Connect with us

Tech

Everything coming to Apple TV in 2026

Published

on

There's no doubt about it: 2026 is going to be jam-packed for Apple TV.

The streamer is hoping to keep up the momentum from its stellar 2025, which saw the premiere of acclaimed, award-winning shows like Pluribus and The Studio, not to mention the triumphant return of Severance. After all that TV goodness, what could possibly be next?

The answer? A lot! At its 2026 press day, Apple TV unveiled its entire slate of film and TV for the year, from new buzzy shows like Imperfect Women to more Ted Lasso. It's a substantial list, and we've gathered it here in one place for your perusal. From potential new TV obsessions to films of all genres, here's what's coming to Apple TV in 2026, in chronological order.

Shrinking Season 3

Apple TV kicked off 2026 with one of its best shows, the currently airing Shrinking Season 3, which sees the continued misadventures of therapist Jimmy (Jason Segel) and his family, friends, and coworkers. Tune in for more life lessons and cathartic tears, and see why Mashable UK Editor Shannon Connellan wrote, "This show is so good it boggles my brain."

Starring: Jason Segel, Harrison Ford, Christa Miller, Jessica Williams, Luke Tennie, Michael Urie, Lukita Maxwell, Ted McGinley, Brett Goldstein, Damon Wayans Jr., Wendie Malick, Cobie Smulders, Jeff Daniels, Candice Bergen, and Michael J. Fox

How to watch: Shrinking Season 3 is now streaming on Apple TV, with new episodes every Wednesday.

Eternity

OK, technically Eternity isn't a new release, but it will be new to streaming on Apple TV. This winning romantic comedy imagines a love triangle in the afterlife, where the late Joan (Elizabeth Olsen) must choose between spending eternity with Larry (Miles Teller), her husband of over 60 years, or Luke (Callum Turner), her first husband who died at war before they truly had a life together. If that thought gives you an existential crisis, don't worry: Eternity is as sweet and funny as it is contemplative and heartfelt. If you missed it in theaters, don't miss it on streaming.

Starring: Miles Teller, Elizabeth Olsen, Callum Turner, John Early, Olga Merediz, and Da'Vine Joy Randolph

How to watch: Eternity hits Apple TV on Feb. 13.

The Last Thing He Told Me Season 2

Jennifer Garner-led thriller The Last Thing He Told Me is back for Season 2, beginning with the bombshell that Owen (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau) has returned after five years on the run. Now, his wife Hannah (Garner) and daughter Bailey (Angourie Rice) are in a race to reunite their family before their complicated past catches up to them.

Starring: Jennifer Garner, Angourie Rice, David Morse, Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, Judy Greer, and Rita Wilson

How to watch: The Last Thing He Told Me Season 2 premieres Feb. 20 on Apple TV.

Monarch: Legacy of Monsters Season 2

Here there be Titans! Apple TV's MonsterVerse series Monarch: Legacy of Monsters returns with a vengeance for Season 2, which introduces a terrifying new beast: Titan X. An aquatic beast of immense power, Titan X has the potential to be the most destructive monster we've seen in the MonsterVerse. It's so threatening, in fact, that the trailer suggests the only way to take it out is by unleashing both Godzilla and King Kong against it. You know what they say: Let them fight.

Starring: Kurt Russell, Wyatt Russell, Anna Sawai, Kiersey Clemons, Ren Watabe, Mari Yamamoto, Joe Tippett, Anders Holm, Takehiro Hira, Amber Midthunder, Curtiss Cook, Cliff Curtis, Dominique Tipper, and Camilo Jiménez Varón

How to watch: Monarch: Legacy of Monsters Season 2 premieres Feb. 27 on Apple TV.

Imperfect Women

Elisabeth Moss, Kerry Washington, and Kate Mara star in Imperfect Women, based on the novel by Araminta Hall. The three play decades-long friends Mary, Eleanor, and Nancy, whose lives are shattered when Nancy is murdered. As the investigation into her death plays out, dark secrets and betrayals come to life, testing the bonds of Mary and Eleanor's friendship and other relationships. If you love Big Little Lies, this should be up your alley.

Starring: Elisabeth Moss, Kerry Washington, Kate Mara, Joel Kinnaman, Corey Stoll, Leslie Odom Jr., Audrey Zahn, Jill Wagner, Rome Flynn, Sheryl Lee Ralph, Violette Linnz, Indiana Elle, Jackson Kelly, Keith Carradine, Ana Ortiz, and Wilson Bethel

How to watch: Imperfect Women premieres on March 18 on Apple TV.

For All Mankind Season 5

Looking to scratch your sci-fi itch while several of Apple TV's genre shows like Severance, Pluribus, Silo, and Foundation are between seasons? Look no farther than space drama For All Mankind, which imagines the continuation of the space race. In Season 5, tensions rise between the residents of Mars and Earth, setting the stage for a space showdown.

Starring: Joel Kinnaman, Toby Kebbell, Edi Gathegi, Cynthy Wu, Coral Peña, Wrenn Schmidt, Mirelle Enos, Costa Ronin, Sean Kaufman, Ruby Cruz, and Ines Asserson

How to watch: For All Mankind Season 5 premieres March 27 on Apple TV.

Your Friends and Neighbors Season 2

Jon Hamm is back to stealing in Your Friends and Neighbors Season 2. He plays disgraced hedge fund manager Andrew "Coop" Cooper, who's doubling down on thieving from his wealthy suburban neighbors. However, a new neighbor threatens to expose him, creating new tension in Vestment Village (and maybe, just maybe, some new dance memes). And guess what? The show is already renewed for a Season 3.

Starring: Jon Hamm, James Marsden, Amanda Peet, Olivia Munn, Hoon Lee, Mark Tallman, Lena Hall, Aimee Carrero, Eunice Bae, Isabel Gravitt, and Donovan Colan

How to watch: Your Friends and Neighbors Season 2 premieres April 3 on Apple TV.

Outcome

Keanu Reeves in "Outcome."

Keanu Reeves in "Outcome."
Credit: Apple TV

Keanu Reeves stars as a Hollywood star on the run from his past in dark comedy Outcome. Directed by Jonah Hill, the film sees actor Reef Hawk (Reeves) facing blackmail over a video that might ruin his career. He soon sets off down memory lane to try to help anyone he may have wronged — and hopefully find the blackmailer along the way.

Starring: Keanu Reeves, Cameron Diaz, Matt Bomer, Jonah Hill, Martin Scorsese, Susan Lucci, Laverne Cox, David Spade, Atsuko Okatsuka, Roy Wood Jr., Kaia Gerber, and Ivy Wolk

How to watch: Outcome premieres April 10 on Apple TV.

Margo's Got Money Troubles

Rufi Thorpe's novel Margo's Got Money Troubles hits the small screen in Apple TV's adaptation from A24 and David E. Kelley (Big Little Lies). Elle Fanning stars as Margo, a single mother and aspiring writer in financial crisis. To solve her money troubles, Margo jumps on OnlyFans, where her alien alter ego finds great success. Nick Offerman and Michelle Pfeiffer star as Margo's parents in what promises to be a heartwarming family dramedy.

Starring: Elle Fanning, Nick Offerman, Michelle Pfeiffer, Nicole Kidman, Marcia Gay Harden, Greg Kinnear, Michael Angarano, Rico Nasty, and Lindsey Normington

How to watch: Margo's Got Money Troubles premieres April 15 on Apple TV.

Criminal Record Season 2

Peter Capaldi and Cush Jumbo in "Criminal Record."

Peter Capaldi and Cush Jumbo in "Criminal Record."
Credit: Apple TV

British crime drama Criminal Record is back, with Peter Capaldi and Cush Jumbo's detectives likely set to clash again. This time around, June (Jumbo) witnesses a young man's death when far-right protestors accost a political rally. Racked by guilt, she seeks to bring the man's killer justice — but to do so, she'll have to take a dangerous bargain from Daniel (Capaldi).

Starring: Peter Capaldi, Cush Jumbo

How to watch: Criminal Record Season 2 premieres April 22 on Apple TV.

Widow's Bay

Matthew Rhys in "Widow’s Bay."

Matthew Rhys in "Widow’s Bay."
Credit: Apple TV

Blending horror and comedy, Widow's Bay transports viewers to its titular island town, 40 miles off the coast of New England. There, Mayor Tom Loftis (Matthew Rhys) hopes to bring tourists to his struggling community. But when he does, there's a big problem: It turns out that the local legends about the island being cursed may be true. Get ready for laughs and scares in equal measure.

Starring: Matthew Rhys, Kate O’Flynn, Stephen Root, Kingston Rumi Southwick, Kevin Carroll, and Dale Dickey

How to watch: Widow's Bay premieres April 29 on Apple TV.

Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed

Tatiana Maslany in "Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed."

Tatiana Maslany in "Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed."
Credit: Apple TV

Tatiana Maslany leads the new dark comedy Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed. She stars as newly divorced mom Paula, who's convinced she witnessed a terrible crime. Her independent investigation takes her down a slippery slope of blackmail and murder, two things that are very inconvenient to be thinking about when you're also dealing with a custody battle and an identity crisis. Will Paula crack the case and rediscover her sense of self-worth? And just how, exactly, does youth soccer fit into all this? Find out when you tune in, for what is hopefully a maximally pleasurable viewing experience.

Starring: Tatiana Maslany, Jake Johnson, Brandon Flynn, Murray Bartlett, Jessy Hodges, Jon Michael Hill, Charlie Hall, Kiarra Hamagami Goldberg, Nola Wallace, and Dolly De Leon

How to watch: Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed premieres May 20 on Apple TV.

Cape Fear

Amy Adams in "Cape Fear."

Amy Adams in "Cape Fear."
Credit: Apple TV

Who's ready for a remake? Apple TV reimagines Martin Scorsese's 1991 film Cape Fear, itself a remake of the 1962 film of the same name. The series centers on married attorney couple Anna and Tom Bowden (Amy Adams and Patrick Wilson), who are about to face a vengeful reckoning from Max Cady (Javier Bardem), the killer they put behind bars. Will the series live up to its source material? Or, at the very least, The Simpsons' "Cape Feare" episode?

Starring: Amy Adams, Patrick Wilson, Javier Bardem, Joe Anders, Lily Collias, Malia Pyles, and Anna Baryshnikov

How to watch: Cape Fear premieres June 5 on Apple TV.

Sugar Season 2

Colin Farrell in "Sugar."

Colin Farrell in "Sugar."
Credit: Apple TV

Everyone's favorite noir private detective who is also (spoiler alert!) secretly an alien is back! I'm speaking of none other than John Sugar (Colin Farrell). In Sugar Season 2, he's on the trail of a new case, this time tracking the older brother of a local boxer. And while that mystery's all well and good, I'm hoping Season 2 really gets into the sci-fi of it all, because again, and I cannot stress this enough, John Sugar is an alien. Explain, please!

Starring: Colin Farrell, Jin Ha, Raymond Lee, Tony Dalton, Laura Donnelly, Sasha Calle, and Shea Whigham

How to watch: Sugar Season 2 premieres June 19 on Apple TV.

Lucky

Anya Taylor-Joy enters heist mode in limited series Lucky, based on the 2021 novel of the same name by Marissa Stapley. Taylor-Joy plays Lucky Anderson, a con artist raised in a life of crime. When a multi-million-dollar heist goes awry, she'll have to put up the fight of her life in order to escape the FBI agents and crime boss on her tail. Will she live up to her name, or will her luck finally run out?

Starring: Anya Taylor-Joy, Annette Bening, Timothy Olyphant, Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor, Drew Starkey, Clifton Collins, Jr., and William Fichtner

How to watch: Lucky premieres July 15 on Apple TV.

The Dink

Mary Steenburgen and Jake Johnson in "The Dink."

Mary Steenburgen and Jake Johnson in "The Dink."
Credit: Apple TV

Pickleball takes center court in The Dink, a comedy film from Barb and Star Go to Vista Del Mar director Josh Greenbaum. Jake Johnson stars as washed-up tennis prodigy Dusty Boyd, who discovers the unthinkable: He loves pickleball, even though his country club owner father (Ed Harris) despises it. With the help of his pickleball partner Candace (Mary Steenburgen), he'll embark on a journey of self-discovery. Oh, and Andy Roddick is there as himself, who also happens to be Dusty's childhood nemesis.

Starring: Jake Johnson, Mary Steenburgen, Ed Harris, Andy Roddick, Patton Oswalt, Chloe Fineman, Chris Parnell, Aaron Chen, and Ben Stiller

How to watch: The Dink premieres July 24 on Apple TV.

Mayday

Kenneth Branagh and Ryan Reynolds in "Mayday."

Kenneth Branagh and Ryan Reynolds in "Mayday."
Credit: Apple TV

Ryan Reynolds and Kenneth Branagh team up for unconventional spy thriller Mayday. Reynolds plays hotshot U.S. Navy pilot Lieutenant Troy “Assassin” Kelly, who finds himself stranded behind enemy lines in Soviet territory at the height of the Cold War. Branagh plays Nikolai Ustinov (Branagh), the gruff ex-KGB agent who discovers them. The two develop an unexpected bond in this comedy from Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves directors John Francis Daley and Jonathan Goldstein. Honestly, they gave us Jarnathan, so I trust them with my life.

Starring: Ryan Reynolds, Kenneth Branagh, Marcin Dorocinski, Maria Bakalova, and David Morse

How to watch: Mayday premieres Sept. 4 on Apple TV.

Ted Lasso Season 4

Jason Sudeikis and Hannah Waddingham in "Ted Lasso."

Jason Sudeikis and Hannah Waddingham in "Ted Lasso."
Credit: Apple TV

You better BELIEVE, because Ted Lasso is back. Turns out Season 3 was not the end of Ted's (Jason Sudeikis) time in Richmond. The lovable soccer coach has returned to England to lead a second division women’s football team, and he'll be joined by several familiar faces. What are you waiting for? Grab some shortbread and settle in for the resurrection of one of Apple's biggest shows.

Starring: Jason Sudeikis, Hannah Waddingham, Juno Temple, Brett Goldstein, Brendan Hunt, Jeremy Swift, Tanya Reynolds, Jude Mack, Faye Marsey, Rex Hayes, Aisling Sharkey, Abbie Hern, and Grant Feely

How to watch: Ted Lasso premieres this summer on Apple TV.

Matchbox The Movie

John Cena in "Matchbox The Movie."

John Cena in "Matchbox The Movie."
Credit: Apple TV

Mattel's Matchbox toys get the film treatment in Matchbox The Movie. The movie centers on a group of friends whose lives get blown up by the return of their former leader, undercover CIA agent Sean (John Cena). He gets them involved in a plot to save the world, and the rest is globe-trotting history.

Starring: John Cena, Jessica Biel, Sam Richardson, Teyonah Parris, Arturo Castro, Corey Stoll, Bill Camp, Danai Gurira, and Golshifteh Faranhani

How to watch: Matchbox The Movie premieres Oct. 9 on Apple TV.

Way of the Warrior Kid

Chris Pratt and Jude Hill in "Way of the Warrior Kid."

Chris Pratt and Jude Hill in "Way of the Warrior Kid."
Credit: Apple TV

Chris Pratt gives a child a Navy SEAL makeover in Way of the Warrior Kid. Based on the best-selling novel by former Navy SEAL Jocko Willink, the film introduces bullied middle schooler Marc (Jude Hill), whose uncle Jake (Pratt) endeavors to teach Marc to defend himself. Enter "Operation Warrior Kid," based on Jake's own Navy SEAL training and designed to help Marc learn about courage. While Marc is the student, Jake may learn something about himself and his own demons along the way.

Starring: Chris Pratt, Linda Cardellini, Jude Hill, Ava Torres, Levi McConaughey, Darien Sills-Evans, Carl McDowell, and Parker Young

How to watch: Way of the Warrior Kid premieres Nov. 20 on Apple TV.

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Tech

Bad Bunny Super Bowl Halftime Show Easter eggs: 15 things you might have missed

Published

on

By

Bad Bunny promised good vibes and a whole lot of dancing during his Super Bowl halftime show, and he didn’t disappoint. But beneath the perreo-ready hits and viral clips was something deeper.

The performance unfolded as a densely layered visual essay, moving from Puerto Rico's sugar cane fields to New York bodegas, from reggaetón history to quiet political protest, and packing decades of memory, migration, and resistance into just 13 minutes of television.

From set pieces referencing the island's ongoing infrastructure collapse following Hurricane Maria to cameos honoring small-business legends and community elders, nearly every frame carried meaning. Some references were immediately legible. Others were designed for the fans who know where to look.

It was a case of storytelling: a reminder that Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio didn't just bring Puerto Rico to the Super Bowl. He brought its history with him. Here are some of the Easter eggs you may have missed.

Returning to the roots of the sugar cane fields

Before fireworks, choreography, or surprise cameos, Bad Bunny began his Super Bowl halftime show in a quiet, sunlit sugar cane field, worlds away from the stadium spectacle to come.

Sugar cane fields are deeply woven into Puerto Rico's history, tied to colonial exploitation and the agricultural labor of generations of working-class people. By opening the performance there, Bad Bunny grounded his global moment in the island's past, honoring the people whose work and resilience built Puerto Rico long before it became a cultural export. It was a reminder that everything that followed grew from this soil first.

Bad Bunny's "Ocasio 64" jersey carries history

When Bad Bunny stepped onto the Super Bowl stage in a custom Zara jersey stitched with the name "Ocasio" and the number "64," it immediately sparked speculation. The name referenced his full surname, Martínez Ocasio. The number, however, carried a heavier weight.

On a personal level, "64" honors his late uncle, who once wore the same number as an athlete. But it also echoes the Puerto Rican government’s initial claim of just 64 deaths after Hurricane Maria in 2017 — a figure later revealed to be a devastating undercount.

Falling into YHLQMDLG

Midway through "Party," Bad Bunny plunged through the roof of the casita into a family's blue living room, a moment that felt both unexpected and deeply intentional.

The visual mirrored the aesthetic of his 2020 album YHLQMDLG, whose blue-hued visualizers defined an era fans never got to see live. The pandemic canceled that tour, making the Super Bowl moment a belated love letter to longtime listeners who’ve been riding with him since the beginning.

Toñita's surprise cameo

Among the star-studded spectacle, one of the night's most meaningful appearances belonged to someone far from the pop spotlight: Maria Antonia "Toñita" Cay, the beloved owner of Caribbean Social Club.

A fixture of Puerto Rican life in Williamsburg for decades, Toñita has been name-checked in Bad Bunny's lyrics and embraced by the Nuyorican community. Her presence in the show was about honoring the everyday institutions that keep culture alive.

Victor Villa and the power of the side hustle

Another blink-and-you'll-miss-it guest was Victor Villa, the founder of Villa's Tacos. You'll see Benito pass a Villa's Tacos truck during "Tití Me Preguntó."

Villa's journey — from selling tacos in his grandmother's yard to running acclaimed brick-and-mortar locations — mirrors Bad Bunny's own narrative of grassroots success. His cameo not only celebrated immigrant hustle but also spoke to Bad Bunny's larger message of believing in where you come from, a belief he made explicit when he told Super Bowl viewers that he never stopped believing in himself and that others should believe in themselves, too.

Coco frío and island street life

During "Tití Me Preguntó," Bad Bunny moved past dancers gathered around a coco frío cart, a small detail loaded with nostalgia. Fresh coconut water, sold by street vendors across Puerto Rico, is part of daily life on the island. By centering it in a Super Bowl spectacle, Bad Bunny elevated an ordinary ritual into a symbol of home.

"Gasolina" and the lineage of reggaetón

No, your ears did not deceive you. After blending "Yo Perreo Sola" and "Voy a Llevarte Pa’ PR," Bad Bunny pivoted into a snippet of "Gasolina" by Daddy Yankee, a defining anthem of the genre.

The track, inducted into the Library of Congress in 2023, helped globalize reggaetón in the 2000s. Bad Bunny's performance also sampled Tego Calderón's "Pa’ Que Retozen" and Don Omar's "Dale Don Dale," situating himself within a living musical lineage.

Concho the toad makes an appearance

Before launching into "Monaco," the camera cut to an image of Concho, the animated amphibian mascot of Bad Bunny's latest album, Debí Tirar Más Fotos. Modeled after the endangered Puerto Rican crested toad, Concho represents environmental fragility and cultural survival.

Jíbaros, power lines, and "El Apagón"

Men in straw hats (pavas) and white clothing — jíbaros, Puerto Rico’s traditional mountain farmers — appeared climbing power lines, blending folklore with modern crisis.

Historically associated with rural life and folk music, jíbaros symbolize resilience. Here, their placement on broken infrastructure referenced post-Hurricane Maria privatization, rolling blackouts under LUMA Energy, and the economic displacement explored in the song "El Apagón." It was a visual essay on who gets left behind when "progress" arrives.

Ricky Martin's Spanish-language reclamation

When Ricky Martin joined to perform "Lo Que Pasó a Hawaii," the moment felt both nostalgic and quietly radical. For an artist long associated with English-language crossover hits like "Livin' la Vida Loca" and "She Bangs," returning to a Spanish-language ballad on the Super Bowl stage carried its own symbolism.

The song reflects on migration and loss. Singing entirely in Spanish, sitting in a monobloc chair, marked how far Latin music has pushed the mainstream. What once felt risky now feels inevitable.

The light blue flag of Puerto Rican independence

At one point, Bad Bunny held la bandera con azul celeste, the light-blue version of Puerto Rico's flag linked to the independence movement.

Once associated with calls for Puerto Rican sovereignty and traced back to pre-U.S. colonial revolts, the light-blue variant of the Puerto Rican flag has become a symbol of resistance and cultural pride. Historians identify azul celeste as the original shade tied to late-19th-century independence movements, and its use today often signals a deeper conversation about the island's identity.

Bad Bunny previously featured it in "La Mudanza," and bringing it to the Super Bowl transformed a political statement into a global broadcast.

A quiet nod to Haiti's visual history

In one of the show's most subtle visual callbacks, a woman waving Haiti's flag wore a green-and-orange ribbed knit top that closely echoed Jay Maisel's 1973 Haiti series, particularly "Haiti No. 59." The styling — easy to miss amid the spectacle — felt deliberately precise, mirroring the texture, color, and composition of Maisel's iconic image.

Lady Gaga and the maga flower

Lady Gaga’s baby-blue dress, paired with a red floral brooch resembling Puerto Rico's national maga flower, was more than a fashion moment. Designed by Luar founder Raul Lopez, the look wove national symbolism into couture, reinforcing the night’s emphasis on Puerto Rican pride.

"La Marqueta" and the roots of diaspora

During "NUEVAYoL," Bad Bunny walked past a New York-style streetscape featuring a storefront labeled "La Marqueta."

The real La Marqueta in East Harlem was once a hub for Latino immigrants, helping shape Spanish Harlem in the mid-20th century. Its inclusion honored the diaspora communities that carried Puerto Rican culture beyond the island — and brought it back, amplified, to the global stage.

"Together We Are America"

Toward the end of the halftime performance, Bad Bunny — notably speaking in English — said, "God Bless America." He then expanded the phrase to encompass all the countries of the Americas, not just the United States, re-framing it as a message of unity and belonging. Holding up a football emblazoned with "Together We Are America," he made the point explicit.

Then, switching back to Spanish, he added: "seguimos aquí" ("we’re still here"), before spiking the ball and launching into "DtMF." The moment crystallized the show's larger thesis: presence as resistance, visibility as power, and community as the foundation of everything.

Continue Reading

Tech

Last-minute shopping for Valentines Day? Two of our Dyson beauty favorites are $150 off.

Published

on

By

Best Dyson beauty deals


Valentine's Day is less than a week away, but if you haven't bought a gift just yet, Dyson's giving last-minute shoppers a pretty sweet deal.

Well, technically two deals. As of Feb. 9, you can grab the Dyson Supersonic Nural hair dryer for $399.99, saving you $150 on the $549.99 list price. The same discount is also available on the Dyson Airwrap i.d. multi-styler, which comes down to $499.99 from its full price of $649.99.

At the time of writing, neither tool is on sale at Amazon, and while the Airwrap i.d. is on sale at Best Buy for the same price, the Supersonic Nural is still at full price. Sephora, on the other hand, has both the Airwrap i.d. and Supersonic Nural on sale, but only in the amber silk colorway, whereas Dyson's site offers more variety.

So which is the best to pick up for your boo (or yourself)? As Mashable's beauty tech expert, I broke it down below.

Dyson Airwrap i.d. deal


Dyson airwrap i.d. with attachments and case

Credit: Dyson

$499.99
at Dyson

$649.99
Save $150

Why we like it

I've tested every Supersonic model available, and while I maintain the supremacy Shark FlexStyle in a pure value sense, the Airwrap i.d. is the multi-styler that made me most get Dyson's popularity. Typically, the curling barrels on multi-stylers provide more of a blown out than truly curled look — and if your hair has trouble holding a style, the wave you do get might not last.

The Airwrap i.d. makes this process better by including a conical barrel in the attachments for tighter curls, and automatic temperature cycling — meaning the hair is hit with properly timed hot then cool air with the press of a button — making styling with this tool as mindless as it should be. In addition to the conical curling attachment, you'll get five more attachments (which vary slightly depending on whether you opt for the straight and wavy or curly and coily model).

Dyson Supersonic Nural deal


Dyson Supersonic Nural with attachments

Credit: Dyson

$399.99
at Dyson

$549.99
Save $150

Why we like it

This is not the hair dryer for the dupe lover. This is the hair dryer for the person who rarely air drys, and wants one of the fastest and easiest hair dry experiences on the market. It comes with smart attachments that automatically adjust temperature and air speed, a scalp protect mode for closer and more comfortable drying, and automatic pausing. For textured hair folks, the diffuser has a removable center that's especially useful for pixie diffusing and maximizing your volume potential.

Continue Reading

Tech

The giant 57-inch Samsung Odyssey Neo G9 curved gaming monitor is $800 off at Amazon

Published

on

By

SAVE $800: The 57-inch Samsung Odyssey Neo G9 curved gaming monitor is on sale at Amazon for $1,499.99, down from the normal price of $2,299.99. That's a 35% discount.



the 57-inch Samsung Odyssey Neo G9 curved gaming monitor

Credit: Samsung

Sometimes, bigger is better. Think that bag of potato chips from Costco, getting upgraded to the seats with extra legroom on the plane, or streaming your favorite Olympic sports on a giant TV. The same can be applied to gaming on a giant monitor. If you need something bigger (and better), check out this Amazon deal.

As of Feb. 9, the 57-inch Samsung Odyssey Neo G9 curved gaming monitor is on sale for $1,499.99 at Amazon, marked down from the standard price of $2,299.99. That's a 35% discount that slashes $800 off the price.

So long as your computer desk has room, gaming on a giant 57-inch curved monitor could be incredible. Samsung makes some top-tier gaming monitors that'll massively level up your experience. Of course, it comes with a nice 240Hz refresh rate, a 1 millisecond response time, and AMD FreeSync Premium Pro. There's also something to be said about gaming on a Quantum Mini-LED display.

Nice extras include the ergonomic stand from Samsung and the DisplayPort 2.1, HDMI 2.1, and USB hub. There's also the Samsung Picture-by-Picture feature which gives you access to viewing two sources at the same time in their native resolution.

While we're still in the depths of winter, upgrade your gaming set up with the 57-inch Samsung Odyssey Neo G9 curved gaming monitor. Since you'll be saving $800 thanks to Amazon's sale price, you'll be able to snag new game titles or maybe even an ultra-comfortable gaming chair.

Continue Reading

Trending