continent Railway Museum in North Freedom, Wisconsin, visitors can ride two holiday-themed trains: the Santa Express and the Holiday Flyer.

According to the museum's website, passengers aboard the Santa Express will take a 55-minute ride and receive a visit from Santa and a small gift, while passengers on the Holiday Flyer will receive hot chocolate and treats.

Wyoming
The antler arch in Jackson Hole Town Square lit at night.
Jackson Hole, Wyoming, is known for its antler arch.

Felix Lipov/Shutterstock

The Jackson Hole Town Square is famous for its arch made of antlers.

After Thanksgiving, the city holds an event — with Santa, cookies, candies, and carols — to watch the antlers light up with Christmas lights for the first time in the season.

Read the original article on Business Insider

I visited The Container Store to see why sales are down. The selection was incredible, but the prices were higher than I expected.

23 December 2024 at 09:21
Outside The Container Store in New York City.
The Container Store storefront on Sixth Avenue in New York City.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

  • The Container Store, a home storage and organization chain, filed for bankruptcy on December 22.
  • I visited the store's Manhattan location in September.
  • I loved the wide variety of options but concluded I'm not the store's target customer for now.

Before I moved to New York City, everyone warned me about the shoebox apartments I'd have to get used to.

They weren't wrong.

Living in a one-bedroom apartment definitely requires some innovative storage solutions. In the past year, I've looked to stores like Target, Ikea, Walmart, and Amazon for homeware items, but I can't stop my Type-A mind from searching for options to make my space more efficient.

Enter The Container Store, a home storage and organization retailer founded in 1978 in Texas. The company now has 102 stores across the US.

However, while the company boasts a cult-like following, sales have struggled. On December 22, the company filed for bankruptcy, revealing in court documents that it's $230 million in debt. Still, CEO and president Satish Malhotra said, "The Container Store is here to stay."

The filing comes after months of other documented financial struggles. In June, The Container Store reported that first fiscal quarter sales were down 12.2% compared to the same period in 2023. The following month, Modern Retail reported that the company hadn't "posted a full-year profit" since 2021.

In September, I visited The Container Store's Sixth Avenue location in Manhattan to see if the storage solutions were right for me and if I could understand the brand's sales decline.

Here's what I found.

When I entered the Manhattan store, I was happy to see it lived up to its name, with aisles and aisles of — you guessed it — containers.
A view of inside The Container Store. There are white pillars spaced on the right side of the frame headed to the back of the store with signs that say "Closet" and "Bath." There are drawers in the front as well as a red sale sign in the right foreground.
This was my view when I first walked into the store.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

As soon as I stepped inside, I was shocked at the massive space. According to the retailer's website, stores have "an average size of approximately >24,000 square feet (18,000 selling square feet)."

Though this location spanned just one floor, all I could see were aisles and aisles of items lining its perimeter and throughout its center.

The store was largely sectioned by the room you're looking to organize, such as the closet, bathroom, kitchen, garage, office, and more.

I started with the closet section and loved the look — but not the price — of these Drop-Front Shoe Boxes.
A clear shoe organizer.
The Container Store's Large Translucent Drop-Front Shoe Box Case of 6.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

During my visit, a case of six was on sale for $59.99, but I still couldn't justify purchasing these, given that my boyfriend and I easily have about 30 pairs of shoes — it would cost us about $300 at a minimum.

But even if we were comfortable justifying the price, I wouldn't expect these boxes to be very apartment-friendly given their size; one case of six measures 11 1/16 inches by 14 7/16 inches by 7 1/4 inches.

As much as I would love to include these in a future dressing room, I had to pass.

As expected, there were plenty of decorative bins, like this Scalloped Maize Storage Bin.
The author holding the Scalloped Maize Storage Bin.
I liked the quality of the Scalloped Maize Storage Bin.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

This one was a good size at 11 inches by 15 inches by 8 1/2 inches and retailed for $29.99.

There was no shortage of hangers.
A wall of different types of hangers in different shades.
There was a wide variety of hangers available.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

My favorite was the Non-Slip Velvet Suit Hangers, which retailed for $9.99 for a 10-pack.

Though I didn't need any more hangers, I would definitely consider purchasing from here in the future, thanks to the wide selection of colors and materials.

I loved these jewelry boxes by Stackers.
The author holding Stackers' Classic Jewelry Drawer.
I loved how customizable these Stackers jewelry drawers were.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

There were plenty of drawer options customers could "stack" to build their perfect custom jewelry box, which I loved.

However, I had difficulty locating the prices of each drawer type on the shelves.

The Stackers Belt Organizer seemed like a great practical gift for the holidays.
A belt organizer.
The Stackers Belt Organizer retails for $24.99.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

This belt organizer, retailing for $24.99, could sit on a closet shelf or in a drawer next to similar organizers.

Moving on to bathrooms, there were plenty of countertop organizers.
A wall of bathroom organizers like toothbrush holders, acrylic trays, and glass jars.
There were plenty of bathroom organizers.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

There were plenty of decorative storage options, from soap dispensers and toothbrush holders to apothecary jars and trays.

But I don't understand the appeal of acrylic.
A large acrylic tray.
I couldn't justify purchasing this acrylic tray.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

The Luxe Acrylic Large Tray pictured above satisfies an itch in my brain that loves the aesthetically pleasing bathrooms I see on Pinterest and TikTok.

But, having been fooled by acrylic pieces, I think these dishes seem more trouble than they're worth. Given the likelihood of dried water, toothpaste, and soap drips, this tray could easily become an eyesore, just like my old acrylic toothbrush holder did.

These pieces don't appear to serve much purpose, especially at a cost of $24.99.

I was shocked to see this makeup organizer retailing for $60.99.
The Luxe Acrylic Makeup Organizer and Storage Kit.
The Luxe Acrylic Makeup Organizer and Storage Kit retails for $60.99 at The Container Store.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

As smart as this storage kit looked, I would never spend this amount when similar options on Amazon are sold at fractions of the price.

And I'm not sure how useful a toilet roll dispenser could really be.
A MindSet Toilet Roll Dispenser by brabantia.
I don't understand why a toilet roll dispenser would be necessary.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

Maybe I'm missing out — and maybe it speaks to the space I have in my bathroom — but for $49.99, I'd rather just grab a new roll of toilet paper from the pack when I need it.

However, I really liked these hair tool storage options.
Storage solutions for hair tools.
The Container Store had multiple options for storing hair tools.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

My hair dryer and diffuser attachment have a bad habit of getting tangled under my sink, so I could see this being a great addition to my bathroom that would be worth the $25.

And I enjoyed browsing the mock closets by Custom Spaces.
Mock closet organization at The Container Store.
I gained a lot of inspiration from the Custom Spaces displays.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

One thing I didn't know about The Container Store before my visit was that it has staff designers available to help curate "Custom Spaces."

In collaboration with acquisitions Elfa and Closet Works, "Custom Spaces" was identified as a key part of the company's growth strategy.

Launched in November 2022 as a rebranded expansion of the company's "Custom Closets," The Container Store's Custom Spaces "is defined by three areas of the home: Closet Spaces, Living Spaces, and Garage Spaces," the company said at the time.

As part of this effort, The Container Store launched a new "Garage + Elfa" line in October 2023 and expanded its "Decor+ by Elfa" line in June 2024. Elfa was not included in the bankruptcy.

My favorite section to explore was all of the aisles dedicated to kitchens.
A wall of kitchen storage solutions.
There was so much kitchen storage available.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

Look at all these storage options!

These Montana Jars were added to my holiday wishlist immediately.
Three different-sized glass jars with wooden lids.
I loved the Montana Jars collection.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

These jars appeared straight out of my Pinterest dreams and seem perfect for holding baking ingredients like flour and sugar.

The collection includes three jar sizes: 1.5 quarts, 2 quarts, and 3 quarts. They retail for $19.99, $21.99, and $26.99, respectively, making the full collection about $69.

Plastic and stainless-steel scoops were also available on another shelf nearby.

This water bottle organizer also deserves a spot in my cabinets.
A water bottle organizer.
I've never seen a water bottle organizer like this.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

YouCopia's Upspace Bottle Organizer 2-Shelf holds eight to 10 bottles and costs $24.99.

This bakeware organizer makes great sense, especially in a small living space.
The Container Store's "Commercial Cabinet Drawer Bakeware Organizer."
This organizer would help keep all my baking sheets and cutting boards together.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

Even if I'm not happy with its $65.99 price tag.

I also appreciated this shopper-friendly display for mapping drawer organizers.
An interactive display showing how certain organizers would fit in a kitchen drawer.
There were a variety of different-size bins to make a drawer as functional as possible.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

If you're looking for something specific, visit the store with measurements in mind so you don't have to guess what product would best fit your space.

However, I wasn't sold on this $45 spice rack.
A metal spice rack.
I couldn't justify spending $45 on this spice rack.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

Call me picky, but I wouldn't like picking through the bottles to find the spice I'm looking for, and I'm not a huge fan of labels.

But if you are a fan of labels, they have plenty.
A wall of labeling supplies.
I was impressed with the labeling options.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

Near the crafting section were packs of labels for kitchens, laundry rooms, bathrooms, playrooms, and more.

Each pack from the "Everything Organizer Collection" retailed for $12.99.

I moved on to more storage options for clothing.
A wall of different laundry baskets.
I saw some laundry baskets for $11.99 and others for $169.99.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

This section included plenty of laundry baskets to choose from.

I have closet organizers like these, which've been a lifesaver for small spaces.
A wall of hanging closet storage.
The additional closet shelving has been helpful from my college dorms to starter apartments.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

They're perfect for maximizing closet space when there isn't much room for dressers.

I also found a few kid-friendly storage options.
Kid-friendly storage bins decorated with different animals like a porcupine, rhinoceros, peacock, sheep, owl, and fox.
The colorful animals ranged from rhinos to foxes.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

These animal-themed bins seemed perfect for a child's bedroom or an elementary school classroom, but I was a bit surprised by the cost.

For example, the peacock storage cube was listed for $19.99, but another unpictured sloth cube was listed for $26.99.

There were also sets of rainbow-colored storage bins and rolling chests.

I was surprised to see Jason and Kylie Kelce while walking through the garage section.
A display for Jason and Kylie Kelce's garage transformation.
Jason and Kylie Kelce collaborated with The Container Store.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

Malhotra told Modern Retail in July that the brand is "starting to do more collaborations."

"I think the partnership we did with the Kelces was really encouraging for customers to see," he said. "Oftentimes, they think that expense is a reason why things are not done, and they look at someone like the Kelces and they go, 'Obviously money is not an issue for them.' Their issue was knowledge, time, and solutions, and that's why they wanted to work with The Container Store."

There were plenty of options for trash cans, too.
A wall of different trashcans ranging in material, shape, and size.
I appreciated the number of options.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

Ranging in size, color, and material, I loved the variety available.

I also enjoyed browsing the office and stationery sections.
A table of stationery supplies ranging from pens and highlighters to notebooks and trinkets.
I love browsing through stationery.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

There were so many trinkets, pens, and notepads to choose from.

There were fun options, like this candy-themed highlighter pack.
Sugar High highlighter pack.
The Sugar High highlighter pack retails for $8.99.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

I would've loved having these in my pencil pouch in elementary school.

I liked the simplicity of this to-do list by Ramona & Ruth.
A today to-do list by Ramona & Ruth.
I'm always looking for new notepads and notebooks to add to my collection.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

If I didn't already own four different notebooks and calendars, this would've been a very easy $15.99 out of my wallet.

I was also surprised by the number of seemingly random trinkets available.
The Woobles "Fred the Dinosaur" beginner crochet kit.
The Woobles "Fred the Dinosaur" crochet kit was so cute.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

Like this beginner crochet kit.

Here's another example: mushroom bookmarks.
Magic Sprout mushroom bookmarks.
I've never seen bookmarks like these.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

I'm still unsure if this design makes much sense, but it is cute.

At this point, I started losing track of what aisles I'd already toured.
A wall of different style baskets.
There were so many aisles of baskets around the store.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

There were just so many choices.

Here are some more options in case you haven't seen enough.
More large plastic storage bins organized on the floor and in shelves in the background.
The Weathertight Clear Totes looked like a great option for moving.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

The Weathertight Clear Totes looked like a great choice for reusable moving boxes and basement storage.

Prices ranged from $14.99 for a 6.5-quart tote to $34.99 for a 74-quart tote.

And who doesn't love a clearance section?
A display of clearance items ranging from bowls and plates to glassware.
When I visited, clearance items were up to 70% off.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

The store's clearance options were robust, with different plates, bowls, glassware, decor pieces, and more.

My favorite clearance item was this marble wine chiller.
Three marble wine chillers on display.
These wine chillers originally sold for $98 each.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

Though this definitely wasn't a need, I'm disappointed I didn't snag one while it was on sale for $29.40.

Overall, my trip to The Container Store made me realize that I'm probably not the brand's target audience ... for now.
Outside The Container Store in New York City.
The Container Store storefront on Sixth Avenue in New York City.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

Malhotra told Modern Retail in July, "There will always be a cheaper alternative to a plastic bin. Our objective is not to compete there because we don't have the scale and buying power to do so."

Instead, he said it's about offering "a white glove experience" through Custom Spaces and the brand's merchandise. He added that The Container Store differentiates itself from the Walmarts and Targets of the world by spending time with customers to help them choose the right products for their space.

Therefore, it seems that The Container Store is looking to target shoppers who have an established home base and plan to invest in it for years to come.

As a 20-something-year-old who plans to bounce from rental to rental for the next few years, I'm nowhere near that phase of my life. So, buying more expensive organizers that may only fit my current apartment isn't worth it.

However, if you have the money, space, and time, I completely understand falling in love with The Container Store. But for now, my visits will simply remain sources of inspiration.

The Container Store did not reply to a request for comment from Business Insider.

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12 snacks children around the world leave for Santa Claus

23 December 2024 at 06:09
A plate of cookies and a glass of milk left out with the note, "Santa's snack." In the background is the living room filled with presents, a Christmas tree, and other decorations.
Children in the US are known to leave Santa milk and cookies.

H. Armstrong Roberts/ClassicStock/Getty Images

  • In the US, it's common for children to leave Santa Claus milk and cookies.
  • But this tradition looks different for children around the world.
  • In Ireland, some families leave Santa a pint of Guinness.

From the Yule Lads of Iceland to the traditionally green-clad Father Christmas of the UK, the Santa Claus Americans are accustomed to looks a little different throughout the rest of the world, and so do certain Christmas traditions.

While it's common for people around the world to leave their gift-giver a treat for their arrival, the choice of snacks and drinks vary.

Many American children, for example, are known to leave milk, cookies, and the occasional reindeer-friendly snack, such as a carrot, but it's common for kids to leave Santa Claus a stronger drink — like beer or wine — in European countries such as France and Ireland. And for children in Germany, snacks are skipped altogether in favor of handwritten letters.

Whether you're looking to mix up your Santa's snacks or just learn something new this holiday season, here's a peek at how Christmas is celebrated around the world through 12 treats families leave for the man with the bag.

United States
A plate of cookies and a glass of milk in the foreground with a lit Christmas tree and fireplace in the background.
Children in the US leave milk and cookies for Santa.

rangizzz/Shutterstock

In the US, many children leave out a glass of milk and a plate of cookies for Santa.

Some families also leave carrots and celery for Santa's reindeer.

Australia
A close-up of Santa Claus holding a a tall pint glass of light beer.
In Australia, children leave Santa beer.

Reshetnikov_art/Shutterstock

Although Australians leave cookies for Santa to snack on, they replace the glass of milk with a cold glass of beer. December is actually summer for Australia, so the beer might be just what Santa needs in the hot weather.

Ireland
A close-up of a glass of Guinness with the brand's logo on the glass.
Some children in Ireland leave a pint of Guinness.

Frantisekf/Shutterstock

Some families in Ireland leave a pint of Guinness for Santa on Christmas Eve.

According to Culture Trip, children usually place the cold beer near the tree to offer Saint Nick a quick pick-me-up for the long night ahead.

UK
A close-up of a plate with two mince pies and two glasses of sherry in front of a Christmas tree.
Children in England leave Father Christmas mince pies and sherry.

Marbury/Shutterstock

Like in Australia and Ireland, children in the UK also leave Santa alcohol.

Families believe Father Christmas needs some sherry to warm up on Christmas night. It's also tradition to pair the sherry with a mince pie.

The Netherlands
Two shoes left out with carrots inside them alongside a note with the text "Liere Sinterklaas" (which translates to "Dear Santa") and pepernoten.
Some children in the Netherlands leave carrots in their shoes.

Milos Ruzicka/Shutterstock

In the Netherlands, children often leave carrots and hay to help energize Sinterklaas's horses — yes, horses — on their trip around the world.

In some parts of Europe, like Denmark, Belgium, and the Netherlands, children don't believe Santa's sleigh is pulled by reindeer. Instead, they think he is being pulled by horses, so children leave food for them on Christmas Eve, and sometimes this food is left in their shoes.

Argentina
A barn full of hay.
Children in Argentina leave hay and water out ahead of Three Kings Day.

ben bryant/Shutterstock

Rather than leave snacks for Santa, children in Argentina leave out hay and water for the Three Kings' horses. They also leave out their shoes, so their gifts can be placed in them, Ecela Spanish reported.

Children in Argentina usually receive their presents on January 6, Three Kings Day, which honors the day the Three Kings delivered their presents to baby Jesus.

Denmark
A small bowl of rice pudding.
Children in Denmark leave their nisse rice pudding.

Gaus Alex/Shutterstock

Kids in Denmark don't leave anything for Julemanden — the Danish term for Santa — to eat, but they do leave out treats for their nisse, or house elf.

According to Atlas Obscura, the Danish tradition calls for families to leave a bowl of risengrød (rice pudding or sweet porridge) out on Christmas Eve for the house elf.

Sweden
Stortorget Square decorated with a Christmas tree in Stockholm.
Children in Sweden also leave out rice porridge.

dimbar76/Shutterstock

In 2017, then-press officer of the Swedish Embassy in Washington, DC, Kate Reuterswärd told NPR that her family would leave a bowl of risgrynsgröt (rice porridge) outside their door.

"The rice porridge is thickened with milk and flavored with cinnamon and a little salt. Some families add almonds, butter, jam, or molasses, but the traditional version doesn't have to be sweetend," she said.

Some families in Sweden may also leave Jultomte a cup of coffee.

Iceland
A close-up of laufabrauð.
In Iceland, families leave the Yule Lads laufabrauð.

Elisa Hanssen/Shutterstock

Rather than Santa Claus, children in Iceland await the arrival of the 13 Yule Lads, who, beginning on December 12, each bring them a small present, Nordic Visitor reported. In return, families leave out laufabrauð, which translates to leaf bread and tastes like a crispy wafer.

France
A glass of white wine in the foreground with a lit Christmas tree blurred in the background.
Some children in France leave Père Noël wine.

New Africa/Shutterstock

In France, children leave Père Noël wine and leave Gui, his donkey, treats like carrots or hay, which is left in their shoes, History.com reported.

Germany
Two children, a girl and boy, writing letters to Santa.
In Germany, some children leave handwritten letters.

Richard Rodriguez/Getty Images

Germans have a Christmas angel, the "Christkind," instead of Santa Claus, and they don't leave any snacks.

Instead, they write the angel letters. Some families mail the letters ahead of the holiday, while others leave them out on Christmas Eve, History.com reported.

Chile
A plate of pan de pascua.
Pan de pascua is a traditional Chilean fruitcake.

Ildi Papp/Shutterstock

In Chile, children leave pan de pascua, a traditional fruitcake, for Viejito Pascuero, "Old Man Christmas." Some of the fruitcake's key ingredients are dulce de leche, rum, candided fruits, and nuts.

Read the original article on Business Insider

I shopped in Target's dollar section and loved its options for last-minute gifts and stocking stuffers

18 December 2024 at 09:06
A Target storefront in Houston.
The author went to Target's dollar section for stocking stuffers and last-minute gifts.

JHVEPhoto/Shutterstock

  • I visited my local Target in New Jersey to shop for gifts in its "Bullseye's Playground" section.
  • All of the items were priced at $1, $3, or $5.
  • From mugs and candles to self-care items, I loved the selection.

Target is one of the biggest retailers in the US, with more than 1,900 store locations, and while I've been a frequent customer for years, I've only recently begun to pay attention to its dollar section.

Known as "Bullseye's Playground" — in honor of the store's bull terrier mascot, Bullseye — the front-of-store section is stocked year-round with items spanning home decor, organization options, and small toys, all retailing for $1, $3, or $5.

I decided to put "Bullseye's Playground" to the test to see what last-minute gifts, stocking stuffers, and decorations I could find at my local Target in Jersey City, New Jersey.

While the items from this section are visible on Target.com, they appear to only be available in store and are "not eligible for same-day delivery or pickup services," according to the retailer's website, so in-person shopping for last-minute holiday gifts is advisable.

Most store locations are offering extended hours (7 a.m. to midnight) through December 23 and from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Christmas Eve, but if you're looking for items outside Bullseye's Playground, the retailer will be offering same-day Christmas Eve delivery for orders placed before 3 p.m. on the Target app or online.

Whether you're in need of some last-minute gift inspiration or just curious about Target's selection, here were some of my favorite options.

Bullseye's Playground is a front-of-store section with affordable options.
An overview of Target's dollar section.
Here's an overview of Bullseye's Playground at my local Target.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

At my local Target, this section is located at the entrance near home decor and fashion items, rather than near the groceries and pharmacy.

I visited on a weekday night, so it wasn't crowded at all.

There were so many different items packed into the displays, so for the sake of time, I decided to focus on highlighting some of my favorite choices.

The first item to catch my eye was a satin pillowcase and eye-mask set.
A gray satin pillow case and eye mask set from Target.
This satin pillow case and eye-mask set retailed for $5.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

For anyone who likes to feel a little luxurious before bed, I found this matching satin pillow case and eye-mask set for $5.

In addition to gray, other colors available in-store and online include beige, pink, and sage.

I loved this headband and wristband set.
A fluffy cream-colored headband and matching scrunchie set from Target.
These fluffy headband and wristband sets retailed for $3.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

If the person you're shopping for is into skincare, a headband and wristband set like this is a great option.

The headband keeps their hair out of their face, while the wristbands prevent the water from dripping down their arms.

These sets retailed for $3 and were available in cream, baby pink, and black.

Also in the beauty category was this LED mirror and makeup brush set.
A mint-green LED mirror and brush set from Target.
There were LED mirror and makeup brush sets for $5.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

The set appeared to fold into an easy-to-carry case and was available in this mint-green color and a cream color for $5.

To go with the mirror and brushes, there was a fluffy makeup bag, too.
A fluffy mint-green makeup bag from Target.
This mint-green makeup bag retailed for $5.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

I didn't love how matted the fluffy fabric appeared to be on this makeup bag, but for $5, it seemed fairly priced.

I was shocked to see a bath tray available.
A wooden bath tray from Target.
I found a bath tray for $5.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

Though this obviously won't fit in a stocking, I was shocked to find a bath tray for just $5.

Its label said it fits most standard tubs and measured at 29.8 inches by 4.7 inches.

There were plenty of scrunchies.
A display of pink, gray, and cream-colored scrunchies at Target.
My local Target had a full bin of scrunchies available.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

As someone who's always in need of a hair tie, I was pleased to find a large bin of scrunchies each priced at $1.

I thought the decorative candles were cute.
A Christmas tree-shaped candle scented like "Cypress & Champagne" from Target.
There were decorative candles scented like "Cypress & Champagne" and "Festive Fir."

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

I saw two Christmas tree-shaped candles at my local Target. The first of which was this 3 oz "Cypress & Champagne" scented option for $3, while the other was called "Festive Fir."

Since the candles were located in Bullseye's Playground and not the nearby candle section, I thought they may have a weaker scent, but I was pleasantly surprised.

Though it's hard to say how such a small candle would impact an entire room, the direct scent was strong and true to their names.

One of my favorite finds on my trip was this pair of iridescent cocktail glasses.
A set of two iridescent cocktail glasses from Target.
This set of iridescent cocktail glasses costs $5.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

Whether you're into home decor or a fan of hosting, these iridescent cocktail glasses seemed like the perfect trend-forward kitchen gift.

The set retailed for just $5, and I'm already regretting not grabbing them as an early gift for myself.

I liked that right next to the cocktail glasses, there was a bar tool set.
A gold bar tool set from Target.
This bar tool set retailed for $3.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

The bar tool set retailed for $3 and included a bottle opener and a jigger with a handle.

I liked that Target seemed to take some of the guess-work out of holiday shopping by placing similar items near each other to make for an easy collection of coordinated gifts.

All that was missing was the alcohol of your choice.

Also nearby were these holiday-themed rolling pins.
Holiday-themed rolling pins; half have a candy-cane print and the others have a forest-green and leafy print.
There were peppermint and winter foliage inspired rolling pins for $5.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

These peppermint and winter-foliage inspired rolling pins retailed for $5 and seemed like cute options to spice up any holiday-themed kitchen without breaking the bank.

I also found a selection of multicolored mugs.
A variety of mugs, including an orange and purple flower mug, a blue and purple one that says "Just Vibes," a burgundy and orange one that says "Love You," and a white mug with yellow smiley faces.
Target had a variety of mugs available for $5.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

While I wasn't a huge fan of the colors and design choices available at my local store, I do think they're cute options for $5.

In the past, I've also purchased holiday-themed mugs like these.
A gingerbread girl mug and a snowman mug.
I purchased these ceramic holiday mugs for $3 each.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

I originally found these ceramic gingerbread and snowman mugs during a Target shopping trip in early November near my hometown in Maryland.

Both hold up to 13 oz and retailed for $3, and while I didn't see them during my most recent Target trip, both items are still present on Target's website, suggesting they may still be available at other locations around the country.

Any of the mugs would pair perfectly with a peppermint hot drink bomb.
A "cozy peppermint mug hot drink bomb" from Target.
This peppermint hot drink bomb retails for $4.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

A small display of these hot drink bombs were on one of the shelves above the mugs; however, the price of them was hard to locate.

After doing more research when I got home, I realized these treats don't appear to be Bullseye's Playground exclusives, as they retail for $4, but I still think they're an affordable stocking stuffer option to consider.

I love these holiday-themed measuring cups and spoons from another trip to Bullseye's Playground.
A set of snowmen measuring cups and measuring spoons.
The ceramic measuring cups and spoons cost $5 each.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

In addition to the mugs, I also found these ceramic snowman measuring cups and measuring spoons during my November Target trip in Maryland.

Both retailed for $5, and though my local Target didn't have them during my most recent December trip, both items are still present on Target's website, suggesting they may still be available at other locations around the country.

And this ceramic plate, too.
A ceramic tray with doodles of a cookie, a carrot, a candy cane, and milk. It also has writing that says, "Hi Santa!" with circles labeled "A special treat for you," "Milk to wash it down," and "Don't forget the reindeer."
This ceramic plate cost $5.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

On another shopping trip in November — this time back in Jersey City — I found a $5 ceramic tray for Santa's Christmas Eve snacks (yes, I shop here a lot).

Though I didn't see it again on my most recent trip, the tray is still listed on Target's website under Bullseye's Playground.

I was surprised to see so many drink-related accessories.
A baby-blue tumbler accessory set from Target.
This tumbler accessory set retailed for $5.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

Sure, Stanley cups have been popular this year, but I wasn't expecting to see so many drink-related accessories.

This tumbler accessory set, for example, came in both a pale-blue and a mint-green color and included a straw cover, handle, and zipper pouch.

It retailed for $5.

Straw toppers and covers were popular, too.
A smiling daisy straw topper and cover set.
This daisy-themed straw topper and cover set retailed for $3.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

There was a large selection of straw toppers and covers available at my local Target, including this daisy set, a cloud and rainbow option, a doughnut and ice cream cone, and a stereo and music note, among others.

Each set sold for $3.

As for home decor, I saw plenty of light-up Christmas tree pillows.
A light-up Christmas tree pillow from Target.
I found this light-up pillow for $5.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

The pillow was small, soft, and retailed for $5.

One thing I noticed, though, was that it requires two AAA batteries, which would have to be purchased separately in order to enjoy its light-up capabilities at home.

According to Target's website, other pillows that may still be available in Bullseye's Playground include a reindeer, a gingerbread man, a gingerbread woman, a gingerbread house, a peppermint, and a star.

There were also some small toys like this finger soccer game …
A holiday-themed finger soccer game from Target.
This finger soccer game retailed for $5.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

The game includes the playing field, two goals, one ball, and two pairs of elf shoes to play. It retailed for $5.

And this desktop soccer game.
A wooden desktop soccer game at Target.
This desktop soccer game cost $5.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

This toy resembled a miniature foosball table and retailed for $5.

Overall, I was impressed with the selection and even picked up a few items for a friend.
The Target logo on the storefront.
I was impressed with the options in Bullseye's Playground.

Markus Mainka/Shutterstock

I ended my shopping trip pleased with Target's selection, and thanks to all the self-care products, I was finally able to decide what to gift my best friend: her own curated bag of self-care items.

In addition to other goodies from around the store, I chose to add the pillow case and eye-mask set, the headband and wristband set, and the Christmas tree candle from Bullseye's Playground.

Now all I'm left to do is wonder: Is it too soon to go back?

Read the original article on Business Insider

The 4 best and 4 worst movie remakes of 2024, according to critics

17 December 2024 at 08:06
Jaquel Spivey as Damian Hubbard, Angourie Rice as Cady Heron, and Auli'i Cravalho as Janis 'Imi'ike in "Mean Girls."
Jaquel Spivey as Damian Hubbard, Angourie Rice as Cady Heron, and Auli'i Cravalho as Janis 'Imi'ike in "Mean Girls."

Jojo Whilden/Paramount

  • Remaking movies has been a popular strategy for Hollywood executives.
  • "Nosferatu" has received positive reviews ahead of its December 25 international release.
  • But Rupert Sanders' "The Crow" didn't need a resurrection.

Hollywood loves a reboot.

In January, "Mean Girls" completed its 20-year journey from film to Broadway musical to musical movie; in May, Chris Pratt revived "Garfield"; and in December, Robert Eggers' "Nosferatu" will enter theaters again more than one hundred years after its silent film debut in 1922.

It's clear the industry has no intention of retiring old IP … and why should it?

"Mean Girls" and "The Garfield Movie" grossed upward of $100 million and $200 million, respectively, according to Box Office Mojo, suggesting that audiences are willing to buy the nostalgia they're being sold, even if they're not asking for it.

Before 2025 brings even more Disney live-action remakes — this time in the form "Snow White" and "Lilo & Stitch" — more "Jurassic World" action, and yet another "Superman," here's a look back at the best and worst movie remakes of the year, according to critics.

Rotten Tomatoes and Box Office Mojo data were accurate as of December 16.

WORST: 4. "Road House"
Jake Gyllenhaal and Lukas Gage as Dalton and Billy in "Road House."
Jake Gyllenhaal and Lukas Gage played Dalton and Billy in "Road House."

Amazon Prime Video

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 60%

Jake Gyllenhaal stars as Elwood Dalton, a former UFC fighter who's been recruited to be bouncer at a bar in the Florida Keys, in this remake of Patrick Swayze's 1989 action adventure.

Critics' reactions to the film were mixed. The Washington Post's Ann Hornaday wrote, "Remaking 'Road House' is a supremely dumb idea, so it's fitting that it has morphed into a self-consciously dumb movie," while Time Out's Phil de Semlyen gave the film a three out of five star rating, writing, "The combination of Gyllenhaal's easy charm, some Florida sunshine and at least one fight scene for the ages make this 'Road House' worth stopping by. Just try to grab a seat in a quiet corner."

3. "Lisa Frankenstein"
Kathryn Newton as Lisa in "Lisa Frankenstein."
Kathryn Newton played Lisa in "Lisa Frankenstein."

Focus Features

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 52%

Written by Diablo Cody ("Jennifer's Body," "Juno," "Tully") and directed by Zelda Williams (daughter of the late Robin Williams), this new interpretation of "Frankenstein" brings audiences back to the 1980s as teenager Lisa Swallows (Kathryn Newton) develops a relationship with a revived corpse (Cole Sprouse) and causes mayhem in her town.

"'Lisa Frankenstein' tries to thread a delicate needle, stitching together a mix of horror, comedy, romance, and teen angst, all while adopting a decidedly off-kilter tone," Brian Lowry wrote for CNN. "The result is an interesting misfire, yielding a few amusing moments while adding up to considerably less than the sum of its parts."

Meanwhile, The Wrap's Lex Briscuso found that the genrebending film "makes for a ridiculously brilliant spin on a timeless story over 200 years old."

2. "The Garfield Movie"
The character Garfield smiling and holding a fork and knife as he prepares to eat lasagne.
Chris Pratt voices Garfield in 2024's "The Garfield Movie."

Sony Pictures Entertainment

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 37%

In the newest "Garfield" movie — it's a reboot of the Garfield franchise, which began in 2004 with "Garfield: The Movie" — the lovably lazy tabby cat (voiced by Chris Pratt) meets his long-lost father and goes on a high-stakes adventure to steal … milk.

Mark Kennedy wrote for the Associated Press that the film is "a curious new animated attempt to monetize the comic icon again by giving him an origin story and then asking him to do things a galaxy away from what he does in the funny pages. It's like if Snoopy ran an underground bare-knuckle fight club."

Yet, it was a box-office success, grossing $234.5 million at the global box office.

1. "The Crow"
Bill Skarsgård as Eric Draven/The Crow in "The Crow."
Bill Skarsgård played Eric Draven and The Crow in "The Crow."

Lionsgate

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 22%

Critics' worst-rated remake of the year was Rupert Sanders' "The Crow," a remake of the 1994 film with the same title. Starring Bill Skarsgård and FKA Twigs as murdered lovers Eric Draven and Shelly Webster, the film follows Draven's resurrection from the afterlife to avenge their deaths and save Webster.

"'The Crow' is not a waste of talent or resources; worse, it just hangs there on the screen, as undead as Eric himself," Ryan Lattanzio wrote for IndieWire.

BEST: 4. "Mean Girls"
Avantika Vandanapu as Karen Shetty, Reneé Rapp as Regina George, Bebe Wood as Gretchen Wieners, and Angourie Rice as Cady Heron in "Mean Girls."
Avantika Vandanapu as Karen Shetty, Reneé Rapp as Regina George, Bebe Wood as Gretchen Wieners, and Angourie Rice as Cady Heron in "Mean Girls."

Jojo Whilden/Paramount

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 69%

Looks like Tina Fey is still trying to make fetch happen, and with some success, too. Rather than a direct remake of the 2004 classic, 2024's "Mean Girls" is actually a film version of the adapted Broadway musical, complete with songs like "Meet The Plastics," led by Renée Rapp as Regina George, and "Stupid With Love," led by Angourie Rice as Cady Heron.

"It turns out that 'Mean Girls: The Musical: The Movie' is pretty good, and likely to succeed at its primary purpose, which is to remind you that the original 'Mean Girls' is fun. The movie gets by via a relentlessly self-deprecating awareness of the absurdity of its own existence," Jackson McHenry wrote for Vulture.

He added, "Mean girls are everywhere, even among the mathletes. And so long as they flourish, we'll keep returning to 'Mean Girls.'"

3. "The Fall Guy"
Ryan Gosling as Colt Seavers in "The Fall Guy."
Ryan Gosling played Colt Seavers in "The Fall Guy."

Universal Pictures

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 81%

Loosely based on the 1980s TV show "The Fall Guy," 2024's film stars Ryan Gosling and Emily Blunt as stuntman Colt Seavers and director Jody Moreno. When the star of Moreno's directorial debut goes missing, it's up to Seavers — her former flame — to save the show.

Maureen Lee Lenker wrote for Entertainment Weekly that the movie is "a joy-ride of a summer blockbuster that packs all the right punches from its action sequences to its chemistry-laden central romance to its meta love for the movies and the unsung heroes who make them feel real."

"Every frame is a testament to [director David Leitch's] love for movies — and a reminder of why we should love them (and the people who make them), too," she added.

2. "Speak No Evil"
Aisling Franciosi and James McAvoy as Ciara and Paddy in "Speak No Evil."
Aisling Franciosi and James McAvoy play Ciara and Paddy in "Speak No Evil."

Universal Pictures

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 83%

As a remake of the same-titled Danish film from 2022, director James Watkins follows an American family (Scoot McNairy, Mackenzie Davis, Alix West Lefler) traveling to the English countryside to stay with a family they met while on vacation in Italy (James McAvoy, Aisling Franciosi, Dan Hough). But their weekend getaway quickly turns into something far more sinister.

"Watkins has rewired the film's dynamics, switching our focus from the beset husband to Davis's uptight wife. He's made his remake more Hollywood, but, for my money, he's also made it more fun to talk about afterward — and during — arranging his plot beats to encourage the audience to howl advice at the screen," Amy Nicholson wrote for The Washington Post.

1. "Nosferatu"
Nicholas Hoult and Lily-Rose Depp as Thomas and Ellen Hutter in "Nosferatu."
Nicholas Hoult and Lily-Rose Depp played Thomas and Ellen Hutter in "Nosferatu."

Focus Features

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 94%

Director Robert Eggers' "Nosferatu" is the highest-rated remake of the year. Starring Lily-Rose Depp, Nicholas Hoult, Bill Skarsgård, Emma Corrin, Willem Dafoe, and more, this remake of 1922's iconic silent film, "Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror" — and its 1979 and 1992 successors "Nosferatu the Vampyre" and "Bram Stoker's Dracula" — follows Depp as Ellen Hutter, a young woman haunted by disturbing visions and the subject of a vampire's obsession. Though the film is set for international release on December 25, it's already garnered more than 90 reviews on Rotten Tomatoes.

"Exciting, repulsive, and beautiful in equal measure, this feels like something the writer-director has been working toward since his unsettling 2016 debut feature, 'The Witch,'" David Rooney wrote for The Hollywood Reporter.

"It's thrilling to experience a movie so assured in the way it builds and sustains fear, so hypnotically scary as it grabs you by the throat and never lets go," he added.

Read the original article on Business Insider

A golf apparel brand loved by Chris Paul and Stephen Curry is breaking barriers in the sport. Here's how.

16 December 2024 at 09:04
Earl Cooper and Olajuwon Ajanaku smiling and holding shoes from their Eastside Golf and Nike collaboration.
Earl Cooper and Olajuwon Ajanaku are the founders of Eastside Golf.

Eastside Golf

  • 2024 has been a landmark year for Eastside Golf.
  • The golf apparel brand was founded in 2019 by Olajuwon Ajanaku and Earl Cooper.
  • Together, they're helping break barriers to access, diversity, and inclusion in the sport.

Ten years ago, it would've been difficult to imagine the words golf and fashion in the same sentence.

Barring Tiger Woods' signature red polos and John Daly's eccentric pant choices, the sport has more often evoked memories of long-winded dress codes critiquing everything from shirt colors and buttons to the presence of belt loops.

But the golf landscape is beginning to change.

The National Golf Foundation (NGF) reported that in 2023, the sport had an estimated reach of 123 million in the US — more than one-third of the population — with "reach" defined by those over age 5 who'd played on or off-course, followed the sport on TV or online, read about it, or listened to a podcast.

In February, the NGF also reported the sport has seen increases in on-course participation from players from marginalized groups. The number of women and girls playing on-course has risen 23% since 2018, and the number of Asian, Black, and Hispanic golfers has increased 43%.

And while these advancements haven't quite reached the pros (Tiger Woods was the only Black golfer to compete at the 2024 Masters), the trend toward younger, more diverse players has brought new ideas of how today's golfers see, and want to represent, themselves.

Enter: Eastside Golf.

Founded by former Morehouse golf teammates Olajuwon Ajanaku and Earl Cooper in 2019, the brand has become a beacon for the growth of inclusion and access to the historically exclusive sport thanks to the work of its founders, community events, and collaborations with companies like Jordan Brand, Mercedes-Benz, Nike, Rolling Loud, and more.

Oh, and their pieces have been worn by everyone from NBA stars Chris Paul and Stephen Curry to former President Barack Obama.

This year has been particularly impactful for Eastside, as it collaborated with Shopify for a pop-up store in New York City, hosted its second annual namesake invitational, released the "Everyone's Game" collection with Nike, continued to give back to HBCUs, and presented the Rolling Loud Invitational on December 12.

As Ajanaku and Cooper look ahead to 2025, here's everything you need to know about the brand that's changing the game.

Eastside was founded after Olajuwon Ajanaku struggled to fund his professional golf career.
Olajuwon Ajanaku at the PitCCh In Foundation's 2nd Annual Charity Golf Tournament in 2022.
Ajanaku told BI that he knew it would be hard to find sponsors after he decided to go pro again.

Cassidy Sparrow/Contributor/Getty Images

After graduating from Morehouse College in 2011 and 2012, respectively, Cooper and Ajanaku went their separate ways, with Cooper becoming a PGA professional and Ajanaku pursuing a professional career.

He did so for two years, and even won some mini tour events, "but it got to a point I just couldn't afford it anymore," Ajanaku told BI.

"I was taking up jobs and literally working at a golf course," he said, adding that he was "literally making pitch decks" to brands about potential sponsorship packages.

In an October interview with Barrons, he estimated that he only raised about $10,000 in those two years.

So, he went corporate, pivoting to a career in commercial vehicle finance, but never losing interest in golf.

When Ajanaku decided he wanted to turn pro again, he knew it would be hard to find sponsors and decided to make his own logo to represent himself: a Black man wearing jeans, a sweatshirt, and a hat, head down as he's swinging the club back while a Cuban link chain flies in the opposite direction. He called it The Swingman.

The Swingman logo became the foundation for Eastside Golf's brand.
The Swingman Logo with "Eastside Golf" written in cursive script below it. The logo and brand name are on a wooden background.
Ajanaku said the Swingman logo is a representation of the way he feels when he's out on the golf course.

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

Ajanaku told BI he initially planned to put the logo on his bag and polo, and described the design as "the way that I feel when I'm out on the golf course."

Per Cooper's suggestion, Ajanaku printed the design on a T-shirt, too.

"I was in downtown Detroit. I maybe got stopped like 100 times in two hours, just like, 'Who are you, what is that logo, where can I get it, and do you play golf?' I was just like, 'Damn, I got something, but still don't know what it is,'" Ajanaku said.

Cooper's advice: Run with it.

Ajanaku made about nine SKUs to start, putting the Swingman on T-shirts, socks, lapel pins, sweatshirts, and even umbrellas.

He mailed the first 3,000 orders from his Detroit apartment.

"And from there, I knew that I had something," he said.

The costs to play golf don't just affect aspiring professionals; they're a barrier to access at all levels, so Eastside devised Community Days.
Three men on a golf course at Eastside Golf's Community Day event in Augusta, Georgia.
Eastside Golf hosted a Community Day in Augusta, Georgia.

Eastside Golf

"I think growing up, there were certainly challenges as far as being able to afford golf," Cooper told BI. "Golf tournaments were very expensive, so I had to ask for money from family and all different types of things."

The NGF reported that in 2023, "the average playing fee for an 18-hole round of golf at a US public golf course was $43," an 18% increase from prices in 2019. And that's not including other necessities like attire, equipment, travel, and tournament fees.

In response to the issue, Eastside came up with Community Days. On these days, the brand buys out a golf course in the US and brings in food, music, products, instructional opportunities, and more for community members of all ages to enjoy.

"We knew we couldn't make golf cheap, but we wanted to eliminate the financial burden completely," Cooper said.

Community Days have become one of the company's premier events, and everyone in the organization is required to attend at least one or two annually.

"It just lifts everyone's spirits so much … it's like putting the battery in your back because you really get a chance to see the impact firsthand," Cooper added.

The brand also gives back to their community at Morehouse and other HBCUs.
Olajuwon Ajankau and Earl Cooper posed with the Morehouse golf team at Augusta National Golf Club next to the team's custom Mercedes-Benz sprinter van.
Eastside Golf has contributed nearly $300,000 to the Morehouse golf team.

Jensen Larson Photography, Inc./Jensen Larson

Both Cooper and Ajanaku were awarded scholarships to play at Morehouse College, an HBCU. There, they won the national title in 2010 and have continued to give back to the college ever since, donating nearly $300,000.

Morehouse golf head coach Edgar Evans Jr. told BI that the collaboration between the program and Eastside "has been a blessing."

"The program has always had a ton of potential, but just like any other college program, if you don't have any support, including monetary support, it's not going to get where you need it to go," he said. "So their contributions have been so important to us growing."

In addition to monetary donations, Eastside has also donated equipment and worked with Mercedes-Benz, their namesake invitational's presenting sponsor, to gift the Morehouse golf team sprinter vans.

The brand also has a roster of professional and NIL athletes, including Michael Herrera, Wyatt Worthington II, Kihei Akina, Morgan Riley, Bailey Davis, Matthew Vitale, and Kota Kaneko, Eastside Golf Japan ambassador.

Eastside has collaborated with big brands like Nike.
A display of the Nike Air Max 1 '86 OG' and Nike Air Zoom Victory Tour 3 shoe collaboration between Eastside Golf and Nike.
Eastside Golf collaborated with Nike for a collection called "Everyone's Game."

Mykenna Maniece/Business Insider

One of Eastside Golf's most recent brand collaborations was announced in September: a collection with Nike called "Everyone's Game," which featured two shoes, each customizable with six first-of-their-kind removable Nike swooshes.

From maroon and white for Morehouse and blue and white for Spelman College, to gold for the Swingman's gold chain and a mirror to — according to the product description — "reflect how you see yourself in the game," each design had a specific callback to Eastside's roots.

Ajanaku said it was "super dope" to work with Nike and have the opportunity to use their technologies, ask questions, and go back in their vintage collections.

"I had a great time, all in all, from the Eastside Golf creative team to the Nike design team, I mean, I feel like we meshed well together," he said.

The brand has had to be protective of itself and its community, too, especially when it came to partnering with the PGA of America in January 2024.

Cooper said he was proud of Eastside's commitment to holding out until the partnership was right between the two brands, and that they wanted it to be about more than just checking a box, but getting real support.

"That hasn't been an easy road because I think we have a very strong point of view of golf, and I think when you talk about a conglomerate like that, that's been around forever, over 100 years, they have a point of view, too. And I think they don't always align," Cooper said, adding that he thinks the reason PGA of America invested was because "they recognized Eastside Golf as the future of the game."

He continued, "So, that's just a huge vote of confidence, and it's something that we don't take for granted. But it definitely took saying, 'No,' sticking to our guns, and making sure that it was done right and that we felt comfortable and we didn't feel like we were selling ourselves short or selling the community short."

Eastside also sells items including sweatshirts, hats, golf bags, and club covers.
Chris Paul wearing sunglasses and an Eastside Golf T-shirt during the second round of the WM Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale in 2022. He was speaking with a fellow attendee.
Chris Paul was an early fan of the brand.

Tracy Wilcox/PGA TOUR via Getty Images

The brand has grown significantly since Ajanaku's first nine SKUs to sell a wide range of men's and women's apparel and golf gear.

Eastside Golf merchandise is available on their website, in stores throughout the US and UK, and, starting in June 2025, the brand will open its flagship store at Detroit Metro Airport.

Looking forward, the brand hopes to see its "non-traditional view on golf" continue to become more popular.
Earl Cooper and Olajuwon Ajanaku smiling and holding shoes from their Eastside Golf and Nike collaboration.
Earl Cooper and Olajuwon Ajanaku are the founders of Eastside Golf.

Courtesy of Eastside Golf

"They mean everything for the sport, to the culture," Chris Paul told Boardroom. "All of us equate everything to Tiger Woods, but now you can show up and see the Eastside Golf logoman? It's iconic."

Ajanaku told BI he thinks golf is already becoming a sport for all kinds of athletes, albeit with Eastside Golf's help, and that as the brand continues to integrate with purist golfers at PGA events and tournaments, the brand's "non-traditional view on golf" will become more popular, "and more companies will try to start doing that if they haven't already."

"And then lastly, I just feel like this logo at the end of the day will be, I'd say the next big logo," he said, adding that Eastside is trying to be just as big as a Ralph Lauren.

"If you truly look at the logo, [it's about] truly standing in what you feel your purpose is and just looking how you want to look and playing the sports that you want to play," Ajanaku said.

And as for the future? Ajanaku is returning to his professional aspirations — "that's a full-circle moment for the brand, something that we're excited about," Cooper said — and Eastside is looking forward to positioning themselves as a leader in the industry.

"I think we'll just continue to show how to grow the game in a unique way," Cooper said, highlighting the brand's Community Days, women's line, and new products. "I think we're very excited about just the impact that we're making … so as we continue to double and triple and scale, but also maintain that ethos of what this brand is all about."

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7 Heisman Trophy winners who didn't meet expectations in the NFL

14 December 2024 at 07:15
Johnny Manziel, #2 of the Cleveland Browns, passed the ball during a game against the Seattle Seahawks.
Johnny Manziel spent two seasons with the Cleveland Browns.

Stephen Brashear/Stringer/Getty Images

  • The 2024 Heisman Trophy winner will be announced on Saturday, December 14.
  • The award is given to the best player in college football.
  • But past winners' collegiate success hasn't always translated to successful careers in the NFL.

College football stars Travis Hunter, Dillon Gabriel, Ashton Jeanty, and Cam Ward will gather in New York City on Saturday for the presentation of the Heisman Trophy, awarded annually to the best player in college football.

The prestigious award has been given to future NFL MVPs like Lamar Jackson (who won the Heisman in 2016 as a sophomore), Hall-of-Famers like Barry Sanders (who won in 1988 as a junior), and Super Bowl winners like Tony Dorsett (who won in 1976).

But, other award recipients have famously struggled to translate their collegiate success to the pros, breeding a superstition widely known as the Heisman curse.

Though it's too soon to tell if recent winners like Jayden Daniels, Caleb Williams, or Bryce Young will fall victim to the supposed curse, here are seven such players who didn't live up to expectations in the NFL.

Andre Ware — 1989 Heisman winner
Andre Ware, #11 of the Detroit Lions, looked to pass in a game against the Phoenix Cardinals in 1993.
Andre Ware was the first Black quarterback to win the Heisman Trophy.

George Gojkovich/Contributor/Getty Images

Andre Ware made history in 1989 as the first Black quarterback to win the Heisman Trophy.

In his third season with the University of Houston, Ware threw for 4,699 yards and 46 touchdowns and set 26 NCAA records.

Ware declared for the 1990 NFL Draft and was selected seventh overall by the Detroit Lions. However, he saw little playing time behind starting quarterback Rodney Peete and backup Erik Kramer.

In Ware's four seasons with the Lions, he played in 14 games, throwing for 1,112 yards, five touchdowns, and eight interceptions. He later bounced around to other teams, including the Minnesota Vikings, Los Angeles Raiders (now the Las Vegas Raiders), and Jacksonville Jaguars, but never took the field with any of them. He also played in the Canadian Football League and in the NFL Europe League (which existed from 1991-2007) before retiring.

Ware was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2004.

Business Insider was unable to reach Ware for comment.

Ty Detmer — 1990 Heisman winner
Ty Detmer, #14 of the Philadelphia Eagles, dropped back to pass during a 1996 game against the New England Patriots.
Ty Detmer won the Heisman Trophy in 1990.

Focus on Sport/Contributor/Getty Images

Detmer won the Heisman Trophy during his junior year at Brigham Young University in 1990. That season, he led the Cougars to a 10-3 record, passing for 5,309 yards and 42 touchdowns.

The win that perhaps solidified Detmer's chances at the Trophy was BYU's 28-21 win over the University of Miami in just the second game of the season. Detmer threw for 406 yards and three touchdowns.

Two years later, he was drafted by the Green Bay Packers in the ninth round of the NFL Draft. As the backup for starter Brett Favre, Detmer only had an opportunity to play in seven games for the team. In those games, played in the 1993 and 1995 seasons, he threw for 107 yards, one touchdown, and one interception.

In 1996, he was signed to the Philadelphia Eagles, and became the starter after Rodney Peete endured a season-ending knee injury. In 13 games, Detmer threw for 2,911 yards, 15 touchdowns, and 13 interceptions.

However, the following season, he was relegated to being a backup quarterback again, and only played in eight games. Detmer went on to play for the San Francisco 49ers, Cleveland Browns, Detroit Lions, and Atlanta Falcons, but remained a backup for the majority of his career, which he finished with 34 touchdowns and 35 interceptions.

Detmer did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.

Gino Torretta — 1992 Heisman winner
Gino Torretta, #13 of the Seattle Seahawks, called a play during a 1996 game against the Oakland Raiders.
Gino Torretta won the Heisman Trophy in 1992.

Stephen Dunn/Staff/Getty Images

University of Miami quarterback Gino Torretta is a 'Canes football legend. In his Heisman-winning season, he threw for 3,070 yards and 19 touchdowns to lead the Hurricanes to an undefeated regular season. He also won the Davey O'Brien Award, the Walter Camp Award, the Maxwell Award, the Johnny Unitas Trophy, and the Chic Harley Award.

But despite his collegiate success, Torretta was selected in the seventh round of the 1993 NFL Draft by the Minnesota Vikings. After not playing at all his rookie season, he was picked up by the Detroit Lions but again as a backup.

Torretta only ever played in one NFL game as quarterback of the Seattle Seahawks. He completed five of his 16 passes for 41 yards, one touchdown, and one interception. He retired from the NFL in 1999.

Torretta did not respond to Business Insider's request for comment.

Danny Wuerffel — 1996 Heisman winner
Danny Wuerffel, #7 of the New Orleans Saints, looked for a pass during a 1997 preseason game against the Chicago Bears.
Danny Wuerffel won the Heisman Trophy in 1996.

Jonathan Daniel/Stringer/Getty Images

Wuerffel's Heisman-winning season with the University of Florida Gators saw him pass for 3,625 passing yards and 36 touchdowns, leading the team to an 11-1 record.

The following year, he was selected by the New Orleans Saints with the 99th pick in the 1997 NFL Draft. Across his three seasons with the Saints, Wuerffel played in 16 games, throwing for 1,404 yards and nine touchdowns.

He also spent single seasons in Green Bay, Chicago, and Washington before retiring after the 2002 season.

In an email sent to Business Insider, Wuerffel said, "While I didn't have the NFL career I dreamt of as a kid, I still consider my time in the NFL a success. I met many amazing people and, more importantly, my pro journey led me to New Orleans where my life's mission of serving others began with Desire Street Ministries."

Desire Street Ministries is a religious organization that was founded in 1990. Wuerffel is the executive director.

Ron Dayne — 1999 Heisman winner
Ron Dayne, #36 of the Houston Texans, ran the ball during a 2006 game against the Indianapolis Colts.
Ron Dayne won the Heisman Trophy in 1999.

Bob Levey/Stringer/NFLPhotoLibrary/Getty Images

Ron Dayne was one of the most prolific rushers in college football history, with a University of Wisconsin career total of 6,397 yards, not including statistics from bowl game appearances.

He earned the Heisman Trophy after his senior season, as one of just five players to finish each year of his collegiate career with more then 1,000 rushing yards. He's also the only Big Ten player to win back-to-back Rose Bowl MVP awards.

Dayne now holds the record for second-most all-time rushing yards, though if his bowl game statistics were included (like the current all-time leader Donnel Pumphrey), he would lead with 7,125 total yards.

In the 2000 NFL Draft, Dayne was selected by the New York Giants. He finished his rookie season with 770 rushing yards for five touchdowns, averaging 3.4 yards per carry. His stats remained similar during his following three seasons with the Giants, recording 1,297 yards for 11 touchdowns and averaging between 3.4 and 3.8 yards per carry.

For context, in 2002, the top-10 running backs each rushed more than 1,297 yards that season.

Dayne later spent one season with the Denver Broncos and two seasons with the Houston Texans. He finished his NFL career with 3,722 yards and 28 touchdowns across seven seasons.

He did not respond to Business Insider's request for comment.

Chris Weinke — 2000 Heisman winner
Chris Weinke, #17 of the San Francisco 49ers, looked for a pass in a 2007 game against the Cleveland Browns.
Chris Weinke won the Heisman Trophy at 28 years old.

Gregory Shamus/Stringer/Getty Images

Prior to pursuing a career in football, Weinke was actually selected in the second round of the 1990 MLB First-Year Player Draft by the Toronto Blue Jays. He played in the minor leagues until 1997 before attending Florida State University at 25 years old.

In his Heisman-winning senior season — at age 28 — Weinke led the NCAA in passing yards with 4,167. He is the oldest athlete to ever win the Heisman Trophy, and he still leads the Seminoles in all-time passing yards with 9,839.

He was selected in the fourth round of the 2001 NFL Draft by the Carolina Panthers. As a rookie, Weinke threw for 2,931 yards, 11 touchdowns, and 19 interceptions; and the Panthers finished the season 1-15. He remained with the Panthers for the following three seasons as a backup, playing in just 12 games and recording three touchdowns.

Weinke spent his last season in the NFL with the San Francisco 49ers as a backup quarterback. He played in two games, threw for 104 yards, and one touchdown.

He's now an assistant head coach, co-offensive coordinator, and quarterbacks coach at Georgia Tech University. He did not reply to Business Insider's request for comment.

Johnny Manziel — 2012 Heisman winner
Johnny Manziel, #2 of the Cleveland Browns, passed the ball during a game against the Seattle Seahawks.
Johnny Manziel played in the NFL for two seasons.

Stephen Brashear/Stringer/Getty Images

In 2012, Manziel became the first freshman to win the Heisman Trophy after a stellar season at Texas A&M.

Nicknamed "Johnny Football," Manziel threw for 3,706 yards and 26 touchdowns and rushed 1,410 yards for an additional 21 touchdowns. He returned to the Aggies the following year and finished the season with 4,114 passing yards for 37 touchdowns, and 759 rushing yards for nine touchdowns.

After just two collegiate seasons, Manziel declared for the NFL Draft and was selected 22nd overall by the Cleveland Browns in 2014.

But before he could take his first NFL snap, Cleveland.com reported that the Browns were "alarmed" by Manziel's off-field partying. His troubles continued into the season, from flashing an obscene gesture at the Washington bench during a preseason game in August to seeking treatment in January 2015.

In the post-game press conference, Manziel said he gets "words exchanged" with him throughout every game, adding, "I should've been smarter ... I need to be smarter than that. There's always words exchanged on the football field." He also described the moment as a "lapse in judgement."

He finished his rookie year having played in just five games, passing for 175 yards, no touchdowns, and two interceptions for a passer rating of 42.0. Manziel returned to Cleveland the following season, where he played in nine games and passed for 1,500 yards and seven touchdowns.

However, it was off-field troubles that continued to plague Manziel's career, including a 2016 misdemeanor domestic violence charge. ESPN reported that the charges were dismissed in November 2017 after Manziel met the requirements of a dismissal agreement.

The Browns released Manziel in March 2016.

"When I got to Cleveland, I wasn't in this head space to be able to just go play football," Manziel told Business Insider's Meredith Cash in 2023. "I was struggling to get out of bed in the morning. I was struggling to fight thoughts and feelings that I had never really had before in my life."

"I know that I'm still gonna walk down the street or go to a restaurant or go to a football game and people are still gonna recognize me," Manziel added. "But at the end of the day, I wanna live a more normal, simplistic lifestyle now. I'm finding things that truly do make me happy without having to be in a spotlight every day."

Manziel did not reply to Business Insider's request for additional comment for this story.

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Tom Brady's personal items, including his luxury watch collection, just sold for $9 million at auction. Take a closer look.

11 December 2024 at 11:19
Tom Brady walked the carpet for Netflix's "The Greatest Roast of All Time: Tom Brady," wearing an all-black suit. He accessorized with a Royal Oak Flying Tourbillon by Audemars Piguet.
Tom Brady auctioned items from his personal luxury watch collection at Sotheby's.

Elyse Jankowski/Stringer/FilmMagic/Getty Images

  • Tom Brady auctioned 21 pieces from his luxury watch collection at Sotheby's on Tuesday.
  • His watch collection, which fetched $4.6 million, included pieces from Rolex and Audemars Piguet.
  • Brady's Rolex Daytona Paul Newman 'John Player Special' sold for $1.14 million.

Seven-time Super Bowl champion Tom Brady is passionate about more than just football — he also has an extensive luxury watch collection.

Or, he used to.

On December 10, the retired 15-time ProBowler auctioned 21 of his watches at Sotheby's, along with 20 other "treasures" from his football career.

His whole collection brought in more than $9 million, with the watches selling for a total of $4.6 million.

"Watches were really the main story and drew the most value," WatchGuys CEO Robertino Altieri told Business Insider.

The luxury watch industry has experienced major fluctuations in recent years. Following a spike in interest during the COVID-19 pandemic, the industry faced a period of decline.

The overall market index is down 5.1% from 2023, per WatchCharts data from December 9, but the success of Brady's auction should help the industry, Altieri said.

"Seeing Tom Brady attach watches to the sports world as well — it's definitely huge," he added.

Brady's auction also reflects the trend of rebooting the luxury resale market through celebrity partnerships. In June 2024, for example, Sotheby's auctioned 11 watches from Sylvester Stallone's personal collection, including his Patek Philippe Grandmaster Chime which sold for $5.4 million.

From a custom Audemars Piguet to the final jersey Brady wore at the University of Michigan, here's a peek at some of the items sold at Sotheby's.

The most expensive watch sold was the Rolex Daytona Paul Newman 'John Player Special.' It went for $1.14 million.
The Rolex Daytona Paul Newman 'John Player Special.'
Brady's Rolex Daytona 'John Player Special' sold for $1.14 million.

Courtesy of Sotheby's

Brady wore the vintage timepiece to the New England Patriots' 2023 home opener, where team owner Robert Kraft famously announced that he'd be inducted into the Patriots Hall of Fame the following June.

According to Sotheby's, the watch was "named after the legendary 1970s Formula 1 livery, because of its black and gold 'Paul Newman' dial" and is "exceedingly rare" due to very small production quantities.

"Beyond its scarcity, the watch radiates an undeniable allure, enhanced by its striking black-and-gold combination and its connection to a golden era of Formula 1," said Richard Lopez, Sotheby's senior specialist for watches.

Brady's custom Audemars Piguet sold for $720,000.
Tom Brady's custom Audemars Piguet Royal Oak Flying Tourbillon.
Brady's custom Audemars Piguet Royal Oak Flying Tourbillon sold for $720,000.

Courtesy of Sotheby's

This Royal Oak Flying Tourbillon by Audemars Piguet features several nods to Brady, including his name set with calibré-cut and baguette diamonds, the number seven in Roman numerals as a nod to his record Super Bowl wins, and his signature on the rotor, according to Sotheby's.

The watch is made of white gold and also includes "a baguette diamond-set bezel," according to Sotheby's.

Brady wore the watch during his May 2024 Netflix special, "The Greatest Roast of All Time: The Roast of Tom Brady."

Sotheby's previously estimated the watch was worth between $400,000 and $800,000, but Altieri said he'd expected it to exceed $1 million.

"It's not often that brands make a piece unique for someone," he said.

The IWC Pilot's Watch Top Gun Edition "SFTI" exceeded expectations, selling for $42,000.
Tom Brady's Pilot's Watch Top Gun Edition 'SFTI.'
Brady's IWC Pilot's Watch Top Gun Edition 'SFTI' sold for $42,000.

Courtesy of Sotheby's

The IWC Top Gun Edition "SFTI" was estimated by Sotheby's to go for a maximum of $10,000. Instead, it sold for $42,000, more than four times its market value.

"That was a really strong indicator just off the bat that more affordable pieces would go for higher numbers," Altieri said.

"Affordable," in this case, refers to their market value; IWC watches, for example, usually retail for less than $20,000, but significantly exceeded that number at the auction.

Brady famously wore this watch while celebrating at the 2021 Super Bowl boat parade in Tampa Bay after his seventh and final championship win.

Another piece that exceeded expectations was the Rolex 'Batman,' which sold for $60,000.
The Rolex 126710BLNR GMT-Master II 'Batman.'
The Rolex 126710BLNR GMT-Master II 'Batman' sold for $60,000.

Courtesy of Sotheby's

Similar to the IWCs on auction, the Rolex 'Batman' performed well above its market value.

Altieri said the model's market value is $17,000, "but right away the bid went 50, 55, and then it sold for 60."

But while IWC soared, Richard Mille pieces like the 35-03 "Baby Nadal" sold at market value for $384,000.
Tom Brady's Richard Mille 35-03 'Baby Nadal.'
Another watch in Brady's collection is the Richard Mille 35-03 "Baby Nadal."

Courtesy of Sotheby's

This collaboration between Richard Mille and 22-time Grand Slam singles champion Rafael Nadal is best known for its innovative "butterfly rotor."

For those not well-versed in watches, a rotor is a small weight within the watch that swings as the wearer moves, generating energy that winds and powers the watch.

What's different about the "butterfly rotor," according to Richard Mille, is that it "offers the wearer the possibility of varying the rotor geometry by themselves," allowing them to engage in various activities like sports without causing any damage or excessive winding.

Other figures who've worn pieces from Richard Mille and Nadal's collaborations include Jay-Z and Real Madrid's Antonio Rüdiger.

Altieri said the watches that "have a lot of hype in today's market" and "attract a lot of media," like a Richard Mille or an Audemars Piguet, didn't perform as well at the auction as he would've expected.

"You would think because it's Tom Brady's name — just like the IWCs and the Batman — it would at least go for double, but it didn't," he said.

Sotheby's previously estimated the piece would sell for between $300,000 and $500,000.

His Patek Philippe TBXII Grand Comp sold for $264,000.
The Patek Philippe TBXII Grand Comp.
The Patek Philippe TBXII Grand Comp sold for $264,000.

Courtesy of Sotheby's

Sotheby's estimated that this Patek Philippe pocket watch, retailed by Tiffany & Co., would sell for between $200,000 and $400,000.

It ultimately sold for closer to the lower end of its estimate at $264,000, which surprised Altieri.

"I thought there was some potential of something like this coming back into fashion, but it's really a bigger pocket watch. It didn't hit the expectation that I thought," he said.

Per Sotheby's, the "yellow gold open-faced watch from 1917 is a rare example" of the brand's minute repeater, which was first introduced in 1845.

Other items from Brady's football career were auctioned. The jersey he wore in his final game at the University of Michigan sold for $792,000.
Tom Brady's University of Michigan jersey from his last game, the 2000 FedEx Orange Bowl.
The jersey Brady wore during his final collegiate football game at the University of Michigan sold for $792,000.

Courtesy of Sotheby's

In addition to luxury watches, Tom Brady and Sotheby's also auctioned memorable pieces from his playing career.

The best-selling item from his career was the jersey he wore in his final game with the University of Michigan (pictured above), which was estimated to sell for between $300,000 and $500,000, and ultimately sold for $792,000.

Other items included were the Tampa Bay Buccaneers jersey he wore when he broke the NFL's passing yards record, his NFL Combine shirt, and a helmet worn during his last season in the NFL.

"The collection is truly unparalleled; the stories they tell, the authenticity they embody, and their historical significance elevate them beyond mere collectibles," Brahm Wachter, Sotheby's head of modern collectibles, said in October. "These items are genuine pieces of sports history."

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The 10 best-dressed people of 2024

1 January 2025 at 05:56
Taylor Russell, Dan Levy, Cynthia Erivo, and Colman Domingo.
Celebrity stylists told BI which celebrities were the best-dressed in 2024.

Getty Images; Jenny Chang-Rodriguez/BI

  • Celebrity stylists Courtney Mays, Kris Fe, and Sam Woolf told BI who had the best style in 2024.
  • Cynthia Erivo's "Wicked" press tour looks were standouts.
  • Dan Levy's Academy Museum Gala look was popular, too.

For some of us, 2024 was the year of Sabrina Carpenter's "Espresso," the "Wicked" movie, and Moo Deng, but for celebrity stylist Courtney Mays, it will be remembered as the year French model and singer Yseult wore a custom iteration of Dior's "New Look" to the Cannes Film Festival.

BI spoke with Mays (known for styling Breanna Stewart, Chris Paul, Sue Bird, Kevin Love), as well as fellow celebrity stylists Sam Woolf (Doechii, Jhené Aiko, Latto), and Kris Fe (Madison Beer, Bia, Muni Long) to learn who — regardless of industry — had the best style of the past year.

"I look at people's style who inspire me and my personal style," Mays said. "I think about people who are moving the needle forward in terms of culture. I think of people that inspire me for my own clients, so everyone kind of has a different wing or a different sort of area that they kind of fall into."

From red-carpet highlights to curated street-style looks, here were the 10 best-dressed people of 2024, according to celebrity stylists.

Cynthia Erivo nailed her "Wicked" press tour looks.
Split Image: Cynthia Erivo wearing Thom Browne on the yellow carpet for the Mexico City premiere of "Wicked." / Cynthia Erivo wearing Schiaparelli Haute Couture on the green carpet for the London premiere of "Wicked." / Cynthia Erivo wearing a bright green vinyl Louis Vuitton gown with a textured cape for the LA premiere of "Wicked."
Cynthia Erivo's press tour looks for "Wicked" were some of 2024's best.

Cristopher Rogel Blanquet/Stringer/Getty Images; Tim P. Whitby/Stringer/Getty Images; Gilbert Flores/Contributpr/Variety via Getty Images

Method dressing has been one of the decade's hottest red-carpet trends, and one actor who's really risen to the challenge is Cynthia Erivo, whose Elphaba-inspired looks were stellar throughout the "Wicked" press tour.

Woolf told BI, "I think the way she embodied her character from the movie in a red carpet fashion perspective was really interesting and really elevated."

It "still gave a character, but it didn't verge on costume, but it still gave fashion," he added.

Of all her press looks, Woolf said he was a fan of the Thom Browne dress she wore in Mexico City (above left), the Schiaparelli gown she wore for the London premiere (above middle), and her work with Louis Vuitton (above right).

Erivo spoke with Vogue in November about the electric-green vinyl Louis Vuitton gown she wore to the film's LA premiere, telling the publication that the look let her character "own the green color in such a big, bold way!"

"I thought the fabric choice was strong and divine, which is how I see my character," she added.

But what elevates Erivo's press tour looks from her counterparts?

To Woolf, it's a combination of the designers' interpretations, who's wearing the clothes — the same garment on two people can translate completely differently — and an understanding that "less is more."

"When you're giving a nod to a theme, it can simply be the color, like Cynthia Erivo wore green. So, I think it's less is more, and just taking one element and not making it a whole thing," he said.

French model and singer Yseult was the queen of Cannes fashion.
Split image: Yseult posing on the "Megalopolis" red carpet at the 2024 Cannes Film Festival wearing Dior. Yseult attending the Christian Dior Haute Couture Fall/Winter 2024-2025 show at Paris Fashion Week.
A stylist told BI that Yseult "kind of plays on this notion of gender fluidity."

Dominique Charriau/Contributor/WireImage/Getty Images; Stephane Cardinale - Corbis/Corbis via Getty Images

Fashion nerds keeping an eye on the 2024 Cannes Film Festival would've been quick to spot Yseult in a new iteration of Christian Dior's "New Look," popularized in his first collection from 1947.

"I thought, I'm going to do Cannes — and I want to feel strong, I want to feel fierce," Yseult told the Washington Post in May.

She added, "I think why people love how I fit this dress is because of my body. My body is unique. I'm a plus-size girl, you know, and I really embrace all the curves. I really embrace myself. For the first time we see a body — a plus-size body — in [this look]."

Yseult's candor is exactly what excites Mays.

"She's partnered with Dior frequently, which I am so excited by because I think, so often, our understandings of size inclusivity are kind of skewed in the fashion world. You get something that's a size 16 and it fits like a 10," Mays told BI. "But to see somebody that actually looks like me and to be celebrated in a luxury space and to do it in a cool way, and I think she's another one that kind of plays on this notion of gender fluidity," noting that she can go from wearing a vintage-inspired Dior gown to a suit and tie.

"I think when you can do that, it's such a marker of someone that has true style," Mays said.

Colman Domingo is consistently one of the best-dressed men in Hollywood.
Split image: Colman Domingo at the Vanity Fair Awards Insider Event at the Cannes Film Festival wearing a flare-legged cream and taupe patterned suit. Colman Domingo at the Critics Choice Awards wearing a mustard-yellow suit and coordinating gold embellished cape.
A stylist told BI that Domingo is "not afraid to take risks" with his style.

Dave Benett/Contributor/Getty Images for Vanity Fair; Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images for Critics Choice Association

Woolf told BI that the "Rustin" actor is "definitely one of the best-dressed males consecutively throughout the year."

"I think the main thing with Colman is he's not afraid to take risks," he added. "And he carries clothes well."

Such risks can be taken with colors, silhouettes, and fabrics, and one look that embodied them all was the mustard-yellow Valentino suit and gold glitter coat Domingo wore to the Critics Choice Awards in January (above right).

Domingo's stylists, Wayman + Micah, told Vogue in October that the actor "really loves to play and have fun in every facet of his being so his style and sense of fashion fully thrives."

"We love putting him in tailored fits that highlight his stature, and we love using accessories to innovate and elevate his looks," they added. "To top it all off, Colman's energy, confidence, and charisma always take every red carpet moment to the next level."

Domingo has credited his style to both his stylists and the people he saw growing up in Philadelphia.

"We know how to dress," Domingo told "Jimmy Kimmel Live" guest host RuPaul in August, citing men who wore pinky rings, kept their nails clean and long, and loved to wear high-waisted suits.

"I feel like I dress like Teddy Pendergrass, The Isley Brothers," he said, adding, "I dress like the sound of Philadelphia."

Charli XCX's style during her "Brat" era proved she's the ultimate cool girl.
Split Image: Charli XCX performing Roskilde Festival in a silver mini dress with coordinating gloves and black knee-high boots. Charli XCX wearing a black off-the-shoulder dress by Dilara Findikoglu during her "SNL" monologue.
A stylist told BI that Charli XCX's style feels "more refined to her right now."

Joseph Okpako/Contributor/WireImage/Getty Images; Will Heath/NBC via Getty Images

There was no escaping "Brat" in 2024 and that's all thanks to British singer Charli XCX.

Fe thought the artist's tour looks were "really cool" and said that her style feels "more refined to her right now," defining it as daring, unapologetic, and fun.

She added that she appreciates the wide range of brands Charli XCX and her stylist Chris Horan have worked with, citing looks from both big fashion houses like Balenciaga and from younger designers like Dilara Findikoglu, whom she wore during her hosting gig at "SNL" (above right).

"What I really like is when an artist has a specific branding or theme for an album, I can appreciate when the artist, creative director, or stylist, or whoever, really sticks to that. And it's a red thread throughout the whole entire album cycle. And I think that they did a really good job of doing that throughout the whole entire 'Brat' era," Fe added.

In July, Horan told Who What Wear that in this era of the "360" singer's career, "she's giving like very much fashion girl" and that "she doesn't play by anyone's rules."

He also said she looks for comfortability and "elements of movement" in her tour looks. He added that comfortable shoes are also important to her, but said they're "the worst part of making a performance look" because he wants her to wear "the highest shoe possible."

Taylor Russell's Met Gala debut with Loewe was one of the best looks of 2024.
Split Image: Taylor Russell wearing Loewe at the 2024 Met Gala; the dress featured a breastplate that appeared to be made of wood and an elegant white skirt and train. Taylor Russell wearing Loewe at the 2024 BAFTA Film Awards; the white gown featured a high neck with open sides and ruffle detailing around the waist and bottom trim.
Taylor Russell's red carpet style perfects sexy elegance.

Jamie McCarthy/Staff/Getty Images; Samir Hussein/Contributor/WireImage/Getty Images

Canadian actor Taylor Russell has emerged as a rising star on both the silver screen and the red carpet, where she's known for striking the delicate balance between sexiness and elegance.

Fe said it's "really refreshing" to see a young person on the red carpet in such stunning pieces that aren't all about showing skin.

She added she's also seen Russell find ways to make vintage pieces feel very modern and that she likes how Russell chooses proportions: "It's really beautiful to see."

Jonathan Anderson, creative director of Loewe, spoke about his relationship with the actor — who's a global ambassador for the brand — with Vogue in May, telling the outlet, "When we work together, it's always an incredible creative dialogue — she is an amazing collaborator and a very special friend."

Dan Levy knows how to do "classic menswear with a little edge."
Split Image: Dan Levy at the 2024 Met Gala wearing a suit with a black-to-floral gradient by Loewe. Dan Levy wearing a cream suit with flare-legged pants by Tiger of Sweden to the Academy Museum Gala.
Dan Levy always wears a pair of statement glasses.

Dia Dipasupil/Staff/Getty Images; Michael Buckner/Contributor/Variety via Getty Images

Another frequent Loewe collaborator is the multitalented Dan Levy, who was also recently named one of the most stylish nepo babies (his dad is actor and comedian Eugene Levy).

Mays told BI that Levy is one of her personal style inspirations who does "classic menswear with a little edge, and a little hint of something else there."

"And also, I love that he's made eyewear sort of his iconic thing," she said. "You don't think about Dan Levy without just a really great pair of frames."

And as for his best looks of 2024? Mays said his Met Gala (above left) and Academy Museum Gala (above right) looks were standout moments.

On his Met Gala suit, Levy told The New York Times in May that he and Loewe "wanted a swerve to simple" with his 2024 look compared to what he and the brand chose for his gala debut in 2021.

"For the longest time, men's fashion was so square. Women had all the fun. That all changed over the past 10 years, so now I'm leaning into everything playful, flamboyant and exciting," he said.

Houston Texans wide receiver Stefon Diggs is a "classic street style icon."
Split image: Stefon Diggs wearing a blue cardigan, leather pants, and silver accessories to the GQ Sports Super Bowl Party. Stefon Diggs attending Vogue World 2024 wearing a pale-blue leather jacket and coordinating pants and chunky white loafers.
A stylist told BI that Stefon Diggs "plays with gender fluidity in a way that's interesting, but also authentic to himself."

Tasos Katopodis/Stringer/Getty Images for GQ; Stephane Cardinale - Corbis/Corbis via Getty Images

Mays said Stefon Diggs is "pushing the needle forward in terms of style in the sports space" and a "classic street style icon."

"I think he's so cool in the way that he dresses. It feels obviously trend forward, but there's something really powerful about the way he gets dressed," she said. "I think he also plays with gender fluidity in a way that's interesting, but also authentic to himself."

Diggs told VMan Magazine in March that his upbringing in the DMV (the DC, Maryland, and Virginia area) helped shape his style.

"My mom has a picture of me wearing cowboy boots in the summertime, just because I loved cowboy boots at the time," he said, adding that although his parents didn't let him wear whatever he wanted, "they were able to balance out being yourself with being presentable."

Diggs added that he's a "texture guy" who likes to wear pieces that align with his mood.

"If I can wake up and something feels good to put on and it puts me in a good space energy-wise, I'm gonna wear it. It could be raining or hot outside, and I'll still have on leather. It doesn't matter. It's all about how I feel that day," he said.

Mays added that while Diggs does have moments where he leans into exclusive pieces — he's a fan of Birkin bags — her favorite looks are ones that feel aspirational but approachable at the same time, like when he pairs a tank with a cardigan, cargo pants, and jewelry, like he did at the GQ Sports Super Bowl Party in February (above left).

Nicole Kidman was booked and busy in 2024.
Split Image: Nicole Kidman at the Gotham Awards in a black gown with painted flowers by Dolce & Gabbana. Nicole Kidman at the Venice Film Festival wearing a champagne and black embellished gown with an elaborately structured top.
A stylist told BI that Kidman's style has become "more refined."

Taylor Hill/Contributor/WireImage/Getty Images; Maria Moratti/Contributor/Getty Images

With projects like "The Perfect Couple," "Special Ops: Lioness," and "Babygirl" on her calendar, 2024 was an exciting year for Nicole Kidman's red-carpet style.

Woolf said her style has become "more refined" since working with stylist Jason Bolden (whose other styling credits include Erivo, Cara Delevingne, and Storm Reid), highlighting the Schiaparelli gown she wore to the Venice Film Festival (right).

"I think the brands she's wearing and I think they're just more fitted to her body and her silhouette," Woolf added, noting that he's also a fan of her collaboration with Balenciaga, whom she's been a brand ambassador for since December 2023.

"It's a really good match for her, and her body, and her look," Woolf said.

A$AP Rocky's style has become "more focused" and quiet-luxury inspired since having children.
Split Image: A$AP Rocky attending the Bottega Veneta Womenswear Fall/Winter 2024-2025 show during Milan Fashion Week in a navy-blue leather suit. A$AP Rocky at the Annual Footwear News Achievement Awards wearing a leather jacket with a sherpa collar, black trousers, and a brown belt with accessories.
A stylist told BI that A$AP Rocky "really plays well with accessories."

Daniele Venturelli/Contributor/WireImage/Getty Images; Cindy Ord/Staff/WireImage/Getty Images

Rapper and certified fashion icon A$AP Rocky "really plays well with accessories," Mays said, adding that she loved his December 2023 campaign with Bottega Veneta — it "feels authentic and elevated and family friendly, but still, like 'I'm cool and I'm smoking my joint but I have 17,000 barrettes in my head.'"

The Bottega campaign caught Fe's eye, too. She called it "a really cool standout moment."

And, of course, it's hard to mention A$AP Rocky without mentioning Rihanna (who, yes, could be on this list every year). Whether they're going out to dinner or walking a red carpet together, they don't match all the time, Fe said.

"They know themselves and they're not dressing for each other. They're dressing for themselves, and I love seeing that. I think that's really important to stay true to yourself and not lose that," she said.

The "Sundress" rapper told People at the Footwear News Achievement Awards on December 4 that his style is "way more focused" since becoming a dad to RZA, 2, and Riot, 1, whom he shares with Rihanna.

"Prior to that, it was more absurd outfits and just mixing and matching everything for the sake of it. Now, it's a bit more quiet luxury," he added.

Best new artist nominee Doechii knows how to make a statement.
Split Image: Doechii at the Willy Chavarria fashion show during New York Fashion Week wearing a tank top, underwear, and toe socks. / Doechii performing at Camp Flog Gnaw wearing Miu Miu.
Doechii's stylist told BI she likes to explore things that are meant to be hidden.

Gilbert Flores/WWD via Getty Images; Katie Flores/Contributor/Billboard via Getty Images

2024 was a breakout year for rapper Doechii, who's earned three Grammy nominations for 2025, including best new artist, best rap performance for "Nissan Altima," and best rap album for her August mixtape "Alligator Bites Never Heal." Kaytranada's remix of her song "Alter Ego" is also nominated for best remixed recording.

Woolf, who's been Doechii's stylist for nearly two years, said "she's a super creative person" who has a lot of ideas, so the pair will collaborate on looks based on things they both like.

One example of such collaboration was her look for Willy Chavarria's New York Fashion Week show (above left).

Woolf said that Doechii had already expressed an interest in not wearing shoes, and creating a look with toe socks. So, when he suggested that she wear a pair of the brand's underwear and go for a "muddy and dirty" look, they knew that was the perfect moment for their ideas to work together.

"Doechii understands fashion," he said. "She knows what looks good, she can see colors that mix well, textures that mix well; she understands and she always wants to break boundaries and make a statement."

One theme that can be seen throughout her style is her willingness to show the "things that are meant to be hidden" like face tape or undergarments, Woolf said. "We incorporate all of those things and we show it all."

Read the original article on Business Insider

15 slang words Gen Zers are using in 2024 and what they really mean

6 December 2024 at 07:26
A group of young people sitting on a staircase and looking at a phone.

FG Trade/Getty Images

  • Just like the generations before them, Gen Z has an extensive list of slang words.
  • "Bussin'," "ick," and "mid" are popular among Gen Zers.
  • Social media helps slang spread rapidly, but proper credit is often lost along the way.

Just like the generations before them, Gen Z uses an extensive list of slang words like "bussin'," "ick," and "mid."

However, unlike past generations, Gen Z has social media to help slang spread rapidly.

"The emergence of social media has created a situation where the potential for slang virality has increased," John Baugh, a linguist at Washington University in St. Louis, told Business Insider last year.

Anyone with an account can share and adopt new terms with just a couple of clicks. While this can be an exciting opportunity for people to connect and bond over language, it can also lead to appropriation.

Black and LGBTQ+ communities created many of the slang words attributed to Gen Z — anyone born between 1997 and 2012.

However, these marginalized communities often don't receive credit for their contributions.

When their slang enters larger circles via social media, those who don't know its origins can misuse the language, which can be offputting or even offensive.

Brands and publications marketing to Gen Z should be especially careful with slang as this generation values authenticity more than older generations.

And much like fashion, slang is ever-evolving. All these words and phrases will inevitably be axed and deemed "uncool."

At least for now, though, here are 15 slang terms Gen Z is using in 2024 and what they mean.

If you're told to do something "for the plot," it means to do it for the experience.
Crowd on day two of Lollapalooza Brazil 2024.
Crowd at Lollapalooza Brazil 2024.

Mauricio Santana/Contributor/Getty Images

Saying "for the plot" is a fun way for Gen Z to encourage each other to do the wild, fun things that make storytelling fun when you're older.

Influencer Serena Kerrigan has been credited with popularizing the phrase, saying, "this is your reminder that if something works out, great, and if it doesn't, it's for the plot." In other words, your highs and lows are all shaping and contributing to your life story.

Whether you swipe right on Tinder or go out spontaneously on a Tuesday night, it's all about the plot.

Still popular from 2023, someone with "rizz" has charisma.
Gerry poses for a photo while the women of "The Golden Bachelor" stand in rows next to and behind him.
Gerry Turner and the women of "The Golden Bachelor."

ABC/Craig Sjodin

It's true; Gen Z has an affinity for abbreviations.

A person with "rizz" is confident, charming, and generally successful in romantic endeavors. The phrase officially reached the boomer generation when the Golden Bachelor announced he had rizz.

An "ick" is a turnoff.
Olivia Attwood Dack attends the TV Choice Awards 2024.
Olivia Attwood Dack helped coin the term "ick" during her appearance on season three of "Love Island."

Hoda Davaine/Dave Benett/Contributor/Getty Images

Ah, the ick. "Love Island" contestant Olivia Attwood (now Olivia Attwood Dack) helped popularize the phrase during season three, but "the ick" remains a staple in Gen Z's vocabulary.

If someone gives you "the ick," it means they've turned you off, either through their actions or words.

"Icks" can arise from small offenses, such as using the "wrong" emoji in conversation, or from larger issues, such as being rude to a barista.

It's all about personal preference.

If someone lives "rent-free" in your mind, you think about them a lot.
German photographer Boris Eldagsen shows a printed photograph of his work "Pseudomnesia: The Electrician" which he had created with the usage of artificial intelligence.
German photographer Boris Eldagsen created this image with artificial intelligence and won the "Sony World Photography Award" in 2023.

FABRIZIO BENSCH via Reuters

When someone or something constantly occupies your thoughts, they've taken up residence in your head without paying you a dime. In 1999, one reader attributed the phrase living "rent-free" to advice columnist Ann Landers.

Though often associated with specific people like a crush or celebrity, the phrase can also apply to positive and negative events, like an epic concert or a ridiculous AI image.

"Mother" is a popular term of endearment for female celebrities that originated in LGBTQ+ communities.
Rihanna performs during the Apple Music Super Bowl LVII Halftime Show in 2023.
Rihanna performs during the Apple Music Super Bowl LVII Halftime Show in 2023.

Kevin Mazur/Contributor/Getty Images for Roc Nation

"Mother" is a woman deserving of your respect who's had a profound influence on your life.

For some, that's Diana Ross. For others, it's Rihanna. Reneé Rapp, Mariah Carey, and Lana Del Rey have all been called mother, too.

Last year, The New York Times reported that people in the Black and Latino LGBTQ+ ballroom scene coined the term, which stemmed from the "queer subculture in which members are organized into so-called houses often led by a 'mother.'"

Michaela Jaé Rodriguez, who played a house mother in the groundbreaking series "Pose," told The New York Times that "anyone should be able to use a term that is trending" but that it's important to know and acknowledge where it came from.

If a person "ate," they executed something flawlessly.
Zendaya attends the 2024 Met Gala.
Zendaya attends the 2024 Met Gala.

John Shearer/Getty Images

Often associated with fashion and beauty, saying someone "ate" is a way of expressing they look amazing and did a great job.

Look at almost any picture of Zendaya on the red carpet, and it'd be correct to say, "She ate."

"Left no crumbs" is a continuation of "ate" that's used as additional emphasis.
Mona Patel on the 2024 Met Gala red carpet.
Mona Patel on the 2024 Met Gala red carpet.

Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue

If you hear "she ate," you may often hear "and left no crumbs" immediately after.

The additional phrase helps emphasize how perfect the person's execution was, though it can be used on its own, too.

For example, "Entrepreneur Mona Patel ate and left no crumbs at the 2024 Met Gala." That means she executed the theme perfectly — everything from her dress to her glam to the presentation on the red carpet was flawless.

"Bussin'" or "buss" means it's very good.
Items from Taco Bell.
Items from Taco Bell.

Rachel Murray/Stringer/Getty Images for Taco Bell

Often used to describe food, "bussin'" originated in the Black community and means extremely good or delicious, per Merriam-Webster.

So if your kid says tonight's dinner was "bussin'," just know you did a great job.

Something is "mid" if it falls short of expectations.
Kaley Cuoco attends the Critics Choice Awards in January 2024.
Kaley Cuoco attends the Critics Choice Awards in January.

Jeff Kravitz/Contributor/FilmMagic

Whether it's a dress on the red carpet, a new TV show, or a pasta recipe, something that's "mid" is mediocre.

BI reported that Kaley Cuoco's 2024 Critics Choice Awards gown missed the mark, so it could also be described as mid.

Another way to say focus is "lock in."
People studying at a library.
People studying at a library.

Dilara Irem Sancar/Anadolu via Getty Images

You can "lock in" on an assignment, cleaning your apartment, or even a video game.

"Let him cook" means don't stop him from doing his thing.
NC State forward DJ Burns Jr. played in the Elite 8 round of the 2024 March Madness Tournament.
The NC State forward DJ Burns Jr. played in the Elite Eight round of the 2024 March Madness tournament.

Lance King/Contributor/Getty Images

While NC State ultimately lost to Purdue in the Final Four, DJ Burns, Jr. was a standout in the 2024 March Madness tournament.

His coaches clearly saw how well he was performing and decided to "let him cook," giving him more playing time in their five tournament games, per ESPN.

Why call yourself delusional when you can say "delulu"?
A BookTok table at a Barnes and Noble in Scottsdale, Arizona.
A BookTok table at a Barnes and Noble in Scottsdale, Arizona.

Tali Arbel/Associated Press

As we've already established, Gen Z loves abbreviations.

"Delulu" simply means delusional, but in a way that's wacky instead of worrisome, according to The New York Times.

If you're hoping to elope with the lead in your favorite romance novel, you might be a bit delulu.

"Sus" is short for suspicious.
Among Us screenshot 5
In "Among Us," players discuss who they suspect of being an "Imposter" before ejecting them.

William Antonelli/Insider

It sounds a little sus, but this term dates back to the 1920s, per Merriam-Webster. The term originates from suss, as in, suss out whether someone is trustworthy or not.

Recently, the word reemerged thanks to the online game "Among Us," in which players try to determine who is an imposter working to sabotage their progress.

Cringe-worthy behavior may cost you "aura points."
Three portraits of blurry faces surrounded by colors
"Homage to Marcel Duchamps: Aura" by artist Susan Hiller.

JEAN-CHRISTOPHE VERHAEGEN/AFP via Getty Images

A kind of cosmic, karma-esque rating system of cool, aura points are won and lost through a variety of impressive and embarrassing deeds. Talked to your crush with spinach in your teeth? Your aura points just took a hit.

"It's tongue-in-cheek, and it also seems to be a sort of weird contemporary honor code," philosopher Julian Baggini told The Guardian.

"No cap" means you're telling the truth.
A person holds a white kitten on an open book
Cats are smart but not necessarily book-smart.

Ali Atmaca/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

The phrase "no cap" has been around for decades and has roots in Black communities.

People often use it for emphasis, similarly to "for real." For example, "My cat is smarter than Einstein, no cap."

"No cap" is basically the opposite of "cap," which is short for "capping."

"Cap or capping has referenced bragging, exaggerating, or lying since the early 1900s," Kelly Elizabeth Wright, a language professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, told TODAY.com.

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The 10 most fun cities in the US, ranked

4 December 2024 at 08:22
A view from the top of Lombard Street in San Francisco.
San Francisco was ranked the seventh most fun city in the US.

Vlad Siaber/Shutterstock

  • A WalletHub study ranked 182 of the most-populated cities in the US by how fun they are.
  • The study compared cities based on categories like costs and nightlife and parties.
  • Las Vegas was ranked the No. 1 most fun city in the country.

As 2024 draws to a close, it's already time to start plotting next year's travels.

So, if you're looking for a fun city to explore — or an exciting new place to ring in 2025 — WalletHub's latest report offers a look at 182 US cities ranked based on how fun they are.

The personal finance outlet first identified the 150 most-populated cities in the US, as well as at least two of each state's most-populated cities. Then, to measure "fun," it compared those cities across three categories: entertainment and recreation, nightlife and parties, and costs. For those categories, 65 different metrics were considered, such as the number of attractions, the acres of parkland per capita, bar accessibility, cost of living, and average prices for beer and wine.

WalletHub said the data used in its report was compiled from the US Census Bureau, the Council for Community and Economic Research, Numbeo, Yelp, and previous WalletHub studies, among other sources, and was accurate as of November 4.

The most fun cities in the US "provide a wide range of indoor and outdoor activities for all types of interests, from sports to theaters to arcades, and they have plenty of diverse restaurants to try," analyst Chip Lupo said.

From Las Vegas to New Orleans, here are the 10 most fun cities in the US, according to WalletHub.

10. New York City
A view of the New York City skyline with autumnal-colored trees in the foreground.
New York City ranked fifth for entertainment and recreation.

Sean Pavone/Shutterstock

The 10th most fun city in the US is New York.

It received two top-10 rankings in entertainment and recreation, and nightlife and parties, placing fifth and eighth, respectively, out of the 182 cities.

According to WalletHub, the city is tied for the most park playgrounds per capita and has the fourth most dance clubs per capita. A previous WalletHub study also ranked New York as the fourth-best sports city in the country.

However, New York ranked last among the 182 cities for costs, as the cost of living database Numbeo reported that New York is the most expensive city in the country.

In addition to cost of living, WalletHub compared costs of items like wine, movie tickets, and average fitness-club fees. In New York, a mid-range bottle of wine and a movie ticket each cost about $20, while a one-month fitness-club fee costs nearly $150.

9. Houston
A view of Houston's skyline with a park and greenery in the foreground.
Houston was the No. 15 ranked city for nightlife and parties.

Sean Pavone/Shutterstock

Houston's highest ranking was as the No. 15 city for nightlife and parties, with WalletHub reporting that the city was tied for the most dance clubs per capita.

The "Space City" also received two top-25 rankings for entertainment and recreation and costs, finishing 23rd and 25th.

Numbeo reported that people in Houston's monthly fitness-club fee costs about $39, while a mid-range bottle of wine costs about $13, and a movie ticket costs $15.

8. Chicago
A view of the Chicago skyline with the Chicago River running down the middle of the frame.
Chicago was ranked the No. 10 city for entertainment and recreation.

Moses P/Shutterstock

The "Windy City" ranked the eighth most fun city in the US, with 10th and 11th place finishes in entertainment and recreation and nightlife and parties, respectively.

According to WalletHub, Chicago was tied for the most park playgrounds and most restaurants per capita. It was also ranked the 15th best sports city in the country.

However, the city also struggled in the costs category, ranking 151st overall.

7. San Francisco
A view from the top of Lombard Street in San Francisco.
San Francisco was ranked the seventh most fun city in the US.

Vlad Siaber/Shutterstock

The seventh most fun city is San Francisco, with top-10 rankings in entertainment and recreation, and nightlife and parties.

WalletHub reported the city was tied for the most festivals, restaurants, and dance clubs per capita.

However, San Francisco was one of the worst-ranked cities for costs, with WalletHub ranking the city 178 out of 182.

Similar to New York, people in San Francisco can expect to pay $17 for a movie ticket, $18 for a mid-range bottle of wine, and about $96 for a one month fitness-club membership, Numbeo reported.

6. Austin
The Austin skyline during the daytime.
Austin ranked seventh in nightlife and parties.

Little Vignettes Photo/Shutterstock

Austin's ranking as the sixth most fun city in the US could largely be credited to its position as the seventh-best city for nightlife and parties.

With the city's robust reputation for live music — it's known as the "Live Music Capital of the World" — residents and tourists can enjoy music venues, festivals like Austin City Limits and South by Southwest, and dance clubs (it's tied for the most per capita).

The city also ranked 18th in entertainment and recreation, and earned a mid-tier 50th place ranking for costs.

5. New Orleans
People walking around New Orleans' French Quarter at night.
New Orleans ranked fourth in nightlife and parties.

f11photo/Shutterstock

As the home of the most famous Mardi Gras celebration in the country, it comes as little surprise that New Orleans would receive a top-five ranking for nightlife and parties.

"Crescent City" tied with San Francisco, Honolulu, Tampa, and Miami for the most festivals per capita, annually hosting the Essence Music Festival and the Voodoo Music and Arts Experience, among other events.

The city also placed 20th in entertainment and recreation as well as 76th in costs. In New Orleans, people can expect to pay around $15 for a movie ticket, $64 for one month at a fitness club, and $17 for a mid-range bottle of wine, according to Numbeo.

4. Atlanta
The skyline of downtown Atlanta at dusk.
Atlanta placed in the top 10 cities for entertainment and recreation and nightlife and parties.

Sean Pavone/Shutterstock

The fourth most fun city in the US is Atlanta, which placed sixth in nightlife and parties and eighth in entertainment and recreation.

The city is home to a variety of music festivals, like SweetWater 420 Fest, Atlanta Jazz Festival, and Shaky Knees Music Festival, all of which contribute to the city's nightlife score.

Atlanta was also ranked as a top 15 city for sports fans.

Meanwhile, the city's lowest ranking was for costs, where it ranked 124th.

3. Miami
An aerial view of Miami, including Miami Beach.
Miami was ranked the third most fun city in the US.

Volodymyr TVERDOKHLIB/Shutterstock

The city synonymous with spring break — Miami — ranked third overall for fun, with top-10 rankings in entertainment and recreation and nightlife and parties.

According to WalletHub, the "Magic City" is tied for the most festivals and restaurants per capita, and it has the fourth most fitness centers and fifth most dance clubs per capita. The outlet added that more than 88% of Miami residents live within half a mile of the park, and that it is the country's leader for water sports opportunities.

And you can't forget about sports; with the Miami Dolphins, Miami Heat, and Inter Miami FC, the city ranked sixth overall for best sports cities in the country.

However, similar to other major cities on the list, Miami was hurt by the cost category, where it ranked 157th.

2. Orlando
The skyline of Orlando during the daytime.
Orlando ranked second for nightlife and parties.

Frame Craft 8/Shutterstock

The second most fun city in the US is Orlando, home of world renowned theme parks like Walt Disney World and Universal Studios.

But if rides aren't your thing, the city has plenty more to offer, as it tied for the most restaurants per capita and ranked second overall for nightlife and parties.

The city also has the second most fitness centers per capita and is the fifth best city for soccer fans, as both the MLS and NWSL have teams in Orlando (Orlando City SC and Orlando Pride).

And contrary to the rising prices of Disney tickets, the city itself isn't as expensive as some other major cities. It ranked 58th in the cost category, with Numbeo reporting the average movie ticket costs $15, a monthly fitness club membership costs about $40, and a mid-range bottle of wine costs $15.

1. Las Vegas
A view of the Las Vegas skyline during the daytime.
Las Vegas is the most fun city in the US.

Lucky-photographer/Shutterstock

Last but not least, is Las Vegas. The most fun city in the US is ranked No. 1 in nightlife and parties and No. 2 in entertainment and recreation. (Honolulu took the top spot for entertainment and recreation, but ultimately did not make the list of top 10 fun cities.)

From casinos and dance clubs to sports stadiums, spas, and arcades, "Sin City" has it all. WalletHub reported that Las Vegas is tied with other cities for the most dance clubs, restaurants, and park playgrounds per capita.

All that fun doesn't have to break the bank, either. The city ranked 36th in costs, with $13 movie tickets, $25 monthly fitness memberships, and $15 bottles of wine.

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The 10 best and 10 worst sequels of 2024, according to critics

1 December 2024 at 06:27
Lady Gaga has Harley Quinn in "Joker: Folie à Deux."
Lady Gaga starred as Harley Quinn in "Joker: Folie à Deux."

Warner Brothers Pictures

  • Sequels were a popular choice for movie studios this year.
  • "Inside Out 2" is the highest-grossing film of 2024, with $1.7 billion in worldwide ticket sales.
  • But not all sequels hit the bar set by their predecessors.

Hollywood seems to have taken a strong liking to the lesson, "If it's not broken, don't fix it."

After decades spent collecting dust in old DVD and VHS collections, previously loved classics like "Beetlejuice," "Gladiator," and "Twister" were revived by studios with sequels fit for both their original audiences and a new generation of moviegoers.

But while these movies earned mid-tier ranking from critics (they all scored around 75% on Rotten Tomatoes), others like "Dune: Part Two" shone brightly — Hoai-Tran Bui wrote for Inverse that it was "in contention for the pantheon of greatest sequels ever."

However, there were some disappointments, too. (Hello, "Joker: Folie à Deux.")

While the internet can debate the value in reviving storylines with sequels, prequels, reboots, etc., Business Insider's Palmer Haasch reported that "familiar IP is comforting to viewers — and risk-averse executives."

In fact, all 10 of the highest-grossing films of the year are sequels, ranging from $397 million to nearly $1.7 billion in worldwide ticket sales, according to Box Office Mojo.

As the year comes to a close, here's a look at the 10 best and 10 worst sequels of the year so far, according to critics on Rotten Tomatoes.

All Rotten Tomatoes ratings were accurate as of November 26.

Let's start with the worst sequels of the year. 10. "Bad Boys: Ride or Die"
Martin Lawrence and Will Smith as Detective Marcus Burnett and Detective Mike Lowrey in "Bad Boys: Ride or Die."
Martin Lawrence and Will Smith star as Detective Marcus Burnett and Detective Mike Lowrey in "Bad Boys: Ride or Die."

Sony Pictures Entertainment

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 65%

Will Smith and Martin Lawrence reprise their roles as Detective Mike Lowrey and Detective Marcus Burnett, who are on a mission to clear the name of their late police captain Conrad Howard.

Matt Goldberg wrote for The Wrap, "The 'Bad Boys' series has never been about tight plotting or ingenious twists. It's about throwing Lowrey and Burnett into chaotic situations and forcing them to wisecrack and shoot their way out. That's it. Those are the movies. They're a bizarre blend of soap opera, broad comedy, and bombastic action, and they should not work, but they do."

9. "Force of Nature: The Dry 2"
Eric Bana as Detective Aaron Falk in "Force of Nature: The Dry 2."
Eric Bana reprised his role as Detective Aaron Falk in "Force of Nature: The Dry 2."

IFC Films

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 64%

The second film in "The Dry" series focuses on the disappearance of a woman, Alice Russell (Anna Torv), during a hiking retreat with four fellow employees. When they return without her, Detective Aaron Falk (Eric Bana) must figure out the truth of what happened to her.

We Live Entertainment's Aaron Neuwirth gave the film a 6/10 rating, writing the story "ends up feeling too convoluted for its own good, with a less engaging structure and more like a push towards some inevitable moments that ultimately take away from the film's urgency."

However, he added that it's still "decadent enough" to watch, and that he doesn't mind seeing another iteration of this story in a few years.

8. "Descendants: The Rise of Red"
Rita Ora as the Queen of Hearts in "Descendants: Rise of Red."
Rita Ora starred as the Queen of Hearts in "Descendants: Rise of Red."

Disney+

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 57%

The "Descendants" series continued with its fifth iteration in July, as Ursula's daughter Uma (China Anne McClain) — now in charge of Auradon Prep — invites the Queen of Hearts (Rita Ora) and her teenage daughter Red (Kylie Cantrall) to the school. But when the Queen of Hearts launches a coup against her high-school nemesis Cinderella (Brandy), each of their daughters, Chloe (Malia Baker) and Red, must team up to go back in time and stop the event that turned the Queen evil.

While the score only draws from seven critics' reviews, Decider's John Serba wrote that fans of the series will be used to its over-the-topness, "which exists very much within the Disney Channel formula of heavily processed visuals and forced pep," and is "surely just good enough for all interested and engaged parties."

7. "Despicable Me 4"
A still of "Despicable Me 4" characters Gru, Lucy, and Gru Jr.
"Despicable Me 4" grossed more than $968 million at the worldwide box office.

Illumination

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 56%

In the latest "Despicable Me" film, Gru (Steve Carell) must face his high-school rival, villain Maxime Le Mal (Will Ferrell) and his girlfriend, Valentina (Sofía Vergara). But to keep the family safe — complete with their newest addition, Gru Jr. — everyone must relocate to a safe house.

Zaki Hasan, of the San Francisco Chronicle's Datebook, wrote, "At this point, the 'Despicable Me' series ('Minions' too) is mostly about keeping the content flowing so Universal can continue selling backpacks and plush toys, so don't be shocked if your child asks to return to theaters again in a few years. Talk about despicable."

6. "Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire"
A still from "Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire," with Godzilla roaring.
"Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire" was released in March.

Warner Brothers Pictures

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 54%

The Monsterverse franchise continues with "Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire," to see the iconic monsters team up against an even bigger threat to the world.

"This movie's a mess," wrote The Film Frenzy's Matt Brunson.

"It's noisy, punishing, soulless (it calculatingly kills off more civilians than even 'Man of Steel'), needlessly convoluted, populated by nitwits and dullards, and choked with increasingly impersonal CGI," he added.

5. "Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire"
Paul Rudd, Finn Wolfhard, Mckenna Grace, and Carrie Coon in a still from "Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire."
Paul Rudd, Finn Wolfhard, Mckenna Grace, and Carrie Coon starred in "Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire."

Sony Pictures Entertainment

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 42%

In the follow-up to the "Ghostbusters" revival, "Ghostbusters: Afterlife," descendants of the late Egon Spengler team up with members of the original Ghostbusting crew — including Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd, Ernie Hudson, and Annie Potts — to save the world from a second Ice Age.

"Ultimately, there's nothing in 'Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire' that will win you over — no great action sequences, no laugh-out-loud jokes, and certainly nothing as inspired as 'Ghostbusters II's' perfect metaphor of a malevolent ooze fed by the negative energy of New York City seeping into the sewers. The jokes are witless, the emotions artless, and the film joyless," wrote Vulture's Bilge Ebiri.

3 (tie). "Venom: The Last Dance"
Tom Hardy as Eddie Brock and Venom in "Venom: The Last Dance."
Tom Hardy reprised his roles as Eddie Brock and Venom in "Venom: The Last Dance."

Sony Pictures Entertainment

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 40%

Sure, Sony doesn't have a perfect track record with superhero movies (see: "Morbius" and "Madame Web"), but the "Venom" series has been a surprise hit … until now. In the final film of the trilogy, Tom Hardy returns as Eddie Brock and Venom as the pair goes on the run from forces from both their worlds.

While The Hollywood Reporter's Gayle Sequeira wrote that what works in this installments' favor is "its incredibly earnest exploration of the characters' personal stakes," Observer's Dylan Roth had a harsher take, writing, "True to form for this trilogy — which supposedly concludes here — the brainless and disjointed 'Last Dance' skates by on star Tom Hardy's charm and a few good gags."

"It's a relentless marathon of mediocrity," Roth added.

3 (tie). "Horizon: An American Saga — Chapter 2"
Kevin Costner as Hayes Ellison in "Horizon: An American Saga – Chapter 1."
Kevin Costner directed, wrote, produced, and starred in "Horizon: An American Saga – Chapter 1" and "Horizon: An American Saga – Chapter 2."

Warner Brothers Pictures

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 40%

After the lackluster reception of "Horizon: An American Saga — Chapter 1," Kevin Costner debuted the second chapter of his Western passion project during the Venice International Film Festival in September. Though the sequel was pulled from theaters ahead of its planned August debut, it's already garnered enough reviews from critics to earn a 40% on Rotten Tomatoes.

Variety's Jessica Kiang wrote that it "is an exercise in contradictions: incident-packed yet oddly sedate; replete with characters new and returning, yet largely lacking in compelling characterization; and, running to over three hours, simply too long a film to be so jarringly abrupt."

2. "Joker: Folie à Deux"
Lady Gaga has Harley Quinn in "Joker: Folie à Deux."
Lady Gaga starred as Harley Quinn in "Joker: Folie à Deux."

Warner Brothers Pictures

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 32%

The musical follow-up to 2019's critically acclaimed "Joker," did not live up to expectations despite the introduction of Lady Gaga's Lee Quinzel, aka Harley Quinn.

"By any reasonable measure this is a terrible movie, too long and too self-serious and way too dramatically inert, a regrettable waste of its lead actors' boundless commitment to even their most thinly written roles," Dana Stevens wrote for Slate.

1. "Rebel Moon — Part Two: The Scargiver"
Djimon Hounsou as General Titus in "Rebel Moon — Part Two: The Scargiver."
"Rebel Moon — Part Two: The Scargiver" was released on Netflix in April.

Netflix

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 16%

"Rebel Moon — Part Two: The Scargiver" was released in April, offering a quick follow-up for audiences who'd seen "Rebel Moon: Part One — A Child of Fire" in December 2023. The sequel picks back up with Kora (Sofia Boutella) and her group of ally warriors returning to the planet Veldt; there, they must train and defend its people from an impending attack while Kora comes to terms with her past.

David Fear wrote for Rolling Stone that "life is painfully short," and advised readers to "turn away from your screens. Go for a walk. Start your own wheat-threshing collective. Anything but suffer through this."

Now, the best sequels of the year: 9 (tie). "Alien: Romulus"
Cailee Spaeny as Rain Carradine in "Alien: Romulus."
"Alien: Romulus" was released in August.

20th Century Studios

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 80%

The seventh installment in the "Alien" series follows indentured space colony worker Rain Carradine (Cailee Spaeny) and a group of other young workers as they attempt to escape to another colony.

Jordan Hoffman wrote for Entertainment Weekly that the film "doesn't try to reinvent anything and instead focuses on refining what works. It's got the thrills, it's got the creepy-crawlies, and it's got just enough plot to make you care about the characters."

9 (tie). "Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes"
A closeup still of Proximus Caesar in "Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes."
"Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes" was released in May.

20th Century Studios

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 80%

"Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes" returns to Earth decades after Caesar's reign to reveal that apes are now the dominant species, not humans. But as Caesar's legacy is distorted by a new ruler, Proximus Caesar, who's attacked and enslaved other clans in the pursuit of human technology, a young chimpanzee, Noa, and a woman must work together.

Ty Burr wrote for The Washington Post, "'Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes' is a sturdy new entry in the revived Planet of the Apes franchise, itself one of the more successful second go-rounds, commercially and artistically, of Hollywood's modern corporate era."

8. "The First Omen"
Nell Tiger Free as Margaret in "The First Omen."
"The First Omen" was released in April.

20th Century Studios

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 83%

As the prequel to 1976's "The Omen," "The First Omen" centers on a young American nun, Margaret, who uncovers a conspiracy to birth the Antichrist while serving at a Catholic orphanage in Rome.

Alison Foreman wrote for IndieWire that the film "ticks all the boxes of a justified IP revisitation that arguably should get more chapters [because] it improves what came before it."

Foreman added, "It's also the rare prequel (sequel, requel, what have you) that fits seamlessly inside the existing franchise and makes tracks toward a chilling new future. In short, it births something new and genuinely scary. Remember when that wasn't so rare?"

7. "Smile 2"
Naomi Scott as Skye Riley in "Smile 2."
Naomi Scott starred as pop star Skye Riley in "Smile 2."

Paramount Pictures

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 86%

Beginning six days after the end of "Smile," "Smile 2" focuses on pop star Skye Riley's (Naomi Scott) battle with the Smile entity.

Though the AP's Mark Kennedy concedes that director and screenwriter Parker Finn's script "sometimes lags as he searches for an ending," Finn found "a great satirical target, given life to a third film easily and showcased another rising star to watch. That's a reason to, well, smile about."

6. "A Quiet Place: Day One"
A closeup still of Lupita Nyong'o as Samira in "A Quiet Place: Day One."
Lupita Nyong'o starred as Samira in "A Quiet Place: Day One."

Paramount Pictures

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 87%

"A Quiet Place: Day One" serves as a prequel to the first two installments in John Krasinski's "A Quiet Place" series by highlighting the first day of the alien invasion in New York City through the journeys of Samira "Sam" (Lupita Nyong'o) and Eric (Joseph Quinn).

"The third chapter of 'A Quiet Place' shows that this smart, reliably frightening series, which began with a modestly budgeted feature that performed way beyond expectations, is by no means tapped out," David Rooney wrote for The Hollywood Reporter.

5. "Transformers One"
An animated still of Megatron and Optimus Prime facing each other.
"Transformers One" was released in September.

Paramount Pictures

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 89%

"Transformers" might be one of the most heavily mined IPs in Hollywood, but Paramount's "Transformers One" manages to do something unique by telling the origin story of Orion Pax (Optimus Prime) and D-16's (Megatron) friendship and inevitable hatred.

Carlos Aguilar of the LA Times wrote that writers Andrew Barrer, Gabriel Ferrari, and Eric Pearson created "a consistently humorous script brimming with witty banter and quips that mostly land."

"Yet what grounds the story amid the pileup of sci-fi terms and lore is the convincingly intense bond that these male protagonists have nurtured," Aguilar added. "There's a gravitas to their relationship that makes the heartbreak of their eventual separation feel earned."

3 (tie). "Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga"
A still of Anya Taylor-Joy as a young Imperator Furiosa in "Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga."
Anya Taylor-Joy starred as a young Imperator Furiosa in "Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga."

Warner Brothers Pictures

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 90%

Another origin story that was well-received this year was "Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga." The prequel follows the story of Furiosa, portrayed by Anya Taylor-Joy, from her kidnapping from the Green Place to her life as a skilled mechanic, driver, and warrior ready to take on her enemies.

Though NPR's Justin Chang thought something in Furiosa's "arc feels a bit too psychologically tidy to grip or disturb you in the way it's supposed to," the movie's post-apocalyptic world is the true star.

"Even in the moments when the CGI looks a little obvious, the mayhem is staged and shot with the kind of blissful coherence that you rarely see in a Hollywood blockbuster anymore," Chang said.

3 (tie). "Inside Out 2"
A still of Joy, Anger, Sadness, Disgust, and Fear being afraid of the new emotion, Anxiety, in "Inside Out 2."
"Inside Out 2" was released in June and is the highest-grossing film of the year.

Pixar

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 90%

Audiences are thrust back into the mind of "Inside Out" protagonist Riley Andersen, who's now 13, as her lovable cast of emotions, led by Amy Poehler's Joy, deal with the introduction of new characters Anxiety, Envy, Ennui, and Embarrassment.

"What I loved most about 'Inside Out 2,' a movie that's warmhearted and entertaining if not quite up to the revelatory standards of its predecessor, is its portrayal of Anxiety as not a villain but a character who believes herself to be a protector," Dan Kois wrote for Slate.

2. "Dune: Part Two"
A closeup still of Timothée Chalamet as Paul Atreides in "Dune: Part Two."
Timothée Chalamet returned as Paul Atreides in "Dune: Part Two."

Warner Brothers Pictures

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 92%

In the highly anticipated follow-up to 2021's "Dune," Timothée Chalamet returns as Paul Atreides as he lives and trains amongst the Fremen of Arrakis and decides whether to embrace his position as the Lisan al Gaib, or messiah.

"It's a towering feat of sci-fi cinema that will put 'Dune: Part Two' in contention for the pantheon of greatest sequels ever," Hoai-Tran Bui wrote for Inverse.

1. "Paddington in Peru"
A still of Paddington Bear in "Paddington in Peru."
"Paddington in Peru" was released to UK audiences in November.

Sony Pictures Entertainment

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 94%

Though "Paddington in Peru," the third on-screen adventure for Paddington Bear, doesn't premiere in US theaters until January 17, it's already received positive reviews from those in the UK, where it was released on November 8.

The film follows Paddington and the Brown family as they go on an adventure through the jungles of Peru to search for his missing Aunt Lucy.

"This is confectionary cinema—sweet, light, and wanting little more than to make its audience smile," Ross McIndoe wrote for Slant.

Read the original article on Business Insider

The Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade is turning 100. Photos show how the tradition has evolved since 1924.

27 November 2024 at 10:59
Pokémon characters Pikachu and Eevee were featured in the 2023 parade.
Pokémon characters Pikachu and Eevee.

Macy's

  • The Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade was first held on November 27, 1924.
  • It's been a hallmark of the holiday season since then, featuring celebrities and character balloons.
  • This year's parade airs on Thursday, November 28 at 8:30 a.m. ET on NBC.

On Thursday, November 28, Macy's will kick off its 98th Thanksgiving Day Parade.

But what's extra special about this year's parade is that it's also the 100-year anniversary of the first Macy's parade — then called the Macy's Christmas Parade — which was held on November 27, 1924. (The company skipped the event from 1942-1944 because of World War II.)

Since then, the parade has grown into a spectacle of giant helium balloons, extravagent floats, marching bands, Broadway performances, celebrity appearances, and more.

"Every single year, we really try to deliver the best in entertainment," Kathleen Wright, director of production operations for Macy's studios, told the "Today" show on Monday.

So, as more than 5,000 volunteers, 32 balloons, and 22 floats prepare to grace the streets of New York City, here's a look back at Macy's first parade and how the tradition has evolved over the last 100 years.

1924: Macy's held its first parade on November 27, 1924; it was called the Macy's Christmas Parade.
The first Santa Claus float featured in the Macy's Christmas Parade in 1924.
Even Macy's first Christmas Parade featured a Santa Claus float.

Macy's

The first parade featured live animals from the Central Park Zoo.

1927: Live animals were replaced with the now classic helium balloons.
Happy Dragon was the second balloon featured in the 1927 parade.
Happy Dragon was the second balloon featured in the 1927 parade.

Macy's

Happy Dragon (pictured above) and Felix the Cat were two balloons on display that year.

1930s: Walt Disney helped design the first Mickey Mouse balloon.
A Mickey Mouse balloon in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade in 1934.
A Mickey Mouse balloon was featured in 1934.

Macy's

The balloon handlers were also dressed as Mickey Mouse.

1940s: The parade was canceled from 1942 to 1944 due to rubber and helium shortages during World War II, but it was back on for the rest of the '40s.
An Uncle Sam balloon in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade in the 1940s
An Uncle Sam balloon was included in a parade during the 1940s.

Macy's

An Uncle Sam balloon graced the streets of New York City in the 1940s.

1950s: The Radio City Rockettes have been perfectly aligned since their first performance at the parade in 1957.
The Radio City Rockettes perform at the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 1958.
The Radio City Rockettes performed at the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 1958.

John Lindsay/AP Photo

The Rockettes were founded in 1925.

1960s: Miss Teenage America 1961 Diane Lynn Cox rode a float in the parade.
Miss Teenage America at the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in the 1960s.
Miss Teenage America Diane Lynn Cox waved to the crowd.

Anthony Camerano/AP

She was accompanied by her "Prince Charming," actor Troy Donahue.

1968: Snoopy, the beloved beagle from the "Peanuts" comics, made his balloon debut.
The "Peanuts" character Snoopy was debuted as a balloon for the first time in 1968 as "Flying Ace Snoopy."
The "Peanuts" character Snoopy had its balloon debut in 1968.

Macy's

The balloon was named "Flying Ace Snoopy."

According to Macy's, Snoopy is the "longest-running character balloon" in the parade's history.

1970s: Kermit the Frog made his debut in 1977.
A Kermit the Frog balloon in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 1977.
Kermit the Frog's balloon debuted in 1977.

Macy's

The balloon handlers were also dressed as Kermit, with green outfits and yellow collars.

1980: The Sesame Street float followed a marching band.
A Sesame Street float in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 1980.
A Sesame Street float was featured in the parade in 1980.

Ken Howard/Getty Images

Sesame Street began airing in 1969.

1982: Woody Woodpecker flew high above Macy's.
A Woody Woodpecker balloon in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 1982.
A Woody Woodpecker balloon flew in 1982.

Macy's

The Woody Woodpecker show aired between 1940 and 1972.

1984: Raggedy Ann waved to onlookers.
A Raggedy Anne balloon in the Macy's Thanskgiving Day Parade in 1984.
1984's parade included a Raggedy Anne balloon.

Macy's

Raggedy Ann was a character created by author and artist Johnny Gruelle in 1915.

1985: The Betty Boop balloon was 67 feet tall.
A Betty Boop balloon in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 1985.
In 1985, a Betty Boop balloon was paraded through the city.

Macy's

The ballon also held over 15,000 cubic feet of helium.

1986: Olive Oyl and Swee'Pea were preceded by a group of clowns.
An Olive Oyl and Swee'Pea balloon in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 1986.
An Olive Oyl and Swee'Pea balloon was featured in 1986.

AP Photo

Olive Oyl and Swee'Pea were characters from "Popeye."

1988: The Pink Panther was on the case.
A Pink Panther balloon in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 1988.
A Pink Panther balloon in the 1986 parade.

Macy's

The first Pink Panther film was created in 1963.

1989: A Ronald McDonald-shaped balloon carried balloons of its own.
A Ronald McDonald balloon in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 1989.
Ronald McDonald made an appearance in 1989.

Tim Clary/AP Photo

An estimated 1.8 million people attended the chilly parade.

1990: Clifford the Big Red Dog lived up to his name.
A Clifford the Big Red Dog balloon at the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 1990.
Clifford the Big Red Dog was included in 1990.

Macy's

The first "Clifford" story was published in 1963 by Norman Bridwell.

1991: Spider-Man made his first appearance at the parade.
A Spider-Man balloon at the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 1991.
Spider-Man made his first Macy's parade appearance in 1991.

Macy's

It was fitting for a Spider-Man balloon to fly over New York City, just as the character does in the comics and movies.

1992: Bart Simpson cruised through town on his skateboard.
A Bart Simpson balloon in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 1992.
Bart Simpson in 1992.

Bebeto Matthews/AP Photo

"The Simpsons" remains the longest-running scripted sitcom in television history.

1993: Members of America Sings!, a performing arts nonprofit organization for young amateur singers, belted out American classics.
A crowd of singers and an American flag at the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 1993.
America Sings! performed in 1993.

Stringer/Getty Images

The singers wore red sweaters with white scarves as they waved American flags.

1994: The Cat in the Hat premiered as a new balloon in Times Square.
The Cat in the Hat balloon at the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 1994.
The Cat in the Hat balloon debuted in 1994.

Stringer/Reuters

A billboard for the Tony Award-winning musical "Kiss of the Spider Woman" can be seen in the background.

1995: Beethoven was big. Like, really big.
A Beethoven balloon at the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 1995.
Beethoven the dog in 1995.

Jeff Christensen/Reuters

There are eight "Beethoven" movies in total.

1996: Betty Boop reappeared.
A Betty Boop balloon at the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 1996.
Betty Boop's 1985 balloon made an appearance.

Jeff Christensen/Reuters

She was sitting on a crescent moon again.

1997: Winds gusting up to 43 miles per hour caused many of the 17 balloons in the parade to rip and deflate.
A Pink Panther balloon fell to the ground at the 1997 Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade.
A Pink Panther balloon deflated in 1997.

Jeff Christensen/Reuters

One of the balloons blew into a lamppost, knocking it into the crowd and injuring two people, The New York Times reported in 1997.

1998: "Rugrats" were all the rage.
"Rugrats" balloons in the 1998 Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade.
A "Rugrats" balloon was featured in 1998.

Adam Nadel/AP Photo

"Rugrats" characters Chuckie and Tommy rode their dog Spike in the 1998 parade.

1999: Before "Googling" became a verb, internet search engine Ask Jeeves was the way to go.
An Ask Jeeves float in the 1999 Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade.
Miss America winner Heather French rode the Ask Jeeves float in 1999.

Jeff Christensen/Reuters

The Ask Jeeves float was accompanied by Miss America winner Heather French.

2000: A marching band led the way for Arthur.
A marching band preceded an Arthur balloon during the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 2000.
Arthur was led by a marching band in 2000.

Craig Blankenhorn/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images

The animated children's series "Arthur" aired from 1996 to 2022.

2001: The trauma of the 9/11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center was still raw.
Firefighters in Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 2001.
Macy's continued with the parade in 2001.

Chris Hondros/Getty Images

Members of the New York City fire department carried an American flag.

2002: Justin Guarini, the runner-up on season one of "American Idol," crooned a Christmas song.
Justin Guarini of "American Idol" sings at the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 2002.
Justin Guarini of "American Idol" in 2002.

Matthew Peyton/Getty Images

Guarini placed second to Kelly Clarkson on the show's first season.

The "100 Christmases" sign behind him was a nod to the age of Macy's iconic storefront in Herald Square, which opened in 1902.

2003: Simple Plan rocked out on the M&M float.
Simple Plan posed on an M&M float during the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 2003.
Simple Plan performed at the parade in 2003.

Matthew Peyton/Getty Images

The band released the singles "Addicted" and "Perfect" in 2003.

2004: A news ticker shared stories about "Desperate Housewives" and the war in Iraq.
Performers on stilts and unicycles at Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 2004.
People performed on stilts and unicycles at the 2004 parade.

Mario Tama/Getty Images

Performers followed the parade route on stilts and unicycles.

2005: Charlie Brown was part of the fun.
A Charlie Brown balloon was featured in the 2005 Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade.
Charlie Brown chased his football in 2005.

Jeff Christensen/AP Photo

The "Peanuts" character chased after his football.

2006: It rained on this parade. Poor Big Bird.
The Big Bird balloon sank to the ground at the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 2006.
The parade continued as usual despite the rain.

Stephen Chernin/Getty Images

The Big Bird balloon sank to the ground due to inclement weather.

2007: Shrek floated above the city in all of his glory.
A Shrek balloon in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 2007.
Shrek was featured in the 2007 parade.

Hiroko Masuike/Getty Images

The third "Shrek" movie, "Shrek the Third," came out in 2007.

2008: Miley Cyrus was at the height of her Disney stardom.
Miley Cyrus waved from a "Bolt" float at the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 2008.
Miley Cyrus waved and performed on a float for the movie "Bolt."

Yana Paskova/Getty Images

Cyrus appeared on a float for the 2008 animated Disney movie "Bolt," in which she was the voice of Penny. 

2009: Keke Palmer blew a kiss to adoring fans.
Keke Palmer blew a kiss to the crowd at the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 2009.
Keke Palmer blew a kiss to the crowd in 2009.

Michael Loccisano/Getty Images

Palmer sang her song "Top of the World" on a Build-A-Bear float. At the time, she was the star of Nickelodeon's "True Jackson, VP."

2010: Miranda Cosgrove rode with the Minions from "Despicable Me."
Miranda Cosgrove at the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 2010.
Cosgrove and the Minions rode on a float with a model of the Statue of Liberty.

Neilson Barnard/Getty Images

Cosgrove voices Margo in the "Despicable Me" franchise.

2011: Members of the NYPD marched through Times Square.
NYPD officers march in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 2011.
NYPD officers in the 2011 parade.

Michael Nagle/Getty Images

Spider-Man followed closely in the background.

2012: US Olympic gymnasts Kyla Ross, Aly Raisman, Jordyn Wieber, McKayla Maroney, and Gabby Douglas of the "Fierce Five" sported their gold medals from the London Olympics.
The Fierce Five (Kyla Ross, Aly Raisman, Jordyn Wieber, McKayla Maroney, and Gabby Douglas) at the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 2012.
The Fierce Five attended the parade in 2012.

Desiree Navarro/Getty Images

The Fierce Five led Team USA to gold in the team all-around for the first time in more than a decade.

2013: Despite the cold and concerns about the wind, the parade continued as planned.
Performers huddled for warmth at the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 2013.
It was a cold November.

Kena Betancur/Getty Images

The National Weather Service reported that the high in Central Park that day was 35 degrees. Despite cold temperatures, the New York Daily News reported that 3.5 million people attended the event.

2014: Spider-Man flew past Macy's.
A Spider-Man balloon at the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 2014.
A Spider-Man balloon flew through the sky in 2014.

Brad Barket/Getty Images

In "The Amazing Spider-Man 2," which was released in 2014, the titular character was played by Andrew Garfield.

2015: A record number of police officers patrolled the parade in the wake of terrorist attacks in Paris.
A Pikachu balloon at the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 2015 is in the background, while NYPD officers stand in the foreground.
Pikachu floated through Midtown as officers stood by in 2015.

Kena Betancur/Getty Images

For the first time, the parade featured 200 officers from the NYPD Counterterrorism Bureau's Critical Response Command, The New York Times reported.

2016: Macy's celebrated its 90th Thanksgiving Day Parade.
A marching band at Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 2016. Their drums read, "Macy's 90 Thanksgiving Day Parade."
A marching band assembled in the parade in 2016.

Eduardo Munoz Alvarez/Getty Images

Marching band drums marked Macy's 90th parade.

2017: The red Power Ranger balloon flew down the streets of New York.
A red Power Ranger balloon at the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 2017.
Saban's Mighty Morphin Power Ranger balloon in 2017.

Noam Galai/Getty Images for Saban Brands

The balloon handlers wore matching red outfits.

2018: SpongeBob SquarePants flew down the street sporting a Santa hat.
A Spongebob Squarepants balloon was included in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 2018. The balloon's handlers wore matching Spongebob outfits.
A SpongeBob SquarePants balloon traveled through New York City in 2018.

Atilgan Ozdil/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

Perhaps SpongeBob was paying tribute to the original "Christmas Parade."

2019: Disney's Olaf from "Frozen" made his third consecutive parade appearance after debuting in 2017.
An Olaf balloon at the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 2019.
An Olaf balloon from "Frozen" was included in 2019's celebration.

Ralph Bavaro/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images

"Frozen 2" came out in 2019.

2020: Santa Claus and his elves wore face masks to the parade in an effort to prevent the spread of COVID-19.
Santa and his elves wore masks at the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 2020.
There were no crowds at the parade.

Eugene Gologursky/Getty Images for Macy's Inc.

Despite there being no live crowds, the parade still featured performances from the Goo Goo Dolls, Sofia Carson, CNCO, Pentatonix, and more.

2021: Broadway's cast of "Wicked" performed "One Short Day."
The cast of "Wicked" on Broadway performing "One Short Day."
The cast of "Wicked" at the parade.

Eric Liebowitz/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images

Broadway performances have been a parade staple for decades.

2022: NBC has been the parade's official broadcast partner since 1952.
Savannah Guthrie and Hoda Kotb posed while hosting the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade on NBC.
Savannah Guthrie and Hoda Kotb hosting the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 2022.

Cara Howe/Contributor/NBC via Getty Images

In 2022, NBC's Savannah Guthrie, Hoda Kotb, and Al Roker were part of the show.

2023: Pokémon character Pikachu has appeared in every parade since 2001.
Pokémon characters Pikachu and Eevee were featured in the 2023 Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade.
Pokémon characters Pikachu and Eevee.

Macy's

According to Macy's, each blade on Pikachu and Eevee's Poké Ball sleigh is about the same length as a semi-trailer truck.

2024: This year's parade will include six new balloons and seven new floats.
The Tom Turkey float at the 2023 Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade. The Macy's star balloon follows behind as crowds of people watch and march with the parade.
The Tom Turkey float will return in 2024.

Macy's

While there will be more than 10 combined new balloons and floats, Macy's still leaves room for the classics like Tom Turkey, which is "the longest running title float in the Parade," according to the brand.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Here's how every state got its nickname

21 November 2024 at 09:18
Grinnell Mountain in the background with Grinnell Lake and  Lake Josephine in the middle ground and trees and foliage in the foreground.
Montana is nicknamed the "Treasure State."

Wichakorn Kitrungrot/Shutterstock

  • Each of the 50 states has a famous nickname.
  • Some are straightforward, like Delaware's nickname, the "First State."
  • Others require a bit more of an explanation, such as how Wisconsin became the "Badger State."

Have you ever wonder why Oregon State University's mascot is a beaver? Why there's an NBA team called the New Orleans Pelicans? Or what a Tar Heel is?

It turns out a lot of the pop-culture references we've come to know and love, especially in sports, are actually connected to state nicknames, which draw on everything from historical facts to natural flora and fauna.

Here's a look at each of the 50 states' nicknames and how they came to be.

Alabama doesn't have an official nickname, but it's often called the "Yellowhammer State" or the "Heart of Dixie."
A wide view of the Alabama State Capitol buidling.
"Dixie" is a nickname for the American South.

Dennis MacDonald/Shutterstock

Perhaps surprisingly, Alabama's unofficial nicknames have nothing to do with the popular rival university cheers, "Roll Tide!" or "War Eagle!"

Instead, both of the state's most common nicknames hark back to the Civil War, with "Yellowhammer" referencing Alabama soldiers' uniforms, which were trimmed with yellow, and "Heart of Dixie" referring to Montgomery, Alabama's position as the first capital of the Confederacy.

Alaska's vast wilderness has led to its nickname, "the Last Frontier."
A view of Hubbard Glacier in Alaska off the coast of Yakutat, Alaska.
Alaska famously still has vast areas of unexplored territory.

Dkojich/Shutterstock

Alaska is the largest state in the US, yet it has one of the smallest populations, with fewer than 750,000 residents, according to the 2020 Census.

With so much space and so few people, Alaska was dubbed "the Last Frontier," as there is still so much area to be explored.

Arizona is the home of the Grand Canyon, making it the "Grand Canyon State."
A view of the Grand Canyon with the Colorado River running through it.
The Grand Canyon is located mostly in Arizona.

romeovip_md/Shutterstock

More than 4.5 million people visited Grand Canyon National Park in 2023, according to the National Park Service.

Arkansas' nickname, the "Natural State," became official in 1995.
Aerial photo of rural Arkansas filled with lush trees and grass.
Arkansas started being promoted as the "Natural State" in the 1980s.

ArkNow Drone and Outdoor/Shutterstock

The Encyclopedia of Arkansas reported that the Arkansas Parks System started advocating for more tourism in the 1980s, using the nickname the "Natural State."

The nickname became official in 1995 thanks to Rep. Dennis Young, who introduced legislation citing the state's various rivers, streams, lakes, bayous, mountains, and wildlife.

Arkansas Tourism is now a $9.2 billion industry with upward of 48 million visiting the state in 2022, per a press release from the Arkansas Cabinet Secretary.

California is the "Golden State."
A field of Orange County California poppies in bloom with mountains in the background and clouds in the blue sky.
One source of California's nickname, the "Golden State," comes from its golden poppies.

Steve Petit/Shutterstock

From the Gold Rush and golden poppies to sunshine and Hollywood, golden has always been the perfect way to describe California.

Colorado is the "Centennial State" because it became a state 100 years after the signing of the Declaration of Independence.
A landscape of snow-capped forested Pikes Peak Mountains. A lake with a sand bank jutting into it is in the middle ground while two trees occupy the foreground.
Colorado became a state 100 years after the signing of the Declaration of Independence.

Oleg Kovtun Hydrobio/Shutterstock

Colorado became a state on August 1, 1876.

Connecticut is nicknamed the "Constitution State."
Connecticut State Capitol in Hartford.
Connecticut adopted the Fundamental Orders of Connecticut in 1639.

Faina Gurevich/Shutterstock

Long before the US Constitution was ratified in 1788, settlers drafted the Fundamental Orders of Connecticut.

The Fundamental Orders were adopted in 1639 and served as a state constitution determining the scope of government.

Delaware was the "First State" in the US.
A plaque hung on a brick wall reads, "In the council chamber of Elizabeth Battell's Golden Fleece Tavern on this site, Delaware became the first state to ratify the Constitution of the United States. December 7, 1787." Below this, is a copy of the original text and signatures of the ratification. At the bottom, it reads, "Erected by the friends of Old Dover December 7, 1987."
Delaware was the first state to ratify the Constitution.

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Delaware ratified the Constitution on December 7, 1787.

The nickname the "Sunshine State" belongs to Florida.
A wide view of Miami Beach. There are buildings in the background, the turquoise ocean in the middle ground, and beachgoers on the sand in the foreground.
Florida is nicknamed the "Sunshine State."

xbrchx/Shutterstock

With beautiful beaches, a warm climate, and plenty of sunshine, Florida adopted the nickname in 1970.

Georgia's nickname the "Peach State" stems from a much darker history.
A "Welcome to Georgia" highway sign. The sign is blue with white writing and has an illustration of a peach. The bottom of the sign is light gray with dark blue writing that reads, "We're glad Georgia's on your mind."
The peach became Georgia's state fruit in 1995.

Feng Cheng/Shutterstock

Peaches may now be widely known as a symbol for Georgia, but the state's attachment to the fruit was actually part of a post-Civil War effort to reinvent its image, NPR reported.

Like so many of the other Southern states, Georgia was primarily known for producing cotton, but after the war, peaches became a new focus as fruit production seemed more "refined and European" than corn and cotton farming.

Hawaii is nicknamed the "Aloha State."
A Hawaii license plate hung on a wooden wall. The license plate reads "Hang Loose" and features the state's nickname, "Aloha State."
Hawaii is the "Aloha State."

Jade Prevost Manuel/Shutterstock

Hawaii's nickname comes from the Hawaiian language — "aloha" is both a word for greetings and partings as well as a way of life emphasizing principles like kindness, unity, and patience.

Idaho's wide variety of minerals and gems led to its nickname, the "Gem State."
Shoshone Falls Park, Idaho. Mountains with waterfalls streaming into a pool of water. A rainbow is in the bottom left corner.
Idaho is known for its many natural resources, including rare minerals like gold, cobalt, and garnet.

Sean Pavone/Shutterstock

In addition to its potatoes, Idaho is known for its many natural resources, including minerals and gems.

Copper, gold, opal, sapphire, and garnet are just a few of the stones that can be found in the state.

Illinois is known as the "Prairie State."
Sunrise over the Springbrook Prairie Forest Preserve filled with yellow and purple wildflowers and lush grasses.
Illinois once was home to 22 million acres of prairie land.

Hank Erdmann/Shutterstock

The state once had 22 million acres of prairie land, according to the Illinois Department of Natural Resources. Now, less than 2,300 acres remain.

Residents of Indiana live in the "Hoosier State."
A side view of the Hoosier Indiana Football Stadium with cars in the parking lot. The stadium reads, "Indiana Hoosiers" across bold red panels with white lettering.
Residents of Indiana are called "Hoosiers."

Vineyard Perspective/Shutterstock

The word "Hoosier" has been part of Indianans' dialect for more than 100 years, but the word's origins are hard to nail down.

The Indiana Historical Bureau said that one way the word may have gained popularity was from a poem written by John Finley called "The Hoosier's Nest" (originally written as Hoosher), which was published and used as the "Carrier's Address" of the Indianapolis Journal in January 1833.

The "Hawkeye State" was first recorded as a nickname for Iowa in 1859.
Caitlin Clark clapped during the NCAA Women's Basketball Tournament. She wore a black and gold jersey for Iowa with her number, 22.
Caitlin Clark famously played basketball for the Iowa Hawkeyes women's basketball team.

Steph Chambers/Staff/Getty Images

The origin of the Hawkeyes' connection to Iowa is still unclear, but, according to the University of Iowa, some believe a local judge suggested the name after reading James Fenimore Cooper's The Last of the Mohicans, which features a character named Hawkeye.

The name gained popularity and is now used by the university's sports teams, with Caitlin Clark being one of the most famous Hawkeyes in recent history.

Kansas is the "Sunflower State."
Sunflower field in Kansas.
Kansas' state flower is the sunflower.

Matt Fowler KC/Shutterstock

Forget about tornados, sunflowers hold a special place in Kansas' heart — they're the state flower and even on the state flag.

Kentucky is the "Bluegrass State."
Seven horses grazing in the Kentucky Bluegrass Region.
Kentucky is known for its bluegrass.

Theodore P. Webb/Shutterstock

Bluegrass is common throughout the state, especially on horse pastures.

Louisiana is known as the "Pelican State."
A flock of pelicans in the Louisiana marsh.
The pelican has been the state symbol of Louisiana since the 1800s.

Konoplytska/Shutterstock

The brown pelican is native to Louisiana, making it the perfect choice for the state's official bird. It also appears on Louisiana's flag, state seal, and in professional sports teams — hello, New Orleans Pelicans.

The nickname the "Pine Tree State" belongs to Maine.
A pine tree forest along the shore of Otter Cove in Acadia National Park, Maine.
Maine is nicknamed the "Pine Tree State."

Jordan Kercheff/Shutterstock

As of 2021, Maine had over 17 million acres of forests, accounting for 83% of the state's area, the USDA Forest Service reported.

The state is home to a high number of Eastern white pine trees.

Maryland has two nicknames: the "Old Line State" and the "Free State."
An aerial view of Fort McHenry in Baltimore.
Maryland's nickname, the "Old Line State," was given during the Revolutionary War. Fort McHenry in Baltimore was one of the battlegrounds during the war.

Christopher Mazmanian/Shutterstock

George Washington gave Maryland the name "Old Line State." As a general in the Revolutionary War, Washington praised Maryland's regular line troops, who served in many battles throughout the war.

Meanwhile, the "Free State" originally referred to Maryland's abolition of slavery in 1864. A congressman from Georgia later adopted the nickname in the 1920s for an editorial piece criticizing Maryland's refusal to pass an act enforcing Prohibition.

With more than 40 bays, it's easy to see why Massachusetts is called the "Bay State."
A view of Boston at sunrise highlighting the city's skyscrapers and the Charles River at Back Bay.
Massachusetts is home to more than 40 bays.

Marcio Jose Bastos Silva/Shutterstock

Massachusetts, Nahant, Dorchester, and Quincy are just some of the many bays located in Massachusetts.

Michigan is bordered by four of the five Great Lakes, making it the "Great Lakes State."
A view of the shore of Lake Superior at Isle Royale National Park in Michigan.
Michigan is bordered by four of the Great Lakes.

F. Setiawan/Shutterstock

Michigan is bordered by Lakes Superior, Huron, Erie, and Michigan.

Ontario is the only Great Lake to not border the state.

Minnesota's nickname, the "North Star State" stems from its motto.
The Minnesota State Flag.
The Minnesota motto is "l'étoile du nord" which translates to "the star of the north."

AndyPhotography391/Shutterstock

Minnesota's motto, "L'Étoile du Nord," was coined by the state's first governor, Henry Sibley, in 1858.

William "Bill" Convery, director of research at the Minnesota Historical Society, told CBS station WCCO in 2023, "You can think of the North Star as a guide, as a way into the future. And I don't know for sure, but I very much guess that's what Sibley had in mind when he suggested that motto for Minnesota."

Mississippi is known as the "Magnolia State."
A close-up of a magnolia tree with a single flower in bloom.
The magnolia is the state flower and tree of Mississippi.

ZlataMarka/Shutterstock

The magnolia is both the state flower and tree of Mississippi. The flower also appears on the state flag.

A Missouri representative is often credited with inventing the state's nickname, the "Show-Me State."
A black and white photo of Missouri Rep. Willard Duncan Vandiver. He had a large, bushy mustache and wore a wide-brimmed hat and suit.
Missouri's nickname, the "Show-Me State," is often credited to a speech given by Rep. Willard Duncan Vandiver in 1899.

Library of Congress/Corbis/VCG via Getty Images

While no one can say for certain how the "Show-Me State" originated, Rep. Willard Duncan Vandiver is often given credit.

Vandiver spoke at a naval banquet in 1899, and outlets reported that he said, "I come from a state that raises corn and cotton and cockleburs and Democrats, and frothy eloquence neither convinces nor satisfies me. I am from Missouri. You have got to show me."

Montana is known as the "Treasure State."
A view of Glacier National Park in Montana where Grinnell Mountain is in the background, Grinnell Lake and  Lake Josephine are in the middle ground, and trees and foliage are in the foreground.
Montana is nicknamed the "Treasure State."

Wichakorn Kitrungrot/Shutterstock

Similar to Idaho and its gems, Montana is known for producing a wide variety of minerals like platinum, gold, and talc.

Montana Public Radio reported that the state is also known as "Big Sky Country" or the "Big Sky State" thanks to a 1930s advertising campaign by the Transportation Department. The name gained even more popularity in 1947 after the release of a book called "The Big Sky" by A.B. Guthrie Jr.

Nebraska is a major producer of several corn varieties, hence its nickname, the "Cornhusker State."
A sprawling cornfield in Nebraska.
Nebraska is nicknamed the "Cornhusker State."

SeanMandeville/Shutterstock

The Nebraska Corn Board reported that in 2022, the state yielded more than 1.4 billion bushels of corn to yield almost $10 billion.

The state accounts for 10% of the country's corn production overall.

Nevada earned its status as the "Silver State" in the 1850s.
A Comstock Lode discovery memorial plaque. The plaque has illustrations of two miners and the text reads, "The Comstock Lode, Discovered 8 June 1859, At head of Six Mile Canyon Washoe Mining District Virginia City, Nevada, This monument of ore from every Nevada county commemorates the one-hundredth anniversary of the discovery of silver."
Silver was discovered in Nevada in 1859 and became an important part of the state's economy.

Michael Vi/Shutterstock

According to Nevada Public Radio, miners Peter O'Riley and Patrick McLaughlin discovered silver in 1859 at what would be named the Comstock Lode.

The discovery led to a boom in migration to the region and became an important part of the state's economy.

New Hampshire is nicknamed the "Granite State."
A granite quarry in New Hampshire in the fall. There are slabs of granite in the water and fall foliage in the background.
New Hampshire is known for its granite.

N00dles/Shutterstock

Granite has been important to the state's economy since the 1800s, with the material being used for buildings around the country, including the Library of Congress, New Hampshire Folklife reported.

It added that the state's Concord quarry produces about 25,000 tons of granite each year.

New Jersey officially became the "Garden State" in 1954.
A blueberry farm; the focus is one several bushes filled with blueberries.
New Jersey is known as the "Garden State" thanks to its production of many fruits, including blueberries.

Mohammed Al-Farook/Shutterstock

While the nickname originally dates back to the 1870s, the New Jersey state legislature voted to make the name official in 1954, overruling the governor to add "The Garden State" to license plates.

While the state doesn't exactly lend itself to visions of farmlands and gardens, the New Jersey Department of Agriculture reported that the state is actually among the top 10 producers of fruits and vegetables like blueberries, peaches, tomatoes, spinach, and squash, with the state's farms generating nearly $1.5 million in 2022.

New Mexico's natural beauty and rich history contributed to its nickname, "Land of Enchantment."
Church Rock in Gallup, New Mexico.
New Mexico is known as the "Land of Enchantment" thanks in part to its natural beauty.

Neil Lockhart/Shutterstock

Similar to other states, New Mexico's nickname was once used to promote tourism. While "Land of Enchantment" was used on license plates as early as 1941, the phrase didn't become the official nickname until 1999.

George Washington is credited with giving New York its nickname, the "Empire State."
An aerial view of Central Park in New York City during the fall. The trees are various shades of green, red, orange, and yellow.
New York is nicknamed the "Empire State."

Volodymyr TVERDOKHLIB/Shutterstock

The New York Historical Society credits Washington for the nickname, citing a 1785 letter he wrote in praise of the state's Revolutionary War efforts where he described New York as "the seat of the Empire."

North Carolina is known as the "Tar Heel State."
A North Carolina Tar Heels cheerleader megaphone decorated with a Carolina Blue Jumpman and a Tar Heel logo, a Carolina Blue footprint with a black circle on the heel. Cheerleaders and fans are in the background.
The term "Tar Heel" used to denote those who worked in a low trade.

Peyton Williams/UNC/Getty Images

North Carolina's nickname stems from the state's early beginnings as a leader in naval industry supplies.

As explained by Carolina Alumni, people working with pine trees to collect and produce materials like turpentine, tar, and pitch often had bare feet during summers, so they would get tar on their soles. As a result, "tar heel" soon became a name for someone working a trade job.

However, during the Civil War, soldiers reclaimed the phrase for themselves, turning it into a celebration of their state, and North Carolina became known as the "Tar Heel State."

North Dakota is called the "Peace Garden State."
A view of the International Peace Garden. There's a large fountain in the foreground and trees in the background of various fall shades of red, orange, and green.
The International Peace Garden is split between North Dakota and Canada.

Jacob Boomsma/Shutterstock

The International Peace Garden, founded in 1932, is located along the border of North Dakota and the Canadian province of Manitoba.

North Dakota began using "Peace Garden State" on its license plates in 1956 and the phrase was officially adopted by the state legislature the following year.

Ohio makes sure everyone knows they're the "Buckeye State."
The Ohio State Buckeyes mascot Brutus Buckeye pointing to fans.
A buckeye is a type of tree that produces a dark brown nut with a light spot, like Ohio State's mascot, Brutus Buckeye.

Ben Jackson/Contributor/Getty Images

A buckeye is a type of tree that was so common in Ohio when the territory was settled that it's also now called an Ohio buckeye. The trees also produce a type of chestnut called a buckeye, too.

The nickname was adopted by the state in 1950 and was adopted as the mascot of Ohio State University in the 1960s.

Oklahoma's nickname, the "Sooner State," dates back to the 1800s.
The University of Oklahoma's mascot during a college football game. The mascot wore a football uniform with "Sooners" written on it, and held a sign that reads "Noise!"
"Sooner" was originally a nickname for the people who settled in what's now Oklahoma before the Land Run officially opened in 1889.

James Black/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

In 1889, Congress passed a bill allowing people to settle on land that is now Oklahoma. However, all settlers were supposed to make their claims to land in accordance with the federal government's designated land opening.

Those who entered the land early were nicknamed "Sooners." The nickname stuck and now applies to all Oklahoma residents and is used by the University of Oklahoma's mascot.

Oregon's nickname, the "Beaver State," dates back to the fur trade.
Oregon State University's mascot, Benny, performed during a break in play during a basketball game. The mascot wore a white basketball uniform with "OSU" and "0" on its jersey.
Oregon is known as the "Beaver State."

Brian Murphy/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Beavers were a key aspect of Oregon's economy during the fur trade, becoming a symbol of prosperity.

However, the success of the trade diminished beaver populations so much that the state is still working on conservation and restoration efforts for beavers and their habitats.

Pennsylvania is nicknamed the "Keystone State."
Philadelphia's City Hall at the end of the street, which is lined on both sides by tall buildings and cars.
Pennsylvania was central in the establishment of the US.

Jimmy Budiman 1976/Shutterstock

Pennsylvania played a critical role in the establishment of the US, serving as the central location for planning the American Revolution, signing the Declaration of Independence, and signing the Constitution, thus earning the nickname the "Keystone State."

Rhode Island is known as the "Ocean State."
A section of the Cliff Walk in Rhode Island. There is a mansion and other properties in the background and there are large boulders lining the shore.
Rhode Island is known for its 400-mile coastline, hence its nickname the "Ocean State."

Alex Tao Wang/Shutterstock

Despite being the smallest state in the US, Rhode Island has a 400-mile-long coastline.

South Carolina's history as the "Palmetto State" began during the Revolutionary War.
A view looking up toward Palmetto trees. The sky is blue behind them with scattered clouds.
The sabal palmetto is South Carolina's state tree.

Frennet Studio/Shutterstock

The palmetto tree played a crucial role in South Carolina's defense against the British during the Revolutionary War, as trunks were used to build the fort that defended Sullivan's Island.

Since then, the tree has been featured on the state flag and seal and is referenced directly in the state pledge to the flag.

South Dakota is the "Mount Rushmore State."
Mount Rushmore on a clear, sunny day. The sculpture features the heads of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Teddy Roosevelt, and Abraham Lincoln.
Mount Rushmore was carved into the Black Hills region of South Dakota.

Lost_in_the_Midwest/Shutterstock

South Dakota is home to the famous landmark that features the faces of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Teddy Roosevelt, and Abraham Lincoln.

Their faces were carved into the mountainside in South Dakota's Black Hills between 1927 and 1941, but the project was strongly opposed by the Lakota Sioux Native American tribe, who consider the Black Hills sacred.

Volunteers in the War of 1812 earned Tennessee the nickname the "Volunteer State."
An aerial view of Knoxville, Tennessee.
Tennessee is known as the "Volunteer State" because of the thousands of volunteers from the state that participated in the War of 1812.

Grindstone Media Group/Shutterstock

According to the Tennessee Historical Society, volunteers played a significant role in the Tennessee militia during the War of 1812.

Then, 40 years later during the Mexican American War, a reported 30,000 Tennesseans responded to a call for 2,600 volunteers.

The University of Tennessee continues to use the nickname today for its sports teams, which are also known as the Vols.

Today, the state actually has one of the lower rates of volunteerism in the country. It's ranked 31st among the states based on its volunteer rate (31.3%), per AmeriCorps.

Texas is the "Lone Star State."
A close-up view of the Texas flag patch on the jersey of Texas Rangers player Josh Smith as he was up to bat.
The Texas state flag features a single star and was adopted after the state became independent from Mexico in 1836.

Scott Taetsch/Contributor/Getty Images

Texas' nickname was taken from the state flag, which was adopted after the state gained independence from Mexico and features a single, "lone" star.

Texas remained an independent entity for 10 years before becoming part of the US.

Utah is nicknamed the "Beehive State" ... but not because of honey.
A close-up of the beehive sculpture in front of the Salt Lake City Capitol Building. The bottom of the sculpture has the word "Industry" inscribed in all caps.
Utah is nicknamed the "Beehive State."

Anastasia_Kot/Shutterstock

The Utah State Capitol said, "The beehive symbolizes the Utah community as each person in Utah works together to support and help one another and create a successful industry."

As a result, depictions of beehives can be found across the state.

Vermont is known as the "Green Mountain State."
A snow-covered view of Killington Mountain Resort and Ski Area. There are more mountains in the background and snow-covered pine trees throughout.
Vermont is home to the Green Mountains, a subrange of the Appalachians.

Matthew Spalding/Shutterstock

Vermont's nickname is a literal translation of its modern name, which was derived from the French "les verts monts," meaning "green mountains."

The state is also home to a mountain range called the Green Mountains, which are part of the larger Appalachians.

Virginia's nickname, "Old Dominion," dates back to colonial times.
An aerial view of Williamsburg, Virginia.
King Charles II may have nicknamed Virginia "Old Dominion."

Sean Pavone/Shutterstock

Virginia's nickname, "Old Dominion," is thought to have originated from two sources: its status as the oldest overseas colony of England or from King Charles II because of its loyalty to the monarchy during the English Civil Wars.

Washington's been called the "Evergreen State" since the 1800s but it's still not official.
An empty road surrounded by dense evergreen forests on both sides.
Washington is widely called the "Evergreen State," but the nickname technically isn't official.

Kasbah/Shutterstock

In February, the Washington State Standard reported that the state may finally make its nickname official more than 100 years after it was first used.

Even if the nickname isn't codified, one look at the state's lush evergreen forests will confirm it's not changing anytime soon.

West Virginia is located in the Appalachian Mountains, making the "Mountain State" a fitting nickname.
An overlook of the Winding New River at New River Gorge National Park in West Virginia.
West Virginia is located in the Appalachian Mountains.

Zack Frank/Shutterstock

It is the only state located completely within the Appalachian Mountains which is why it was given such a nickname.

It should come as no surprise, then, that the University of West Virginia draws on this fact for its mascot, the Mountaineers.

Wisconsin's nickname, the "Badger State," has more to do with mining than real badgers.
The University of Wisconsin's mascot, Bucky Badger, with its arms outstretched. The university band is blurred in the background.
Wisconsin is known as the "Badger State."

Stacy Revere/Staff/Getty Images

The nickname was inspired by lead miners in the 1800s who sought shelter in the mine tunnels rather than building homes, according to the Wisconsin Historical Society.

And finally, Wyoming is nicknamed the "Equality State."
A black-and-white illustration of women standing in line to cast their votes in Cheyenne, Wyoming. A small child stands in the bottom right corner holding a picnic basket. The illustration is from an 1888 edition of Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper.
Wyoming was the first state to allow women to vote and hold office.

Ken Welsh/Design Pics/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Just over 50 years before the 19th Amendment was ratified, Wyoming became the first state to give women the right to vote and hold office.

Unfortunately, the state has not lived up to its nickname. WalletHub reported that the state ranked 48th for women's equality in 2024 based on factors such as workplace environments, political empowerment, and education and health.

Read the original article on Business Insider

25 iconic women who made movie history

20 November 2024 at 10:22
Lily Gladstone poses with her Golden Globe award in 2024.
Lily Gladstone poses with her Golden Globe award in 2024.

ROBYN BECK/AFP via Getty Images

  • Women are making history both on and off the silver screen.
  • From first-time wins to fighting for equal pay, women are helping lead changes in representation.
  • In 2024, Lily Gladstone became the first Indigenous woman to win best actress at the Golden Globes.

Women in film have created some of the most recognizable characters, costumes, and songs in history. But so many of them have had to push back against sexism, racism, and ageism in the industry.

Even after historic Academy Awards wins, actresses like Hattie McDaniel, Rita Moreno, and Miyoshi Umeki were left with stereotypical roles like maids and submissive housewives, demonstrating how even those at the top of their game could be relegated to caricatures.

And decades later, actresses like Octavia Spencer have had to speak on the same topic, as well as the issue of pay equality, not only in relation to male co-stars but to white actresses, too.

Despite the issues that persist in the industry, there's been great progress. Just look at stars like Michelle Yeoh and Lily Gladstone and the success of female-led and female-made movies like "Barbie," which smashed box-office records when it was released in 2023 and brought in more than $1.4 billion in global ticket sales, according to Box Office Mojo data.

As women continue to break barriers in film, here's a look at 25 iconic women who've made movie history and continue to inspire younger generations to do the same.

Hattie McDaniel was the first Black person to win an Academy Award.
Hattie McDaniel holds her Academy Award in 1940.
Hattie McDaniel won the Academy Award for best supporting actress in 1940.

Bettmann/Contributor/Getty Images

In 1940, Hattie McDaniel won the Academy Award for best supporting actress for her role as Mammy in "Gone with the Wind" —but she couldn't even attend the Atlanta premiere.

The role drew both criticism and praise from the Black community, Vanity Fair reported, as some feared it perpetuated harmful, racist stereotypes.

McDaniel disagreed and, in her acceptance speech, said, "I sincerely hope that I shall always be a credit to my race and the motion picture industry … My heart is too full to tell you how I feel."

The "Mammy" is one of several stereotypical depictions of Black women seen in films, alongside tropes like the "Jezebel" and the "Angry Black Woman," and is often characterized as an overweight, asexual woman who maintains a strong commitment to care for the white family she serves, the BBC reported.

McDaniel was pigeonholed into accepting representation as it was allowed, an issue that's only recently begun to be addressed as the industry recognizes that representation for the sake of representation alone is simply not good enough.

She died in 1952 at the age of 59.

Italian actress Sophia Loren was the first performer to win an Oscar for a foreign-language film.
Sophia Loren holding her World Film Favorite special award at the 1977 Golden Globes.
Sophia Loren won the World Film Favorite special award at the 1977 Golden Globes.

Silver Screen Collection/Contributor/Getty Images

Named "one of the world's most iconic movie stars" by the Oscars, Loren made history in 1961 when she became the first actor to win an Oscar for a foreign-language film.

Throughout her career, Loren has won an extensive list of international awards, including two Oscars, five Golden Globes, seven David di Donatello awards for best actress, and a BAFTA.

Her most recent David award came in 2021 at the age of 86 for her role as Madame Rosa in "The Life Ahead," Variety reported.

"It's hard to believe the first time I received a David was more than 60 years ago," she said during her acceptance speech, per Variety. "But this evening, it seems like the first time again, though the emotion is even greater," she added.

Some of her famous films include "Two Women," "Marriage Italian Style," "Nine," "Grumpier Old Men," and "A Special Day."

Viola Davis is the only Black actor to achieve the Triple Crown of Acting.
Viola Davis poses with her Oscar in 2017.
Viola Davis won the Academy Award for best supporting actress in 2017.

Jeffrey Mayer/WireImage/Getty Images

Davis is a prolific actor known for her roles in "The Help," "Fences," "Ma Rainey's Black Bottom," and "How to Get Away with Murder."

She is the only Black actor to win the Triple Crown of Acting: a competitive Oscar, Emmy, and Tony award in acting categories.

She won the Academy Award for best supporting actress in 2017 for her role in "Fences," an Emmy for lead actress in a drama in 2015 for her role as Annalise Keating in "How to Get Away with Murder," and two Tonys for best featured actress in a play and best lead actress in 2001 and 2010 for "King Hedley II" and "Fences," respectively.

In her Oscars acceptance speech, Davis gave a testament to "the stories of the people who dreamed big and never saw those dreams to fruition, people who fell in love and lost."

"I became an artist, and thank God I did because we are the only profession that celebrates what it means to live a life," she said.

Davis is also one of just 19 people to achieve EGOT status, winning a Grammy in 2023 for best book audio, narration, and storytelling recording for her memoir "Finding Me."

Rita Moreno was the first Latina to win an Oscar for her role as Anita in "West Side Story."
Rita Moreno as Anita in the 1961 production of "West Side Story."
Rita Moreno is the first and only Latina to achieve EGOT status.

Silver Screen Collection/Contributor/Getty Images

Moreno's career has spanned eight decades and includes many memorable achievements.

In 1962, her role as Anita in "West Side Story" made her the first Latina to win an Academy Award, but her success failed to yield any exciting new movie roles.

In 2008, she told the Miami Herald, "Before 'West Side Story,' I was always offered the stereotypical Latina roles. The Conchitas and Lolitas in westerns. I was always barefoot. It was humiliating, embarrassing stuff. But I did it because there was nothing else. After 'West Side Story,' it was pretty much the same thing. A lot of gang stories."

Instead of film, Moreno turned to theater and television, where she would go on to win the Triple Crown of Acting and achieve EGOT status — the first and only Latina to do so — for her roles in "The Ritz" and "The Electric Company" and her appearance on "The Muppet Show."

Moreno has also been awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, a Peabody Award, and the Kennedy Center Honors Lifetime Artistic Achievement award.

In 2010, Kathryn Bigelow became the first woman to win best director at the Oscars for "The Hurt Locker."
Kathryn Bigelow accepted the Oscar for best director in 2010.
Kathryn Bigelow accepted the Oscar for best director in 2010.

GABRIEL BOUYS/AFP via Getty Images

The Oscars have a long record of failing to recognize women directors, but in 2010 — 81 years after the Oscars began and 33 years after the first female director was nominated — Bigelow won the award for "The Hurt Locker."

The Iraq war drama, which also won best picture, starred Jeremy Renner, Anthony Mackie, and Brian Geraghty and told the story of an Explosive Ordnance Disposal team and war's impact on people.

Bigelow's other works include "Point Break," "Zero Dark Thirty," "Detroit," and "The Loveless."

She is also the first woman to win the New York Film Critics Circle Award for best director twice, winning first for "The Hurt Locker" in 2009 and again for "Zero Dark Thirty" in 2012.

Costume designer Edith Head has won more Oscars than any other woman in history.
Edith Head poses with some of her eight Academy Awards in 1975.
Edith Head won eight Academy Awards throughout her career.

Mark Sullivan/Getty Images

Costume designer Edith Head is best known for creating the beautiful clothes seen on movie stars like Audrey Hepburn, Grace Kelly, and Elizabeth Taylor, the Oscars reported.

She won eight Oscars from 35 nominations, placing her among the most awarded people in Academy Awards history.

Famous films she designed for include "Roman Holiday," "Sabrina," "A Place in the Sun," and "All About Eve."

Head died in Los Angeles in 1981, at 83 years old.

Zoe Saldaña is the first actor to star in multiple billion-dollar franchises, with roles in both the "Avatar" and "Avengers" series.
Zoe Saldaña at the "Avatar: The Way of Water" world premiere in 2022.
Zoe Saldaña has starred in two billion-dollar franchises.

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It's rare for an actor to star in one of the highest-grossing films of the year — let alone of all time.

And, if you're Zoe Saldaña, make that four.

Saldaña has starred in "Avatar," "Avatar: The Way of Water," "Avengers: Infinity War," and "Avengers: Endgame" as Neytiri and Gamora, respectively.

Each of these films grossed over $2 billion at the global box office for a collective total of over $9 billion.

With "Yentl," Barbra Streisand became the first woman to win the Golden Globe for best director.
Barbra Streisand poses with her Golden Globe awards for best director (musical or comedy) and best actress (musical or comedy) in 1984.
Barbra Streisand won Golden Globe awards for best director (musical or comedy) and best actress (musical or comedy) in 1984.

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Barbra Streisand is a multi-talented star best known for her roles in "Funny Girl," "Hello Dolly!," "A Star is Born," and "Yentl." She also is one of the most successful singers of all time.

In 1984, she became the first woman to win the Golden Globe for best director for her work on the musical "Yentl," in which she also starred and won the Golden Globe for best actress (musical or comedy).

"This award is very meaningful to me. I'm very proud because it also represents, I hope, new opportunities for so many talented women to try to make their dreams become realities, as I did," she said in her acceptance speech.

In 2021, when Emerald Fennell, Regina King, and Chloé Zhao were all nominated for best director, Streisand told the Hollywood Reporter, "I never thought I'd see the day when three out of five nominated directors would be women. It brings a huge smile to my face."

Streisand, too, is one of the few people to achieve EGOT status, although not all of her awards were in competitive categories: She has won four Emmys, 10 Grammys, two Oscars, and a special Tony award for Star of the Decade in 1970, ABC News reported.

In 2023, Michelle Yeoh became the first Asian woman to win best actress at the Oscars.
Michelle Yeoh poses with her Oscar in 2023.
Michelle Yeoh won the Academy Award for best actress in 2023.

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Best known for her roles in "Tomorrow Never Dies," "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon," "Memoirs Of A Geisha," and "Everything Everywhere All At Once," Michelle Yeoh became the first Asian woman, and just the second woman of color, to win best actress at the Academy Awards in 2023 for her role as Evelyn Quan Wang.

In her acceptance speech, Yeoh said, "For all the little boys and girls who look like me watching tonight, this is a beacon of hope and possibilities. This is proof that dreams dream big and dreams do come true, and ladies, don't let anybody tell you you are ever past your prime. Never give up!"

In addition to her Oscar, Yeoh also won an Independent Spirit Award, a Golden Globe, and three SAG awards for her work in "Everything Everywhere All At Once."

She is set to star in upcoming "Avatar" sequels, as well as "Wicked" alongside Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande.

Halle Berry is the first Black woman to win best actress at the Academy Awards.
Halle Berry poses with her Oscar for best actress in 2002.
Halle Berry won the Academy Award for best actress in 2002.

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Halle Berry is the first woman of color and the only Black woman to win the Oscar for best actress. She won in 2002 for her role as Leticia Musgrove in "Monster's Ball."

Through tears, Berry accepted the award and said, "This moment is so much bigger than me. This moment is for Dorothy Dandridge, Lena Horne, and Diahann Carroll. It's for the women that stand beside me, Jada Pinkett, Angela Bassett, Vivica Fox, and it's for every nameless, faceless woman of color that now has a chance because this door tonight has been opened."

However, no Black actress has won the best actress award since. In 2017, reflecting on how no Black actresses had been nominated in the category that year, she told Teen Vogue of her win, "That moment really meant nothing. It meant nothing. I thought it meant something, but I think it meant nothing."

Berry is also known for her roles in the "X-Men" series, "Catwoman," and "Die Another Day."

Meryl Streep is the most nominated actor of all time.
Meryl Streep attending the 81st Golden Globe Awards in 2024.
Meryl Streep has received 21 Oscar nominations.

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Miranda Priestly. Donna Sheridan. Joanna Kramer. Florence Foster Jenkins. Margaret Thatcher.

Meryl Streep deeply embodies each and every character she's played throughout her career, becoming the most Oscar-nominated and most Golden Globe-nominated actor of all time, with 21 and 33 nominations, respectively. Streep also has 15 BAFTA nominations.

She's won eight Golden Globes for acting, the most recent being in 2012 for best performance by an actress in a motion picture - drama, for "The Iron Lady."

Streep has also won three Academy Awards, two BAFTAs, three Emmys, and the Cecil B. DeMille Award.

Miyoshi Umeki was the first Asian actor to win an Oscar.
Miyoshi Umeki poses with her Oscar in 1958.
Miyoshi Umeki won the Academy Award for best supporting actress in 1958.

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Umeki won the Oscar for best supporting actress in 1958 for her role as Katsumi in the film "Sayonara," starring Marlon Brando.

She would later destroy her Oscar after the death of her husband, Randall Hood, in 1976, Entertainment Weekly reported in 2018, scratching out her name and throwing away the trophy.

Her son, Michael Hood, told the publication that she said, "I know who I am, and I know what I did."

"It was a point of hers, to teach me a lesson that the material things are not who she was," said Hood.

Umeki died in 2007 at the age of 78.

Ariana DeBose is the first queer, Afro-Latina actress to win an Academy Award.
Ariana DeBose holds her Oscar for best supporting actress in 2022.
Ariana DeBose won the Academy Award for best supporting actress in 2022.

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Sixty years after Rita Moreno became the first Latina to win an Academy Award, DeBose became the first queer, Afro-Latina to win an Oscar — for the same role: Anita in "West Side Story."

In her speech, she thanked the "divine inspiration that is Rita Moreno."

"I'm so grateful your Anita paved the way for tons of Anitas like me, and I love you so much," she said.

"So to anybody who has ever questioned your identity, ever, ever, ever, or you find yourself living in the gray spaces, I promise you this: There is indeed a place for us," DeBose concluded.

Katharine Hepburn holds the record for most Oscars by an actress.
Katharine Hepburn in 1968.
Katharine Hepburn won a record four Academy Awards.

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Katharine Hepburn holds the record for actress with the most Academy Awards, winning four throughout her career, all for best actress.

She received 12 nominations in the category and won for her roles in "Morning Glory," "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner," "The Lion in Winter," and "On Golden Pond," spanning from 1934 to 1982, according to the Academy Awards Database.

Her win for "The Lion in Winter" marks one of just six ties in Oscars history, as Hepburn shared the award with "Funny Girl" actress Barbra Streisand, Collider reported.

Hepburn died in 2003 at the age of 96.

Chloé Zhao is the only woman of color to win best director at the Oscars.
Chloé Zhao holds her awards for best picture and best director at the 93rd Academy Awards in 2021.
Chloé Zhao won the Academy Awards for best picture and best director in 2021.

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In 2020, Chinese-born director Chloé Zhao became the first woman of color to win best director at the Oscars for her film "Nomadland," which also won best picture.

In her acceptance speech, Zhao said, "This is for anyone who have the faith and the courage to hold on to the goodness in themselves, and to hold on to the goodness in each other, no matter how difficult it is to do that."

For "Nomadland," Zhao also won directing awards at the Golden Globes, British Academy Film Awards, and the Directors Guild of America Awards.

Recently, she directed the 2021 Marvel film "The Eternals," and is working on a film adaptation of "Hamnet" starring Paul Mescal and Jessie Buckley.

Audrey Hepburn remains one of the most iconic women in film history.
Audrey Hepburn poses for a publicity still for "Breakfast at Tiffany's" in 1961.
Audrey Hepburn starred in iconic films like "Breakfast at Tiffany's."

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Audrey Hepburn is an iconic figure in film and fashion history, with starring roles in classics like "Roman Holiday," "Sabrina," "My Fair Lady," and "Breakfast at Tiffany's."

She achieved EGOT status in 1994, having won the Academy Award for best actress in 1953 for "Roman Holiday," the Tony for best actress in a play in 1954 for "Ondine," the Emmy for outstanding individual achievement — informational programming in 1993 for "Gardens of the World with Audrey Hepburn: Flower Gardens," and the Grammy for best spoken world album for children in 1994 for "Audrey Hepburn's Enchanted Tales."

In addition to her career as an actress, Hepburn was well known for her humanitarian work, serving as a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador from 1988 until her death in 1993 at age 63.

"Barbie" made Greta Gerwig the first solo female director to gross over $1 billion at the box office.
Greta Gerwig attends the 96th Academy Awards in 2024.
Greta Gerwig's "Barbie" grossed more than $1 billion.

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Greta Gerwig's "Barbie" was the highest-grossing film of 2023, with over $1.4 billion earned worldwide.

With this accomplishment, Gerwig became the first solo female director to have a movie earn $1 billion and one of just five female directors to gross more than $800 million.

Although she was snubbed by the 2024 Oscars for best director, all of her directorial projects — "Lady Bird," "Little Women," and "Barbie" — have been nominated for best picture.

Octavia Spencer is the first Black woman to receive consecutive Oscar nominations.
Octavia Spencer poses with her Academy Award in 2012.
Octavia Spencer won the Academy Award for best supporting actress in 2012.

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Octavia Spencer was nominated for best supporting actress in 2017 and 2018 for her work in "Hidden Figures" and "The Shape of Water."

She previously won the award in 2012 for her role as Minny Jackson in "The Help," which was also her first Oscar nomination.

Spencer has been outspoken about the issue of pay equality in the industry, especially as a woman of color.

In a 2023 interview with the Hollywood Reporter, Spencer said, "Women and women of color have always lagged. When they start casting movies, they put all the money on the white male or Black male leads. They come to you when they've given out all the dollars and they only have cents. I don't need you to tell me how much you love me and how much you want to work with me."

"Love is not going to take care of my godkids. So, I've always been a proponent of making sure that there's equal pay. It's still not equal, but it's certainly getting better," she added.

Marilyn Monroe's name and image are synonymous with Hollywood glamour.
Marilyn Monroe at the premiere of the film "There's No Business like Show Business."
Marilyn Monroe starred in films like "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes."

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With her platinum-blonde hair, beauty mark, and elegant fashion, Marilyn Monroe is easily one of the most recognizable women in film history.

Born as Norma Jeane Mortenson, Monroe would go on to star in films like "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes," "Some Like It Hot," and "The Seven Year Itch."

Embodying the role of the "blonde bombshell," her image and life story have been the subject of intense scrutiny, with documentaries, biopics, and even AI chatbots seeking to capture her essence, raising issues and concerns around consent and the public's unwillingness to let the memory of some celebrity figures rest.

Lily Gladstone is the first Indigenous actress to win a Golden Globe.
Lily Gladstone poses with her Golden Globe award in 2024.
Lily Gladstone won the Golden Globe award for best actress in 2024.

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Lily Gladstone played Mollie Burkhart in Martin Scorsese's historical crime drama "Killers of the Flower Moon," becoming the first Indigenous woman to win best actress at the Golden Globes.

Gladstone spoke Blackfeet during her acceptance speech and said, "I'm so grateful that I can speak even a little bit of my language, which I'm not fluent in, up here because in this business, Native actors used to speak their lines in English, and then the sound mixers would run them backwards to accomplish Native languages on camera. This is an historic win."

She added, "This is for every little rez kid, every little urban kid, every little Native kid out there who has a dream who is seeing themselves represented and our stories told by ourselves, in our own words, with tremendous allies and tremendous trust from within and from each other."

Costume designer Ruth E. Carter is the only Black woman to have won multiple Academy Awards.
Ruth E. Carter posing with her Academy Award in 2023. Carter wore a lemon-yellow off-the-shoulder gown with long sleeves and large white earrings.
Ruth E. Carter has won two Academy Awards for costume design.

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Carter has won two Academy Awards for best costume design, first taking home the award in 2019 for "Black Panther" and again in 2023 for its sequel, "Black Panther: Wakanda Forever."

After her second win, Carter told reporters, "I dealt with adversity in the industry that sometimes didn't look like me and I endured. I feel that this win opens the door for other young costume designers that may not think that this industry is for them and hopefully they'll see me, and they'll see my story and they'll think they can win an Oscar, too."

Throughout her career, she has also designed costumes for other award-winning films like "Selma," "Malcolm X," and "The Butler."

With "The Farewell," Awkwafina became the first Asian woman to win a Golden Globe for best actress.
Awkwafina posed with her Golden Globe award in 2020.
Awkwafina won the Golden Globe for best actress in a musical or comedy in 2020.

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In 2020, Awkwafina won the Golden Globe for best actress in a musical or comedy for her performance as Billi in Lulu Wang's "The Farewell."

The film focuses on Billi and her family's return to China to say goodbye to their matriarch, Nai-Nai, who isn't aware that she has terminal cancer.

Awkwafina's other acting credits include her sitcom "Awkwafina is Nora from Queens" and box-office hits like "Crazy Rich Asians" and "Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings," which grossed $239 million and $432 million, respectively, per Box Office Mojo.

Thelma Schoonmaker is the most nominated film editor in Oscars history.
A portrait of Thelma Schoonmaker posing at the 74th Annual ACE Eddie Awards; she wore a black top and blazer.
Thelma Schoonmaker has won three Academy Awards for film editing.

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Over the course of her nearly 60 year career, Thelma Schoonmaker has won three Academy Awards for film editing from nine nominations, all for her work on movies directed by Martin Scorsese.

Her first win came in 1981 for his film, "Raging Bull." She told the Academy's A.frame, "The direction, camera work, acting, and music were pure gold for me to edit."

Since then, Schoonmaker has edited all of Scorsese films, winning her second and third Oscars in 2005 and 2007 for "The Aviator" and "The Departed," respectively.

In her 2007 acceptance speech she said, "Working with Marty is quite something. It's tumultuous, passionate, funny, and it's like being in the best film school in the world."

Schoonmaker's nine nominations, the most recent of which came in 2024 for "Killers of the Flower Moon," make her the most-nominated film editor in Academy Award history.

Jane Campion is the only woman to be nominated twice for best director at the Academy Awards.
Jane Campion at the 77th Locarno Film Festival.
Jane Campion has been nominated for best director twice at the Academy Awards.

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While directors like Scorsese, Steven Spielberg, and Christopher Nolan have amassed multiple Oscar nominations for best director, the only woman to receive more than one nomination in the category is Jane Campion.

Her first nomination came in 1994 for "The Piano" and her second came in 2022 for "The Power of the Dog," which she won.

Though Campion lost the Oscar in 1994, she still made history with "The Piano," as she became the first woman to win the Palme d'Or, awarded to the director of the best film at the Cannes Film Festival.

In 2020, Hildur Guðnadóttir became the first female composer to win the Golden Globe for best original score.
Hildur Guðnadóttir posing with her Golden Globe award for best original score in 2020.
Hildur Guðnadóttir won the Golden Globe for best original score in 2020.

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Icelandic composer Hildur Guðnadóttir's created the award-winning score for Todd' Phillips' "Joker."

In addition to winning the Golden Globe for best original score, she also won the Academy Award in the category and became the first solo woman to win the BAFTA for best original music.

In her acceptance speech at the Oscars, Guðnadóttir said, "To the girls, to the women, to the mothers, to the daughters who hear the music bubbling within, please speak up. We need to hear your voices."

Other films and shows Guðnadóttir has worked on include "Chernobyl," "Women Talking," and "Mary Magdalene."

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