Reading view

There are new articles available, click to refresh the page.

We didn't see our 11-year-old son at a holiday event for hours. We were never worried about him.

People gather at a holiday market.

Dneutral Han/Getty Images

  • Our family looks forward to a busy holiday event attended by thousands in our town each year.
  • We've given the oldest of our four kids more independence, even at this crowded event.
  • We use technology and the trust we have in our community to keep our kids safe.

Each year, on the first Saturday of December, our town hosts its annual holiday light-up night to kick off the festive season. Our quaint main street is packed with vendors, goodies, local musicians, and reindeer games. Local businesses sling seasonal cocktails for the grownups and set up craft stations for the kids. The town kicks off the evening by welcoming Santa and Mrs. Claus to the town center where everybody cheers as the massive Christmas tree comes to life with thousands of twinkling lights. If I'm being honest, it's a scene straight out of a holiday movie.

My husband and I have been attending this event for a decade, ever since we relocated to the tiny Pittsburgh borough of Bellevue with infant twins and a toddler in tow. Since our first light-up night, the event has grown substantially — and so has our family. I'll admit it hasn't always been easy helping four kids navigate a main drag packed with a couple of thousand neighbors, but we trudge the two blocks to the center of town religiously every year. It's a chance to hug neighbors, let the kids run free, and celebrate the loving community we are so thankful to be a part of.

We created our village

I often hear other moms bemoan the "loss of the village," and the way modern motherhood can feel insular and lonely. This is true on many levels. Shifts in the fabric of American society have left today's mothers with less support than our moms had, and the 24-hour news cycle has left even more mothers fearful of leaning on their community.

Thankfully, that has not been our experience. While I would like to say we magically found our "village," the truth is that sometimes we have to create one.

It's not easy to lean on neighbors (or strangers), but I've learned over our decade in this little town that people are willing to look out for each other, if you open up your heart and let them.

A few years ago, we briefly lost our youngest child at this very same holiday event. While those moments when she wasn't in our eyesight were terrifying, I knew in my gut during those frantic moments that the adults in our town were looking out for her. As a neighbor I barely knew hoisted my kiddo above the crowd so I could find her, I teared up. This community we are a part of looks out for one another.

Giving our kids independence

Our kids are older now; 13, 11 (twins), and 6. We've given our big three more independence in our walkable town throughout the year. With kid-safe cell phones in hand and kid-friendly debit cards at their fingertips, we trusted our village enough to set them loose on the main street once that giant evergreen was shining brightly at the center of town. While my 13-year-old and one of my 11-year-old twins spent some time with us throughout the evening, our son Ezra disappeared into the festive fray almost immediately. I wasn't surprised. He's extroverted and confident and has never met a festival he didn't love.

For many parents, not seeing their fifth grader for two hours on a dark and chilly evening may induce panic, but this village we've built and come to rely on gave us the confidence to let him test his wings. The location dot on his cell phone let us know he was still at the event, and a few spending notifications told us he was well hydrated and warm, thanks to a pair of LED gloves he purchased from a street vendor.

It seems like our son had a great night

We heard snippets about Ezra's evening from others. Our town librarian heard the DJ say his name at one point, and another friend let us know he helped pass out raffle baskets to the winners at the end of the evening. A fellow parent let me know she told his friend group to move their horseplay away from some younger kids, and they readily complied. I thanked her for being willing to offer guidance when I didn't have eyes on him. "Sure," she said. "I would want you to do the same if you saw my kid being a knucklehead, too." We laughed, but I know she means it.

Once the festivities had concluded, Ezra sent us a text asking if he could help the adults in charge clean up the event. We often say his big personality is paired with an even bigger heart. Of course we said yes.

Once he finally burst through our front door at the end of the evening, brought home by a friend's older cousin, he was cold and exhausted. It was after 10 p.m. and he crashed quickly into bed. I asked him how his night went since we had not seen him for over two hours. "It was fun," he said. "I think I did everything they had to do." Within minutes, he was out cold.

I'm glad we can trust our children — and our town — to do the right thing

A few days later, a local photographer shared a photo album from the festivities. Within an hour I had a dozen text messages telling me to take a look. I opened the link and gasped. There was Ezra, on stage, holding a tambourine. The thousand-watt smile on his face says it all. He had the best night. I have never seen a photo that better encapsulates my son.

Modern parenting is designed to provoke anxiety. From online urban legends and hysteria to a general lack of trust in our neighbors, it's easy to give into the temptation to clip our kids' wings and worry about how the world may harm them.

I know the world is scary. I worry every day about my kids' safety. I worry about gun violence, online bullying, and the general divisiveness and hatred that seems to permeate today's culture. Rather than give into the temptation to shelter them at home, though, I've found strength in leaning on our community and working hard to foster independence in our kids. With a bit of help from modern technology and a whole lot of help from trusted adults, teaching our kids to navigate the world on their own feels like the best possible tool we can give them.

Read the original article on Business Insider

What Christmas looks like in every state

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 left NYC after 20 years so I could live near Disney World. Florida's been great despite some big drawbacks.

Writer Jenna Clark hugs a Rapunzel character in a room with wooden detailing and red and gold curtains
I moved from New York to Florida to be closer to Disney World.

Jenna Clark

  • I relocated from New York City to Florida to be closer to one of my favorite places, Disney World.
  • I visit the parks at least three times a week and love spending time with my friends there.
  • I'm still adjusting to the severe storms and dealing with a little homesickness.

As someone who lived in New York City for over 20 years, moving to Florida was a significant change.

I live about 15 minutes away from Disney World, and though I love visiting the parks, I definitely miss some things about NYC.

Here are a few of the best and worst parts of my move.

I can visit the Disney parks multiple times a week.
The writer wears a shirt with Minnie Mouse on it, a black skirt, and mouse ears next to a cutout of a Muppet with a sign that says "Muppet 3D Vision"
I absolutely love visiting Disney World.

Jenna Clark

One great thing about living so close to Disney World is that I can go to the parks whenever I want, as long as reservations are available for annual passholders.

I usually visit three or four times a week because the parks bring me so much happiness.

I enjoy meeting the characters, so if I'm having a hard day and want to see Mickey Mouse or a princess, I don't have to commute very far.

I frequently get to spend time with my friends at the parks.
Three girls, including the writer, wear mouse ears and smile for the camera. The girl on the left wears a pink and blue sweatshirt with a castle on it, the girl in the middle wears a green jacket and red sweatshirt, and the writer, on the right, wears a pink fleece hoodie with Chip and Dale on it
My Florida friends and I hang out in the parks a lot.

Jenna Clark

Most of the friends I made during my time in the Disney College Program in 2018 now live in Florida.

Since moving, I've met with them to watch the parades, visit characters, and eat snacks in the parks.

It's nice to go to the parks, enjoy each other's company, and not feel rushed during every experience.

I can easily try the new, creative snacks Disney rolls out.
The writer wears purple mouse ears and a purple shirt and holds a purple-and-orange cupcake for Halloween
Disney World has plenty of adorable, themed snacks.

Jenna Clark

The creative snacks are one of my favorite parts of visiting Disney World.

I love trying the different cupcakes, brownies, and Mickey crisped-rice treats that celebrate holidays like Halloween, Christmas, and Father's Day.

I often enjoy the Mickey ice-cream sandwiches and bars, especially when the heat is unbearable.

Most of the people I've met in Florida have been friendly.
A girl wearing a blue dress with tea cups on it, Peter Pan character at Disney World, and the writer wearing a purple shirt and mouse ears
I love meeting Disney characters and interacting with staff members.

Jenna Clark

I was born and raised in New York City, so I was taught not to make eye contact or say hello to most people when walking on the street.

One of the first things I noticed when I moved to Florida was how friendly many people were, especially the staff at Disney World.

Whenever I pass by people at my apartment complex or in the parks, a wave or a "hello" is often involved.

Though this initially felt strange, I've become more comfortable interacting with strangers.

I can see glimpses of Magic Kingdom's fireworks from my apartment.
Purple and yellow fireworks at Disney World
When I moved to Florida, I was excited to learn I could see Disney's fireworks from my apartment.

Jenna Clark

I never thought I'd be able to see Magic Kingdom's fireworks from my apartment, but now I can.

Though I don't have a complete view of the shows, I see at least a couple of magical fireworks each night.

On the other hand, Florida has more intense storms than New York.
Wilderness lodge, with several balconies and log details, at Disney World. Trees and bushes a side walk with fallen branches and leaves are in the foreground
I sheltered Disney World's Wilderness Lodge during Hurricane Ian.

Jenna Clark

I thought I knew what heavy rain was like living in New York, but I didn't realize how extreme tropical storms and hurricanes could be until I moved to Florida.

Although New York has been hit directly by a handful of hurricanes in the past few years, Florida is the most hurricane-prone state in the US.

The storms in Florida can get pretty extreme. When I had to evacuate my apartment complex and ride out Hurricane Ian, my first big Florida storm, I chose to stay at Disney's Wilderness Lodge.

It was a frightening experience, but I thought the park employees did a great job ensuring guests were as comfortable as possible.

Still, I try to stay on top of extreme weather warnings and upcoming storms more than ever now that I'm in Florida.

The heat can be brutal, especially when waiting for outdoor attractions.
The writer stands in front of a ride at Disney World with tea cups. The writer wears a white skirt, purple shirt, mouse ears, and a purple backpack
I wear sunscreen more often now that I live in Florida.

Jenna Clark

Florida is known for its high temperatures and strong sun rays, so I apply sunscreen much more often than I did in New York.

Many of the attractions and shows at the theme parks are outdoors, so if I forget my sunscreen, I get a harsh sunburn that lasts for several days.

The tap water doesn't taste as good as it did in NYC.
A hand with pink nails holds a red Coca-Cola cup in front of a wooden door
I don't think the Florida tap water tastes as good as the water in NYC.

Jenna Clark

After living in New York for about 20 years, I grew accustomed to the taste of tap water.

Since I made drinking tap water a habit, I usually bring my reusable water bottles with me when I visit the theme parks.

However, I find that Florida's tap water doesn't taste as great.

I miss my family and often experience homesickness.
Selfie of the writer and family in front of a sign that says "Disney's Yacht Club Resort Welcome Clark Family." The writer wears a headband with Mickey Mouse hands, another girl with pink hair wears pink mouse ears, and the mother wears green mouse ears
My parents have visited Florida a few times, but I miss them when they're not here.

Jenna Clark

I moved to Florida with my sister but often miss my parents and family back in New York.

It's hard knowing I can't take a 40-minute train ride to see my parents on the weekends like I did in college.

It's nice when my parents do come to visit, though.

This story was originally published on January 16, 2024, and most recently updated on December 23, 2024.

Read the original article on Business Insider

The most powerful news photos of the year

Donald Trump holds his fist in the air while bleeding after an assassination attempt.
Butler, Pennsylvania.

Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

  • Getty Images released its top 100 most powerful news photos of the year.
  • Photos show key moments in the 2024 presidential election and conflicts in the Middle East.
  • Photographers captured the aftermath of natural disasters and phenomena like the solar eclipse.

Getty Images released a compilation of the most powerful news photos taken by their photographers in 2024.

Throughout the year, photojournalists captured the defining images of the biggest news stories related to politics, military conflicts, natural disasters, and other global issues.

"Regardless of the assignment, Getty Images photographers and videographers produced honest, moving, and gripping images of humanity at its highest and lowest moments and painted a picture of the world in all of its complexity without bias or manipulation, producing a trusted and memorable historic document of 2024," Sandy Ciric, senior director of news photography at Getty Images, told Business Insider.

Here are 30 of the best news photos of the year.

On January 10, Ukrainian soldiers fired an 82mm mortar in Kreminna.
Ukranian soldiers on a combat mission.
Kreminna, Ukraine.

Kostiantyn Liberov/Libkos/Getty Images

Mortar platoon soldiers endured temperatures of -15 degrees Celsius while holding their positions.

Palestinian children played in the ruins of Rafah in Gaza on January 31.
Children play in ruins in Rafah, Gaza.
Rafah, Gaza.

Ahmad Hasaballah/Getty Images

Mahmoud Al-Durra and his children were displaced from Gaza City amid the Israel-Hamas war.

On February 8, Pakistani citizens attended an event at the Pakistan Muslim League party office ahead of the general elections.
People celebrate a speech in Lahore, Pakistan.
Lahore, Pakistan.

Elke Scholiers/Getty Images

The elections were held two years after Pakistan's Prime Minister Imran Khan was ousted in a no-confidence vote.

San Francisco Drag Laureate D'Arcy Drollinger officiated the wedding of a same-sex couple on Valentine's Day at San Francisco City Hall.
San Francisco Drag Laureate D'Arcy Drollinger marries a same-sex couple.
San Francisco, California.

Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

The event marked 20 years since the first same-sex marriages in San Francisco.

Multimillion-dollar mansions were left precariously perched on a cliff on February 27 after a landslide in Dana Point, California.
Mansions on a cliff.
Dana Point, California.

Mario Tama/Getty Images

On February 4, Gov. Gavin Newsom of California declared a state of emergency in Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, and Ventura counties after heavy rainfall caused flooding and mudslides.

Around 65 migrants crossed the English Channel on an inflatable dinghy on March 6.
An inflatable dinghy carrying migrants crosses the English Channel.
The English Channel.

Dan Kitwood/Getty Images

According to data released by the UK's Home Office, 33,684 migrants arrived in the UK on small boats in 2024 as of December 1.

A cargo ship struck Baltimore's Francis Scott Key Bridge on March 26, causing it to collapse.
The cargo ship Dali sits in the water after running into and collapsing the Francis Scott Key Bridge.
Baltimore.

Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images

Six maintenance workers died as a result of the bridge collapse.

On April 8, a solar eclipse was visible above the Washington Monument in Washington, DC.
A solar eclipse is seen above the Washington Monument.
Washington, DC.

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Many traveled to watch the solar eclipse in the "path of totality" in parts of the US, Mexico, and Canada.

Pro-Palestinian demonstrators barricaded themselves inside a building at Columbia University amid rising campus tensions on April 30.
Demonstrators supporting Palestinians in Gaza barricade themselves inside Hamilton Hall at Columbia University.
New York City.

Alex Kent/Getty Images

In April, Columbia University's then-president Nemat Minouche Shafik announced that the institution would not divest from Israel and said students remaining in a pro-Palestinian encampment on campus would be suspended. Student protesters then barricaded themselves inside the university's Hamilton Hall, resulting in 300 arrests.

Employees at the Hidden Sanctuary Resort in the Philippines dumped blocks of ice into the water during a heat wave on May 4.
Workers prepare to dump blocks of ice at a pool amid extreme heat at the Hidden Sanctuary Resort in the Philippines.
Marilao, Bulacan province, Philippines.

Ezra Acayan/Getty Images

Temperatures in the Philippines hit 53 degrees Celsius, or around 127 degrees Fahrenheit.

Mourners attended the funeral of Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi in Tehran on May 22.
Mourners attend the funeral of Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi.
Tehran, Iran.

Majid Saeedi/Getty Images

Raisi died in a helicopter crash in the mountains near the border with Azerbaijan. Iran's foreign minister and a provincial governor also died in the crash.

A wind turbine in Prescott, Iowa, lay toppled after tornadoes ripped through the area on May 22.
A toppled wind turbine after tornadoes in Prescott, Iowa.
Prescott, Iowa.

Scott Olson/Getty Images

Iowa experienced a record-high number of 122 tornadoes in 2024.

The Sundhnúkur volcano near Grindavik, Iceland, erupted on May 29.
A volcano erupts in Iceland.
Grindavik, Iceland.

John Moore/Getty Images

Iceland's famous Blue Lagoon was evacuated ahead of the eruption.

June 6, 2024 marked the 80th anniversary of D-Day.
A soldier's silhouette in a D-Day anniversary display.
Ver-sur-Mer, France.

Christopher Furlong/Getty Images

The Normandy British Memorial hosted an installation titled "Standing with Giants" as part of the official D-Day commemoration.

On June 27, President Joe Biden faced off against former President Donald Trump during the first presidential debate in Atlanta.
President Joe Biden at the first presidential debate with Donald Trump.
Atlanta, Georgia.

Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

The presidential debate proved disastrous for Biden. His poor performance panicked Democrats, ultimately leading to his withdrawal from the 2024 election.

On July 13, former President Donald Trump narrowly survived an assassination attempt during a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania.
Donald Trump holds his fist in the air while bleeding after an assassination attempt.
Butler, Pennsylvania.

Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

Photographers on the campaign trail captured images of Trump's bloodied face as he held a fist in the air, which quickly became iconic photos.

Oil slick from the sunken tanker MT Terra Nova muddied the waters of Manila Bay in the Philippines on July 29.
An oil spill from the sunken tanker MT Terra Nova in the Philippines.
Bulacan province, Philippines.

Ezra Acayan/Getty Images

The oil tanker was carrying 1.4 million liters, or around 400,000 gallons, of fuel when it sank during Typhoon Gaemi.

One year after the Maui wildfires, damage remained visible in an aerial photo taken of Lahaina on August 4.
Regrowth from the Lahaina wildfire in Maui.
Lahaina, Hawaii.

Mario Tama/Getty Images

The Maui wildfires killed 102 people.

A firefighter battled flames from the Park Fire in Mill Creek, California, on August 7.
A firefighter pours a drip torch on a wildfire in California.
Mill Creek, California.

Ethan Swope/Getty Images

The Park Fire, the fourth-largest fire in California's history, burned over 400,000 acres.

Vice President Kamala Harris and President Joe Biden embraced at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago on August 19.
Joe Biden and Kamala Harris embrace at the Democratic National Convention.
Chicago.

Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

Biden endorsed Harris after he dropped out of the race.

In his speech at the Democratic National Convention, Biden spoke highly of Harris, saying that choosing her as his vice president was "the best decision" he's made in his career.

"I've made a lot of mistakes in my career, but I gave my best to you," he said in his speech.

Debris from Chimney Rock, North Carolina, littered the shores of Lake Lure in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene on September 28.
Damage from Hurricane Helene in North Carolina.
Lake Lure, North Carolina.

Melissa Sue Gerrits/Getty Images

Hurricane Helene, a Category 4 storm, left 3 million homes in five states without power and caused widespread flooding and damage.

Israelis marked the first anniversary of the October 7 terrorist attacks in which Hamas militants killed around 1,200 people and took 254 hostages.
A man and a woman embrace at the site of the Nova Festival on the anniversary of October 7.
Re'im, Israel.

Leon Neal/Getty Images

Around 60 hostages remain in Gaza, though it is unknown how many are still alive.

Israel's counteroffensive airstrikes and military actions in Gaza have resulted in over 45,000 Palestinian fatalities, according to figures provided to the United Nations by the Hamas-run Ministry of Health in Gaza. The Israel Defense Forces reported that 17,000 of these fatalities were Hamas militants.

Two weeks after Hurricane Helene, another storm pummeled the region when Hurricane Milton made landfall on October 9.
Boat washed ashore from Hurricane Milton.
Punta Gorda, Florida.

Joe Raedle/Getty Images

Hurricane Milton slammed into southwest Florida with winds of up to 120 mph and left 3.3 million homes and businesses without power.

Trump worked the drive-thru at McDonald's on the campaign trail in Pennsylvania on October 20.
Donald Trump works the drive-thru line at McDonald's.
Feasterville-Trevose, Pennsylvania.

Win McNamee/Getty Images

Pennsylvania was a crucial battleground state in the 2024 election where both Harris and Trump campaigned heavily.

October 31 was the latest date in 130 years that Japan's Mount Fuji had not received any snowfall.
Mount Fuji with no snow.
Yamanakako Village, Japan.

Tomohiro Ohsumi/Getty Images

Mount Fuji's snowless top raised concerns about the impact of the climate crisis on weather patterns.

Trump won the 2024 election and declared victory in the early hours of the morning on November 6 in Palm Beach, Florida.
Donald Trump walks onstage in Palm Beach, Florida, after winning the 2024 election.
Palm Beach, Florida.

Win McNamee/Getty Images

Trump won 312 electoral votes to Harris' 226. Republicans also won majorities in the House and the Senate.

Harris delivered her concession speech at Howard University on November 6.
Kamala Harris concedes the 2024 election.
Washington, DC.

Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

"In our nation, we owe loyalty not to a president or a party but to the Constitution of the United States," Harris said in her speech. "And loyalty to our conscience and to our God. My allegiance to all three is why I am here to say, while I concede this election, I do not concede the fight that fueled this campaign."

A door at the National Assembly in Seoul, South Korea, was damaged when South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol declared martial law on December 3.
A broken door at the National Assembly in Seoul, South Korea.
Seoul, South Korea.

Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images

Members of South Korea's Parliament convened for an emergency vote to reverse Yoon's declaration, barricading themselves inside the National Assembly as soldiers forced their way in.

Lawmakers voted to end martial law, and Yoon relented after six hours of chaos.

Luigi Mangione, the 26-year-old suspect in the shooting of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, appeared in court in Pennsylvania on December 10.
Luigi Mangione is led into court.
Hollidaysburg, Pennsylvania.

Jeff Swensen/Getty Images

Mangione was arrested in Pennsylvania and agreed to be transferred to New York, where he faces federal charges of stalking, murder through the use of a firearm, and a related gun charge.

On December 11, a woman took a selfie in front of a destroyed tank after Syrian rebels deposed longtime ruler Bashar Assad.
A woman takes a selfie in front of a destroyed tank in Damascus, Syria.
Damascus, Syria.

Chris McGrath/Getty Images

Assad fled Syria and has reportedly taken refuge in Moscow.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Only 45 songs have stayed at No. 1 on the chart for 10 weeks or more — here they all are

lil nas x mariah carey shaboozey split image
Lil Nas X, Mariah Carey, and Shaboozey.

Daniel Boczarski/Paras Griffin/Getty Images; James Devaney/WireImage

  • A small fraction of all No. 1 hits have managed to rule the Billboard Hot 100 for double-digit weeks.
  • Lil Nas X's "Old Town Road" and Shaboozey's "A Bar Song (Tipsy)" are tied for the all-time record.
  • Mariah Carey, Drake, and Boyz II Men have the most songs on this list with three apiece.

The Billboard Hot 100 is widely considered to be the definitive all-genre singles chart in the US.

Since it was launched in 1958, well over 1,000 songs have reached the coveted No. 1 spot, but far fewer have reigned long enough to reach double-digit weeks — or, even more impressively, surpass that milestone.

According to Billboard, only 4% of all No. 1 hits have topped the Hot 100 for 10 weeks or more. All 45 songs that have achieved the feat are listed below, in chronological order.

1. "You Light Up My Life" by Debby Boone
debby boone
"You Light Up My Life" reached No. 1 on October 15, 1977.

Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

"You Light Up My Life" was the first song in history to chart at No. 1 for 10 weeks.

2. "Physical" by Olivia Newton-John
olivia newton john physical
"Physical" reached No. 1 on November 21, 1981.

Olivia Newton-John/YouTube

"Physical" charted at No. 1 for 10 weeks.

3. "End of the Road" by Boyz II Men
end of the road boyz ii men
"End of the Road" reached No. 1 on August 15, 1992.

Boyz II Men/YouTube

"End of the Road" charted at No. 1 for 13 weeks.

4. "I Will Always Love You" by Whitney Houston
i will always love you whitney houston
"I Will Always Love You" reached No. 1 on November 28, 1992.

Whitney Houston/YouTube

"I Will Always Love You" charted at No. 1 for 14 weeks.

5. "I Swear" by All-4-One
i swear all 4 one
"I Swear" reached No. 1 on May 21, 1994.

All-4-One/YouTube

"I Swear" charted at No. 1 for 11 weeks.

5. "I'll Make Love to You" by Boyz II Men
i'll make love to you boyz ii men
"I'll Make Love to You" reached No. 1 on August 27, 1994.

Boyz II Men/YouTube

"I'll Make Love to You" charted at No. 1 for 14 weeks.

7. "One Sweet Day" by Mariah Carey and Boyz II Men
one sweet day mariah carey
"One Sweet Day" reached No. 1 on December 2, 1995.

Mariah Carey/YouTube

"One Sweet Day" charted at No. 1 for 16 weeks.

8. "Macarena (Bayside Boys Mix)" by Los Del Rio
macarena
"Macarena" reached No. 1 on August 3, 1996.

Los Del Rio/YouTube

"Macarena (Bayside Boys Mix)" charted at No. 1 for 14 weeks.

9. "Un-Break My Heart" by Toni Braxton
toni braxton unbreak my heart
"Un-Break My Heart" reached No. 1 on December 7, 1996.

Toni Braxton/YouTube

"Un-Break My Heart" charted at No. 1 for 11 weeks.

10. "I'll Be Missing You" by Puff Daddy and Faith Evans featuring 112
i'll be missing you puff daddy
"I'll Be Missing You" reached No. 1 on June 14, 1997.

Bad Boy Entertainment/YouTube

"I'll Be Missing You" charted at No. 1 for 11 weeks.

11. "Candle in the Wind 1997/Something About the Way You Look Tonight" by Elton John
elton john something about the way you look tonight
Elton John's famous tribute to Princess Diana reached No. 1 on October 11, 1997.

Elton John/YouTube

"Candle in the Wind 1997/Something About the Way You Look Tonight" charted at No. 1 for 14 weeks.

12. "The Boy Is Mine" by Brandy and Monica
the boy is mine
"The Boy Is Mine" reached No. 1 on June 6, 1998.

Brandy & Monica/YouTube

"The Boy Is Mine" charted at No. 1 for 13 weeks.

13. "Smooth" by Santana featuring Rob Thomas
smooth santana
"Smooth" reached No. 1 on October 23, 1999.

Santana/YouTube

"Smooth" charted at No. 1 for 12 weeks.

14. "Maria Maria" by Santana featuring The Product G&B
Santana Maria Maria
"Maria Maria" reached No. 1 on April 8, 2000.

Santana/YouTube

"Maria Maria" charted at No. 1 for 10 weeks.

15. "Independent Women, Pt. 1" by Destiny's Child
independent women pt 1 destiny's child
"Independent Women, Pt. 1" reached No. 1 on November 18, 2000.

Destiny's Child/YouTube

"Independent Women, Pt. 1" charted at No. 1 for 11 weeks.

16. "Foolish" by Ashanti
ashanti foolish
"Foolish" reached No. 1 on April 20, 2002.

Ashanti/YouTube

"Foolish" charted at No. 1 for 10 weeks.

17. "Dilemma" by Nelly featuring Kelly Rowland
Dilemma Nelly Kelly Rowland
"Dilemma" reached No. 1 on August 17, 2002.

Nelly/YouTube

"Dilemma" charted at No. 1 for 10 weeks.

18. "Lose Yourself" by Eminem
eminem lose yourself
"Lose Yourself" reached No. 1 on November 9, 2002.

Eminem/YouTube

"Lose Yourself" charted at No. 1 for 12 weeks.

19. "Yeah!" by Usher featuring Lil Jon and Ludacris
usher yeah
"Yeah!" reached No. 1 on February 28, 2004.

Usher/YouTube

"Yeah!" charted at No. 1 for 12 weeks.

20. "We Belong Together" by Mariah Carey
mariah carey we belong together
"We Belong Together" reached No. 1 on June 4, 2005.

Mariah Carey/YouTube

"We Belong Together" charted at No. 1 for 14 weeks.

21. "Gold Digger" by Kanye West featuring Jamie Foxx
gold digger kanye west
"Gold Digger" reached No. 1 on September 17, 2005.

Kanye West/YouTube

"Gold Digger" charted at No. 1 for 10 weeks.

22. "Irreplaceable" by Beyonce
beyonce irreplaceable
"Irreplaceable" reached No. 1 on December 16, 2006.

Beyoncé/YouTube

"Irreplaceable" charted at No. 1 for 10 weeks.

23. "Low" by Flo Rida featuring T-Pain
low flo rida
"Low" reached No. 1 on January 5, 2008.

Flo Rida/YouTube

"Low" charted at No. 1 for 10 weeks.

24. "Boom Boom Pow" by The Black Eyed Peas
boom boom pow
"Boom Boom Pow" reached No. 1 on April 18, 2009.

The Black Eyed Peas/YouTube

"Boom Boom Pow" charted at No. 1 for 12 weeks.

25. "I Gotta Feeling" by The Black Eyed Peas
i gotta feeling
"I Gotta Feeling" reached No. 1 on July 11, 2009.

The Black Eyed Peas/YouTube

"I Gotta Feeling" charted at No. 1 for 14 weeks.

26. "We Found Love" by Rihanna featuring Calvin Harris
rihanna we found love
"We Found Love" reached No. 1 on November 12, 2011.

Rihanna/YouTube

"We Found Love" charted at No. 1 for 10 weeks.

27. "Blurred Lines" by Robin Thicke featuring T.I. and Pharrell
blurred lines music video
"Blurred Lines" reached No. 1 on June 22, 2013.

Robin Thicke/YouTube

"Blurred Lines" charted at No. 1 for 12 weeks.

28. "Happy" by Pharrell Williams
pharrell happy
"Happy" reached No. 1 on March 8, 2014.

Pharrell/YouTube

"Happy" charted at No. 1 for 10 weeks.

29. "Uptown Funk!" by Mark Ronson featuring Bruno Mars
uptown funk
"Uptown Funk!" reached No. 1 on January 17, 2015.

Mark Ronson/YouTube

"Uptown Funk!" charted at No. 1 for 14 weeks.

30. "See You Again" by Wiz Khalifa featuring Charlie Puth
see you again wiz charlie music video
"See You Again" reached No. 1 on April 25, 2015.

Wiz Khalifa/YouTube

"See You Again" charted at No. 1 for 12 weeks.

31. "Hello" by Adele
hello adele
"Hello" reached No. 1 on November 14, 2015.

Adele/YouTube

"Hello" charted at No. 1 for 10 weeks.

32. "One Dance" by Drake featuring WizKid and Kyla
one dance drake
"One Dance" reached No. 1 on April 23, 2016.

Drake/YouTube

"One Dance" charted at No. 1 for 10 weeks.

33. "Closer" by The Chainsmokers featuring Halsey
closer the chainsmokers music video
"Closer" reached No. 1 on September 3, 2016.

The Chainsmokers/YouTube

"Closer" charted at No. 1 for 12 weeks.

34. "Shape of You" by Ed Sheeran
ed sheeran shape of you
"Shape of You" reached No. 1 on January 28, 2017.

Ed Sheeran/YouTube

"Shape of You" charted at No. 1 for 12 weeks.

35. "Despacito" by Luis Fonsi and Daddy Yankee featuring Justin Bieber
despacito music video
"Despacito" reached No. 1 on May 27, 2017.

Luis Fonsi/YouTube

"Despacito" charted at No. 1 for 16 weeks.

36. "God's Plan" by Drake
drake god's plan
"God's Plan" reached No. 1 on February 3, 2018.

Drake/YouTube

"God's Plan" charted at No. 1 for 11 weeks.

37. "In My Feelings" by Drake
in my feelings drake
"In My Feelings" reached No. 1 on July 21, 2018.

Drake/YouTube

"In My Feelings" charted at No. 1 for 10 weeks.

Drake holds the record for the most solo entries on this list, with three of the longest-running chart-toppers in history.

38. "Old Town Road" by Lil Nas X featuring Billy Ray Cyrus
old town road
"Old Town Road" reached No. 1 on April 13, 2019.

Lil Nas X/YouTube

"Old Town Road" holds the record for the longest stretch at No. 1 with 19 weeks. It also became the fastest song in history to be certified diamond.

39. "The Box" by Roddy Ricch
roddy ricch the box
"The Box" reached No. 1 on January 18, 2020.

Roddy Ricch/YouTube

"The Box" charted at No. 1 for 11 weeks.

40. "Butter" by BTS
bts butter
"Butter" reached No. 1 on the chart dated June 5, 2021.

HYBE LABELS/YouTube

"Butter" charted at No. 1 for 10 nonconsecutive weeks.

41. "Easy On Me" by Adele
Adele Easy On Me music video
"Easy On Me" reached No. 1 on the chart dated October 30, 2021.

Adele/YouTube

"Easy On Me" charted at No. 1 for 10 nonconsecutive weeks, becoming Adele's second song to reach the milestone.

42. "As It Was" by Harry Styles
harry styles as it was music video
"As It Was" debuted at No. 1 on the chart dated April 16, 2022.

Harry Styles/YouTube

"As It Was" charted at No. 1 for 15 nonconsecutive weeks, the longest reign ever for a British artist.

43. "All I Want for Christmas Is You"
mariah carey all i want for christmas is you
"All I Want for Christmas Is You" was released in 1994.

Mariah Carey/YouTube

Nearly three decades years after its release, "All I Want for Christmas Is You" returned to No. 1 in December 2022 for its milestone 10th week atop the chart.

The holiday classic is Carey's third song with double-digit weeks atop the Hot 100, making her the third artist and first woman ever to achieve the feat thrice.

In 2024, the song experienced another holiday surge, earning its 17th total week at No. 1 and surpassing "One Sweet Day" as Carey's longest-reigning hit on the Hot 100.

44. "Last Night" by Morgan Wallen
morgan wallen last night music video
"Last Night" reached No. 1 on the chart dated March 18, 2023.

Morgan Wallen/YouTube

"Last Night" charted at No. 1 for 16 nonconsecutive weeks, the most ever for a solo song — despite the country singer's many controversies.

45. "A Bar Song (Tipsy)" by Shaboozey
Shaboozey A Bar Song (Tipsy) official visualizer
"A Bar Song (Tipsy)" reached No. 1 on the chart dated July 13, 2024.

Shaboozey/YouTube

"A Bar Song (Tipsy)," Shaboozey's breakout hit, has charted at No. 1 for 19 nonconsecutive weeks, the most among solo hits. It's now tied with "Old Town Road" for the all-time record.

Read the original article on Business Insider

A timeline of OpenAI's rocky 2024

Image of Sam Altman
OpenAI lost executives, achieved a historic valuation, and started the transition to a for-profit company in 2024.

Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

  • OpenAI reached new funding and valuation heights in 2024.
  • The ChatGPT maker also saw longtime employees depart and a legal fight with Elon Musk.
  • Here are the biggest moments from OpenAI's roller-coaster year.

OpenAI cemented its place as the most valuable name in artificial intelligence in 2024 — and set itself up for more growth. The path wasn't entirely smooth.

After starting as a nonprofit almost a decade ago, OpenAI officially started moving toward converting to a for-profit company this year. It also wrapped up a historic funding round. All that came as CEO Sam Altman emerged with his role at the company intact after his temporary ouster last year.

But legal challenges remain for OpenAI, including court battles with Elon Musk, who co-founded the startup, as well as some of the nation's largest newspapers. The company also lost several high-profile employees, including some who were there at its start in 2015.

Here are the highlights of OpenAI's rocky year.

At the start of 2024, OpenAI was still reeling from the attempt to oust CEO Sam Altman.
Sam Altman
Sam Altman

Getty Images

OpenAI's board of directors removed Altman as CEO in November 2023, saying it didn't have "confidence in his ability to continue leading OpenAI."

A few days later, though, Altman was back as the startup's chief executive, and there was a new board, too. OpenAI employees reportedly refer to the period as "The Blip."

Details about the drama, such as exactly who had pushed for Altman's ouster, tricked out over the following weeks and months.

In December, Altman told Time that the ordeal was tough for him but that OpenAI emerged more unified than before. "I wouldn't wish it on an enemy. But it did have an extremely positive effect on the company," he said at the time.

Elon Musk's xAI raised billions to take on OpenAI
Elon Musk in a meeting
Elon Musk

Allison Robbert/Getty Images

The Financial Times reported in January that xAI was seeking to raise as much as $6 billion at a valuation of $20 billion. Founder Elon Musk has framed the company as a challenger to OpenAI, which he co-founded with Altman. Musk left OpenAI's board in 2018.

OpenAI reached an $80 billion valuation in February
Sam Altman presenting onstage with the OpenAI logo behind him.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman

Jason Redmond/AFP/Getty Images

A deal valued OpenAI at $80 billion, about triple its last valuation, The New York Times first reported in February. Company employees could cash out their shares as part of the tender offer.

Elon Musk sued Sam Altman and OpenAI in February
Tesla CEO Elon Musk (left) and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman (right).
Tesla CEO Elon Musk (left) and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman (right).

Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto via Getty Images; Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images

Musk sued Altman and OpenAI in February, saying that the company "has been transformed into a closed-source de facto subsidiary" of Microsoft. That meant that OpenAI was now generating profit in violation of its nonprofit mission, Musk said in the lawsuit.

Altman and other OpenAI executives responded in a blog post in March. The post said that Musk himself had talked to the company about making OpenAI a for-profit entity, including potentially merging it with Tesla.

Musk withdrew his lawsuit in June, though the issue would resurface in the fall.

An SEC investigation into OpenAI came to light in February
SEC
The SEC logo

Jonathan Ernst/Reuters

The SEC investigation was focused on whether OpenAI misled investors, The Wall Street Journal reported.

Unnamed sources told the Journal that the investigation was a response to the former OpenAI board's statement in November that Altman was not "consistently candid in his communications" before he was temporarily ousted from the company.

Sam Altman won a return to OpenAI's board in March
Sam ALtman
Sam Altman

Riddhi Kanetkar / Business Insider

OpenAI's board "unanimously concluded" that Altman and President Greg Brockman were "the right leaders for OpenAI," Chair Bret Taylor said in March.

Altman rejoined the board as three new members, all women, also took seats.

OpenAI cofounder Ilya Sutskever announced in May that he was leaving OpenAI
Ilya Sutskever
Ilya Sutskever

Jack Guez/Getty

Sutskever, also chief scientist at OpenAI, was one of the group that attempted to push Altman out of the company in November. He later said that he regretted being part of the movement to oust Altman.

In a farewell post on X, formerly known as Twitter, Sutskever said he was confident that OpenAI would create artificial general intelligence that would be "both safe and beneficial."

OpenAI swiftly stopped using ChatGPT's "Sky" voice in May after claims it sounded like Scarlett Johansson
Scarlett Johansson in a tan suit
Scarlett Johansson was not pleased by OpenAI's voice chat.

NBC

OpenAI pulled the voice from ChatGPT amid a public furor, adding that it wasn't an imitation of the movie star but belonged to another actor.

Some users had compared Sky to the voice of an automated assistant in the 2013 movie "Her," which Johansson voiced.

Johansson said that Altman had asked her to voice ChatGPT but that she declined. When OpenAI went ahead with a voice that sounded like hers, Johansson said she was "shocked" and hired legal representation.

OpenAI faced fresh criticism over safety as summer began
Sora video with OpenAI above
OpenAI just launched its AI video generator Sora to the public.

CFOTO/Future Publishing via Getty Images

In addition to the "Sky" voice incident, a New York Times report in early June added to OpenAI's image problems. It featured concerns from current and former OpenAI employees that the company wasn't doing enough to prevent its artificial intelligence from harming or destroying humanity.

An OpenAI spokesperson at the time reiterated to Business Insider the company's commitment to safety, highlighting an "anonymous integrity hotline" for employees to voice their concerns and the company's safety and security committee.

A Vox report also said that OpenAI pushed restrictive NDAs on departing employees and put their vested equity at risk if they didn't agree to them. The company told BI it would make " important updates to our departure process."

All of that created a public relations challenge for Altman.

Apple said it would integrate ChatGPT into its software in June
ChatGPT logo on screen with OpenAI logo behind
ChatGPT

NurPhoto/Getty

During its annual Worldwide Developer Conference in June, Apple said it would offer ChatGPT within its software, such as through Siri.

The partnership gives OpenAI potentially vast reach, with ChatGPT now within easier reach of millions of iPhone users.

Musk filed a new lawsuit against OpenAI in August; in November, he amended it to include Microsoft as a defendant
OpenAI x Microsoft Microsoft Build
Sam Altman, left, speaks with Microsoft's Kevin Scott.

Microsoft

In August, Musk filed another lawsuit in which his lawyers argued that OpenAI executives "deceived" Musk into cofounding the company by playing on his concerns about the existential risks AI poses.

In November, Musk added Microsoft as well as one of its board members, Reid Hoffman, who also used to sit on OpenAI's board, as a defendant in the suit. It alleged that Microsoft was working with OpenAI to create a monopoly in the artificial intelligence world and extend "lavish compensation" to employees.

Musk also named Shivon Zilis, a former OpenAI board member and mother of three of Musk's children, as a plaintiff.

In September, OpenAI announced that it would become a for-profit company
ChatGPT search option
A ChatGPT search bar.

OpenAI

OpenAI was founded as a nonprofit in 2015, but the company said that it would change that status over the next two years.

The process will involve multiple steps, such as giving OpenAI's investors equity stakes in the new entity and earning government approvals, Business Insider previously reported.

The plan has drawn pushback, including from Musk and Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg.

CTO Mira Murati said in September that she would leave OpenAI
Mira Murati
Mira Murati

Bloomberg/ Getty Images

Chief Technology Officer Murati said she was leaving OpenAI "to create the time and space to do my own exploration."

Murati reportedly played an important role in the attempted ousting of Altman from OpenAI. She served as CEO temporarily before Altman was reinstated.

President Gregg Brockman also said in August that he would take an extended leave of absence; he returned in November.

Other OpenAI executives and employees left the company throughout 2024
Andrej Karpathy wearing a black sweater
Andrej Karpathy left OpenAI in 2017 to join Tesla but returned in 2023.

San Francisco Chronicle/Hearst Newspapers via Getty Images

Including Sutskever, at least nine notable OpenAI employees have left the company in 2024, Business Insider found. Among them were OpenAI co-founders Andrej Karpathy and John Schulman.

OpenAI raised a $6.6 billion funding round in October — the biggest in Silicon Valley's history
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman addresses the Station F in Paris
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman

JOEL SAGET/AFP via Getty Images

The funding round valued OpenAI at $157 billion, putting it on a similar footing with Uber and AT&T.

Thrive Capital led the round. Other major investors in OpenAI's round included SoftBank, Tiger Global, Microsoft, and Nvidia.

In November, xAI told investors it had raised $5 billion at a $50 billion valuation, The Journal reported.

In November, OpenAI allegedly deleted legal data in its legal fight with The New York Times and other newspapers
new york times building
The New York Times' headquarters

Avalon/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Lawyers for the newspapers were reviewing OpenAI's training data as part of the lawsuit.

In November, they learned that "OpenAI's engineers erased all of the News Plaintiffs' programs and search result data," according to a filing in the case. OpenAI did not respond to a request for comment at the time.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Fog of war: The US Navy's Red Sea Super Hornet shootdown is this fight's 2nd friendly-fire incident

An F/A-18F Super Hornet flies past the aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman in November.
An F/A-18F Super Hornet flies past the aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman in November.

US Navy courtesy photo by Lt. Lily Moorhead

  • A US Navy warship accidentally shot down an American fighter jet over the Red Sea on Sunday.
  • The crew members survived, but it marks the second friendly-fire incident of the Houthi conflict.
  • These incidents highlight the complex operating environment in which NATO forces have engaged.

Though there are still a lot of unanswered questions, the accidental downing of a US Navy fighter jet by an American warship in the Red Sea over the weekend underscores the risks and complexity of intense combat in a high-tempo operating environment.

The shootdown marks the second known friendly-fire incident for American and allied forces this year as they continue to battle the Houthi rebels in Yemen. In February, a German warship mistakenly targeted an American military drone, but a malfunction spared the uncrewed aircraft from getting hit.

Early Sunday morning local time, the guided-missile cruiser USS Gettysburg mistakenly fired on an F/A-18 Super Hornet flying above the Red Sea, downing the carrier-based fighter in what the US military said was "an apparent case of friendly fire."

US Central Command said that two naval aviators ejected safely from the aircraft and were recovered by the Navy. It added that an initial assessment suggests one of the crew members sustained minor injuries. A two-seater F/A-18 typically has a pilot and weapons officer.

Centcom, which oversees US forces in the Middle East, said the incident "was not the result of hostile fire, and a full investigation is underway." It did not respond to Business Insider's requests for more information.

An F/A-18F Super Hornet takes off from the flight deck of the aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman in December.
An F/A-18F Super Hornet takes off from the flight deck of the aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman in December.

US Navy photo

Friendly-fire engagements aren't uncommon occurrences in combat, especially high-intensity fights.

During the Gulf War, for instance, an A-10 Warthog killed nine British soldiers when the ground-attack aircraft opened fire on their armored personnel carriers, mistaking them for Iraqi vehicles. A few years later, F-15s shot down two Black Hawks on a humanitarian mission, killing 26 people. The pilots mistook the helicopters for Iraqi targets they thought were violating a "no fly" zone.

There are numerous examples across military conflicts, a more recent incident being a US airstrike in Afghanistan that killed five American servicemembers in 2014.

Bradley Martin, a retired Navy surface warfare captain, said friendly-fire incidents are "likely to eventually occur in the complicated and rapidly changing environment of air defense." There are a wide range of things that can go wrong.

"Friendly and enemy aircraft can be in the engagement areas. Identification systems can malfunction," Martin, now a senior policy researcher at the RAND Corporation, told BI. "Friendly aircraft profiles can look like threat profiles. And certainly, human error can enter into the equation. Operators may have minutes or even seconds to make a determination and, mistakes occur."

The guided-missile cruiser USS Gettysburg sails in the Middle East in December.
The guided-missile cruiser USS Gettysburg sails in the Middle East in December.

US Navy photo

"I think it's important to remember that the Navy has been reacting to intense air attacks now for over a year, with more engagements in a month than we'd seen in decades," Martin said, referring to the Navy's tireless efforts to fend off Houthi missiles and drones.

"These have been largely successful, but with a large number of engagements comes the increased risk of mistakes and malfunctions," he said.

And mistakes have been made, though nothing fatal. In February, a German frigate accidentally targeted an American MQ-9 Reaper drone while it was on a mission in the vicinity of the Red Sea. The missiles never reached the drone, though, thanks to a technical error in the warship's radar system.

The German military said at the time, it engaged a drone that lacked a "friend or foe" identification and coordinated with allies in the area before opening fire. It's unclear where the disconnect occurred, but it almost ended in the destruction of an expensive combat and reconnaissance drone.

The F/A-18 Super Hornet that was shot down was part of the air wing attached to the aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman. The Truman and its strike group, which consists of the Gettysburg and two destroyers, entered the Middle East region earlier this month, becoming the latest assortment of Navy warships to join the conflict against the Houthis.

The aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman transits the Mediterranean Sea in November.
The aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman transits the Mediterranean Sea in November.

US Navy courtesy photo by Lt. Lily Moorhead

The F/A-18 is a multi-role fighter jet made by US defense contractor Boeing that has been in service with the Navy for decades. A single aircraft is estimated to cost around $60 million.

The military's acknowledgment of the Red Sea friendly-fire incident came shortly after a combat bout between the US and the Houthis. Centcom said it carried out strikes against Houthi facilities in Yemen, and during the operation, its forces shot down multiple drones and a cruise missile.

It is unclear if the friendly-fire incident occurred during the operation, which took place at some point on Saturday local time. Centcom said that F/A-18s were involved in the mission.

The Houthis said that they launched eight cruise missiles and 17 drones during the battle with the US military. The rebels said this led to the downing of the F/A-18 and ultimately forced the Truman to withdraw to another part of the Red Sea.

The Houthis have spent the past year launching missiles and drones at military and civilian vessels operating in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden. The rebels claim they are acting in solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza and have stepped up their long-range attacks on Israel in recent days. US, British, and Israeli forces have carried out extensive strikes on Houthi targets in Yemen.

Read the original article on Business Insider

I make Ina Garten's easy potato gratin for my family every Christmas, and it's the best holiday side dish

Ina Garten's potato gratin
I make Ina Garten's potato gratin for my family every Christmas.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

  • I make Ina Garten's potato-fennel gratin every Christmas.
  • I first made it when I barely knew how to cook, and the easy recipe was 100% foolproof.
  • The dish is cheesy and comforting and pairs perfectly with any holiday side dish.

There's one "Barefoot Contessa" recipe I make for my family every Christmas, and I think it deserves a spot on everyone's holiday menu.

I originally found Ina Garten's recipe for potato-fennel gratin on the Barefoot Contessa website, but it also appears in her first cookbook, "The Barefoot Contessa Cookbook."

"I love to make potato gratin and fennel gratin, so I decided to combine the two," Garten writes in the description. "If you make this in an old French gratin dish, it looks wonderful and can go from the oven to the table with style."

I started making Garten's potato-fennel gratin when I had almost zero cooking skills, so I can attest that it's 100% foolproof. More importantly, it's incredibly comforting — and goes well with nearly everything.

Here's how to make it.

Ina Garten's potato-fennel gratin requires just five main ingredients.
Ingredients for Ina Garten's potato gratin
Garten's potato-fennel gratin also includes heavy cream and Gruyère cheese.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

To make Garten's gratin for four, you'll need:

  • 1 pound russet potatoes (2 large ones)
  • 1 small fennel bulb
  • ½ yellow onion
  • 1½ cups Gruyère cheese
  • 1½ cups plus 1 tablespoon heavy cream
The first step is properly cutting the fennel.
Fennel for Ina Garten potato gratin
Garten's recipe was the first time I'd ever cooked with fennel.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

I will admit that the first time I made this dish, I had to watch a Martha Stewart YouTube video on how to cut fennel.

But if you're an amateur, there's no need to let this herb intimidate you.
Fennel for Ina Garten's potato gratin
Make sure to thinly slice the fennel bulb.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

First, cut off the stalks as close to the bulb as possible. Then, cut the bulb in half lengthwise.

Remove the cores at the bottom. For Garten's recipe, you'll then thinly slice the bulb halves crosswise — which should make about two cups of fennel.

Pro tip: Don't throw out your stalks and fronds! Stewart recommends using the fronds in salads and saving the stalk to flavor stockpot dishes.

Once that's out of the way, get your onion ready.
Onions for Ina Garten's potato gratin
You'll also want to thinly slice your onion.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

You should thinly slice your yellow onion for this dish.

Peel your potatoes, then slice them crosswise.
Potatoes for Ina Garten's potato gratin
Peel your potatoes before thinly slicing them.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

Garten recommends thinly slicing them by hand or with a mandoline.

You'll also need to grate your Gruyère cheese.
Cheese for Ina Garten's potato gratin
Garten's recipe calls for the Gruyère cheese to be grated.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

Preparing Garten's gratin takes under 10 minutes, which is great when you're juggling multiple dishes for a holiday feast.

And don't forget to butter your baking dish!
Buttered pan for Ina Garten's potato gratin
Make sure to butter your baking dish before building the gratin.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

If you're making the gratin for four, Garten recommends using a 9-by-9-by-2-inch baking dish.

Once you're done with your prep, sauté your fennel and onions together.
Onions in a pan for Ina Garten's potato gratin
Sauté your fennel and onions for 10 to 15 minutes.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

Per Garten's recipe, you'll want to add 1 tablespoon of olive oil and ½ tablespoon of unsalted butter to a pan.

Then, sauté the fennel and onions on medium-low heat for 10 to 15 minutes, until they're tender.

While your stove is working away, add your potatoes to a large bowl with the heavy cream.
Potatoes with cream for Ina Garten's potato gratin
First, add the potatoes and heavy cream to a large bowl.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

You'll use 1 ½ cups of heavy cream for this step.

Then, add 1 cup of the Gruyère cheese, as well as salt and pepper.
Potatoes with cream, cheese, seasoning for Ina Garten's potato gratin
Add your Gruyère cheese, plus salt and pepper.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

Garten recommends adding ½ teaspoon of salt and ¼ teaspoon of pepper to the mix.

I really love pepper, so, as you can see, I may have added a touch more.

Next, add your sautéed fennel and onions on top.
Onions and potato mixture for Ina Garten's potato gratin
Don't forget to add your sautéed fennel and onions.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

It's almost time to bake!

To build the gratin, start by pouring your potato mixture into the baking dish.
The potato mixture in a pan for Ina Garten's potato gratin
Smooth your potato mixture in the baking dish.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

Gently press down to smooth the potatoes out.

Then, mix the rest of your heavy cream and cheese together and sprinkle on top.
The potato mixture in a pan for Ina Garten's potato gratin
Then, add the rest of your cheese and heavy cream on top.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

Remember, you'll want to use 1 tablespoon of cream and ½ cup of Gruyère for this quick step.

After an hour in the oven at 350 degrees Fahrenheit, your gratin will be beautifully browned and bubbly — and almost ready to eat.
Ina Garten's potato gratin
Garten's gratin looks beautifully golden-brown when it comes out of the oven.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

Garten recommends letting the gratin sit for 10 minutes before serving it hot.

She also notes that the gratin can be cooked a day ahead and reheated at 350 degrees for 30 minutes, a helpful tip if you want to save some time during the holidays.

Garten's potato-fennel gratin doesn't just look delicious — it tastes incredible, too.
Ina Garten's potato gratin
And it tastes like a creamy, cheesy dream.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

Few things in this world are more comforting than potatoes mixed with heavy cream and cheese. Garten's gratin is creamy and satisfying, thanks to the Gruyère, and the potatoes are perfectly cooked. Since the fennel is sautéed, its flavor is mild and sweet rather than overpowering.

But one of the best things about the gratin is how well it goes with everything, making it a great sidekick for any meat or holiday side dish.

I think the potato-fennel gratin is a perfect side for any holiday spread.
Ina Garten's potato gratin on a plate
I can't wait to make Garten's gratin for Christmas again.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

It's so simple to make that you could easily delegate the task to a young budding chef in your family or at least let the kids help you with it in the kitchen. Plus, the gratin is easy to make ahead and reheat before dinner, giving you some much-needed space in the oven for a big holiday menu.

And you can't go wrong with creamy potatoes and cheese, especially during the winter season.

Believe me, you'll all be fighting for seconds.

Read the original article on Business Insider

I spent $1,500 at a wellness resort with ocean views and a personal guide. It's the only all-inclusive I'd return to.

A lobby area filled with different green and gray seating arrangements, hanging wicker lighting fixtures, and potted plants
I paid $1,500 for a three-night stay at Palmaïa, The House of AïA.

Rebecca Strong

  • I paid $1,500 for a three-night stay at a wellness resort called Palmaïa, The House of AïA.
  • My king suite with an ocean view was super comfortable and I loved the 24-hour room service.
  • I left the resort feeling better than I did when I arrived, so I'd say it was worth the money.

For me, traveling is the ultimate act of self-care. So, when I came across a wellness resort called Palmaïa, The House of AïA, on Hotels.com's Perfect Somewheres list — which highlights some of the top 1% of hotels on the company's app — I booked a trip.

I'd seen some of my favorite influencers raving about their stays at the all-inclusive resort located in Playa del Carmen, Mexico, so I had high hopes for my trip to the wellness spot.

As a Hotels.com Platinum One Key member, I got a 36% discount when I booked my trip and paid about $1,500 for a three-night stay.

Here's what my experience was like.

The accommodations were more than comfortable.
A bed with white sheets next to a wall with gray stones and a wall with a green pattern
My king suite had high ceilings, a massive bathroom, and sweeping ocean views.

Rebecca Strong

During my trip, I stayed in a king suite with an ocean view.

I don't tend to sleep well while traveling, but at Palmaïa, I had no trouble getting seven to eight hours of shuteye. The king-size mattress was perfectly firm, and my room always felt cool.

The high ceilings, chic sitting area, exposed-brick wall, and enormous bathroom with plenty of counter space didn't hurt, either.

I loved the 24-hour room service and took full advantage of it.
A bowl of black-bean soup with a yellow topping, herbs, and tomatoes
Late-night black-bean enfrijoladas hit the spot after a long day of travel.

Rebecca Strong

When I arrived at the hotel around midnight, I was excited to learn the resort offered 24-hour room service.

Upon checking in, the receptionist took my order, and a piping-hot dish of black-bean enfrijoladas (a type of enchiladas served with a black-bean sauce) arrived just moments after I was escorted to my room.

Around-the-clock room service also came in handy when I was craving a snack or didn't have time to sit down for breakfast.

The resort's nomadic guide added a personalized touch to my experience.
A lobby area filled with different green and gray seating arrangements, hanging wicker lighting fixtures, and potted plants
My nomadic guide escorted me across the resort when I didn't know how to get to an activity.

Rebecca Strong

During my stay, I was assigned a nomadic guide — a staff member who acts as a personal concierge. Each morning, my guide messaged me with updates about the day's scheduled activities and dinner reservations.

They even escorted me from my room to a class when I didn't know how to get there, replaced my room key when I lost mine, and arranged for a staff member to take me to a convenience store for medicine when I developed a sun rash.

There were tons of food options and nonalcoholic beverages to choose from.
A bowl of fruit including apples, pineapples, strawberries, and blueberries, sitting next to a glass of green juice
I loved the range of plant-based dishes available at the resort.

Rebecca Strong

The resort has four main restaurants, all of which I enjoyed dining at. Many of the creative takes on traditional Mexican dishes were flavorful and nutrient-rich — think waffles infused with matcha and plant-based poke bowls with marinated watermelon "tuna."

Palmaïa offered lots of vegan, gluten-free, and nut-free items. However, as someone who doesn't have any dietary restrictions, I appreciated that I had the option to add barbacoa to my tacos or real Parmesan to my salads.

I also loved that Palmaïa had unique nonalcoholic drinks with the option to add liquor. The restaurants offered wine and cocktails, but alcohol didn't seem to be a central part of the resort's social environment.

The activities were super unique.
Three instructors sit on a mat with an arrangement filled with bowls and candles outdoors
The outdoor cacao ceremony was an experience to remember.

Rebecca Strong

All-inclusive resorts typically offer access to fun activities, but Palmaïa's daily itineraries were truly one-of-a-kind.

I participated in a few activities — including a mindfulness-focused drawing session and a primal-movement class — but my favorite experience was an outdoor cacao ceremony.

This session, inspired by Mayan tradition, involved setting intentions and drinking a ceremonial cacao beverage while listening to live music.

Getting around the grounds was a breeze.
View of a woman in a black outfit riding a bike with palm trees in the foreground
I took full advantage of the on-site bikes.

Rebecca Strong

I've been to resorts that are so sprawling it takes 15 minutes or longer to walk from my room to a restaurant. Luckily, this wasn't the case at Palmaïa — the grounds were super walkable.

Even better, Palmaïa offered complimentary bicycles for guests to use around the property. I used them when I was rushing to scheduled activities or just wanted to feel the breeze on my face.

I never had to fight for a beach or poolside chair.
A hand holds a tan book with text that says "Language of the Body" over a pool, with the writer's legs stretched above the water
I relaxed with a book at the pool.

Rebecca Strong

Palmaïa had no shortage of places to swim or relax with a good book.

There were a few infinity, adults-only, and kid-friendly pools in front of the guest-room buildings. The long stretch of beach in front of the resort also had ample cabanas and lounge chairs.

There were even some cenotes — large natural pools — in a jungle area on the property.

The trip was a tad expensive — but I'd go back in a heartbeat.
A greenhouse filled with palm trees, bonsai, and other plants with a glass roof looking onto trees
I'd definitely return to Palmaïa, The House of AïA.

Rebecca Strong

This trip may have been a splurge, but it was well worth the $1,500. In the past, I've often found myself coming home from all-inclusive getaways feeling worse than when I arrived — maybe due to all the food, alcohol, and sedentary time on the beach.

However, between the engaging activities, the nutrient-dense meals, and the attentive staff catering to my every need, Palmaïa left me feeling refreshed, renewed, and invigorated — and (almost) ready to return to real life.

Read the original article on Business Insider

American is adding 3 new longer-range routes from New York LaGuardia. They'll fly only once a week because of this rule.

American plane at the gate in LaGuardia.
American is adding new routes from LaGuardia using a workaround to the airport's perimeter rule.

Joe Raedle/Getty Images

  • American Airlines will launch new longer-haul routes from LaGuardia. They'll only fly once weekly.
  • LaGuardia's new routes are doable thanks to the "perimeter rule" being waived on Saturdays.
  • American and other airlines also use perimeter rule exemptions in Washington, DC.

American Airlines will use a special rule exception to fly longer-than-normal routes out of New York's LaGuardia Airport next year.

An airline spokesperson confirmed to Business Insider on Monday that American will launch new flights to Bozeman and Kalispell in Montana and Calgary in Canada in June 2025 to target leisure travelers.

There is one caveat: The routes will only operate on Saturdays.

This is because, to manage airport capacity, LaGuardia allows flights of only 1,500 miles or fewer from Sunday through Friday. This is known as a "perimeter rule." Longer flights and bigger jets are primarily pushed to the nearby Newark Liberty and John F. Kennedy airports.

However, the rule is waived for flights to Denver at all times and for flights operated to all other places on Saturdays. The latter exception gave American the leeway it needed to fly the new Saturday routes to Montana and Canada.

LaGurdia's slot restriction is also waived on Saturdays, meaning American won't need special takeoff and landing permissions for the routes. Cirium data shows all three flights will use a Boeing 737 Max and trek about 2,000 miles.

Operating Saturday-only flights to avoid the perimeter rule at LaGuardia is not new, though airlines have struggled to fill planes because Saturdays are lower-demand days.

Delta Air Lines, for example, cut two Saturday cross-country flights from LaGuardia to Los Angeles and Phoenix in January.

American also uses perimeter exemptions in the US capital

Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Washington, DC, is the only other US airport with a mandated perimeter rule. The restrictions at both airports were established in the 1980s.

Reagan's routes are limited to 1,250 miles. Dulles International Airport, about 30 miles away, gets longer flights.

However, over the past two decades, Congress has increased daily slot allowances to allow for more flights beyond the perimeter on Sunday through Friday.

American and other airlines have taken advantage of the exemptions. Cirium shows American already flies daily to Las Vegas, Los Angeles, and Phoenix.

Alaska Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Frontier Airlines, Southwest Airlines, and United Airlines also use exemptions to fly daily from Reagan to cities like Los Angeles, San Francisco, Austin, Denver, and Seattle.

An Alaska Airlines Boeing 737-800 jet flies past the U.S. Capitol dome as it comes in for a landing at Washington Reagan National airport in Arlington, Va., on Thursday, February 15, 2024.
Airlines fly near the Capitol during final approach to Washington National Airport.

CQ-Roll Call, Inc./Getty Images

The Federal Aviation Administration Reauthorization Bill, signed in May, approved 10 additional slots that could operate within or beyond Reagan's perimeter. That equates to five more roundtrip flights.

American was awarded one of the slots on Friday, a daily roundtrip to San Antonio starting in March. It will be the only airline operating the flight.

Meanwhile, Delta was awarded a slot pair to Seattle, Alaska was given one to San Diego, Southwest will use one to serve Las Vegas, and United received approval to San Francisco — which will be the airline's second daily flight to the California city.

There is debate over keeping the perimeter rule at Reagan and LaGuardia.

Some advocates say it reduces noise and airport congestion and ensures airlines don't shift slots to abandon regional routes within the perimeter. A near-miss at Reagan in May also sparked concern that more flights could impact runway safety.

Opponents of the rule say it restricts airline networks, gives travelers less choice, raises airfares, and limits economic growth. For lawmakers, eliminating the rule at Reagan would mean more convenient flights into DC from their home states.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Taylor Swift is in her WAG era — here's every time she's cheered on Travis Kelce and the Chiefs

taylor swift travis kelce super bowl
Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift hug at the 2024 Super Bowl.

Patrick T. Fallon/AFP via Getty Images

  • Taylor Swift has supported her boyfriend, Travis Kelce, at all four Chiefs home games this season.
  • She's been photographed at 20 football games total since last September, including Super Bowl LVIII.
  • Swift tends to wear Chiefs gear and dress up in the team's red-forward color palette.

Taylor Swift famously sang, "You know I love the players, and you love the game." But when it comes to the Kansas City Chiefs, it looks like she loves them both.

Since Swift began dating NFL star Travis Kelce last summer, she has been spotted cheering at 20 of his games so far, including Super Bowl LVIII.

"I'm just there to support Travis," Swift told Time. "I have no awareness of if I'm being shown too much and pissing off a few dads, Brads, and Chads."

The megastar is back in action for her second NFL season, supporting Kelce and the Chiefs in their first three home games against the Ravens, Bengals, and Saints.

We rounded up the best photos of Swift from each appearance so far.

Swift attended her first game at Arrowhead Stadium in September 2023.
taylor swift chiefs game
Taylor Swift at Arrowhead Stadium on September 24, 2023.

David Eulitt/Getty Images

Swift's enthusiasm at her first Chiefs game seemed to confirm her rumored romance with Kelce.

Swift later said they were already an official couple before she watched the Chiefs beat the Chicago Bears.

"This all started when Travis very adorably put me on blast on his podcast, which I thought was metal as hell," she told Time. "We started hanging out right after that. So we actually had a significant amount of time that no one knew, which I'm grateful for, because we got to get to know each other."

"By the time I went to that first game, we were a couple," Swift continued. "I think some people think that they saw our first date at that game? We would never be psychotic enough to hard launch a first date."

For her second appearance, she brought her longtime pal Blake Lively.
taylor swift blake lively chiefs game
Taylor Swift and Blake Lively at MetLife Stadium on October 1, 2023.

Kevin Sabitus/Getty Images

Swift and Lively watched the Chiefs defeat the New York Jets at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey — where Swift had performed three sold-out concerts just a few months prior.

The October game drew the highest viewership for a Sunday TV show since the Super Bowl, NBC Sports reported.

Indeed, Swift's newfound interest in football has been credited with bumping merch sales and enticing more female viewers.

Swift cheered with her boyfriend's mom, Donna Kelce, during a home game against the Denver Broncos.
taylor swift donna kelce chiefs game
Taylor Swift and Donna Kelce at Arrowhead Stadium on October 12, 2023.

David Eulitt/Getty Images

Shortly before her third game-day appearance, Kelce accused the NFL of "overdoing it" with its wall-to-wall coverage of Swift.

"I think it's fun when they show who all is at the game. I think it brings a little more to the atmosphere, brings a little bit more to what you're watching," Kelce said during an episode of his "New Heights" podcast.

"But at the same time, I think they're overdoing it a little bit," Kelce continued. "For sure, especially for my situation. I think they're just trying to have fun with it."

Swift has struck up a close friendship with Brittany Mahomes, who's married to Kelce's teammate.
taylor swift brittany mahomes chiefs game
Taylor Swift and Brittany Mahomes at Arrowhead Stadium on October 22, 2023.

David Eulitt/Getty Images

Just a few days before the release of "1989 (Taylor's Version)," the rerecorded version of her fifth album, Swift watched the Chiefs take down the Los Angeles Chargers.

She spent the home game cheering with Mahomes and showing off their secret handshake.

Swift wore a black turtleneck and a red teddy coat in Green Bay, Wisconsin.
taylor swift brittany mahomes nfl game
Taylor Swift and Brittany Mahomes at Lambeau Field on December 3, 2023.

Stacy Revere/Getty Images

Swift spent most of November 2023 on the road for the South American leg of The Eras Tour. Kelce even flew to Buenos Aires, Argentina, to watch Swift perform — and received an onstage shout-out in return.

She returned to Kelce's side in early December when the Chiefs took on the Green Bay Packers. It was her first time watching Kelce's team lose.

She wore a vintage Chiefs sweatshirt for the team's next home game.
Taylor Swift in a stand at a football game.
Taylor Swift at Arrowhead Stadium on December 10, 2023.

Jamie Squire/Getty Images

Swift purchased the '90s sweatshirt from Westside Storey, a secondhand clothing boutique in Kansas City.

The store's owner, Chris Harrington, told Business Insider he originally thought Swift's order — which totaled $1,200 for curated vintage pieces — could be fraudulent.

Instead, she wore one of those pieces at Arrowhead Stadium in December, causing a surge of traffic to Westside Storey's website.

"We've had hundreds of orders over the last 48 hours," Harrington told BI. "Sometimes our online store lights up after a Chiefs game when we win, but this is 100 times more than that, and we lost the game. It was the Taylor effect."

She brought her dad and friends to cheer for the Chiefs in Foxborough, Massachusetts.
taylor swift chiefs game
Taylor Swift at Gillette Stadium on December 17, 2023.

Danielle Parhizkaran/The Boston Globe via Getty Images

Swift hit the road to watch the Chiefs defeat the New England Patriots on the latter's home turf. She even convinced her father, Scott Swift, to swap his traditional Philadelphia Eagles gear for a Chiefs sweatshirt.

Several friends accompanied Swift, including Alana Haim, stylist Ashley Avignone, and backup singer Melanie Nyema.

Swift spent Christmas Day at Arrowhead Stadium.
Taylor Swift appears at a December 25 Chiefs game against the Raiders wearing a Santa hat with Travis Kelce's number on it.
Taylor Swift at Arrowhead Stadium on December 25, 2023.

Jamie Squire/Getty Images

Even though the Chiefs lost to the Las Vegas Raiders on December 25, 2023, Kelce praised Swift and her family for making the day special.

The singer's brother, Austin Swift, even gave him a sentimental gift while dressed as Santa Claus, Kelce shared on his podcast.

She also spent New Year's Eve cheering for Kelce in Kansas City.
taylor swift chiefs game
Taylor Swift at Arrowhead Stadium on December 31, 2023.

Jamie Squire/Getty Images

Swift wore a Chiefs varsity jacket for the game against the Cincinnati Bengals, which the home team won.

For her first game of 2024, Swift braved freezing temperatures to high-five fans.
taylor swift chiefs game
Taylor Swift at Arrowhead Stadium on January 13, 2024.

Jamie Squire/Getty Images

The Chiefs defeated the Miami Dolphins during the fourth-coldest game in NFL history, according to CNN.

That same day, the Chiefs owner praised Swift and Kelce's "purely organic" relationship.

"It's been a very interesting, very fun year having the two of them dating, the attention that's been focused on the Chiefs," Clark Hunt told CNBC. "Our female audience has grown leaps and bounds."

Kelce scored two touchdowns in Buffalo, New York, with Swift in the stands.
taylor swift chiefs game
Taylor Swift at Highmark Stadium on January 21, 2024.

Kathryn Riley/Getty Images

Swift joined Kelce's family to watch the Chiefs advance through the NFL playoffs — including his brother, Eagles center Jason Kelce, who lost his shirt in the frenzy.

She saw Kelce and his teammates become AFC champions.
travis kelce taylor swift
Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift celebrate the Chiefs' AFC Championship win.

Patrick Smith/Getty Images

Swift watched the Chiefs beat the Baltimore Ravens in the 2024 AFC Championship Game, securing their spot in Super Bowl LVIII. She even joined Kelce on the field to celebrate the win.

Swift flew from Tokyo to watch the Chiefs play in Super Bowl LVIII.
taylor swift super bowl
Taylor Swift at Allegiant Stadium on February 11, 2024.

Ezra Shaw/Getty Images

Swift was widely expected to attend the 2024 Super Bowl in Las Vegas, despite having an Eras Tour stop scheduled in Tokyo the night before.

Sure enough, she made the trip in time to watch the Chiefs take on the San Francisco 49ers, with friends like Lively, Lana Del Rey, and Ice Spice in tow.

The superstar geared up for her second NFL season in September 2024.
Taylor Swift walking in an all denim outfit
Taylor Swift arrives ahead of the Kansas City Chiefs v Baltimore Ravens game at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium on September 05, 2024 in Kansas City, Missouri.

David Eulitt

Swift was back in Kansas City on the evening of September 5, 2024, as the Chiefs took the field for their first game of the season against the Baltimore Ravens.

She donned an all-denim getup and thigh-high red boots.

Swift wore a vintage Chiefs T-shirt for Kelce's second home game of the season.
Danielle Haim and Taylor Swift arrive at Arrowhead Stadium on September 15, 2024.
Danielle Haim and Taylor Swift arrive at Arrowhead Stadium on September 15, 2024.

Scott Winters/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Just a few days after attending the MTV Video Music Awards in New York (and giving her boyfriend a shout-out onstage), Swift was back in Kansas City to watch the Chiefs defeat the Cincinnati Bengals.

She also watched the Chiefs beat the Saints at Arrowhead Stadium.
Taylor Swift cheers from a VIP suite at Arrowhead Stadium on October 7, 2024.
Taylor Swift cheers from a VIP suite at Arrowhead Stadium on October 7, 2024.

Cooper Neill/Getty Images

After skipping two of Kelce's games in Atlanta and Los Angeles, Swift returned to Kansas City in style — wearing over $50,000 worth of jewelry and designer clothing — to cheer for the Chiefs against the New Orleans Saints.

The home team won 26-13, their fifth consecutive win of the season.

Swift cheered when the Chiefs beat the Buccaneers with a touchdown drive in overtime.
Taylor Swift waves to fans at Arrowhead Stadium on November 4, 2024.
Taylor Swift waves to fans at Arrowhead Stadium on November 4, 2024.

Aaron M. Sprecher/Getty Images

One day after Swift wrapped the final US leg of the Eras Tour in Indianapolis, she was back in Kansas City to watch the Chiefs take on the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

Despite a touchdown from the Buccaneers in the final minute of regulation play, the Chiefs rallied in overtime to score a winning touchdown.

The singer was on duty again to watch the Chiefs defeat the Denver Broncos.
Taylor Swift at Arrowhead Stadium on November 10, 2024.
Taylor Swift at Arrowhead Stadium on November 10, 2024.

Jamie Squire/Getty Images

Swift wore her typical black-and-red combo for another home game at Arrowhead Stadium, pairing a Victoria's Secret corset with a Versace tweed two-piece set. She was joined in the VIP box by her mother, Andrea Swift.

Swift saw the Chiefs beat the Raiders at home.
Taylor Swift and Donna Kelce arrive at Arrowhead Stadium on November 29, 2024.
Taylor Swift and Donna Kelce arrive at Arrowhead Stadium on November 29, 2024.

Jamie Squire/Getty Images

Swift arrived at Arrowhead Stadium with Kelce's mom, Donna. The pair cheered as the Chiefs clinched a narrow defeat against the Los Vegas Raiders.

A few weeks later, she watched the Chiefs win again at Arrowhead Stadium.
Taylor Swift arrives at Arrowhead Stadium on December 21, 2024.
Taylor Swift arrives at Arrowhead Stadium on December 21, 2024.

Scott Winters/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Swift wore her boldest gameday outfit yet for the Chiefs vs. the Houston Texans, pairing a statement red coat with a faux fur lining from Charlotte Simone with a vintage Chanel bucket hat.

Kelce and the Chiefs beat the Texans 19-27, adding another win to their dominant season. (To date, the Chiefs have only lost three times with Swift in the stands.)

Read the original article on Business Insider

Business leaders share 5 ways they're taking AI from pilot to use case

Workforce Innovation Series template with vertical, colorful stripes on the left and bottom sides. A blue-tinted photo of coworkers looking at computer monitors

Getty Images; Andrius Banelis for BI

In the business world, there are few areas that artificial intelligence hasn't touched. Many industries are rushing to adopt AI, and the technology is changing how employees collaborate and complete tasks.

Generative AI is a major buzzword for business leaders. But actually integrating AI can be a different story.

"A lot of our clients have dozens of AI pilots everywhere," Jack Azagury, the group chief executive for consulting at Accenture, said at one Workforce Innovation roundtable. "Very few have a coherent business case and a true reinvention and transformation."

How do companies move forward as the novelty of AI wears off? Business Insider's Julia Hood asked members of the Workforce Innovation board how they transitioned their AI pilots into real-world use cases. Board members shared five major ways their companies were moving AI from theory to operations.

"Before we go and tell our clients to embark on AI fully, we want to be an AI-first organization," said Anant Adya, an executive vice president, service-offering head, and head of Americas delivery at Infosys. "We want to show our clients we are using AI, whether it is in HR when it comes to driving better employee experience or when it comes to recruitment."

Members also highlighted employee training and peer-to-peer learning opportunities.

The roundtable participants were:

  • Anant Adya, an executive vice president, service-offering head, and head of Americas Delivery at Infosys.
  • Lucrecia Borgonovo, a chief talent and organizational-effectiveness officer at Mastercard.
  • Neil Murray, the CEO of Work Dynamics at JLL.
  • Justina Nixon-Saintil, a vice president and chief impact officer at IBM.
  • Marjorie Powell, a chief HR officer and senior vice president at AARP.

The following has been edited for length and clarity.


Identify early adopters, like human resources

Nixon-Saintil: Because we provide these platforms and solutions to clients, we are usually client zero. We implemented AI across our business and multiple functions, and one of the first things we did was our AskHR product, which I think answered over 94% of questions employees had.

HR employees now spend time doing higher-order work and partnerships with business units instead of answering basic questions that a virtual assistant can answer. I think that's when you start seeing a lot of the benefits of it.

Borgonovo: HR has been leading the way in terms of embedding AI to enhance the employee experience end to end, right before you hire somebody all the way to after they leave the organization. There are tons of opportunities to improve performance and productivity and provide greater personalization.


Invest in ongoing training

Adya: There are certain AI certifications and courses that everybody has to take to be knowledgeable about AI. So we are driving education in terms of what is the impact of AI, what is gen AI, what are LLMs, and how you look at use cases. And certainly educating everybody that it's not about job losses but about amplifying your potential to do more.

Powell: We have hands-on skill building. This past year we posted over 20 AI workshops helping teams integrate AI into their work. We really encourage our staff to participate. We have a product we're using behind our firewall, so they can engage and play with it. We're just telling them go ahead and try to break it, so they can give us feedback on what's working.

There was a team of people who said we want to see how you could use AI with PowerPoint or Excel. And they're finding, well, it's not so good in those things. But as it continues to grow, they'll be ready for that, and they'll know what it was able to do and what it wasn't. I think it's just making it fun, and that way it's not so scary.

Murray: Our internal large language model is now a widget on everybody's dashboard that is accessible on your landing page. Training is super important here to make people comfortable with it. Even if it's just an online module, you have to get people comfortable.

Nixon-Saintil: We've also done companywide upskilling. We had two Watsonx challenges. Watsonx is our AI data platform. This is one of the ways we've upskilled a majority of the organization. The outcome of that is there are some great ideas that employees actually ideated, and they're now implementing those ideas and solutions in different functions.

Borgonovo: Employees want to use AI, and I think they're eager to learn how to use AI to augment their jobs. For that, we built a three-tiered learning approach. One is democratizing access for everybody and building general knowledge of AI.

The second tier is much more role-specific. How do we drive new ways of working by having people in different roles embrace AI tools? Software engineering, consulting, sales — you name it. And then something we definitely want to build for the future is thinking proactively about how you re-skill people whose roles may be impacted by AI so they can become more comfortable doing high-level tasks or can shift to a different type of role that is emerging within the organization.

The other piece is where we're seeing the greatest demand internally, which is for knowledge management. It's gathering information from a lot of different sources in a very easy way.

Another job family that is very eager to get their hands on new AI technology is software engineering. We have taken a very measured approach in deploying coding assistants within the software-engineering community. This year we did a pilot with a subset of them using coding assistants. The idea is to just learn and, based on our learning, scale more broadly across our software-engineering community in 2025.

One of the really interesting learnings from this pilot was that the software engineers who were using the coding assistants probably the best were people who had received training. What we're learning is that before you start rolling out all of these technologies or AI-specific platforms for different job families, you have got to be really intentional about incorporating prompt training.


Unlock peer-to-peer learning

Powell: We have idea pitch competitions and a year-round idea pipeline program where people can put in ideas on how to use AI and share what they've learned. It sparks a lot of peer learning and creativity on our digital-first capabilities to help us with our digital transformation.

Then we collaborate through community. We have a generative-AI community of practice. This is somewhat like how companies have employee resource groups; we have communities of practice as well. They give employees a space to share their techniques and learn from each other and stay ahead of evolving trends. They meet monthly, they have an executive sponsor, and they have all kinds of activities and learning opportunities.

Murray: As we monitored AI use and what sort of questions were being asked, we identified super users across all departments — so the people who were capable of developing the most evolved prompts. I suppose those prompts are now appearing in pull-down menus to help people who maybe aren't as advanced in their use of it, because prompting is a really important part of this. And so the super users are driving everybody else to show them what's possible across the organization.


Find customer pain points to solve

Borgonovo: One of the use cases that drives not only knowledge management but also efficiencies is around customer support. Customer support is probably one of the areas that has been leading the way.

We have a customer onboarding process that can be very lengthy, very technical, involving hundreds of pages of documentation and reference materials. It was our first use case for a chat-based assistant that we processed in terms of streamlining and creating greater efficiency and a much better customer experience.


Reinforce responsible leadership

Powell: We want our leaders, people leaders particularly, to guide employees to use AI effectively and responsibly. We want to make sure they're emphasizing privacy, policy, and efficiency. So we encourage managers to point the staff toward training that we offer, and we offer quite a bit of training.

Read the original article on Business Insider

A gut-health scientist and trained chef shares 4 easy, tasty ways she eats more fiber

Emily Leeming stands in front of a window and plants in a white linen blouse.
Emily Leeming keeps the snacks she wants to eat more of in an easily accessible place.

Bree Dunbar

  • Fibrous foods like beans, nuts, and seeds feed the "good" microbes in the gut.
  • Most Americans are not meeting the daily recommended fiber intake.
  • Emily Leeming opts for whole grains instead of white carbs and sprinkles seeds on her breakfast.

When it comes to your gut health, eating enough fiber is crucial.

Emily Leeming, a dietitian and gut microbiome researcher at King's College London, told Business Insider how to improve.

From our immune system to our emotions, a growing body of research suggests that the state of our gut health affects the whole body.

The gut microbiome, the trillions of "good" and "bad" microbes that live in the digestive lining, is heavily shaped by what we eat, said Leeming, the author of "Genius Gut: The Life-Changing Science of Eating for Your Second Brain."

The Dietary Guidelines for Americans recommends adults eat 14g of fiber per 1,000 calories. They say more than 90% of women and 97% of men do not.

Leeming, who used to work as a private chef, takes a simple approach to meeting her daily fiber goal, while keeping her meals tasting good.

She shared four tips for easily adding more fiber to your diet.

Stock up on high-fiber foods

Leeming knows which foods are particularly high in fiber and she makes sure to add them to her shopping list.

"There are high-fiber foods that probably surprise people like dark chocolate and avocados," she said. One avocado is about 10 grams of fiber, and two pieces of dark chocolate contain about two grams.

Leeming focuses on what she calls the "B-G B-Gs," which stands for beans, greens, berries, grains, and seeds.

"It's the beans, whole grains, nuts and seeds that tend to contain more fiber than the fruits and vegetables," she said, adding that fruits and veggies are of course still important.

She said berries tend to be higher in fiber than other fruits because they contain seeds.

Make your grains wholegrain

Wholegrains such as oats, quinoa, wild rice, and wholemeal bread, are great sources of fiber, Leeming said. Opting for a wholegrain such as brown rice over its white counterpart is an easy swap that will up your fiber intake, she said.

"I absolutely love pasta. So I do wholegrain pasta," she said. Leeming also adds legumes such as beans or lentils to dishes to up the fiber content even more.

"I'm a really big fan of beans and lentils with tomato sauce and some green veggies or maybe a salad on the side," she said.

Sprinkle nuts and seeds on top of any dish

Sprinkling some mixed nuts and seeds over a dish is a quick way to add some more fiber into your day.

"You can add them to anything. It could be your breakfast in the morning, it could be a salad that you've just made," Leeming said.

Chia seeds and flax seeds are particularly high in fiber, she said. Chia seeds contain about 30 grams of fiber per 100 grams, and 20 grams of flax seeds provide about 6 grams of fiber.

Keep healthy snacks in your line of sight

Leeming also keeps a jar of mixed nuts by her kettle so that she can snack on them when she goes to make a cup of tea.

"The things that I want to eat more of, I keep in my line of sight. That just visually prompts you to go for them as a first step," she said.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Blake Lively's biggest controversies and rumored feuds, from her plantation wedding to the 'It Ends With Us' drama

Blake Lively at the Copenhagen premiere of "It Ends With Us."
Blake Lively at the 2024 CFDA Fashion Awards.

NILS MEILVANG/Ritzau Scanpix/AFP via Getty Images

  • Blake Lively's past controversies resurfaced during a recent public backlash.
  • The actor has been in the spotlight following the release of her movie "It Ends With Us."
  • Lively has accused her costar and director, Justin Baldoni, of sexual harassment and damaging her reputation.

Blake Lively is no stranger to scandal.

The 37-year-old actor has attracted feud rumors since the start of her career, when she landed her breakout role in 2005's "The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants."

Public discourse about Lively's conduct reached a fever pitch during the promotional cycle for her latest box office hit, "It Ends With Us." Now, Lively has filed a lawsuit accusing her costar and director, Justin Baldoni, of sexual harassment and manufacturing outrage on social media to damage her reputation.

Here's a look at some of Lively's biggest controversies over the years.

Lively and her "Gossip Girl" costar Leighton Meester reportedly "avoided each other like the plague" while filming.
Blake Lively and Leighton Meester as Serena and Blair in "Gossip Girl" season one.
Blake Lively and Leighton Meester as Serena and Blair in "Gossip Girl" season one.

The CW/Max

While their "Gossip Girl" characters swung wildly from the ultimate BFF duo to toxic frenemies almost every other episode, off-screen, Lively and Meester were said to have had a frosty relationship.

The CW teen drama ran for six seasons between 2007 and 2012. Lively played the effortlessly cool, free-spirited Serena Van der Woodson, the foil to Meester's controlling queen bee Blair Waldorf.

New York Magazine reported in 2008 that the two stars were said to "avoid each other like the plague" while on set shooting the show's early seasons, with tensions running so high that their castmates were forced to "choose sides."

"Blake and Leighton have never been best friends, and never professed to be. Blake goes to work, does her job, and goes home," a publicist for Lively said at the time, per Harper's Bazaar.

However, speaking to Vanity Fair for a retrospective on the series published in 2017, showrunner Joshua Safran said the pair got on fine on set.

"Blake and Leighton were not friends. They were friendly, but they were not friends like Serena and Blair," he said. "Yet the second they'd be on set together, it's as if they were."

In the same article, recurring cast member Michelle Trachtenberg denied rumors of a full-blown feud between the two.

"It's funny," she said. "Because when we were filming, there was, 'Leighton hates Blake, Blake hates Leighton, everyone hates Blake, everyone hates Leighton, everyone hates Chace,' and blah, blah, blah. It really wasn't. We were all chill. It was cool."

Incidentally, as of 2024, Lively and Meester do not follow each other on Instagram. Meester does, however, follow two of her other costars, Chace Crawford and Penn Badgley.

Rumors swirled that Lively was somehow involved in Armie Hammer's exit from "Gossip Girl."
Armie Hammer on "Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen" in 2017.
Armie Hammer on "Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen" in 2017.

Chris Haston/Bravo/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images

Appearing on "Watch What Happens Live With Andy Cohen," Armie Hammer was asked by an audience member to name the "biggest diva" on the set of "Gossip Girl."

Hammer had a four-episode arc on the series during its second season. He played Gabriel Edwards, a conman who briefly dated Lively's character.

In response to the question, Hammer diplomatically said: "Let me just say that was a tough show to film, and I didn't end up actually filming all of the episodes I was supposed to because it was such a tough film."

"Really? Literally, you said, 'Get me out of this'?" Cohen asked.

"It was also like, 'Get him out of here,'" the actor said.

Cohen followed that up by asking whose love interest he played in the series, prompting Hammer to drop Lively's name.

Chelsea Handler, who also appeared on the talk show, joked, "Sounds like she was the problem."

Cohen added: "It sure does, Chelsea. That's exactly what I was thinking."

"No, no, that's not what I'm saying," Hammer replied, laughing awkwardly.

In 2012, Lively and Ryan Reynolds married at a slave plantation in South Carolina. Reynolds said the couple didn't know about the venue's history until after their ceremony.
Ryan Reynolds and Blake Lively in 2022 in New York City.
Ryan Reynolds and Blake Lively in New York City.

Gotham/GC Images/Getty Images

In 2012, Lively and her husband, Ryan Reynolds, tied the knot at Boone Hall plantation in South Carolina. The plantation features nine slave cabins built between 1790 and 1810, which are referred to as "Slave Street."

Reynolds apologized for the decision in a 2020 interview with Fast Company after the couple was called out for the hypocrisy of a joint statement — accompanied by a $200,000 donation to the NAACP Legal Defense — they shared on Lively's Instagram following the murder of George Floyd by police.

Reynolds said they chose Boone Hall based on Pinterest photos and only realized it was a "place built upon devastating tragedy" after the event.

Reynolds added that after learning of Boone Hall's history, the actors had another wedding at home years later.

Lively has not addressed the backlash over her wedding venue.

Lively's now-defunct lifestyle website ran a fashion editorial that romanticized the Antebellum South in 2014.
Blake Lively walks the red carpet at the 2014 Annual Cannes Film Festival.
Blake Lively walks the red carpet at the 2014 Annual Cannes Film Festival.

Andreas Rentz/Getty Images

Two years after her wedding at Boone Hall, Lively launched a lifestyle website called Preserve.

In just a matter of months, it attracted controversy when its fall issue featured a photo shoot and article that appeared to romanticize the monied world of the Confederate South.

Titled "Allure of Antebellum," the photo shoot featured a white, blonde-haired model in a floppy hat, high-heeled pumps, and a leopard-print mini-skirt.

In the accompanying article, the unnamed author wrote about the "innate sense of social poise" and "unparalleled warmth and authenticity" of the pre-Civil War era women.

"The term Southern Belle came to fruition during the Antebellum period (before the Civil War), acknowledging women with an inherent social distinction who set the standards for style and appearance," the Preserve article read.

"These women epitomized Southern hospitality with a cultivation of beauty and grace, but even more with a captivating and magnetic sensibility."

The publication of the editorial immediately attracted criticism, with Refinery29 arguing: "The authors use the word antebellum in a misty-eyed, nostalgia-tinged way that completely ignores the brutality endured by Southern women not lucky enough to be born into privilege."

A year later, in October 2015, Lively shuttered the site, explaining to Vogue in an interview that it was because she and her team had "launched the site before it was ready."

Lively is rumored to have had a falling out with her "A Simple Favor" costar, Anna Kendrick, although their costar denied any friction.
Anna Kendrick and Blake Lively attend the New York premiere of "A Simple Favor" in 2018.
Anna Kendrick and Blake Lively at the New York premiere of "A Simple Favor."

Jimi Celeste/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images

Lively and Anna Kendrick starred alongside each other in the 2018 movie "A Simple Favor."

According to reports, the two had a falling out on the set of the film.

Claire Parker, cohost of the popular podcast Celebrity Memoir Book Club, previously said in a TikTok video that by the end of the movie, Lively and Kendrick "were not speaking," citing an unnamed studio source.

While neither Lively nor Kendrick has addressed the rumors, their costar Henry Golding has denied the claims of a feud, saying he thought the two stars got on "reasonably well."

"Definitely no friction that I noticed," he said when asked about the rumors on "Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen."

Despite this, fans have continued to speculate about sensing tension between the two stars — who are set to reunite for a sequel next year— in joint interviews.

After a clip from a resurfaced 2016 interview went viral, Lively was criticized for being rude to a journalist.
Blake Lively attends the New York premiere of "Café Society" in 2016.
Blake Lively attends the New York premiere of "Café Society" in 2016.

Sylvain Gaboury/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images

Reporter Kjersti Flaa interviewed Lively and her costar, Parker Posey, about the film "Café Society" in 2016.

Flaa reshared the interview eight years later — at the height of Lively's "It Ends With Us" backlash — when she uploaded it to YouTube with the title "The Blake Lively interview that made me want to quit my job."

In the video, Lively offered a snarky response to Flaa after she congratulated the actor on her pregnancy.

"First of all, congrats on your little bump," Flaa said, kicking off the interview.

"Congrats on your little bump," Lively responded, although Flaa was not pregnant.

Later in the interview, Lively challenged Flaa for asking a question about clothes. The actor also seemed to ignore Flaa in parts of the interview and angled her body toward Posey.

"It actually took me a while to get over the experience," Flaa previously told Business Insider, adding, "I have met moody celebrities, but nothing like this interview."

Flaa told MailOnline that Lively's comment was particularly hurtful because she wasn't able to conceive.

"It's true that the comment hurt me because I was never able to have kids myself, but of course Blake did not know that so I can't blame her for the pain that I felt," she later told BI.

Lively sparked outrage among sexual assault survivors for defending Woody Allen.
The cast of "Café Society" poses with Woody Allen at the 2016 Cannes Film Festival.
The cast of "Café Society" poses with Woody Allen at the 2016 Cannes Film Festival.

George Pimentel/WireImage

Lively's 2016 film "Café Society" was directed by Woody Allen.

Two years before "Café Society" premiered, The New York Times published an open letter by Dylan Farrow, Allen's adopted daughter, reiterating the accusation that he groomed and sexually assaulted her as a child.

Farrow originally accused her famous father when she was 7 years old. At the time, a state's attorney in Connecticut said he had "probable cause" to prosecute but declined to file charges.

In the 2014 essay, Farrow called out Hollywood stars like Cate Blanchett, Emma Stone, and Scarlett Johansson for working with Allen in recent years and ignoring the allegation against him.

"Woody Allen is a living testament to the way our society fails the survivors of sexual assault and abuse," she wrote.

During the press tour for "Café Society," French comedian Laurent Lafitte cracked a joke about Allen dodging accountability during the opening ceremony for the 2016 Cannes Film Festival.

Later at the festival, Lively made it clear she disapproved of Lafitte's material.

"I think any jokes about rape, homophobia, or Hitler is not a joke," Lively told Variety. "It was more disappointing for the artists in the room that someone was going up there making jokes about something that wasn't funny."

At the same event, Lively also said she hadn't read Ronan Farrow's new op-ed in the Hollywood Reporter, in which the investigative reporter defended his sister and criticized powerful people for "sweeping aside her allegations."

"I don't want to speak on something I haven't read," Lively told Vulture. "I think that's dangerous. It's definitely something that being at the festival, the media these days, you come to a film festival about film and people talk about all different types of things. You know? That can be definitely tricky to navigate."

Lively continued to praise Allen throughout the press tour, describing his director style as "very empowering."

"It's amazing what Woody has written for women," she told the Los Angeles Times, adding that she did not consider Allen's personal life while shooting the film.

"It's very dangerous to factor in things you don't know anything about," Lively said. "I could [only] know my experience. And my experience with Woody is he's empowering to women."

In 2017, Farrow published another op-ed in the Los Angeles Times that questioned Allen's role in the #MeToo movement, casting Lively as a hypocrite for condemning Harvey Weinstein but continuing to support Allen.

In 2018, Lively posted in support of Hollywood's anti-sexual harassment initiative Time's Up, writing, "I'm honored to be a part of this movement. The time is NOW!"

Farrow replied, "You worked with my abuser, @blakelively. Am I a woman who matters too?"

Farrow's account of her assault has remained consistent over the years, most recently in the 2021 HBO docuseries "Allen v. Farrow," while Allen has repeatedly denied the allegation.

Lively apologized for poking fun at Kate Middleton's "photoshop fails" after the princess went public with her cancer diagnosis.
Blake Lively Kate Middleton split image
Blake Lively and Kate Middleton both photographed in 2024.

Eric Charbonneau/Mark Cuthbert/UK Press/Getty Images

Amid the social media storm that erupted after the release of a digitally manipulated portrait of the princess and her children following Middleton's mysterious retreat from the public eye, Lively jumped on the trend of mocking her "photoshop fails."

She shared an edited photo on Instagram to promote her beverage line. The photo showed Lively sitting in a chair by a warped pool with a comically enlarged thumb and a lemon floating above her head.

According to People, she captioned the photo: "I'm so excited to share this new photo I just took today to announce our 4 new @bettybuzz & @bettybooze products! Now you know why I've been MIA."

Middleton later announced that she had been diagnosed with cancer and was undergoing chemotherapy.

Lively later deleted her post and shared a note on her Instagram Story apologizing to the British royal and her own followers.

"I'm sure no one cares today, but I feel like I have to acknowledge this. I made a silly post around the 'photoshop fails' frenzy, and oh man, that post has me mortified today. I'm sorry. Sending love and well wishes to all, always," she wrote.

Lively faced backlash for the way she promoted "It Ends With Us," a film about a woman experiencing domestic violence.
Three photos fo Blake Lively in floral dresses.
The "It Ends With Us" cast has been surrounded by drama since the film's release in August.

Robert Kamau/GC Images/Gotham/Getty Images

"It Ends With Us," a film in which Lively plays Lily Bloom, a woman experiencing domestic abuse, opened in theaters on August 9, 2024.

It's based on a book of the same name by BookTok favorite Colleen Hoover; fans who already knew the story immediately began to question Lively's promotional approach.

In a promo video shared on the film's official Instagram account, Lively encouraged people to watch the film by saying: "Grab your girls, wear your florals!"

Lively also leaned into method dressing, opting for florals in almost every outfit she wore during the press tour, which some fans criticized as tone-deaf.

In a TikTok video that's been viewed more than 4 million times, a woman who identified herself as a domestic violence survivor accused Lively of promoting the movie like it's "the sequel to Barbie."

Elsewhere, the actor could be seen using interviews and events for the film to cross-promote her brands, including her hair care line, Blake Brown.

A promotional email for Lively's beverage line, Betty Buzz, also shared a recipe for making a cocktail using her husband's gin brand, The New York Times reported.

As fans noted, Lively's approach contrasted starkly with that of her costar and director, Justin Baldoni, who was praised for highlighting the movie's weighty themes during his interviews.

It didn't help that the two were also pitted against each other following rumors of a feud between them.

The charity Women's Aid also criticized the marketing around the movie, sharing a statement with the BBC that read: "Despite domestic abuse being a key theme of the film, much of the marketing has ignored this and viewers have not been warned about the potentially distressing content."

Lively has since accused Baldoni of sexual harassment on set and orchestrating a smear campaign to "bury her."
Blake Lively Justin Baldoni split image
Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni costarred in "It Ends With Us."

Jeff Spicer/Getty Images for Sony Pictures; Gotham/WireImage

On December 21, Lively filed a legal complaint against Baldoni, accusing her director and costar of sexual harassment, retaliation, and coordinating attempts to damage her reputation.

According to the filing, obtained by Business Insider, Lively's strategy for promoting "It Ends With Us" — which drew backlash for making light of the film's themes — was "in accordance with the marketing plan created and delivered by the film's distributor Sony."

The marketing plan directed the cast to avoid discussing sad or heavy themes, in order to frame the film as "a story of hope."

At the same time, Lively alleged that Baldoni "abruptly pivoted" his talking points in an attempt to explain why he'd been unfollowed by much of the film's cast and crew on social media — apparently prompted by Baldoni's inappropriate behavior on set.

"To that end, he and his team used domestic violence 'survivor content' to protect his public image," the legal filing reads.

As Business Insider previously reported, Baldoni hired a public-relations crisis team, including veteran PR manager Melissa Nathan, as rumors swirled that he was on the outs with Lively and other castmates. According to Lively's lawsuit, Nathan's team helped Baldoni orchestrate an online smear campaign against Lively, partially to distract fans from speculating about his conduct on set.

"He wants to feel like she can be buried," a publicist working with Mr. Baldoni wrote in a message to Nathan, per the legal complaint.

"You know we can bury anyone," Nathan replied.

A rep for Baldoni called the allegations "shameful" and "categorically false" in a statement to Business Insider.

A rep for Lively told The New York Times, "I hope that my legal action helps pull back the curtain on these sinister retaliatory tactics to harm people who speak up about misconduct and helps protect others who may be targeted."

Read the original article on Business Insider

Databricks executive breaks down the AI talent wars: 'It's like looking for LeBron James'

Databricks logo on phon screen
Databricks' vice president of AI described recruiting top AI researchers as like "looking for LeBron James."

Illustration by Avishek Das/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

  • Databricks' vice president of AI likened looking for top researchers to "looking for LeBron James."
  • Naveen Rao told Command Line that probably fewer than 1,000 researchers could build frontier models.
  • Rao said it wasn't ridiculous for companies to pay large amounts for AI and infrastructure talent.

Recruiting top-tier AI researchers today is a bit like scouting a sports team's next star athlete — they're few in number and costly to recruit, but they can change an organization's trajectory.

"It's like looking for LeBron James," Naveen Rao, Databricks' vice president of AI, told The Verge's Command Line newsletter published Friday. "There are just not very many humans who are capable of that."

While thousands of tech workers and engineers are qualified to work on AI, identifying the best — and convincing them to jump ship — remains a challenge for companies leading the AI race. Rao said he agreed that probably fewer than 1,000 researchers were capable of building new frontier models. But he added that the work of a star AI engineer could have a "massive influence" on a company's ability to win.

Rao said the AI talent wars weren't just about "pure AI talent" — they're also about scaling and building infrastructure for AI models. He said he sees some aspects of the pool expanding in that area.

"When you build a model and you want to scale it, that actually is not AI talent, per se," Rao told Command Line. "It's infrastructure talent."

He added that the scarcity of top AI talent had given researchers "unprecedented" leverage at the companies they work at. While many Americans are navigating an employer-driven job market, cutting-edge AI engineers seem to have the upper hand.

Earlier this year, Perplexity's CEO described being rebuffed by a Meta engineer who told him to "come back to me when you have 10,000 H100 GPUs," the in-demand Nvidia chips needed to develop and scale AI.

As competition increases, companies such as OpenAI, Anthropic, xAI, Microsoft, and Google have ramped up their hiring efforts. AI tech workers have shared stories of CEOs' extravagant efforts to secure top talent: One worker said OpenAI CEO Sam Altman personally called to pitch them on joining the team, while a Meta recruit said Mark Zuckerberg showed up in an email thread.

The companies are also offering hefty pay incentives to secure the best talent. Google recently turned heads when it was said to have paid $2.7 billion in a deal to bring Noam Shazeer, the founder of Character.ai, back to the company. While Google didn't formally acquire Character.ai, it paid to license the startup's technology, and Shazeer made hundreds of millions from the deal, The Wall Street Journal reported.

Rao said that while the amounts these companies are paying for talent may sound ridiculous, they aren't. The executive gave an example of a former employee at his company Nervana. He described the employee, who now works at OpenAI, as "the best GPU programmer in the world." Rao said that programmer's code now likely powers every inference on OpenAI models and could have saved the company $4 billion.

"I think that's why you see Google hiring back Noam Shazeer," Rao said. "It's very hard to find another Noam Shazeer."

Read the original article on Business Insider

Blake Lively's famous friends and costars are speaking out in support since her complaint against 'It Ends with Us' costar Justin Baldoni

Paul Feig Blake Lively
"A Simple Favor" director Paul Feig and Blake Lively.

Ethan Miller/Getty

  • Blake Lively sued her "It Ends with Us" costar and director Justin Baldoni for sexual harassment on December 20.
  • Lively also alleged Baldoni made attempts to damage her reputation.
  • Here's everyone who's spoken out in support of Lively, including former costars and directors.

Blake Lively sued her "It Ends with Us" costar and director Justin Baldoni on December 20 for sexual harassment and an attempt to damage her reputation.

The news comes months after the movie's promotion leading up to its August release was overshadowed by rumors of a feud between the stars.

In the complaint, obtained by Business Insider, Lively said she met with Baldoni and producer Jamey Heath during production to address the "hostile work environment that had nearly derailed production of the film."

The meeting resulted in all parties agreeing to a number of stipulations, including "no more showing nude videos or images of women, including the producer's wife," to Lively (who is addressed as "BL" in other parts of the complaint) or her employees.

It also required "no more mention of Mr. Baldoni or Mr. Heath's previous 'pornography addiction' or BL's lack of pornography consumption to BL or to other crew members."

During the movie's late summer press tour, social media users criticized Lively's lighthearted approach to the movie's marketing, which led to a wave of backlash. Reports also began to surface that Lively and Baldoni feuded during production and had made separate cuts of the movie (Lively's ultimately won).

Lively said in the complaint that Baldoni and his team engaged in "social manipulation" to destroy her reputation through a "sophisticated press and digital plan in retaliation for Ms. Lively exercising her legally protected right to speak up about their misconduct on the set, with the additional objective of intimidating her and anyone else from revealing in public what actually occurred."

Bryan Freedman, an attorney for Baldoni and his company, Wayfarer Studios, said in a statement to BI that the claims made in the complaint were "categorically false" and "intentionally salacious with an intent to publicly hurt and rehash a narrative in the media."

"It is shameful that Ms. Lively and her representatives would make such serious and categorically false accusations against Mr. Baldoni, Wayfarer Studios and its representatives, as yet another desperate attempt to 'fix' her negative reputation, which was garnered from her own remarks and actions during the campaign for the film; interviews and press activities that were observed publicly, in real time and unedited, which allowed for the internet to generate their own views and opinions," the statement said.

A representative for Lively referred BI to a statement shared with The New York Times on Saturday.

"I hope that my legal action helps pull back the curtain on these sinister retaliatory tactics to harm people who speak up about misconduct and helps protect others who may be targeted," the statement said.

She also told the outlet that neither she nor her representatives ever spread negative stories about Baldoni or Wayfarer Studios.

Since the lawsuit, Lively has received a wave of support from family and people she has worked with in Hollywood.

Here's who has spoken out in support of Lively.

Her "Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants" costars America Ferrera, Amber Tamblyn, and Alexis Bledel released a joint statement.
Blake Lively Alexis Bledel America Ferrera Amber Tamblyn The Sisterhood Of The Traveling Pants 2
Blake Lively, Alexis Bledel, America Ferrera and Amber Tamblyn attend the world premiere of 'The Sisterhood Of The Traveling Pants 2' in 2008.

Stephen Lovekin/Getty Images

Since starring in the 2005 movie "The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants" and its 2008 sequel, Lively, Ferrera, Tamblyn, and Bledel have remained close friends.

In a joint statement released on Instagram, Ferrera, Tamblyn, and Bledel showed support for Lively.

"As Blake's friends and sisters for over 20 years, we stand with her in solidarity as she fights back against the reported campaign waged to destroy her reputation," the statement reads. "Throughout the filming of 'It Ends with Us,' we saw her summon the courage to ask for a safe workplace for herself and colleagues on set, and we are appalled to read the evidence of a premeditated and vindictive effort that ensued to discredit her voice. Most upsetting is the unabashed exploitation of domestic violence survivors' stories to silence a woman who asked for safety. The hypocrisy is astounding."

"We are struck by the reality that even if a woman is as strong, celebrated, and resourced as our friend Blake, she can face forceful retaliation for daring to ask for a safe working environment," the statement continued. "We are inspired by our sister's courage to stand up for herself and others. For anyone seeking more information or engaging in this important conversation online, please read the full legal complaint in the investigative reporting by Megan Twohey, Mike McIntire, and Julie Tate for the New York Times."

So has "It Ends with Us" author Colleen Hoover.
Colleen Hoover and Blake Lively stand together on a stage in front of a sign that says Book Bonanza.
Colleen Hoover and Blake Lively at Book Bonanza in June 2024.

Eric Charbonneau/Getty Images for Sony Pictures

In an Instagram Stories post, the author wrote:

"@blakelively, you have been nothing but honest, kind, supportive and patient since the day we met."

"Thank you for being exactly the human that you are. Never change. Never wilt."

And Lively's "A Simple Favor" director Paul Feig.
paul feig
Paul Feig.

Jeff Spicer/Getty Images

The "Bridesmaids" filmmaker directed Lively in the 2018 whodunit "A Simple Favor," and the two recently wrapped on a sequel.

"I've now made two movies with Blake and all I can say is she's one of the most professional, creative, collaborative, talented and kind people I've ever worked with," Feig wrote on X. "She truly did not deserve any of this smear campaign against her. I think it's awful she was put through this."

Lively's half-sister Robyn also showed her support.
Blake Lively and Robyn Lively in dresses
Blake and Robyn Lively.

Gotham/GC Images/Getty

Robyn Lively, Blake's half-sister who also starred in "It Ends with Us," posted on Instagram to show her support.

"She is one of the kindest, most honest and loving humans I know. Blake isn't a villain. She's a mama bear to her core, a loving and supportive wife, a sister, a friend, and someone who worked her ass off on a film in abominable working conditions," she wrote.

Read the original article on Business Insider

First time flying first class? Here are etiquette tips to avoid being the most annoying person in a premium cabin

A bed, slippers, a blanket, a robe, and a sleep mask on a bed inside the first class cabin inside an Airbus A380 at the airbus factories in Hamburg, Germany, Reefrreshments in the background in front of three windows
First class is about indulgence, and business class is about sleeping and working comfortably, a travel expert, Gilbert Ott, says.

Christian Charisius/picture alliance via Getty Images

  • First-time flight upgraders should be aware of business- and first-class etiquette.
  • A flight expert shared his top tips for blending in with passengers who often book premium cabins.
  • He said not to ask whether everything is free in first class or expect too much in business class.

When you're flying first class, etiquette is key for blending in with the opulent crowd — especially if you've never been in a premium cabin before. The same goes for business class.

Travelers in first and business class may be spoiled with welcome gifts, multicourse meals, and private seats for lounging. While tickets aren't cheap, credit card and airline rewards programs have made the luxurious cabins accessible for people accumulating points and miles.

If you're upgrading a flight for the first time, Gilbert Ott, who flies an estimated 200,000 miles a year, has a few tips for those who want to blend in with the first- and business-class crowds and avoid annoying more seasoned premium passengers.

Don't ask whether everything is free in first class
A beige First Class Airplane Seat With Tray Of Food
Most first-class offerings are included in the price of the ticket.

imaginima/Getty Images

"I think the etiquette is that first class is about indulgence," Ott told Business Insider.

Ott doesn't recommend asking flight attendants whether each bonus offering is free because everything is complimentary, from meals to sparkling wine.

And there's nothing wrong with "filling your boots" to make the most of the perks, he added.

Don't expect too much in business class
Passengers are sitting in the commercial plane. Cabin crew is take care passengers in the plane.
Business class offers a less personalized experience.

eyesfoto/Getty Images

While first-class passengers often get personalized experiences and are greeted by name, business-class flyers shouldn't expect the same level of attention.

"Business class is about efficiency. It's a comfortable seat where you can sleep or work," Ott said.

Staff members serve dozens of people in business class, while first-class cabins typically seat fewer than 10 passengers, he added.

"There's a lot of work that goes into all those meals and drinks," Ott said. "So if you're looking for an over-the-top experience, then first class is where you can expect staff to make the flight awesome. And that's what you're paying for."

Don't hover over passengers in doored seats
Luxurious seats with doors inside a first-class cabin on a plane
Doored seats offer more privacy for passengers in premium cabins.

jun xu/Getty Images

If you've flown recently, you may have noticed that many business- and first-class cabins have added doors to each seat to give passengers more privacy.

Ott said you shouldn't infringe on another traveler's space to fetch items from overhead bins.

"Don't awkwardly hover over the person because the whole idea of doors is that people can't look in on you," Ott said. "So when you wake up and someone is looking over your space, it's odd."

Don't take up too much overhead-bin space
Empty airplane interior, bag left in overhead bin, side view
Stick to the space above your seat.

Thomas Barwick/Getty Images

BI previously reported that premium-cabin passengers are often entitled to overhead-bin space, and according to Ott, the bins are usually not too crowded. But that doesn't mean you should bring extra bags and put them wherever you want, as Ott has seen many passengers do.

Instead, Ott suggests keeping your limited belongings in the space above your seat.

Read the original article on Business Insider

The Nordstrom family struck a deal to take their namesake department store chain private. Here's how they built their retail empire.

a two-story Nordstrom in a mall shows the upper landing with the store name while a young mother and child walk in through the lower entrance.
Nordstrom is slated to become a private company in 2025, it said on Monday.

Saul Loeb/Getty Images

  • Nordstrom's founding family is taking the retail chain private with help from a Mexican retailer.
  • Bruce Nordstrom, whose grandfather started the department store in 1901, died in May.
  • Here's how Nordstrom grew from a single location in Seattle into a fashion empire.

The descendants of John W. Nordstrom are taking the eponymous department store chain private.

Nordstrom's great-grandsons Pete and Erik, who are now the company's President and CEO, respectively, are working with cousin Jamie Nordstrom, the company's chief merchandising officer, and Mexican retailer El Puerto de Liverpool to purchase the company at $24.25 per share, the group said on Monday. The deal gives Nordstrom an enterprise value of $6.25 billion and should be completed in the first half of 2025, the group said.

Earlier this year, Pete and Erik's father, Bruce, died at the age of 90 after a long career with the company.

The grandson of founder John W. Nordstrom, Bruce was instrumental in bringing the retailer to international prominence in a career that spanned four decades.

Here's how the Nordstroms built their empire from a single shoe store in Seattle to one of the biggest names in fashion retail.

Nordstrom was founded as a shoe store by John W. Nordstrom and Carl F. Wallin in Seattle in 1901.
Nordstrom 4
A Nordstrom sign showing the year the company started.

Shutterstock

Two decades later, the partners opened a second store in Seattle's University District.

John Nordstrom retired in 1928 and sold his share to his sons Everett and Elmer.
Nordstrom 3
A Portland, Oregon, Nordstrom store in 2015.

Shutterstock

Wallin retired soon after and sold his share of the company to the Nordstrom sons too. John's third son, Lloyd, later joined the team.

John Nordstrom's sons focused on expanding into women's clothing.
nordstrom 0680
Mannequins at a Nordstrom department store.

Business Insider/Jessica Tyler

Nordstrom purchased the Seattle-based clothing store Best's Apparel in 1963. Three years later, the company purchased a Portland, Oregon-based clothing store and began offering both shoes and apparel under the name Nordstrom Best. The company added men's and children's apparel in 1966.

In 1968, the three Nordstrom brothers handed the company over to the next generation.
bruce nordstrom 3
Bruce Nordstrom.

Getty Images

Everett's son Bruce, Elmer's sons James and John, Lloyd's son-in-law Jack, and family friend Bob Bender became the new heads of the company. The third generation of Nordstrom chairmen took the company public in 1971, formally renaming it Nordstrom Inc.

The first Nordstrom Rack opened in the basement of the downtown Seattle store in 1973.
Nordstrom Rack
A Nordstrom Rack location in New York.

Business Insider/Mary Hanbury

That same year, the company became the largest-volume fashion specialty store on the West Coast, with sales surpassing $100 million. The chain continued to expand throughout the next several decades.

In 1995, Nordstrom's third generation handed the reins over to the fourth.
Blake, Pete, Erik, and Jamie Nordstrom smile for camera at Nordstrom store opening
Blake, Pete, and Erik Nordstrom in 2007.

John Wilcox/MediaNews Group/Boston Herald via Getty Images

The elder Nordstroms retired as co-chairmen, but remained on the Board of Directors, and Bruce's sons, Blake, Pete, and Erik, took over the company in 1995.

Bruce's oldest son Blake became co-president in 1995.
blake nordstrom
Blake Nordstrom.

Vince Talotta/Toronto Star via Getty Images

Blake began working in the family business when he was about 11 years old. His first role with the company was in the stockroom, and he went on to hold many positions with the company, including merchandise buyer, regional manager, and then vice president in charge of stores in Washington and Alaska.

Erik Nordstrom worked for his older brother in various positions at the company as the two rose through the ranks together.
Blake Erik Nordstrom
Blake and Erik Nordstrom.

Getty Images

"It was always the best working for my brother because he had more confidence in me and gave me more autonomy than anybody I had ever worked for," Erik Nordstrom said in his father's 2007 book, "Leave It Better Than You Found It."

Bruce returned as chairman in 2000, retiring for a second time in 2006.
Bruce Nordstrom
Bruce Nordstrom.

Getty Images

Bruce and his sons were credited with turning the company around after several years of underperformance by non-family leadership.

Throughout the 2000s, Nordstrom partnered with fashion brands like Façonnable, Topshop, HauteLook, and Jeffery.
nordstrom 0657
A store display of Topshop apparel and accessories.

Business Insider/Jessica Tyler

In 2014, the company started expanding internationally. It opened stores in Canada and the US territory of Puerto Rico.

Nordstrom opened its first menswear-only store in 2018 and a flagship womenswear store in 2019.
Nordstrom men's
Nordstrom's menswear shop.

Business Insider/Mary Hanbury

The concept combined in-store services, such as tailoring, shoe shining, and food, with high-tech digital ordering and returns systems.

Blake died in 2019 at the age of 58, passing control of the company to his brothers.
Blake Nordstrom stands with arms resting on racks of clothes at Nordstrom Rack
Blake Nordstrom at a Nordstrom Rack in 2018.

Vince Talotta/Toronto Star via Getty Images

"Blake was the best big brother, friend and mentor anyone could ever ask for," Pete and Erik Nordstrom said in a note to employees. "One of the things that brings us some comfort is that Blake's values, character and passion can still be reflected in what this company does — how we treat each other, our customers and our communities. Building on that is the best way we can think of to honor his legacy."

In April, Pete and Erik revealed that the company was exploring options to go private.
Erik and Pete Nordstrom stand in front of Nordstrom backdrop during red carpet event
Erik, left, and Pete Nordstrom in 2012.

Frank Franklin II/AP

In regulatory filings, the brother said they had not yet received any financing commitments to complete such a deal.

In May, Bruce died at his home at the age of 90.
Bruce Nordstrom2
Bruce Nordstrom in 2018.

Getty Images

Nordstrom died on May 18.

"Our dad leaves a powerful legacy as a legendary business leader, a generous community citizen and a loyal friend," Pete and Erik said in a statement.

In December, Erik, Pete, and other Nordstrom family members reached a deal to take the company private.
Erik Nordstrom gestures while speak inside Nordstrom store
Erik Nordstrom in 2019.

Shannon Stapleton/Reuters

The deal with Mexican retailer El Puerto de Liverpool was developed over several months. Once completed, the Nordstrom descendants will own 50.1% of he department store chain, with the other 49.9% in the hands of Liverpool, Nordstrom said on Monday.

Jessica Tyler contributed to an earlier version of this story.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Taylor Swift's gameday looks ranked from least to most stylish, including $70,000 ensembles and vintage Chiefs gear

Taylor Swift arrives at Arrowhead Stadium in December 2024.
Taylor Swift arrives at Arrowhead Stadium in December 2024.

Icon Sportswire/Getty Images

  • Taylor Swift has become a regular at Kansas City Chiefs games since she started dating Travis Kelce.
  • Her NFL style was initially laid-back, as she appeared in simple sports jackets and sweatshirts.
  • Now, Swift has leaned into luxury and subtle nods to Kelce for her gameday looks.

Taylor Swift made her NFL debut in September 2023, revealing her romance with Travis Kelce in dramatic fashion by supporting him at a Kansas City Chiefs game at Arrowhead Stadium.

Over a year later, Swift and Kelce still seem to be going strong, and the singer's gameday fashion continues to make headlines.

From standout $70,000 outfits to forgettable athletic looks, here's a look at everything she's worn in her WAG era, ranked from least to most stylish.

Taylor Swift's first gameday outfit was cute but ultimately forgettable.
Donna Kelce and Taylor Swift stand in Travis Kelce's box at Arrowhead Stadium.
Taylor Swift attended her first Chiefs game in September 2023.

Jason Hanna/Getty Images

She made her Arrowhead Stadium debut in studded $190 Ksubi shorts, a white $105 Dôen tank top, and $192 New Balance sneakers — all sold out as of November 2024.

She also sported a vintage Kansas City Chiefs jacket and a $1,305 crescent-shaped earring from Jacquie Aiche.

The same could be said for the leather and denim getup she sported in October 2023.
taylor swift blake lively chiefs game
Taylor Swift and Blake Lively attend a game between the New York Jets and the Kansas City Chiefs at MetLife Stadium on October 1, 2023.

Kevin Sabitus/Getty Images

As the Chiefs battled the New York Jets at MetLife Stadium, Swift cheered the team on from a box suite.

Her simple outfit for the occasion included $528 denim shorts with crystal detailing from Area (which have since sold out), a black long-sleeved shirt, and a leather jacket from Gant.

She also accessorized with a $9,250 diamond choker and $1,795 Louboutin boots.

The outfit she wore to a December 2023 game had lots of team spirit but lacked interesting details.
Taylor Swift and Scott Swift cheer from a box at a stadium.
Taylor Swift and Scott Swift at a Chief's game in December 2023.

Kathryn Riley/Getty Images

Her Chiefs pullover, for example, was a light-gray shade that didn't stand out in the audience. Her plaid skirt was also understated.

The most interesting aspects of her outfit were the accessories. Swift wore a $598 Mejuri ring with a red stone in the middle and a $35 handmade hat from a local Kansas City artist.

Swift quickly became intentional with her outfit choices.
Taylor Swift attends a Kansas City Chiefs game on October 12, 2023.
Taylor Swift attends a Kansas City Chiefs game on October 12, 2023.

David Eulitt/Stringer/Getty Images

For a game in October 2023, Swift arrived wearing a red, white, and black jacket covered in Kansas City logos. The $130 piece, which is now sold out, was the work of Wear by Erin Andrews.

Though the jacket wasn't part of her flashiest outfit, Swift undeniably left her mark on the sports anchor's clothing business.

"I started screaming and freaking out and singing all my favorite Swiftie songs. And then yeah, we restocked, and we sold out. And thank you, thank you, Taylor Swift," Andrews told Seth Meyers during an appearance on his show.

Swift paired the outerwear with a $3,190 Balenciaga corset and sold-out Prada boots.

Her vintage sweatshirt for an October 2023 game had a bit more personality.
Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift exit Arrowhead Stadium on October 22, 2023.
Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift at Arrowhead Stadium in October 2023.

Charlie Riedel/AP Images

Swift paired a vintage Chiefs sweatshirt from Ellie Mae Studios with a black pleated skirt and loafers.

As usual, she added an assortment of jewelry to elevate her look, including Cartier's $13,400 Juste un Clou necklace. She also wore the $3,600 Heavy Belcher bracelet and the $1,050 Enamel Miniature Medallion from Foundrae, as well as Jacquie Aiche's $5,775 evil-eye bracelet and $4,675 7 Diamond Kate Smooth Bar bracelet.

Swift completed her look with a $21 custom friendship bracelet featuring an 87 in a sweet nod to Kelce, who wore a red plaid shirt after the game that coordinated with Swift's gameday look.

The designer jacket she wore to a game in January screamed luxury.
Taylor Swift and other Chiefs fans cheer from a box.
Taylor Swift cheers at a Chiefs game in January 2024.

Kathryn Riley/Getty Images

Rather than wearing team gear, Swift arrived at the sporting event in a white varsity jacket from Gant's collaboration with Kilo Kish.

The high-fashion piece featured stars and other shapes in the Chiefs' signature red, matching Swift's winter beanie and lipstick.

The jacket, which retailed for $1,800, is now sold out.

There was no missing Swift when she arrived at Arrowhead Stadium for a game in November.
Taylor Swift walks into a football game in an a black top and shorts with a red and black jacket.
Taylor Swift attends a Chiefs game at Arrowhead Stadium in November 2024.

Jamie Squire/Getty Images

She was photographed wearing a vintage, leather Chiefs jacket — a fan said her parents sold it on eBay for $169 — and black shorts from Agolde.

Other pieces included $2,195 Louboutin boots, a $3,900 Dior saddle bag, and a $630 belt from The Row. But it was her gold and diamond accessories that stole the show.

Swift wore $575 Louis Vuitton earrings, a $4,475 Chanel necklace, a $3,150 Louis Vuitton ring, and a $4,150 ring from Retrouvai.

One of Swift's most memorable looks came on Christmas Day.
Taylor Swift and Austin Swift, dressed as Santa Claus, cheer during a Chiefs game.
Taylor Swift and her brother Austin Swift attend a Chiefs game on Christmas 2023.

Jamie Squire/Getty Images

She attended the holiday Chiefs game alongside her brother Austin, who was dressed as Santa Claus.

Though Swift wasn't in costume, she was dressed with holiday spirit. To complement her Santa hat, which was embroidered with Kelce's jersey number, Swift wore an $895 bomber jacket from Guest in Residence, which has since sold out.

She also sported a now-sold-out Hill House skirt, $35 Sheertex tights, and heeled Prada loafers.

Swift's Super Bowl look was fairly simple, but a slew of symbolic accessories made it stand out.
Taylor Swift attends the 2024 Super Bowl.
Taylor Swift attends the 2024 Super Bowl.

Perry Knotts/Getty Images)

The base of Swift's look for the 2024 Super Bowl — which the Chiefs won — was all black. She paired Dion Lee's crochet corset top with Area's $695 crystal slit jeans and $1,195 suede ankle boots from Christian Louboutin.

Swift also wore a red Chiefs bomber jacket from WEAR by Erin Andrews, which cost $129. Her accessories also nodded to the Chiefs, like Judith Leiber's red football clutch. The bag is not available in red online, but brown, gold, and pink versions cost $3,995 on the brand's website.

Her $3,325 necklace from Stephanie Gottlieb featured an 87, a nod to Kelce's jersey number. She also wore a diamond tennis choker from the brand, which cost $7,995.

Swift adorned herself with other red jewelry, including two rings from Shahla Karimi, Retrouvai's $4,550 Ruby Magna ring, and The Last Line's $695 diamond-studded Heart Twist earring, which is sold individually.

She also turned to Shay Jewelry for several red pieces, including a $6,800 necklace, the $5,600 Ruby Eternity Band, and a $19,950 bracelet. Jacquie Aiche's $7,150 Sophia Diamond Chain Pavé Ear Cuff and $715 Pavé Diamond Letter Mini Hoop completed her look. Swift wore a "T" hoop, naturally.

Swift's Super Bowl ensemble was simple, but her accessories filled the look with team spirit.

Swift put a more glamorous spin on her NFL style when the Chiefs played the Green Bay Packers in December 2023.
Taylor Swift stands with two other women, cheering in a box.
Lyndsay Bell, Taylor Swift, and Brittany Mahomes attend a Kansas City Chiefs game in December 2023.

Stacy Revere/Getty Images

Instead of wearing a sweatshirt or jersey with the Chiefs logo, Swift donned Stella McCartney's $2,400 belted teddy coat for an away game in Wisconsin. The red color was perfect to support the Chiefs.

The rest of Swift's look was black, including her Louis Vuitton mini wrap skirt, which retails for $3,400. She also wore a black mock-neck top with Cartier's Agrafe Herringbone Twisted necklace atop it. The $27,250 necklace featured gold and diamond detailing, matching Swift's $1,400 linked tennis earrings from Vrai.

Stuart Weitzman's $995 thigh-high Vidaland boots completed her ensemble.

Her coordinating Vivienne Westwood set for an October game was among her most high-fashion NFL looks.
Taylor Swift walks into the Chiefs game wearing a plaid set and tall black boots.
Taylor Swift attends a Kansas City Chiefs game in October 2024.

David Eulitt/Getty Images

The $1,875 off-the-shoulder Sunday corset and $1,010 Meghan kilt from Vivienne Westwood featured a plaid pattern with maroon detailing that subtly nodded to the Chiefs.

Vivienne Westwood also designed Swift's $1,270 Grace boots and $590 Belle Heart-Frame Jacquard bag.

She didn't hold back on her jewelry for the game, wearing over $46,000 worth of it with the look, including her Cartier necklace and $5,680 custom diamond TNT bracelet from Wove that Kelce gave her as a gift.

Jacquie Aiche designed Swift's bracelets: the $4,675 Seven-Diamond Kate Smooth Bar bracelet and the $5,250 evil-eye bracelet. She also wore various rings, including Shahla Karimi's $3,490 Cloud Offset Pear ring and two custom-made ruby-studded rings from Effy Jewelry.

Glitter freckles from Fazit completed her ensemble.

Swift's jacket for the Chiefs' New Year's Eve game coordinated with a piece Kelce wore the same week.
taylor swift chiefs game
Taylor Swift attends a game between the Cincinnati Bengals and the Kansas City Chiefs at Arrowhead Stadium on December 31, 2023.

Jamie Squire/Getty Images

Swift's look for the game between the Chiefs and the Bengals was simple: black pants, a belt, and a black top.

But a white-and-black varsity jacket designed by Jeff Hamilton brought a pop of team spirit to her look. The jacket featured an assortment of patches, including the "KC" arrowhead logo on the front and back, the NFL logo, and a football helmet. Swift's jacket also said "Chiefs" in red lettering.

Her statement jacket was almost identical to a Jeff Hamilton jacket Kelce wore to arrive at the Chiefs game on Christmas 2023, just a week earlier.

Kelce and Swift's jackets were custom, but Hamilton sells a similar jacket for $850 on his website.

Swift subtly paid tribute to her boyfriend with a gold and diamond bracelet last year.
Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift walk with their arms around each other on a football field.
Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce after the 2024 AFC Championship.

AP Photo/Julio Cortez

After Kelce and his teammates won the 2024 AFC Championship, Swift joined him on the field to celebrate. There, fans got a closer look at her red and black outfit.

It included a $695 red sweater from Guest in Residence, $2,830 earrings from Wwake, a $6,250 diamond ring from Jacquie Aiche, and $35 Sheertex tights.

But the gold, diamond-embellished tennis bracelet from Wove seemingly had the most sentimental value to Swift.

The brand's founder, Kendall Junck, previously told Business Insider that the bracelet was part of a jewelry collaboration with pro golfer Michelle Wie West, who is friends with Kelce.

She said that when West reached out to gift Kelce some of the pieces, he requested matching bracelets with the letters "TNT" for Taylor and Travis.

Swift's oversize T-shirt dress offered a fun spin on Chiefs merchandise for their September game against the Bengals.
Danielle Haim and Taylor Swift arrive at Arrowhead Stadium on September 15, 2024.
Danielle Haim and Taylor Swift arrive at Arrowhead Stadium on September 15, 2024.

Scott Winters/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Swift's oversize 1995 Salem shirt hit her mid-thigh, allowing her to wear it as a dress. The red piece featured the Chiefs logo and the team's name.

Swift did not reveal where she bought the shirt, though Kansas City business Westside Storey, which sells souvenirs and curated vintage items, told BI it was selling the same piece a week before she was spotted wearing it.

Swift paired the top with Giuseppe Zanotti's $1,650 Frannie boots and Louis Vuitton's Coussin bag, which retails for $4,800.

She wore several high-end jewelry pieces, including Louis Vuitton's $625 My LV Chain earrings. Swift also stacked two necklaces, Vitaly's $120 Shimmer Chain and Melinda Maria's $118 Julian Loves Diamonds Necklace 16, which features diamondettes.

Swift rocked a vintage sweatshirt at a Chiefs game in December 2023.
Taylor Swift in a stand at a football game.
Taylor Swift attends a Kansas City Chiefs game on December 10, 2023.

Jamie Squire/Getty Images

Swift attended the Chiefs game against the Buffalo Bills in December 2023 wearing a $250 vintage sweatshirt, which said "Chiefs" in large letters and featured the team's logo on one sleeve.

She bought the sweatshirt from Westside Storey in Kansas City. The store's owner, Chris Harrington, told BI he initially thought her purchase was fraudulent.

Swift dressed up the casual sweatshirt by pairing it with a $2,100 leather miniskirt from Khaite, which she wore backward, Larroudé's $500 Kate Hi boots in black leather, and GANT 240 Mulberry Street's $1,700 tailored coat in black.

She also added Mejuri's Heirloom Ring, which costs $648, and Mazin Jewels Open Rivet Ring, a $64 piece.

Her custom jacket for the Chiefs' playoff game against the Miami Dolphins in January was one of a kind.
Taylor Swift Chiefs
Taylor Swift attending an NFL game between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Miami Dolphins.

Ed Zurga/AP Photo

Swift attended the playoff game in a custom red jacket made by Kristin Juszczyk, a designer married to San Francisco 49ers fullback Kyle Juszczyk.

Kristin made the oversize puffer jacket using one of Kelce's jerseys, as she documented in a TikTok, so it featured his number, 87, on the front and sleeve, as well as his name. She also embroidered "Chiefs Kingdom" onto the jacket.

Swift focused her look on the jacket, pairing it with a black top, Paige's $249 Gemma pants, and $1,395 Christian Louboutin combat boots.

She also wore Anine Bing's Waylon belt, which retails for $200 but is out of stock, and carried the $525 Ilda Bag from Manu Atelier.

She wore all denim at the 2024-2025 season opener.
Taylor Swift wears a denim set and boots in a stadium.
Taylor Swift at a Kansas City Chiefs game in September 2024.

David Eulitt/Getty Images

Swift seemed to signal she was fully stepping into her WAG era at the season opener in September, arriving at Arrowhead Stadium in an all-denim look.

She paired a denim version of Versace's Medusa corset, which retails for $1,325, with $174 mom shorts from Grlfrnd.

Swift also wore Giuseppe Zanotti's $1,650 burgundy thigh-high Frannie boots. The pricey shoes were more affordable than her Louis Vuitton side trunk bag, retailing for $3,950.

An assortment of high-end jewelry completed Swift's ensemble, including her TNT bracelet and a 1970s-inspired coin necklace from For Future Reference. The brand's founder, Randi Molofsky, previously told BI that the brand collaborated with Swift's stylist on the look.

"We were so lucky to work directly with Taylor's longtime stylist, Joseph Cassell Falconer, on last night's look for Taylor," he said. "He came to us specifically for the vintage coin necklace because he really had a vision of that bold, glam '70s style to pair with the denim-on-denim and over-the-thigh boot."

The priciest element of her outfit was a $29,100 ring from Retrouvai, which she paired with Howl's $4,800 Ruby Cocoon ring. Lizzie Mandler's $13,200 three-row Cleo bracelet sat on her wrist while she wore EF Collection's $895 diamond and prong chain earrings and the $590 Love Explosion Starburst Charm earrings from Three Stories Jewelry in her ears.

Swift wore $66,970 worth of jewelry for the look.

Swift elevated her style from sporty to chic in November.
Taylor Swift arrives at Arrowhead Stadium in November 2024.
Taylor Swift arrives at Arrowhead Stadium in November 2024.

David Eulitt/Getty Images

Swift then arrived at a Chiefs home game in a red-and-black checked Versace blazer and skirt that cost $3,350 and $1,695, respectively.

The blazer sat on her shoulders, showing off the $34.99 Victoria's Secret corset Swift wore as a top.

She also chose Versace accessories for the look, including the $1,650 Medusa 95 Leather Knee High Boots and the $2,190 Medusa 95 Small Tote Bag.

Swift's standout jewelry piece for the game was the gold Tambour Watch from Louis Vuitton she wore on her wrist. It retails for $54,000, and Kelce has a coordinating timepiece.

But the Ruby and Diamond Heirloom Bezel Ring from Retrouvai she wore on her hand was nearly as pricey at $32,970. She complemented the ring with Effy Jewelry's $2,167 Ruby Royale Ruby and Diamond Crossover Ring.

The luxurious look was stylish and sleek, making her stand out in the stadium filled with sports fans.

The superstar's best gameday look so far included a fuzzy coat and designer hat.
Taylor Swift arrives at Arrowhead Stadium in December 2024.
Taylor Swift arrives at Arrowhead Stadium in December 2024.

Icon Sportswire/Getty Images

There was no missing Swift when she arrived at Arrowhead Stadium over the weekend.

She wore a vibrant red coat with a faux fur lining from Charlotte Simone, plaid Sheertex tights, and a vintage Chanel bucket hat in black.

Her outfit also included $1,595 Manolo Blahnik boots and a red Tods handbag.

The outfit was fashionable, festive, and perfect for a winter game.

Read the original article on Business Insider

7 high-profile political figures who made a splashy transition to the media industry

A view from the interior of a studio at MSNBC.
A slew of high-profile political figures have made a jump to the media world.

Virginia Sherwood/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images via Getty Images

  • In recent decades, there's been a very visible pipeline from politics to the media industry.
  • Some critics have pushed backed against former political figures migrating to major news networks.
  • Several key figures have successfully made the jump, becoming staples of TV news.

In recent decades, the politics-to-media pipeline has become an enduring phenomenon, with former party leaders and communications gurus using their previous gigs to become well-compensated hosts and pundits on network news programs.

In March, former Republican National Committee chair Ronna McDaniel was hired as a paid contributor for NBC News (and subsequently dropped after pushback from some of its top hosts), and in December, controversial former congressman Matt Gaetz accepted a job as an anchor at OAN.

Here's a look at key figures who have successfully made the jump over the past few decades:

George Stephanopoulos
George Stephanopoulos
George Stephanopoulos has been a staple of ABC News for years.

Lloyd Bishop/NBC via Getty Images

Stephanopoulos has become a household name as a result of his nearly 15-year tenure as a co-anchor on ABC's "Good Morning America."

Before Stephanopoulos became one of the biggest names at ABC News, he had a background steeped in Democratic politics, first as an aide to onetime Rep. Edward Feighan of Ohio in the 1980s before working on the unsuccessful 1988 presidential campaign of then-Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis.

Stephanopoulos rose to prominence as a deputy campaign manager for Bill Clinton's successful 1992 presidential campaign, later serving as White House communications director and a senior advisor in the administration.

At ABC News, Stephanopoulos is not only one of the faces of the weekday morning team but he also serves as the anchor of "This Week," the network's Sunday public affairs program.

In December 2024, ABC News settled a defamation lawsuit brought by Trump against Stephanopoulos and the network after the host during a March interview said Trump had been "found liable for rape" in the case involving the writer E. Jean Carroll. (Trump was found liable for sexually assaulting and defaming Carroll.)

Joe Scarborough
joe scarborough capitol police rant
"Morning Joe" host Joe Scarborough previously served as a GOP congressman from Florida.

William B. Plowman/NBC/NBC Newswire/NBCUniversal via Getty Images

Scarborough was elected to the US House from Florida during the 1994 "Republican Revolution," when his party regained a majority in the lower chamber after 50 years of Democratic control.

While in Congress, Scarborough championed conservative policies on everything from foreign affairs to the federal budget.

He later stepped down from the House in September 2001.

In 2003, Scarborough began hosting the MSNBC program "Scarborough Country." The show ran until 2007.

Since 2007, he has hosted the MSNBC program "Morning Joe."

In March 2024, Both Scarborough and his cohost (and wife) Mika Brzezinski publicly voiced their disagreement over the McDaniel hire and stated that she would not be a guest on their program.

After President-elect Donald Trump's November 2024 victory, Scarborough and Brzezinski were rebuked by many of their viewers after the pair went to Mar-a-Lago after the election in a push to "restart communications" with the incoming president, whom they were very critical of during the campaign.

Scarborough defended the move and waved off the criticism.

"Yesterday I saw for the first time what a massive disconnect there was between social media and the real world because we were flooded with phone calls from people all day, literally around the world, all very positive, very supportive," he said in November.

Jen Psaki
Jen Psaki
White House press secretary Jen Psaki waves goodbye after her last press briefing at the White House on May 13, 2022.

AP Photo/Andrew Harnik

As White House press secretary from January 2021 until May 2022, Psaki was the public face of President Joe Biden's administration.

Before that, she was a White House deputy press secretary, deputy communications director and communications director under President Barack Obama — as well as a State Department spokesperson in his administration.

In between her stint with the Obama and Biden administrations, she served as a CNN political contributor.

She now hosts the MSNBC program "Inside with Jen Psaki," which premiered in March 2023.

Nicolle Wallace
Nicolle Wallace
Nicolle Wallace previously worked in the George W. Bush White House.

Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images

Since 2017, Wallace has been an integral part of the MSNBC lineup as the host of "Deadline: White House."

Wallace previously served as the White House communications director from January 2005 until July 2006 under President George W. Bush and later worked as a senior advisor for John McCain's 2008 presidential campaign.

In 2014, Wallace joined ABC's "The View" as a co-host, but exited the program at the end of the season.

Michael Steele
GettyImages michael steele
Michael Steele once led the Republican National Committee.

Ronen Tivony/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Steele, an attorney and former Maryland lieutenant governor, was one of the most prominent Black Republican officeholders during the George W. Bush era.

In 2006, Steele unsuccessfully ran for the US Senate in Maryland, winning the GOP nomination but losing the general election to Democrat Ben Cardin.

He served as chair of the Republican National Committee from 2009 to 2011, leading the party as it picked up 63 seats in the House (and thus retook control) in the 2010 midterm elections.

In May 2011, Steele became a MSNBC political analyst.

He later backed Joe Biden in the 2020 presidential election.

Steele now hosts the MSNBC program "The Weekend," alongside commentator Alicia Menendez and former Kamala Harris chief spokesperson Symone Sanders-Townsend.

Claire McCaskill
Claire McCaskill
Claire McCaskill, right, represented Missouri in the US Senate from 2007 to 2019.

William B. Plowman/NBC via Getty Images

For years, McCaskill carved out a reputation as a moderate Democrat, serving as a prosecutor and as Missouri's auditor.

Despite the increasingly conservative lean of Missouri, McCaskill was elected to the US Senate in both 2006 and 2012, but she was unseated by Republican Josh Hawley in 2018.

McCaskill has since become a NBC News and MSNBC political analyst, and is a frequent guest on "Morning Joe."

Symone Sanders-Townsend
Symone Sanders-Townsend.
Symone Sanders-Townsend was a frequent presence on television as the national press secretary for Bernie Sanders' 2016 presidential campaign.

Chris Saucedo/Getty Images for SXSW

Sanders-Townsend rose to prominence as the national press secretary for Sen. Bernie Sanders' 2016 presidential campaign, where she was a highly-visible force in boosting the independent Vermont lawmaker's bid.

Sanders lost the Democratic primary to former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton that year, but Sanders-Townsend later emerged as an advisor for Biden's 2020 presidential campaign.

After Biden won the presidency, Sanders-Townsend became a senior advisor and the chief spokesperson for Vice President Harris. She would later depart Harris' office and pivot back to a perch in media.

Sanders-Townsend can now be seen on MSNBC's "The Weekend" alongside Steele and Menendez.

Read the original article on Business Insider

❌