Taylor Swift is again expected to be cheering at the Super Bowl on Sunday as the most famous NFL "WAG."
Some viewers of the country's most-watched sporting event are more curious about who's sitting in her box or her attire than, you know, the game.
Why it matters: Swift joins a changing guard of WAGs who have massive platforms thanks to new media, brand partnerships, or — in Swift's case —careers that eclipse their NFL-playing partners'.
Since President Trump began his political career in 2015, the number of media and defamation lawsuits involving him or his businesses as either the plaintiff or defendant quadrupled compared to the prior three decades, according to an Axios analysis of public databases.
Why it matters: The growing volume shows how, since turning into a political figure, Trump has become bolder about using the courts in media and free speech cases.
Streaming TV companies including Samsung, LG, Vizio, Amazon, Google and Apple have removed TikTok from their smart TV systems and app stores, complying with the ban law that went into effect Jan. 19, an Axios investigation found.
Why it matters: While the public's focus has mostly been on mobile companies, the removal of the app across the streaming TV ecosystem shows that corporate America is mostly determined to follow the law, despite President Trump's executive order promising the ban won't be enforced for 75 days.