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Look, we all know the drill by now: You type a question into the magic AI box, and the magic AI box spits out an answer that is usually pretty good, occasionally mind-blowing, and every once in a blue moon mind-blowingly bizarre. But if youre just treating Google Gemini like a glorified search bar, youre leaving a lot of utility on the table. Its sort of like buying a Swiss Army knife and only ever using the toothpick. If you want to move past the beginner phase and actually make Gemini work for you, here are four tricks that might not be immediately obvious but are surprisingly handy. Stop copy-pasting your own emails If youre trying to summarize a long email thread or find a specific document to pull data from, your first instinct is probably to open a new tab, find the email, copy the text, go back to Gemini, paste it in, and then ask your question. No need: Gemini has “Extensions” built right in. If you want to know when your flight is or summarize a Doc, just type @ in the prompt box. Youll see a menu pop up for Google Docs, Gmail, Drive, Maps, and other Google services. Select one, and say something like, “@Gmail find the email from Bob about the Q3 budget and summarize the main points.” It goes and finds the info, saving you from tab fatigue. If you need to turn on these extensions, heres how. The trust but verify button Use AI long enough and youll eventually come across “hallucinations,” which is a polite way of saying the AI just made something up because it sounded good. If youre using Gemini for important research, make sure to use the Double-check response feature, which can be found by clicking the three-dot icon at the bottom of a response. When you click it, Google runs a search to see if theres content on the web to substantiate what the AI just told you. A green highlight means Google found a search result that supports the statement, while an orange highlight means Google either found content that might contradict it, or it couldn’t find a match. Its not foolproof, but its a helpful extra step to take in order to make sure Googles info isnt too far off base. Tables and spreadsheets Were used to chatbots just . . . chatting. But if youre trying to make a decision, like comparing three different project management tools or deciding among five hotels for that Nashville trip, paragraphs of text are actually pretty annoying to parse. You can force Gemini to make information more digestible by telling it, for example: “Output this as a table comparing [Option A] and [Option B] based on price, reviews, and features.” Itll organize the messy data into a clean grid. And if youre feeling especially ambitious, youll notice an “Export to Sheets” icon underneath the table. One click creates a brand-new Google Sheet with all that data populated, formatted, and saved to your Google Drive. It turns cumbersome manual data entry into a single button press. Audio uploads Most people know Gemini can read text and look at pictures. But it also has ears. If you have a recording of a chaotic 45-minute meeting, a rambling lecture, or an interview you recorded on your phone, dont waste your time listening to it at 2x speed. You can upload audio files directly into the prompt bar. Just click the plus (+) icon, select Upload files, and drop in your audio clip. Then ask for what you need: “Summarize this meeting and extract the three action items assigned to me” or “Find the timestamp where they discuss the Q3 budget, for example. It doesnt just transcribe; Gemini “listens” to the context and turns an hour of audio into a 30-second read.
Category:
E-Commerce
Its been called the AI Super Bowl, thanks to Anthropic and OpenAI launching what (hopefully) might become AIs very own Cola Wars. Its been called the MAHA Bowl, thanks to brands like Novo Nordisk promoting Wegovy pills, while Ro and hims & hers are pitching telehealth services, Novartis got NFL tight ends to relax for prostate cancer checks, and pharma company Boehringer Ingelheim hypes kidney health. But we know it was the Super Bowl because mixed in amongst the trends were Sabrina Carpenters FrankenPringles man, both T-Mobile and Coinbase hit play on the Backstreet Boys, Oakley Meta made connected glasses look pretty good, and Manscaped somehow turned shaved body hair into emotionally-resonant characters. Another distinct sign this was as Super Bowl-y an ad game as any other Super Bowl? Celebrity directors. Taika Waititi took on Pepsi, Spike Jonze went full Italian variety show with Ben Stiller for Instacart, and Joseph Kosinski took all the innovation from his experiences at the helm of last years blockbuster F1 to get Kurt Russell to teach a guy how to ski. Oh, and somehow the award-winning director with the least commercial films had two spots in the gameYorgos Lathimos directed both Squarespace and Grubhub. Apple continued its complete reinvention of the halftime show, turning Bad Bunnys electric performance into a global event. We also saw a respectable number of hit songs get classically commercial reinterpretations. The aforementioned Backstreet Boys were joined by Andy Samberg becoming Meal Diamond for Hellmanns, Danny McBride and Keegan-Michael Key butchering Bon Jovi for State Farm, and both the NFL and Rocket crafting emotional gut punch moments by reinterpreting two songs from the Mr. Rogers catalog. Advertising! It was a feast for the sensesa cornucopia of commercial extravaganza. All with enough choices that everyone watching the game has their own favorites Including me! Here are my picks for the best ads from the 2026 Super Bowl. But first, the worst! Svedka Vodka Shake Your Bots Off Its apparently the first Super Bowl ad known to be produced primarily with AI. I never wouldve guessed This ad so bad Im not sure its fair to make fun of it, even if its somehow purposely awful. This is the kind of bad that should be taught in schools. It looks like it was made by Advertising 101 students in a rush. The AI angle is a gimmick for gimmicks sake, obviously, and doesn’t add anything to the ad at all except the robots’ nightmare fuel faces. What is so disappointing is that vodka has historically been a pretty great place for advertising. For anyone curious about the kind of creativity is possible in the vodka category, just watch Belvedere Vodkas 2022 spot Daniel Craig, directed by Waititi. Or Absoluts Vodka Movie from 2008, made by Tim Heidecker, Eric Wareheim, and Zach Galifianakis. Glorious. Svedka, conversely, serves up the advertising equivalent to the most vapid, superficial people youve ever seen in a club. A robot apocalypse as imagined by the Butabi brothers. OK, now lets get to the good stuff. Here are my Top 5 ads from this year… Budweiser “American Icons” As I said in my pregame brand power rankings, Bud was here for the crown. Created by BBDO New York, this takes Budweisers penchant for animal buddies to a new, non-partisan patriotic level. What could possibly be cuter than a horse and a yellow lab becoming best friends? Well, when its Buds 150th anniversary and Americas 250th, the answer, of course, is EAGLET. These are divisive times, with many states feeling less and less united with every news cycle. But here, just for a moment, Bud has served up something that we can all agree on. When that bald eagle spread its big grown wings for the first time from behind that leaping horse, red states, blue states, MAGA, Democratic Socialists, coastal elites, flyover rednecks, and everyone in between were able to say, Oh HELLS yeah. And in 2026, thats something to raise a glass to. Jeep Billy Bass Goes to the River What initially appears to be a pretty run-of-the-mill car ad takes a decidedly epic turn that transforms ths spot into a classic. If you listen to the Super Bowl episode of Fast Companys Brand New World podcast (do it!), youll know I spoke to the folks who made it, Mark Gross and Chad Broude, who are co-founders and co-chief creative officers of Chicago-based independent ad agency Highdive. They have hundreds of Super Bowl ads between them, and this latest piece of work shows the benefit of that experience. Highdive has become synonymous with great Super Bowl work since the 2020 Super Bowl and their fantastic Jeep commercial starring Bill Murray, reliving the classic 1993 comedy Groundhog Day. The level of difficulty here is highno nostalgic soundtrack, no celebrity, no gimmick. Just a straight shot of good ol fashioned copywriting, perfect casting and comedic timing straight into the veins. Rocket x Redfin America Needs Neighbors Like You With the amount of money required just for Super Bowl air timea reported $8 million, plus a required additional matching ad buy across other NBC sports brands need to ensure they get your attention. This year, Rocket and Redfin did that by combining three things that would create a large Venn diagram of interest: Lady Gaga singing Mr. Rogerss Wont You Be My Neighbor?; a heartwarming commercial airing during the game; and, most crucially, giving viewers the chance to win a million-dollar house. But everything revolves around the spot, which was a well-crafted, heartwarming vibe shift from all the comedy and celebrities. I spoke to CMO Jonathan Mildenhall about this triple threat approach. “The only way to win at the Super Bowl is to win a disproportionate share of conversation pregame, as well as during game, and, increasingly, the progressive brands are talking about postgame conversation, Mildenhall says. For us the pregame was Lady Gaga behind the scenes, then during the game there is the spot, and were announcing the Great American home search for people to participate in over the days after the game. Hellmanns Meal Diamond The Boston Red Sox, and every karaoke bar on the planet, utilize Neil Diamonds Sweet Caroline effectively to bring a crowd together, put an arm around one another and scream SO GOOD! SO GOOD! SO GOOD! in unison. Here we get that 1969 hit remixed for mayo thanks to Andy Samberg as Meal Diamond. Of course this looks and sounds ridiculous. But it actually continues a strategy Hellmanns started in 2024. Mayo Cat starred Kate McKinnon and was able to put one word into the mouth of every cat: Mayyo. Its ambition to embed itself in our brains in such an insidious way that we hear it every time a cat meows was commendable. Clearly, that ambition remains. Now when youre making lunch, you may find yourself humming a familiar tune and whisper-crooning to yourself, Haaaam, touching ham.. until it hits a crescendo, Sweet Sandwich Time! Bah-bah-baaaaah. Bud Light Keg Bud Light was in a dark place not that long ago. It was unfairly punished for its one-off partnership with Dylan Mulvaney, which turned into an unlikely lightning rod for anti-trans weirdos and fans of Kid Rock. Thankfully, with Shane Gillis, the brand has been building back its beer advertising pedigree by making commercials that are funny as hell. His impressive run includes Confessions, Wrong Commercial, and last years big game ad BMOC. Now Gillis, Post Malone, and Peyton Manning return, this time at a wedding. When the keg gets knocked over and rolls down a hill, the entire wedding party does its best Princess Bride As you wish impression. Dumb, fun, and exactly what you want from a Bud Light ad.
Category:
E-Commerce
In Southwest Airlines new Super Bowl ad, boarding looks more like the Hunger Games than an orderly process. Set in an airport thats been reimagined as a dense jungle, passengers rush to secure their preferred seats before its too late: a woman swings on a giant vine to cut her fellow travelers; a grandma shoulder-checks a passerby; and a man creates a dummy seatmate out of twigs to convince other fliers that his aisle seat has already been snagged. The ad is a parody of Southwests former open boarding policy, which, since the airlines official founding in 1971, allowed passengers to choose their own seats in a system that aimed to reduce the hierarchy of tiered seating. In January 2024, Southwest announced that it would be nixing open seating in favor of a more standard assigned seating system, citing the time pressure involved in the open seating process and a new focus on premium seating options as the main reasons for the change. Assigned seating officially rolled out across the airlines operations on January 27. Southwest describes its new spot, Boarding Royale, as a self-aware clap-back at its former boarding policy. And, at surface value, the ad is funny, well-executed, and accurate for anyone whos ever traveled with a nervous flier (or is one). But, taken alongside Southwests brand moves over the past two years, the ad feels less like a light-hearted self-own, and more like the hypocritical creative output of a brand thats seriously lost the plot. “Boarding Royale” pokes fun at open seating Boarding Royale was directed by the creative agency GSD&M, Southwests longtime agency of record. According to Julia Melle, director of brand and content at Southwest, the ad is designed to introduce assigned seating in a way that recognizes we understand its a category norm” and “feels authentic to our brand. [Photo: Southwest Airlines] Within the spot, there are nods to the various traveler behaviors associated with Southwest’s open seating, such as the traveler who checked in too late, the one who creatively saves seats, and the young families with children who will do anything to ensure they sit together, Melle says. Our most loyal customers have probably witnessed these behaviors more than anyone, so we believe the exaggeration will give them a chuckle. Indeed, the ad does a good job at poking lighthearted fun at the kinds of exasperating, head-scratching behaviors one tends to encounter at the airport. This strategy mightve worked perfectly well if it was, say, making a silly joke at the expense of a rival airline. But it falls flat when its directly making fun of a feature that was a pillar of Southwests brand for decadesand was, until recently, a system that the company touted again and again in its own marketing materials. Southwest’s boarding about-face From its inception, Southwest cultivated a reputation as a quirky, low-cost airline for the everyman. Three key features sat at the heart of that brand positioning: open seating, a staunch stance against hidden fees, and an iconic Bags Fly Free policy. Over the past several years, the company has shaved away all of those commitments. Some of Southwests earliest ads tout the airlines unique boarding process, which it promised at the time would take less than 10 minutes total. In the 80s, a series of print advertisements promised, Unlike assigned seating, youre free to sit next to someone just like you. For years, the brands unofficial slogan, oft repeated by flight attendants, was You can sit anywhere you wantjust like at church. In 2007, backlash to the concept of Southwest eliminating open seating was so strong that the company published a blog titled, You Spoke and We ListenedSouthwest Says Open Seating is Here to Stay! Southwests marketing often used its open seating modelwhich meant no ticketed class divisions in the cabinto tout its lack of hidden fees compared to competitors. In the early 2000s, many of the brands ads parodied other airlines by showing passengers getting charged additional fees for small luxuries like using the overheard compartments, reclining their seats, or enjoying a snack. In one 2015 campaign titled Transfarency, the company promised, Transfarency means we dont dream up ways we can trick you into paying more. A brand that’s lost the plot To say that these spots have aged poorly would be an understatement. When it announced its new assigned seating policy in 2024, Southwest also introduced a category of premium seats which come with extra legroom, faster Wi-Fi, and larger overhead binsfor an added cost. Its currently in the process of renovating its cabins to make room for these seats, which will take up one third of each aircrats total seating. In August 2025, it also announced a new policy that requires travelers who dont fit within the armrests of their seat to pay for an extra one in advance. [Photo: Southwest Airlines] The brands most egregious move by far, though, came in March 2025, when it announced that it would kill its Bags Fly Free policy, which allowed travelers to check two bags without added costs. Bags Fly Free was a mantra that Southwest repeated in its marketing for decades, including spots in 2009, 2011, and one in 2023 that has since been made private by the company on YouTube. As recently as September 2025, the company said on an earnings call that ending the signature program would be a destructive step too far. Southwest has also removed a 2024 study from its website which found that eliminating Bags Fly Free would destroy value. This isnt to say that brands arent allowed to change their minds or their business strategies. But Southwest hasnt just evolved with the times; its sacrificed some of its most closely held brand attributes values in pursuit of profit. With just a bit of context on Southwests repeated capitulations to market pressure, Boarding Royale starts to feel less like a silly ad, and more like a betrayal of the companys purpose.
Category:
E-Commerce
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