3. A classic Super Bowl
This year's Super Bowl had everything. Rihanna unveiled during her stunning halftime performance that she was pregnant. Celebrities dominated what turned out to be a really funny slate of commercials (although they didn't hawk crypto this time around for some reason). Media critic and Twitter CEO Elon Musk was spotted sitting with News Corp and Fox honcho Rupert Murdoch. And the game was great, too. After the Philadelphia Eagles, led by an incredible Jalen Hurts, rushed to a 24-14 lead at halftime, the Kansas City Chiefs and their MVP quarterback, Patrick Mahomes, executed a nearly flawless gameplan in the second half to win 38-35. It's the Chiefs' second Super Bowl win in four years.
4. Explaining the housing market
It can be hard to keep up with all the ups, downs and sideways moves in the housing market. What's going on with home prices these days, anyway? CNBC's Diana Olick breaks it down. While price increases have been slowing for months, actual prices are still higher than they were 12 months prior. With mortgage rates easing off a bit, demand appears to be returning, and that could help nudge prices up a bit again. "While prices continued to fall from November, the rate of decline was lower than that seen in the summer and still adds up to only a 3% cumulative drop in prices since last spring's peak," said CoreLogic's chief economist, Selma Hepp.
5. Watch the skies
What's with all the close encounters in North American air space lately? Things from another world? Almost certainly not, although a top U.S. military officer, when asked whether aliens were involved, said he hasn't ruled out anything. "I'll let the intel community and the counterintelligence community figure that out," said Gen. Glen VanHerck, commander the North American Aerospace Defense Command and U.S. Northern Command. The wild speculation came as U.S. jets shot more objects out of North American skies over the weekend, days after they took down a Chinese spy balloon that floated over much of the United States. The more recent objects haven't been as big as the Chinese balloon, and it's not clear where they might have come from. And lawmakers are demanding answers. The truth is out there, probably.
— CNBC's Mike Calia wrote this newsletter. Hakyung Kim, Lillian Rizzo, Sarah Whitten, Diana Olick and Ashley Capoot contributed .
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