A ‘Wii Sports’ Switch comeback and a parade of remakes set off a wild Nintendo Direct

A screenshot of the tennis game in 'Switch Sports'. A separate window in the bottom right corner of the frame shows a person playing the game.

Every once in a while, Nintendo does this thing where it just leans in and gives the fans what they want. Less the news you’re hoping to see and more the news you wouldn’t have dared to even hope for. Our latest Nintendo Direct stream is one of those occasions.

We got some blockbuster news, like reveals of Mario Strikers: Battle League and Switch Sports — yes, it’s effectively a sequel to Wii Sports, get hype — as well as new info about Kirby and the Forgotten Land (which looks positively delightful) and a promise for two more years(!!) of updates for Mario Kart 8 Deluxe. The “Booster Course Pass” will add 48 tracks to the game in total across six packs released through the end of 2023.

The stream also featured some shockers. Classic games like Chrono Cross, Front Mission 1st and Klonoa are incoming. Nintendo Switch Online subscribers are also getting a pair of surprises in the form of Earthbound and Earthbound Beginnings, two beloved classics that sit at the top of many a super-fan’s hoped-for re-release lists.

There’s a lot more in the 40-minute direct, including looks at Switch re-releases of Portal (both games) and No Man’s Sky. Check it out.

Samsung’s The Frame on sale in multiple sizes, plus more 4K TV deals as of Feb. 9

Samsung QLED TV sitting in living room

UPDATE: Feb. 9, 2022, 4:40 p.m. EST This story has been updated to reflect current pricing, including a slew of affordable Hisense ULED TVs on sale.

  • The Samsung 75-inch The Frame QLED TV is a massive masterpiece, whether it’s playing a show or acting as the art itself — $2,199.99 $2,999.99 (save $800)

  • The LG 65-inch C1 Series OLED 4K TV has dazzling picture that can keep up with high-stakes gaming — $1,796.99 $2,499.99 (save $703)

  • The Hisense 65-inch U6G ULED TV is an affordable way to bring OLED-like colors and contrast to your gaming setup — $599.99 $1,299.99 (save $700)


Large 4K TVs no longer have to cost an exorbitant amount of money. Rather, these high-quality TVs featuring punchy colors, decipherable shadows, and smooth transitions are actually affordable for regular consumers. And to make them even more budget-friendly, we’ve gathered up the best deals on 4K and QLED TVs from top brands like Samsung, LG, Sony, and more.

Samsung TV deals

Samsung TV with bridge on screen

Credit: Samsung

Our pick: Samsung 75-inch The Frame QLED TV

$2,199.99 at Samsung (save $800)

Why we love it

If you’ve spent time researching nice TVs, you know why The Frame is so unique. When you’re not watching Samsung’s quantum dot technology bump the brightness and color in every juicy scene ofYellowjackets, The Frame itself morphs into a piece of art. Let it pull from a library of work by real artists or watch it blend into the wall behind it when you upload a photo of the wall.

More Samsung TVs on sale

  • Samsung 43-inch The Sero Rotating QLED TV — $999.99 $1,999.99 (save $1,000)

  • Samsung 50-inch 7 Series 4K TV — $399.99 $479.99 (save $80)

  • Samsung 50-inch 8000 Series 4K TV — $449.99 $569.99 (save $120)

  • Samsung 50-inch Q60A Series QLED TV — $579.99 $699.99 (save $120)

  • Samsung 55-inch 8000 Series 4K TV — $499.99 $629.99 (save $130)

  • Samsung 55-inch Q70A Series QLED TV — $849.99 $1,099.99 (save $250)

  • Samsung 55-inch The Terrace Outdoor QLED TV — $2,999.99 $3,619.99 (save $620)

  • Samsung 65-inch 8000 Series 4K TV — $649.99 $799.99 (save $150)

  • Samsung 65-inch TU8300 Curved 4K TV — $649.99 $799.99 (save $150)

  • Samsung 65-inch Q60A Series QLED TV — $899.99 $999.99 (save $100)

  • Samsung 65-inch The Frame QLED TV — $1,499.99 $1,999.99 (save $500)

  • Samsung 65-inch Q900A 8K TV — $2,999.99 $4,499.99 (save $1,500)

  • Samsung 70-inch Q60A Series QLED TV — $999.99 $1,349.99 (save $350)

  • Samsung 75-inch 7 Series 4K TV — $849.99 $1,099.99 (save $250)

  • Samsung 75-inch Q70A Series QLED TV — $1,399.99 $2,099.99 (save $700)

  • Samsung 75-inch QN84A Neo QLED TV — $1,899.99 $2,799.99 (save $900)

  • Samsung 85-inch Q60A QLED TV — $1,799.99 $2,799.99 (save $1,000)

  • Samsung 85-inch The Frame QLED TV — $3,799.99 $4,299.99 (save $500)

LG TV deals

LG TV with glowing tree screensaver

Credit: LG

Our pick: LG 65-inch C1 Series OLED 4K TV

$1,796.99 at Amazon (save $703)

Why we love it

The LG C1’s OLED display has more than 8 million pixels to bring you deep blacks and vibrant colors. Its 4K AI processor adjusts with the content to ensure everything you watch looks the best it can. Its zippy refresh rate keeps heavy-graphics gaming on point, too.

More LG TVs on sale

  • LG 43-inch UP8000 Series 4K TV — $359.99 $479.99 (save $120)

  • LG 48-inch C1 Series OLED 4K TV — $1,096.99 $1,599.99 (save $503)

  • LG 50-inch UP8000 Series 4K TV — $429.99 $529.99 (save $100)

  • LG 55-inch NanoCell 80 4K TV — $646.99 $799.99 (save $153)

  • LG 65-inch NanoCell 75 Series 4K TV — $699.99 $949.99 (save $250)

  • LG 65-inch B1 Series OLED TV — $1,596.99 $2,299.99 (save $703)

  • LG 65-inch A1 Series OLED TV — $1,399.99 $1,799.99 (save $400)

  • LG 65-inch 90 Series QNED Mini LED 4K TV — $1,599.99 $1,999.99 (save $400)

  • LG 65-inch G1 Series OLED TV — $2,299.99 $2,799.99 (save $500)

  • LG 70-inch UP8070 4K TV — $799.99 $999.99 (save $200)

  • LG 70-inch NanoCell 75 Series 4K TV — $899.99 $1,199.99 (save $300)

  • LG 75-inch NanoCell 90 Series 4K TV — $1,699.99 $2,099.99 (save $400)

  • LG 77-inch C1 Series OLED TV — $2,899.99 $3,299.99 (save $400)

Sony TV deals

Sony TV with desert scene screensaver

Credit: Sony

Our pick: Sony 50-inch X80J 4K TV

$499.99 at Best Buy (save $200)

Why we love it

Sony doesn’t often have the budget-friendly range that Samsung or LG do, so a mid-sizer for under $500 feels lucky. This X80J and the slightly more expensive X85J use different panels and offer different viewing experiences. If you care about wide viewing angles, this living room-sized X80J is the way to go.

More Sony TVs on sale

  • Sony 50-inch X85J 4K TV — $649.99 $849.99 (save $200)

  • Sony 55-inch X80J 4K TV — $599.99 $799.99 (save $200)

  • Sony 55-inch X85J 4K TV — $749.99 $999.99 (save $250)

  • Sony 65-inch X80J 4K TV — $749.99 $999.99 (save $250)

  • Sony 65-inch Bravia XR A9 OLED TV — $3,299.99 $3,799.99 (save $500)

  • Sony 75-inch X80J 4K TV — $999.99 $1,399.99 (save $400)

  • Sony 75-inch X85J 4K TV — $1,299.99 $1,599.99 (save $300)

  • Sony 75-inch X90J 4K TV — $1,599.99 $2,099.99 (save $500)

  • Sony 77-inch A80J OLED TV — $2,899.99 $3,499.99 (save $600)

  • Sony 85-inch X85J 4K TV — $1,799.99 $2,499.99 (save $700)

  • Sony 85-inch X95J Bravia XR TV — $3,799.99 $4,499.99 (save $700)

Other TV deals from TCL, Vizio, and more

Hisense TV with blue and yellow design

Credit: Hisense

Our pick: Hisense 65-inch U6G ULED TV

$599.99 at Walmart (save $700)

Why we love it

A steal for gamers, this Hisense deal is a chance to upgrade from a monitor to a big screen. Low input lag and contrast in bright rooms are some shining points.

More TVs from TCL, Vizio, and more

  • TCL 43-inch 4-Series 4K TV — $259.99 $349.99 (save $90)

  • Hisense 50-inch R6 4K TV — $295 $348 (save $53)

  • Amazon 50-inch 4-Series 4K Fire TV — $329.99 $469.99 (save $140)

  • TCL 50-inch 5-Series QLED TV — $429.99 $599.99 (save $170)

  • Vizio 50-inch M7 Quantum Series 4K TV — $499.99 $699.99 (save $200)

  • TCL 55-inch 4-Series 4K TV — $329.99 $499.99 (save $170)

  • Amazon 55-inch 4 Series 4K Fire TV — $379.99 $519.99 (save $140)

  • Hisense 55-inch U6G ULED TV — $459.99 $649.99 (save $170)

  • Hisense 55-inch U7G ULED TV — $599.99 $849.99 (save $250)

  • TCL 55-inch 6-Series Mini LED QLED TV — $699.99 $949.99 (save $250)

  • Vizio 58-inch V-Series 4K TV — $399.99 $529.99 (save $130)

  • TCL 65-inch 4-Series 4K TV — $449.99 $699.99 (save $250)

  • Hisense 65-inch 65A6G 4K TV — $449.99 $599.99 (save $150)

  • Vizio 65-inch V-Series 4K TV — $499.99 $599.99 (save $100)

  • Amazon 65-inch Omni Series 4K Fire TV – $599.99 $829.99 (save $230)

  • Vizio 75-inch M6 Series 4K TV — $729 $999.99 (save $270.99)

  • TCL 75-inch 5-Series QLED TV — $999.99 $1,299.99 (save $300)

  • Hisense 75-inch U6G ULED TV — $899.99 $1,049.99 (save $150)

  • Hisense 75-inch U7G ULED TV — $1,199.99 $1,499.99 (save $300)

  • Hisense 75-inch U9DG Dual-Cell ULED TV — $1,999.99 $2,999.99 (save $1,000)

  • TCL 75-inch 6-Series Mini LED QLED TV — $1,299.99 $1,799.99 (save $500)

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  • The best 4K TVs: For gamers, Netflix binge-watchers, and everyone else

  • Your TV needs a soundbar. Here are our faves.

The best robot vacuum deals as of Feb. 9: It’s a good time to buy a vacuum-mop hybrid

Roomba j7+ on auto empty dock

UPDATE: Feb. 9, 2022, 4:25 p.m. EST This story has been updated to reflect current sale prices and availability.

We’ve compiled the best deals on robot vacuums from brands like iRobot, Shark, and Ecovacs. Here are the ones to grab as of Feb. 9:

  • BUDGET PICK: The Eufy 30C Max covers a lot of ground, gets up to 100 minutes of battery life, and comes with boundary strips— $196.99 $299.99 (save $103)

  • BUDGET SELF-EMPTYING PICK: The Shark IQ has an XL bin that holds two months of dust — $419.99 $599.99 (save $180)

  • BEST ROBOT VACUUM/MOP DEAL: The Ecovacs Deebot N8 Pro+ uses LiDAR to vacuum and mop, then empties the mess on its own — $519.99 $799.99 (save $280)


Only three things are certain in life: Death, taxes, and a few days each month when you need to vacuum but just don’t have time. Whether you detest the chore or get a little bummed when you can’t have that satisfying dance with your Dyson, a robot vacuum is a lifesaver. Shop models on sale below.

Robot vacuums under $200:

Eufy brown and black robot vacuum with boundary strip and phone

Credit: Eufy

Our pick: Eufy 30C Max

$196.99 at Amazon (save $103)

Why we like it

You won’t get smart mapping at this price point, but the Eufy 30C Max navigates better than the 15C Max thanks to its included boundary strips. It manages to squeeze out a robust floor cleaning in 100 minutes (or over an hour on Max mode), and has suction more than strong enough for hard floors and light carpet upkeep.

More robot vacuums under $200

  • ILIFE V3s Pro — $129.99 $159.99 (save $30)

  • Ecovacs Deebot 710 — $139.99 $175.99 (save $36)

  • iRobot Roomba 670 — $174 $329.99 (save $155.99)

  • Eufy 11S Slim Max — $169.99 $249.99 (save $80)

  • ILIFE A9 — $189.99 $299.99 (save $110)

  • Roborock E4 Robot Vacuum — $199.99 $299.99 (save $100)

Robot vacuums under $500

Shark IQ self-emptying vacuum

Credit: Shark

Our pick: Shark IQ Robot Vacuum with XL Self-Empty Base

$419.99 at Amazon (save $180)

Why we like it

Shark’s largest self-emptying dock delivers nearly two months of cleaning before the bin fills up. The vacuum itself maps out your home, then follows its map with methodical row-by-row sweeping. In the Shark app, you can select specific rooms to clean.

More robot vacuums under $500

  • Yeedi Vac — $229.99 $299.99 (save $70)

  • Neato Robotics D8 — $349 $599.99 (save $250.99)

  • Eufy RoboVac X8 — $499.99 $599.99 (save $100)

Robot vacuums under $800

samsung jetbot and clean station

Credit: Samsung

Our pick: Samsung Jet Bot+

$634 at Amazon (save $165)

Why we like it

Surprise: Amazon has the better price on the Jet Bot+ than Samsung’s own website. The more affordable model in Samsung’s LiDAR-equipped collection of vacs cleans by identifying the type of surface and amount of dust it’s dealing with. The compact Clean Station holds up to a month’s worth of debris.

More robot vacuums under $800

  • Shark AI RV2502AE — $549.99 $649.99 (save $100)

  • iRobot Roomba j7 — $550 $$649.99 (save $90.99)

  • Neato Robotics D10 — $599.99 $799.99 (save $200)

Robot vacuum and mop hybrids and dedicated robot mops

Ecovacs N8 Pro+ vacuum

Credit: Ecovacs

Our pick: Ecovacs Deebot N8 Pro+

$519.99 at Amazon (save $280)

Why we like it:

The Deebot N8 Pro+ includes fundamental smart upgrades like LiDAR mapping and virtual boundaries for customizing its cleaning path down to specific rooms or areas. It also has sensors that avoid carpets while mopping and uses 3D obstacle detection to avoid small objects that cheaper vacs usually trip over.

More hybrids and robot mops on sale

  • Roborock E4 — $239.99 $379.99 (save $140)

  • Ecovacs Deebot Ozmo N7 — $297.49 $499.99 (save $200) 

  • Yeedi Vac Station with Self Empty — $359.99 $549.99 (save $190)

  • Neabot N2 with Self Empty — $399.99 $599.99 (save $200)

  • Shark VacMop AV2001WD — $399.99 $479.99 (save $80)

  • Roborock S5 Max — $459.99 $549.99 (save $90)

  • Dreametech Z10 Pro — $509.98 $598.98 (save $90)

  • Roborock S6 MaxV — $459.99 $749.99 (save $290)

Are robot vacuums worth it?

The control of an upright vacuum comes with its own type of satisfaction. But if you’re not one to classify cleaning as cathartic, a robot vacuum could erase that huge, agonizing task from of your chore list. (And did we mention the joy of having “first day clean” floors all the time?)

But whether robot vacuums are worth it or not comes with a caveat: It can’t be just any robot vacuum. A cheap robovac that doesn’t do the job right — scattering dust, bumping into walls, getting stuck on area rugs — might actually create more work for you.

What to consider when buying a robot vacuum

  • Suction power: A vacuum is the one purchase that you hope sucks a lot. Suction power is typically measured in Pascals (Pa), ranging between 600 Pa to 2,500 Pa. Stronger sucking will be needed to pick up heavier pieces of debris (be sure to set up a barrier around Legos) and to pull matted-down pet hair from rugs.

  • Floor type: Carpeting and high pile rugs will probably require stronger suction than hard floors, as well as special features like an extra-wide or self-cleaning brush roll to prevent hair from wrapping and clogging. Folks in homes with multiple floor types might consider a bigger, sturdier robot vacuum that can hurl itself and its wheels over mats, rugs, and transitions from carpet to hard floors.

  • Home layout: Every robot vacuum is equipped with sensors and drop detection. But if your home has lots of rooms, lots of turns, or lots of close-together furniture, you’ll have fewer navigation issues with an advanced model that uses intelligent mapping to remember exactly how your home is laid out, including labeling of specific rooms, mental notes of staircases, and ability to deploy zone cleaning.

  • Low-profile furniture: No one should have to be scared about what’s accumulated under their couch over the past year. A robot vacuum measuring three inches or less in height should be able to scoot under most low-hanging couches and beds.

  • Battery life and square footage: One of the main complaints people have about their robot vacuum is that it craps out in the middle of the floor. Larger spaces require more time to clean, and it all depends on how annoyed you’ll be if it only finishes a few rooms at a time. Average run times for the list below range between 90 and 150 minutes, which translate to about 500 and 2,600 square feet covered on one charge.

  • App control: WiFi-enabled robot vacuums can be synced with a smartphone app to control scheduling, manual start, cleaning settings, as well as telling your vac to make its rounds when you’re not home. Low-end models that don’t connect to WiFi will usually come with a separate remote. If you’re used to asking Alexa or Google to turn off the lights or tell you the weather, a model with voice integration will blend in nicely.

Explore related content:

  • The best robot vacuums for every budget

  • Samsung’s Jet Bot AI+ robot vacuum is a must-have for pet owners

  • The ILIFE V3s Pro is a cheap robot vacuum for hands-off spot cleaning

The best Peloton alternatives to buy following the Peloton turmoil

UPDATE: Feb. 9, 2022, 11:40 a.m. EST This story has been updated to include information on the recent layoffs at Peloton as well as the CEO’s resignation.

You probably know that the pricey, cult-favorite Peloton bikes skyrocketed in demand in the beginning of the pandemic. As gyms and boutique fitness studios shuttered in 2020 and folks turned to exercising from home, home cardio equipment, especially cycling bikes, became indispensable. They were a way to work off stress, helped people stay active indoors, and offered an online community through app- and Zoom-based classes.

But now, two years into the pandemic, demand for Peloton fitness equipment has slowed down significantly, and the future of the connected fitness brand is unclear. For buyers in the market to build out their home gyms, purchasing a bike from Peloton might not be top of mind any longer.

What’s going on with the Peloton layoffs?

According to a report from CNBC at the end of January 2022, Peloton plans to temporarily halt production of their connected bikes and treadmills due to waning demand. The company will pause manufacturing for two months to recoup costs following diminishing interest in their products, which they attribute to increased price sensitivity on the part of consumers, as well as a steep hike in competitor activity since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Amid these production issues, Peloton also announced on Feb. 8 that 2,800 workers would be laid off and that the Peloton CEO and founder, John Foley, would be stepping down.

If you’re still in the market for an at-home fitness bike, it’s no longer Peloton or bust. There are some amazing studio-quality bikes available that will give you the same thrill and sweat as a Peloton bike. Some of them are even compatible with the Peloton app.

Is there a cheaper alternative to Peloton?

There are way more stationary bikes on the market than just Peloton, meaning there’s pretty much one for every budget. First, you have to decide what type of cycling experience you want. Are you looking for a studio-style bike with an attached screen? Do you want to be able to stream interactive workouts directly to your bike? Or are you looking for something cheaper that can use your own device for workout streaming? The driving question here is which app or site you want to get your workouts from, or if you just want a bike to pedal indoors while watching TV. Bikes without connected monitors tend to be hundreds of dollars cheaper than those with flashy screens.

Who is Peloton’s biggest competitor?

Peloton’s biggest competitors are myxfitness, the Equinox/SoulCycle at-home bike, NordicTrack and Echelon. All of these bikes feature large touchscreens and streamed live/on-demand fitness classes — so they’ll all get you close to the Peloton experience. Some specifics like memberships, upfront cost, and tech specs set them apart from each other, and we’ll get into that below.

Is the Echelon bike as good as Peloton?

The Echelon bike is a solid choice as a Peloton alternative. It’s about $900 cheaper than the no-longer-available Peloton Bike+, and it features the same type of rotating screen that rolled out with the launch of the Bike+. It also has a comparable monthly membership fee to Peloton: you’ll have to pay $39.99 per month to access Echelon’s library of live and on-demand workouts. The membership will get you a pretty good selection of workout options, with classes ranging from HIIT bike rides to floor and mat focused strength, yoga, and boxing classes.

What type of resistance is best?

The two main resistance types for indoor cycling bikes are friction and magnetic resistance. Bikes with friction resistance use felt pads that compress the flywheel of your bike when the resistance is adjusted. Magnetic drive cycles, on the other hand, use strong magnets on the flywheel to create the sensation of heavier or lighter resistance.

Friction bikes tend to be cheaper, but since the felt pads need to be replaced when they wear out, they’ll bring a recurring cost. A cycle with a magnetic drive will be much quieter than one with a friction resistance system, and basically won’t need any maintenance over its life span — but the upfront cost might be more.

What should I look for in a spin bike?

Some of the most important things to look for in a stationary bike are the type of resistance, flywheel weight, adjustability, and pedal type. Decide between magnetic resistance or friction resistance according to your budget and desired upkeep on your bike.

You’ll also want make sure the bike you purchase is suited to your height and weight for the most comfortable ride. Remember that the heavier the user, the heavier flywheel weight you’ll want for maximum stability.

And just a note about how some reviewers of these bikes complain about the seat not being comfortable: That’s a pretty common complaint about Peloton bike seats as well. They are, after all, bike seats.

What is the best alternative to Peloton?

To get a Peloton-like experience with even more added high-tech features, we recommend the NordicTrack S22i Commercial Studio Cycle. This bike is truly the most versatile: it comes with a free 30 day iFit subscription, lets you stream movies and TV to the screen, and has added incline and decline on top of resistance for an extra workout challenge. You’ll also notice a 360-degree rotating screen that opens up a whole world of floor and mat workouts for those days when you need a break from riding. This feature was only just released at Peloton with the launch of the Bike+, so NordicTrack is 100% on top of the trends.

If you’re not already sold on a NordicTrack bike, check out our full list of the best Peloton alternatives on the market:

Rare ‘space diamond’ was purchased with $4.29 million in crypto from Sothebys auction

illustration of a diamond flying through space

What does outer space, a 555.55 carat diamond, and cryptocurrency have in common?

Well, a notorious 555.55 carat diamond that’s potentially from outer space was just auctioned off for millions of dollars. And the buyer is paying with cryptocurrency.

“The diamond has sold for £3,161,000 / $4,292,322,” confirmed a Sotheby’s spokesperson in a statement to Mashable. “The buyer has opted to use cryptocurrency for the purchase.”

According to the auction house, the diamond is the “largest fancy black natural colour diamond…and the largest cut diamond in the world.”

Known as “The Enigma,” this odd, black diamond has stumped scientists. The Enigma is, what Mashable’s Science Editor Mark Kaufman has called an “unusual species of diamond” known as “carbonados.”

SEE ALSO:

Is the mysterious ‘space diamond’ for real? An investigation.

“Today, most diamonds are found in volcanic rock called kimberlite. But, crucially, carbonados are found elsewhere,” wrote Kaufman. “For many geologists, the Earth-origin theories can’t explain another integral feature of carbonados.”

Cue the extraterrestrial theories, such a meteorite crashing into Earth and forming the carbonados diamonds. And while these theories involving space are just that – theories – geologists have not dismissed them.

So, who paid more than $4 million for this diamond? While Sotheby’s has yet to confirm the identity of the buyer, crypto entrepreneur Richard Heart has publicly shared that he is the auction winner. The specific type of cryptocurrency was also not disclosed.

“I won the world’s largest cut diamond for our #HEXican cultural heritage!” tweeted Heart. “It’ll be called the HEX.com diamond, it weighs 555.55 carats and has 55 facets.”

A rare extraterrestrial gem that has potentially turned into a cryptocurrency marketing campaign. It truly is out of this world.

‘The Office’ showrunner Greg Daniels shares an axed storyline from Jim and Pam’s wedding episode

The cast of

When it came time to write one of most important episodes of The Office, showrunner Greg Daniels couldn’t stop horsing around.

On the latest episode of the Office Ladies podcast, former co-stars Jenna Fischer and Angela Kinsey spoke with Daniels about writing the Season 6 episode “Niagara: Part 1” with Mindy Kaling and a truly bizarre horse-related storyline that ultimately got scrapped. As a refresher, the two-part “Niagara” episode showed Jim and Pam’s highly anticipated wedding, which took place at Niagara Falls. It’s a fan-favorite for sure, but had the horse storyline made it in, I’m not so sure the episode would be as beloved as it is today. Thankfully, we had Mindy Kaling, famous lover of rom-coms, to assist with the script.

“OK. How do we even set it up?” Kinsey said. “Roy, and the horse, and the falls? Greg, you have to tell the whole story.”

“So much of it was balancing how much comedy to put in and how much joy to put in,” Daniels said. “And definitely I wanted to have that theme of, ‘There’s all these things going wrong in the wedding, but Pam and Jim managed to carve out this beautiful private moment anyway,’ right? So the table draft had an act break where, to top off all these things that had been going wrong, like finding out about the pregnancy and…”

“Andy’s scrotum?” Fischer said.

“Michael and Pam’s mom,” Kinsey added.

“Yeah… To top it all off, like, Roy shows up on a horse to try and make a grand gesture of ‘take me back,’ and it just goes terribly. And, you know, this was a card that we had on the board early on about when those things happen in romantic comedy movies, they usually work. And how awkward is it when that doesn’t work, and nobody wanted it, and nobody was rooting for it. And you know, you have to just ride your horse away,” Daniels said.

In the table read draft, Kinsey recalled that Roy was going to ride a horse into the church while Jim was in the middle of his vows, and Pam was going to shut Roy down. Hard.

The cast of "The Office" takes a group shot while filming the "Niagara" episode.

Absolutely they do.
Credit: Chris Haston / NBC / NBCU Photo Bank

“I think what it was in that script was it was ordered differently,” Daniels said. “It was like, everything goes wrong at the wedding, and then Michael’s having the worst day, and then Jim gets the idea: I’m going to take Pam away and do it right. And he leaves Michael in charge. And then in the script there were like sort of two montages. There was the montage of Jim and Pam getting married on the Maid of the Mist [boat tour of Niagara Falls]. And then there was the montage of Michael kind of killing it as being put in charge of the party.”

Notice what’s missing from that script? The Dunder Mifflin crew’s iconic “Forever” dance. But we’ll get to that in a bit.

“I have to mention the other part about the horse,” Daniels said. “There was a runner in that version where Dwight was fascinated, being at Niagara Falls, about the 1800s and the history of people going over the falls in a barrel, and animals surviving going over the falls in a way that that people couldn’t. And so after Roy does this whole thing, Dwight sees a free horse and decides he’s going to test this out and he takes the horse into the river and then he starts getting swept toward the falls and he panics and he has to be rescued. But the horse goes over the falls…”

Don’t worry, the horse SURVIVED in this alt storyline and was shown swimming away from the falls. But viewers would have seen a falling horse in back of Jim and Pam as they were getting married on the Maid of the Mist tour, which arguably would have made the scene much less romantic.

If you’re wondering what made Daniels finally cut ties with the chaotic storyline, we have the cast and crew to thank.

“We read it at the table,” Daniels recalled. “There was an awful lot of comedy in the script, and I think we had just sort of over-stacked the comedy and under-stacked the joy, because there were just too many bad things happening to poor Pam and Jim. And they had their great moment on the Maid of the Mist still, but everything that was public was kind of a disaster. And I think there was this very smart feeling from, you know, everybody — especially cast — that that was not cool. Like, ‘You got to give them more joy.'”

“The emotional balance in the episode was off. And also, like, I think the cast were all friends, and we had done so many episodes of them sort of turning into a family that it was — you just didn’t want to be that negative and play them all as problems for Pam and Jim, right? So that was sort of the message after the table read,” he said.

Ultimately, they decided no horse. But they got terrifyingly close to filming the goofy scenes.

“I was still producing, and I remember going to scout the tank at Universal where the horse was going to be filmed in the water, because that was like a big, big deal,” Daniels said. “And like, I knew that we had to fix this, but I was still having to produce the version until until it got changed. And I came back from that and Paul [Lieberstein] luckily had pulled this other card that we had had about the YouTube sensation ‘Forever’ song, and figured out a way to put that in at the end.”

The “Forever” dance, which got intercut with Jim and Pam’s more intimate second wedding, absolutely made the episode. And, crucially, it got rid of Roy and Dwight on horseback.

Be sure to listen to the full podcast episode to hear more behind-the-scenes stories about filming the episode, “Niagara: Part 1.”

You can stream episodes of The Office on Peacock and follow along with the podcast every week on EarwolfApple Podcasts, or Stitcher.

Alfa Romeo’s Tonale hybrid SUV comes with an NFT

A blue SUV on a highway

First it was a house, now it’s a car.

Alfa Romeo’s new plug-in hybrid SUV, the Tonale, will come with a complimentary non-fungible token (NFT) when it arrives in 2023.

At the global reveal on Tuesday, the cryptocurrency feature was announced. Each purchase will be linked to a digital certificate (that’s what an NFT is, essentially) that will continuously update with information about the car. Alfa Romeo says that this record will keep track of maintenance and milestones (like when you hit 100,000 miles) and provide extra data and a well-documented history if you ever sell your Tonale.

NFTs are stored in a digital wallet with other cryptocurrencies (think of the NFT as a digital baseball card or other collectible), but Alfa Romeo didn’t mention which blockchain it will be based on. Most NFTs run on Ethereum, a blockchain platform like Bitcoin, that records all data digitally. In theory, you could trade or sell your Tonale NFT on its own, but it likely won’t have much value without the car itself.

OK, then.

The NFT will track data only if the owner agrees to share that information, and at this point, it feels a bit more like a gimmick than a valuable feature. Alfa Romeo reps said they’d have more details closer to launch.

The front console and driver's seat and wheel

Still just a car.
Credit: Alfa Romeo

Otherwise, the car is, well, a car. The 15.5 kWh battery has 30 miles of pure electric range combined with a four-cylinder engine. There’s a 10.25 inch center touchscreen that can connect wirelessly to Apple CarPlay or Android Auto.

The Italian carmaker claims it’s the first to attach blockchain technology to a vehicle purchase, for whatever that’s worth.

Pricing wasn’t immediately available, but reports have surfaced indicating that the Tonale will start just under $40,000 for the base trim level.

Tears of joy emoji might be experiencing a renaissance

A bunch of the laughing crying emojis on a red background

The laughing crying emoji might be coming back into vogue.

According to an Emojipedia analysis of over 2.16 billion tweets, the face with tears of joy emoji 😂 has returned to its spot as Twitter’s number one emoji by the slimmest of margins, just barely surpassing the loudly crying face 😭. 

This doesn’t necessarily mean that the face with tears of joy emoji is cool again, though. The change is largely due to the loudly crying face experiencing a steep drop in popularity in January, from 1.93 billion uses in December to 1.78 billion uses in the month. Thats a total decrease of about 150 million uses. The face with tears of joy emoji only increased 20 million uses from December to January.

The emoji been going through different phases online over the past few years, being labeled as “cringe” and a communication tool used predominately by Millennials. It was released with the first-ever set of emoji back in 2011, and was the most popular emoji from 2019 to 2021. It’s no wonder that it had an absolute chokehold on Millennials.

Then Gen Z came along, and created their own way to communicate online, with ever-changing combinations of the loudly crying face 😭, the skull 💀, the pleading eyes 🥺, and even the chair emoji 🪑.

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But not all users follow the cultural guidelines set up by the youngest generation, so the face with tears of joy has continued to top the charts despite its cringe factor. And, now, some young people use the face ironically, too, which could help that uptick.

Following the crying face emoji, the top emoji used on Twitter were: sparkles ✨, rolling on the floor laughing 🤣, pleading face 🥺, red heart ❤️, folded hands 🙏, smiling face with heart eyes 😍, smiling face with hearts 🥰, and smiling face with smiling eyes 😊.

It shouldn’t come as a surprise that emoji evolve just as any other tool in our lexicon. Congrats to the tears of joy emoji, which has held onto its spot as one of the most used emoji for so many years. 😂 🏆 🥳

More emoji

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  • Stephen Colbert has some serious beef with the people who make emoji

  • How to create a custom emoji in Slack

  • Say hello to Yats: Why investors are paying thousands to ‘own’ emoji

  • Google gave nearly 1,000 emoji a much-needed makeover

  • We probably won’t get a bisexual pride flag emoji anytime soon. Here’s why.

Kodak’s Mini 2 Retro Photo Printer will let you print out your favorite memories

Phone and printer showing the same image of person on snowboard, with other pictures in the snow under the printer

SAVE 37%: The Kodak Mini 2 Retro Portable Photo Printer lets you take printing photos into your own hands. As of Feb. 9, it’s on sale for $87.99 at Amazon. That’s 37% (or $52) off its regular price of $139.99.


Want printed photos on demand without having to buy a separate camera? The Kodak Mini 2 Portable Photo Printer will bring the fun of an instant camera while also preserving the original images in HD quality in your phone.

At just 1.5 pounds, the Kodak Mini 2 is super portable and even smaller than a Polaroid camera — perfect for taking on trips. The photo quality is vibrant and sharp, and 4Pass Technology makes the shiny new pictures fingerprint- and water-resistant.

You can even customize the pictures before you print. Kodak’s AR app has stickers, filters, and frames galore, so you can stick cat ears on your friends or put a heart around your S/O. You can even adjust exposure, contrast, saturation, etc. You also have the option of making collages if you want more than one image on the printer paper, or to go borderless if you want just the photo without a frame.

White photo printer with two yellow boxes of film printing image of two people on pink background

Credit: Kodak

Kodak Mini 2 Retro 2.1×3.4” Portable Photo Printer

$87.99 at Amazon (save 37%)

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9 Olympians to follow on TikTok right now

Scotty James in action.

The 2022 Winter Olympics are underway in Beijing, but the real party isn’t on NBC — it’s on TikTok. 

Athletes from around the world are using the platform to give a behind-the-scenes look at life in the Olympic Village. Between day-in-the-life vlogs, OOTD snippets, and “things in my Olympic room that just make sense” videos, TikTok is where these Olympians go to express themselves away from the competition. Not to mention, it’s created a whole new generation of social media-savvy stars, those who are up on the latest digital trends. 

We first encountered the phenomenon of the Olympian TikTok star last summer at the Games in Tokyo, thanks to the IOC loosening their social media guidelines. For the first time, Olympic athletes were allowed to post whatever they wanted on social media, which gave birth to a  wide variety of TikTok content, from athletes testing the “anti-sex cardboard beds” to watching Olympians thirst over one another (they are, in fact, just like us). 

SEE ALSO:

The IOC loosened its social media rules, and now Olympians are TikTok stars

While the TikTok presence of athletes at the Winter Olympics lacks the novelty of the Summer Olympics, they are still making delightful content. I have yet to watch a wink of the Olympics on broadcast TV, but I have spent hours experiencing the Games on my FYP. So here are the most fun Olympians to follow. 

Scotty James, Team Australia Snowboard

Scotty James is my favorite Olympian on TikTok. Full stop. I’ve been following the Australian snowboarding hottie since he joined the platform back in March 2020. He posts the perfect balance of funny, relatable TikToks and sick snowboarding videos. His content has only gotten better and more popular since arriving in Beijing. James’s “Things in my Olympic Room that just make sense” video has over 3 million views and over 1 million likes due to his charismatic demonstration of his devotion to Australia. He just seems like a cool, authentic dude! He’s also really good at snowboarding, arriving in Beijing fresh off his X Games win. At the 2018 PyeongChang Olympics, he won the first Australian medal in Snowboarding. I will be tuning into the Olympics for the first time to watch him shred the halfpipe. 

Tessa Maud, Team USA Snowboard

Tessa Maud is only 18, and you can tell because she’s so good at TikTok. While other Olympians have been gaining TikTok clout through making funny videos, Maud has been posting like an aesthetic, day-in-the-life vlogger — but with the epic twist that she’s an Olympian. She’s also been answering a lot of questions and teaching her Gen Z followers how to tune into her races. Her presence on TikTok feels very sincere, and after watching a couple of videos you can’t help but root for her. 

SEE ALSO:

The easiest ways to watch the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing without cable

Jonny Gustafson, Team USA Luge

Someone has to be the funniest Olympian on TikTok, and that someone is Jonny Gustafson. He’s embracing the absurdity of being a professional luge sledder by using a truly eclectic mix of audios that you have to hear to believe. Gustafson has posted TikToks about how hard it is for him to keep his Olympic room clean and how qualifying for the Olympics meant he’d be missing his DnD campaigns. He’s doing TikTok like no other Olympian and making Team USA (and nerds) proud. 

Piper Gilles, Team Canada Figure Skating 

I have a soft spot for any Canadian athlete who posts TikToks of their enviable Lululemon Olympic kits, and Piper Gilles does just that with humor! While Gilles is done competing, her TikToks continue to entertain. My favorite is a collab between her and Ivanie Blondin Nagy, a member of the Canadian speed skating team, in which they dance to “THATS WHAT I WANT” by Lil Nas X in their wildly different competition outfits. 

Filip Fjeld Andersen, Team Norway Biathlon 

Filip Fjeld Andersen is posting immaculate content. It’s the 22 year-old’s first Olympics, and he documented Team Norway’s 32-hour journey from Italy to Beijing across five videos. It’s hard to describe, but there is something so funny about Andersen’s content. In one video, he tries to make his Olympic room “more aesthetic” by hanging up Chinese New Year decorations. In another, he reveals that he only realized the panda pillow on his bed was a blanket due to fellow Olympian, Maddie Mastro’s TikTok about it. Olympians, they are just like us! 

Anna Fairman and Anna Segedi, Team China Hockey

Two members of China’s hockey team, both named Anna, have paired up to make us twice the content. They are just two girlies creating the kind of TikToks you might make with your best friend — but at the Olympics. I love to see it! They’ve already competed, but are thankfully still making silly videos. 

Shaun White, Team USA Snowboard

If you’re looking to learn what it’s like at the Olympics from a pro, Shaun White is your guy. He’s not messing around with trendy audios or even trying to be funny. Instead, he’s answering all your burning questions about the Olympics in thorough detail. Before heading to his fifth Olympics, White posted a TikTok telling his followers to ask him any questions they have about the Olympics, and sure enough he’s been working his way through all of them. He’s practically a winter Games expert at this point, and his wealth of Olympics knowledge is actually compelling among a sea of more frivolous content. 

Natalie Corless, Team Canada Luge

Sledders are the unexpected TikTok stars of Beijing. Corless is 18, which we know directly translates to having a good TikTok presence, and she’s been posting a combination of vlogs and funny, relatable videos, like her latest post where she stress-cleans to “Big Bootie Mix” before her race. Not to mention, she’s giving us more Canadian kit content. 

Bonus: Adam Rippon, former Team USA Olympian and current coach 

While he’s not competing at this year’s Olympics, the former Olympic figure skater and Bronze medalist is in Beijing coaching Mariah Bell in her first Olympics. Rippon has mastered the art of the TikTok vlog cadence and posts daily vlogs where he makes all the mundane logistical drama of being an Olympic coach into captivating content.