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6 details you may have missed from Beyoncé's Christmas halftime show on Netflix

Beyonce dressed in white surrounded by dancers dressed in white
Beyoncé performed at halftime during the Netflix-streamed game against the Baltimore Ravens and Houston Texans on Christmas Day.

Eric Christian Smith/AP

  • Beyoncé performed at halftime during the Christmas Day game between the Baltimore Ravens and Houston Texans.
  • The performance paid homage to Texas and Mexican cultures through costumes and cameos.
  • Beyoncé also wore a custom look designed by Lindsey James Show Clothing, styled by Shiona Turini.

Beyoncé took over the field at halftime during the Christmas Day game between the Baltimore Ravens and the Houston Texans, which streamed live on Netflix. And it was such a visual and musical spectacle that you might've missed some things.

The Houston native performed eight songs from her "Cowboy Carter" album during her 12-minute performance at NRG Stadium in Houston. The spectacle fittingly included several nods to Texas, Mexican, and rodeo culture and an appearance from her daughter, Blue Ivy.

Since you might have missed some easter eggs, cameos, references, and details, we rounded them up:

Beyoncé's performance included several nods to her hometown culture of Houston.
Beyoncè riding a white horse
Beyoncè riding a white horse during her Christmas Day performance on Netflix.

Parkwood Entertainment

During her performance, Beyoncé included several nods to Texas and Houston culture, superficially Western and rodeo culture.

She began the sprawling show singing "16 Carraiges" while sitting on a white horse. She wore a custom white cowboy hat designed by ASN Hats, a Cowboy Carter sash, and a Roberto Cavalli coat from the designer's archive.

The horse was pulled by a man always wearing a cowboy hat, wide belt buckle, and cowboy boots.

As the horse walked into the stadium, it passed several low-rider cars, popular in Houston, that sat in front of an American flag seemingly wrapped in plastic.

Later in the performance, Beyoncé performed a line dance, another nod to Texas and rodeo culture.

Cameos in the performance also made clear that Bey wanted to celebrate rodeo culture, such as the inclusion of bull-riding icon Myrtis Dightman, Jr. and the first Black Rodeo Queen in Arkansas, Ja'Dayia Kursh.

Beyoncé also paid tribute to Mexican culture.
Beyonce on a floating stage dressed in white
Beyonce on a floating stage during the halftime performance.

Brooke Sutton/Getty

During her performance on the field, Beyoncé said, "One, two, tres!" It seems as if the pop star was attempting to include the 2.7 million Spanish speakers in the city of Houston.

One of her outfits also resembled the pattern of a mariachi singer.

Lastly, Mexican Cowgirl Melanie Rivera was spotted among the crowd of performers.

Beyoncé performed with her daughter, Blue Ivy.
Beyonce and Blue Ivy dressed in white
Beyoncé performing with her daughter Blue Ivy.

David J. Phillip/AP

Beyoncé has collaborated with her firstborn, Blue Ivy, many times over her career, and Christmas Day was the latest. It marked the first time the 12-year-old performed onstage with her mom since 2023's Renaissance World Tour.

While Blue Ivy performed choreography behind and beside Beyoncé, she notably appeared to be the only dancer on the field who didn't wear a platinum blonde wig.

Beyoncé's longtime dance captain, Ashley Everett, returned.
Beyonce with dancers dressed in white
Ashley Everett (center) performing with Beyoncé.

Brooke Sutton/Getty

The biggest Beyhive fans spotted Beyoncé's longtime dance captain, Ashley Everett, was among the hundreds of dancers on the field. Her appearance comes after she was absent from Bey's Renassaince World Tour.

Everett became famous as one of two dancers in Beyoncé's iconic "Single Ladies" music video.

Even the Houston Texans owners got in on the fun.
Cal McNail and wife Hannah dressed in suits
Houston Texans owner Cal McNair and his wife, Hannah.

Tim Warner/Getty

During the performance, Beyoncé recreated a traditional homecoming parade, complete with a car caravan and the appearance of two "homecoming" queens — Miss Rodeo Texas Princess 2004 and Miss Rodeo Texas 2015.

In one of the cars was also Texans owner Cal McNair and his wife Hannah — another nod to Houston.

The performance had a homecoming feel.
band performing dressed in white
Texas Southern University's Ocean of Soul Marching Band.

Mason Poole/Parkwood Entertainment

Beyoncé had her own homecoming, as the Houston native returned to perform during this Christmas Day performance. She made that plain by bringing a Texas homecoming game vibe to her performance, complete with drum majors, line dancing, and performers sporting sashes. She also featured 200 members of Texas Southern University's Ocean of Soul Marching Band.

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Why Bob Dylan's 1965 Newport Folk Festival performance sparked controversy from friends and fans: 'He betrayed the cause'

Bob Dylan performs at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival.
Bob Dylan performs at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival.

Alice Ochs/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

  • "A Complete Unknown" stars Timothée Chalamet as Bob Dylan during his rise to fame in the '60s.
  • The movie's climax is Dylan's performance at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival.
  • Dylan performed with an electric band, causing him to be ostracized from the folk scene.

James Mangold's new film "A Complete Unknown" reaches its climax when Bob Dylan (Timothée Chalamet) takes the stage at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival, drawing boos from the crowd and disgust from his peers.

But out of all the performances Dylan gave in the '60s, what made this one so controversial? To understand its outsize significance in Dylan's career, as well as music history at large, it's important first to rewind.

The Newport Folk Festival was cofounded in 1959 by jazz promoter George Wein and music manager Albert Grossman. (The latter is best known for representing Dylan between 1962 and 1970.)

Dylan made his debut at the annual event in 1963 alongside Joan Baez, a close collaborator who was already a folk superstar. He returned the following year for a solo set in his typically sparse style — guitar, harmonica, raw vocals — and sang now-beloved tracks like "Mr. Tambourine Man" and "Chimes of Freedom."

Dylan amassed an adoring crowd in 1964 and became known as one of the festival's biggest draws. He was expected to return for the 1965 edition, alongside friends and folk staples like Baez and Pete Seeger.

It was also expected that Dylan would deliver another solo acoustic performance. Instead, the 1965 Newport Folk Festival is better known as the night Dyan went electric.

'An artist can't be made to serve a theory'

Joan Baez and Bob Dylan perform at the 1963 Newport Folk Festival.
Joan Baez and Bob Dylan perform at the 1963 Newport Folk Festival.

Jeff Hochberg/Getty Images

The original script for "A Complete Unknown" was based on Elijah Wald's 2015 book "Dylan Goes Electric! Newport, Seeger, Dylan, and the Night That Split the Sixties."

Wald recounts how a 24-year-old Dylan took the stage with an electric guitar, breaking with convention and shocking — even enraging — the crowd who gathered to hear traditional finger-picked tunes.

Instead, Dylan opened with "Maggie's Farm" ("Well, I try my best to be just like I am / But everybody wants you to be just like them / They say 'Sing while you slave' and I just get bored") and "Like a Rolling Stone" ("When you got nothing, you got nothing to lose / You're invisible now, you got no secrets to conceal"), backed by a full band.

Before the performance, Dylan had been growing agitated with the expectations placed on him by fans and the media, who were hailing him as the bastion of protest music. However, according to Baez, Dylan wasn't particularly interested in politics beyond its service to his songwriting. His music leaned more toward commentary than activism.

"I think what happened with Bobby is the same as with The Beatles. They are really talented, but they don't want to accept responsibility for what's going on," Baez said in 1967. "And the minute they write a song that was sort of saying, 'I'm on this side or that,' then everybody's going to jump all over them for being part of a cause, and they don't want it."

At the time, the folk scene was all about social awareness and advocacy. Baez was a fixture at protests and civil rights marches, for example, while Seeger was avidly pro-worker and tracked by the FBI for suspected ties to communism. By contrast, Dylan avoided political events throughout the '60s and even declined to denounce the Vietnam War, a cause that united many of his contemporaries. (When asked to do so by Sing Out! in 1968, he replied, "How do you know that I'm not, as you say, for the war?")

Dylan's girlfriend in the early '60s, Suze Rotolo, said he balked at the idea of getting boxed in — as a person or a musician — in her 2008 memoir "A Freewheelin' Time."

"The old-left wanted to school him so he would understand well and continue on the road they had paved, the one that Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger and others had traveled before him. They explained the way of the road and its borders," she wrote. "Bob listened, absorbed, honored them, and then walked away. An artist can't be made to serve a theory."

In short, Dylan didn't feel beholden to the folk tradition. So, on that pivotal day in Newport, he decided to swap his acoustic guitar for the famed Sunburst Fender Stratocaster.

Bob Dylan's Fender Stratocaster electric guitar from the 1965 Newport Folk Festival, displayed at an auction preview at Christie's in 2013.
Dylan's guitar from the 1965 Newport Folk Festival was auctioned for nearly $1 million in 2013.

Andrew Burton/Getty Images

"When Dylan took the stage with that unprecedented amped-in performance, he fatefully intertwined folk with rock 'n' roll," Rolling Stone reported. "But more immediately, he was harassed by the audience, who booed him loudly and called him a traitor to the folk genre."

The dissenters included Seeger, who had supported Dylan's career since they met years prior in Greenwich Village. Seeger was also a prominent member of the festival's board of directors and has been credited with booking Dylan for the lineup.

It's been widely reported that Seeger, watching Dylan's performance from the wings, told the audio technicians he wanted to chop the cables with an ax. (It's unlikely that Seeger actually tried to cut Dylan's sound, as he's depicted attempting in "A Complete Unknown," but rumors about that day can be hard to separate from reality. Seeger later said he was only upset because the sound was distorted.)

Not everyone was horrified. Johnny Cash was famously supportive of his friend's shift toward rock, while Baez later told Rolling Stone, "I just thought he was very brave to do it, even though I didn't like the sound of it. But I learned to like it, because he was still writing wonderful stuff."

Still, Dylan was shouted off the stage in Newport after just three songs. After a brief intermission, he returned with his acoustic guitar to play "Mr. Tambourine Man" and, fittingly, "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue." The crowd cheered for these songs, but bootleg videos show Dylan looking stoic.

'Judas!'

Bob Dylan performs in White Plains, New York in 1966.
Bob Dylan performs in White Plains, New York in 1966.

Alice Ochs/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

In the following years, Dylan was ostracized from the folk community. Fans thought electric Dylan was an out-of-touch sell-out, less authentic than acoustic Dylan, and they weren't afraid to let him know.

"A Complete Unknown" shows a furious concertgoer screaming "Judas!" at Dylan in Newport, which actually did happen — only it happened several months later in Manchester, England, during Dylan's 1966 world tour. (He'd just released "Blonde on Blonde," which has since been vindicated by fans and critics as one of his best albums.)

One fan identified as Lonnie, who attended the Manchester show in question, is quoted in C.P. Lee's 1998 biography "Bob Dylan: Like the Night."

Lonnie told Lee he doesn't regret how the crowd treated their one-time hero: "It was like, as if, everything that we held dear had been betrayed," he said, adding, "We made him and he betrayed the cause."

Ironically, the immediate backlash seemed to reinforce the very reason Dylan stepped back from folk music in the first place.

In his 2004 memoir, "Chronicles: Volume One," Dylan said his admirers had been acting increasingly possessive. "Screw that," he wrote. "As far as I knew, I didn't belong to anybody then or now."

Dylan's rebellious streak made him perfectly suited for the rock world, which embraced him with open arms.

Dylan refused to play at the Newport Folk Festival for another 37 years before he finally returned in 2002. By that time, change and genre-hopping had become not a sticking point for Dylan's fans but a key part of his allure.

Once again, he sang "Like a Rolling Stone." This time, it was met with applause.

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How Elon Musk spent 2024 getting richer and more powerful than ever

Elon Musk holds the microphone during a town hall in Pennsylvania where he discussed his support for Donald Trump/
Tesla CEO Elon Musk, the world's richest man, stands out from the other Americans who preceded him in holding the same title.

Matt Rourke/AP

  • Elon Musk is the world's first $400 billion person.
  • It's not just his wealth that increased in 2024.
  • Thanks to Donald Trump, Musk will enter 2025 with unprecedented power.

Elon Musk is more than just the world's richest person.

He's also the self-proclaimed "First Buddy" of President-elect Donald Trump, who will soon return to his position as leader of the free world. Trump has named Musk as co-leader of "The Department of Government Efficiency," giving the tech titan major sway over federal spending.

Like many moments in Musk's life, it's a remarkable turnaround story.

2024 began with Musk briefly relinquishing his wealthiest title, first to French luxury titan Bernard Arnault and then to Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, Musk's rival in space travel.

Musk had also backed the wrong candidate. In early 2024, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who Musk had aligned himself with, abruptly ended his campaign after Trump blew him out in the Iowa Republican caucuses. By March, Trump, trying to orchestrate his own comeback, privately met with Musk to ask for his financial support. In response, Musk said his checkbook was closed.

He changed his mind, spending over $277 million backing Trump and the GOP. Musk even campaigned for Trump in Pennsylvania, the biggest swing state.

Musk's wealth surged after the 2024 election election. His big bet is still paying off.

January: Musk visited Auschwitz amid an uproar
Elon Musk visits the Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp
Elon Musk visits the Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp alongside conservative podcaster Ben Shapiro (left).

Andrzej Rudiak/AP

Musk ended 2023 under siege. In what he later called his "dumbest" tweet ever, the billionaire promoted an antisemitic post. Media Matters, a liberal nonprofit, accused X of placing ads next to pro-Nazi content, allegations that sent advertisers fleeing the platform.

He apologized for the post but lashed out at advertisers, including Disney CEO Bob Iger, telling them "to go fuck" themselves.

In late January, Musk accepted an invitation to visit the site of the infamous Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp. Afterward, he said he had been "naive" about the Holocaust.

February: Musk returned to the Super Bowl

Musk had a prime seat to watch the Kansas City Chiefs win their second-straight Super Bowl.

This was Musk's first big game since reports surfaced that he spent the 2023 Super Bowl frustrated that President Joe Biden's tweet received more engagement than his own. According to Platformer, Musk pressured Twitter engineers to begin working on ensuring that his future posts would get much larger exposure.

March: X abruptly ended a deal with Don Lemon after a testy interview

X is a platform that champions free speech, and we’re proud to provide an open environment for diverse voices and perspectives. The Don Lemon Show is welcome to publish its content on X, without censorship, as we believe in providing a platform for creators to scale their work…

— Business (@XBusiness) March 13, 2024

Musk's X has become a new home for many commentators, including conservative commentator Tucker Carlson.

Former CNN anchor Don Lemon inked a deal with the platform for similar support, but those plans were scrapped after Lemon's interview with Musk.

Lemon, who later sued Musk, questioned the CEO's commitment to welcoming "diverse voices" on X in the wake of the abrupt cancellation.

"His commitment to a global town square where all questions can be asked and all ideas can be shared seems not to include questions of him from people like me," Lemon wrote in a since-deleted post.

April: Musk made a surprise visit to China
Elon Musk makes a surprise visit to China
Tesla CEO Elon Musk, left, met with Chinese Premier Li Qiang in Beijing.

Getty Images

Musk sent Tesla shares higher in April amid a previously unannounced visit to China. According to Reuters, the Tesla CEO was there to soothe tensions over the automaker's Full Self-Driving (FSD) software, which has long been hoped to launch in its second-biggest market.

The entry of Tesla's technology into China continues to be delayed.

Musk's ties to China are receiving renewed attention given the powerful post he will occupy outside the Trump administration. Multiple House Democrats accused Musk of helping kill an initial bipartisan year-end spending bill due to including a provision that would regulate US investments in China. Congress eventually averted a government shutdown, but the final legislation did not include the investment restrictions.

"This awful creature needs to be expelled from Congress! Ugh …," Musk wrote on X, in response to Rep. Rosa DeLauro, a Connecticut Democrat, calling him out for tanking the deal.

May: Musk welcomed Indonesia to SpaceX's Starlink
Elon Musk signs a deal for Starlink while wearing a traditional batik shirt
Elon Musk signs a deal for Starlink while wearing a traditional batik shirt

Getty Images

SpaceX's Starlink satellite internet service exploded in popularity over the year.

In May, Musk headed to the resort island of Bali to welcome Indonesia to Starlink, making it the third Southeast Asian country to receive the service.

Even bigger announcements came later in the year. In September, United Airlines announced it would launch Starlink service early next year. Several major cruise ship companies now offer Starlink as well.

Global internet traffic from Starlink more than tripled in 2024, as Business Insider previously reported.

July: Musk 'fully' endorsed Trump

I fully endorse President Trump and hope for his rapid recovery pic.twitter.com/ZdxkF63EqF

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) July 13, 2024

Musk came off the sidelines in a major way by endorsing Trump after the former president survived an assassination attempt. Like others in Silicon Valley, the billionaire later said admired Trump's courage.

With blood across his face, Trump held up his fist and yelled "Fight" as Secret Service agents ushered him off the stage to safety.

It wasn't fully clear at the time, but Musk had already been working to support Trump. Just a day before shots rang out, Bloomberg News reported that the Tesla CEO had donated to a pro-Trump super PAC.

October: Musk joined Trump on the campaign trail
Elon Musk jumps behind Donald Trump during a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania
Elon Musk jumps behind Donald Trump during a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania.

Getty Images

Musk soon became one of the biggest megadonors of the entire 2024 cycle. He wasn't done trying to influence the presidential race.

In October, Musk joined Trump as the former president returned to Butler, Pennsylvania, at the exact location of the July assassination attempt.

"As you can see, I am not just MAGA, I'm dark MAGA," Musk said while wearing an all-black Make American Great Again hat.

Trump's campaign seized on Musk's attire and used it to fuel further fundraising.

SpaceX showed it can catch a rocket in midair
SpaceX successfully demonstrated its ability to catch a Starship rocket in midair
SpaceX successfully demonstrated its ability to catch a Starship rocket in midair

SpaceX / Handout/Anadolu via Getty Images

It wasn't all politics. In mid-October, Musk's SpaceX conducted its fifth test flight of its Starship rocket.

The company made history and pulled off an engineering marvel when it demonstrated its ability to catch a 233-foot-tall Super Heavy booster as it descended back toward the launchpad.

The spectacle moved Musk's vision for reusable rockets and, thus, cheaper space travel one step closer to reality.

Musk started $1 million giveaways to voters
Elon Musk presents a $1 million check to a voter
Elon Musk presents a $1 million check to a voter

Getty Images

Musk didn't stop at donating hundreds of millions to help Trump. He hit the campaign trail, focusing on Pennsylvania, widely viewed as the 2024 election's most important state.

The billionaire went even further in a controversial step, giving away $1 million to voters in swing states. The Trump ally's attorneys later admitted that the checks weren't the result of a true lottery.

Philadelphia's district attorney, Larry Krasner, filed a lawsuit in October attempting to stop the effort. Just before Election Day, a Pennsylvania judge ruled that the checks could go on.

November: The Trump-Musk bromance simmered at Mar-a-Lago

The whole squad pic.twitter.com/5yQVkFiney

— Kai Trump (@kaitrump) November 6, 2024

Late on November 5, it became clear that Trump's political comeback would be successful. Musk was at Trump's private Mar-a-Lago club to watch the results unfold.

Trump thanked Musk by name in his victory speech early the next morning.

"We have a new star, a star is born," Trump told boisterous supporters in West Palm Beach, Florida, a few hours before the election was called in his favor. "Elon. He is an amazing guy."

Kai Trump, one of the president-elect's granddaughters, went even further, declaring Musk part of the family's "squad" in a photo that showed over a dozen Trumps next to Musk holding his son, X Æ A-12.

Musk, Trump, and some cabinet picks enjoyed a night out
Elon Musk and Donald Trump talk to a UFC fighter
Elon Musk and Donald Trump talk to a UFC fighter

Getty Images

Musk and Trump remained virtually inseparable after the election. The billionaire maintained a constant presence at Mar-a-Lago.

When the president-elect left his club, Musk would often join him. On November 16, Musk joined Trump's sprawling entourage to watch UFC 309 at Madison Square Garden in New York.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Trump's pick to lead the Health and Human Services Department, and former Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard, who Trump nominated to be director of national intelligence, were among those who sat nearby.

December: DOGE took over Capitol Hill
Elon Musk carries his son X-Æ-12 on his shoulders during a visit to the US Capitol
Elon Musk carries his son X-Æ-12 on his shoulders during a visit to the US Capitol.

Getty Images

Musk wasted little time working on DOGE, the outside advisory panel that Musk and Ramaswamy have said will cut $2 trillion from the federal budget.

In December, Musk and Ramaswamy visited Capitol Hill to discuss their plans with GOP lawmakers. Musk even brought his son along.

Musk sent GOP lawmakers into chaos

Ever seen a bigger piece of pork? pic.twitter.com/ZesFCNSNKp

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) December 18, 2024

Musk wasn't done disrupting Washington.

In mid-December, House lawmakers finally reached a deal to avoid a government shutdown just before the Christmas holiday. As was often the case, lawmakers loaded the legislation full of unrelated provisions, stretching the bill to over 1,500 pages long.

Trump's "First Buddy" soon joined a handful of conservative activists in fomenting an effort to kill the bill. Speaker Mike Johnson, a Republican who helped break the deal with House Democrats, had to scrap it.

There was brief concern that Musk's actions might lead to a government shutdown, an occurrence he and Trump encouraged if the final deal didn't give them what they wanted.

Ultimately, Trump didn't get his wish for lawmakers to increase the debt ceiling. Musk declared he was satisfied with the final product, which trimmed the deal down which funded the federal government through March 14, included $100 billion in disaster relief, and extended farm policies for a year.

Trump said Musk can't be president

Democrats pounced on the opportunity to blame Musk for the funding bill's death. Some even called him President Musk.

Musk responded by lashing out at Democrats. He said on X the statements were a ploy designed to drive a wedge between him and Trump.

Trump addressed the fracas just before Christmas, joking to a conservative conference that he wasn't worried about the Tesla CEO who can't be president.

"No, he's not gonna be president, that I can tell you," Trump said. "And I'm safe, you know why? He can't be, he wasn't born in this country."

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Dave Portnoy Slams Beyoncé's Halftime Show, 'Been LOST'

Dave Portnoy is not a fan of Beyoncé and he clearly wants the world to know it ... publicly ripping her during her big Christmas Day halftime show. The Barstool Sports honcho went in on Queen Bey on Wednesday as she was serenading NRG Stadium in…
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