13 Hours AgoSeahawks’ Kenneth Walker III is Super Bowl MVPKenneth Walker III #9 of the Seattle Seahawks rushes against the New England Patriots during the third quarter in Super Bowl LX at Levi’s Stadium on February 08, 2026 in Santa Clara, California. Kevin C. Cox | Getty Images Sport | Getty ImagesAnd the Super Bowl MVP is… running back Kenneth Walker III.Walker rushed for a game-high 135 yards on 27 carries during the Seahawks’ 29-13 win over the Patriots. He also caught two passes for 26 yards and is one of only three players with multiple runs of more than 25 yards in a Super Bowl.— Sarah Whitten14 Hours AgoKen is going places with ExpediaKen takes a vacation from Barbie’s dream house in Expedia’s Super Bowl spot.The ad features the iconic doll jet setting around the world, using Expedia’s app to purchase flights and hotels.— Sarah Whitten14 Hours Ago’He Gets Us’ campaign returns with another adIn the final moments of the broadcast, the evangelical groups behind the “He Gets Us” campaign poke at consumerism and greed to ask, “Is there more to life than more?” It’s the fourth straight year the group has advertised in the Super Bowl, and the controversial campaign has come under fire in prior years for political messages.— Sarah Jackson14 Hours AgoThe Seattle Seahawks are Super Bowl champsSeattle Seahawks’ players celebrate with the Vince Lombardi Trophy after defeating the New England Patriots during Super Bowl LX at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California on February 8, 2026. Patrick T. Fallon | Afp | Getty ImagesThe Seattle Seahawks have won Super Bowl 60. The Oregon-based team secured the win against the New England Patriots with a score of 29-13.— Sarah Whitten14 Hours AgoHims & Hers calls America’s wealth gap a ‘health gap’Hims & Hers Health is back at the Super Bowl — a year after airing its polarizing ad that critics accused of oversimplifying U.S. health care — with a provocative message: “Rich people live longer.”The 60-second ad features a Jeff Bezos-like figure wearing a blue spacesuit and a lookalike of millionaire and longevity researcher Bryan Johnson. Luxury elective care treatments — from red light therapy to IV drips and cosmetic skin procedures — take center stage before the company touts its own diagnostic testing.In a statement the company said: “The campaign centers on the uncomfortable truth that America’s healthcare is a tale of two systems: one elite, proactive tier for the wealthy, and a broken, reactive one for everyone else.” — Brandon Gomez14 Hours AgoPatriots a …