Key eventsShow key events onlyPlease turn on JavaScript to use this featureAlaina DemopoulosAI vs AIOoh, the tech oligarchs are fighting! Ads are coming to ChatGPT – and its rival company Anthropic took the time to remind us that “Claude will remain ad-free”. Let’s see how well this ages.ShareAlaina DemopoulosSerena Williams wants you thinnerNo plot, story or special effects to speak of: the telehealth company must have spent all their money on Serena Williams. As far as Super Bowl commercials go, this Ro one is pretty straightforward.ShareBenjamin LeeThe Mandalorian and GroguDisney’s Star Wars strategy – decrease quality of movies, increase amount of TV shows – hasn’t really been paying off all that well, Andor aside. While there is a fanbase for The Mandalorian and his little baby Yoda friend, it remains to be seen if a big enough audience is excited enough to see this as something other than an extended episode of something they’re used to watching on their smartphone. I do appreciate a specially made, or at least freshly packaged, big game teaser though, not purely reliant on the same cocktail of clips, more of that please studios.ShareUpdated at 19.05 ESTBenjamin LeeThe Michelobs are on Lewis PullmanNepo baby Lewis Pullman (son of Bill) meets father of Nepo baby Kurt Russell (dad of Wyatt) for an ad to celebrate the importance of being a cheapskate. Lewis must learn how to ski better to prevent paying for the beers being drunk by his far more accomplished Olympian friends Chloe Kim and TJ Oshie. Whatever it takes!ShareAlaina DemopoulosBen Stiller gets out-flippedBen Stiller and Benson Boone? Sure, why not. Zoolander stars alongside everyone’s favorite back-flipping Mormon as the two act as 1980s pop stars performing a song about the grocery delivery app. But when Boone starts with the acrobatics – and why wouldn’t he? – Stiller cannot keep up. Cue a very Stiller-esque meltdown that involves the comedian failing backflips from unnervingly increasing heights. For such a random pairing, the two leads do have some sort of chemistry going on.ShareAdrian HortonHailee Steinfeld needs a liftHailee Steinfeld’s husband (Buffalo Bills QB Josh Allen) may not have made it to the big game this year, but the Sinners actor did – for a spot with State Farm, where she has to endure Keegan-Michael Key’s off-key cover of Livin’ On a Prayer (he’s an off-brand insurance broker, you see), until she’s rescued by none other than Patriots fan Jon Bon Jovi himself.ShareUpdated at 18.55 ESTDani AnguianoIt was a lively crowded scene outside Levi’s Stadium, where a handful of protesters had gathered ahead of the largest sporting event of the year.Santa Clara county had been on edge in the weeks leading up to the Super Bowl amid reports that ICE agents would be conducting immigration operations during the game.The NFL announced this week that there was no planned ICE activity during the game and the governor said his office had also received a similar confirmation. But officials had been prepared for either outcome, and the area’s congressman Ro Khanna said he would be outside the stadium on Sunday to make sure ICE does not “harass a single American or immigrant”.“ICE stay out of my district on Super Bowl Sunday.”Outside one stadium entrance on Sunday, dozens of onlookers gathered to take in the scene. A handful of demonstrators from different religious groups handed out pamphlets, while vendors sold T-Shirts and snacks, and fans waited in hopes of somehow snagging a last minute ticket. There was a small crowd of protesters with signs and drums demonstrating against ICE, and one playing a xylophone; but most began clearing out before the game kicked off.By the time the game began, Elisabeth Pitts, carrying a sign that read “United We Stand Against Fascism”, was among the only protesters left on the scene.She came out to watch for ICE. She felt the administration’s move last fall to suggest immigration agents would be in the area was “petty” and wanted to take a stand against that.“I just think it’s important to protect our rights and stand up against bullies and to protect ourselves from a fascist style government,” Pitts said.ShareUpdated at 18.53 ESTBenjamin LeeDisclosure DayArriving at just the right time for increasingly energised UFO conspiracy theorists, Steven Spielberg’s big return to the sci-fi genre is still looking like a whole bunch of question marks (Good or bad aliens? Bad CGI? Why is every American played by a Brit?) but it is thrilling to have a summer blockbuster that’s actually original once again. The latest spot shows a giant ship emerging through clouds, Independence Day style, and some more questionable accents. Time will tell.ShareAdrian HortonPuthers rise! Those opening jazzy keys made me a little nervous that we were heading into Fergie national anthem territory, but Charlie Puth, the niche-beloved pop artist (“You smoked, then ate seven bars of chocolate / We declared Charlie Puth should be a bigger artist” goes a choice Taylor Swift lyric) delivered a smooth-as-butter rendition of the Star-Spangled Banner. Complete with a flyover and cutaways to troops in the Middle East (eek) of course. I will once again be returning to his excellent and deeply underrated 2018 album Voicenotes.ShareBenjamin LeeBecause it’s hard to put your shoes on, right?Skechers here providing much-needed aid to adults struggling to put their shoes on without having some sort of breakdown. Their easy slip-ons are smooth enough to impress Sofía Vergara, an actor worth a reported $180m, who can probably just pay someone to put them on for her, I would have thought.ShareBenjamin LeeHoppersPixar, a company that used to turn the wildest premises into both critical and commercial gold, has been struggling to impress either side in recent years. After Elio was a historic flop for them, they’re hoping Hoppers might turn the tide, and they might have a safer hit on their hands. It’s a fun, grabby premise – tech that allows humans to masquerade as animals – and while there’s not that much here in this big game spot, here’s hoping the recent billion-dollar success of Zootopia’s animated animals will help nudge it along.ShareBenjamin LeeScream 7Poor old Sidney Prescott. It’s almost been 30 years of menacing phone calls, non-lethal stab wounds, severed relationships (some literally), unwanted press attention, and now, as the Scream franchise continues to be more commercially successful than ever before (the sixth chapter was a record-breaker), here comes Ghostface threatening her teenage daughter. But as Sidney’s bad luck continues, Neve Campbell’s does the opposite. The actor was lured back after taking one film off over a pay dispute and it’s her most substantial role, and we assume salary, to date. The new spot offers more of the same, keeping the film’s long list of back-from-the-dead cameos under wraps, but the repetition is almost reassuring, the biggest secrets not being spoiled just yet.ShareJustin and Hailey Bieber are here, spotted entering a private suite to watch the game.ShareAdrian HortonOK we’re back to the musical performances, with Americana singer-songwriter and Washington state native Brandi Carlile for America the Beautiful. We’re now 3 for 3 on solid performances – she sounds gorgeous, with just the right level of twang.ShareUpdated at 18.44 ESTAdrian HortonAnd for the New England Patriots, we have… Jon Bon Jovi? Ok this one confuses me as Bon Jovi is famously from New Jersey, home to the New York Giants and now the New York Jets, but I guess he is a Pats fan. Where are the Wahlbergs?ShareUpdated at 18.55 ESTBenjamin LeeYour hair is sadA quick moment here to feel bad for all your unwanted body hair which, according to Manscaped, misses being on you so much that it sings a sad little song before it’s washed down the drain. Pretty scary, honestly.ShareOwen MyersNostalgia-bait goes boringIt’s hard to make accounting software sexy, and it’s some credit to Ramp that they don’t even try with their ad featuring The Office US’s Kevin Malone. But it doesn’t do much beyond prompting a watery smile of recognition, and I still have no idea what Ramp is actually for.Share
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