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Sunday, February 8, 2026

In the Arctic, the major climate threat of black carbon is overshadowed by geopolitical tensions

February 08, 2026
In the Arctic, the major climate threat of black carbon is overshadowed by geopolitical tensions

REYKJAVIK, Iceland (AP) — As rising global temperatures speed up the melting of sea ice in the Arctic Ocean, it's set off a boom of ships taking routes that previously were frozen and not traversable.

The increase in marine Arctic traffic, which received increased attention as President Donald Trump pushed for the United States to take overGreenland, has come with a heavy environmental cost: black carbon, or soot, that spews from ships and makes the ice melt even faster. Several countries are making a case for ships in the Arctic to use cleaner fuels that cause less pollution in meetings this week with international shipping regulators.

Glaciers, snow and ice covered in the soot emitted by ships have less ability to reflect the sun. Instead, the sun's heat is absorbed, helping to make the Arctic the fastest warming place on Earth. In turn, melting Arctic sea ice can affectweather patternsaround the world.

"It ends up in a never-ending cycle of increased warming," said Sian Prior, lead adviser for the Clean Arctic Alliance, a coalition of nonprofits focused on the Arctic and shipping. "We need to regulate emissions and black carbon, in particular. Both are completely unregulated in the Arctic."

In December, France, Germany, the Solomon Islands and Denmark proposed that the International Maritime Organization require ships traveling in Arctic waters to use "polar fuels," which are lighter and emit less carbon pollution than the widely used maritime fuels known as residuals. The proposal includes steps that companies would take to comply and the geographic area it would apply to — all ships traveling north of the 60th parallel. The proposal was expected to be presented to the IMO's Pollution Prevention and Response Committee this week and possibly another committee in April.

A 2024 ban on using a type of residual known as heavy fuel oil in the Arctic has had only modest impacts so far, partly because of loopholes.

Concerns about shipping pollution are overshadowed by geopolitics

The push to reduce black carbon, which studies have shown has a warming impact 1,600 times that of carbon dioxide over a 20-year span, is happening at a time of conflicting interests, both internationally and among the countries that have coastlines in the Arctic.

In recent months, Trump's periodic comments about the need to "own" Greenland to bolster U.S. security have raised many issues, from Greenland's sovereignty to the future of the NATO alliance. Pollution and other environmental issues in the Arctic have taken a backseat.

Trump, who has calledclimate changea "con job," has also pushed back against global policies aimed at fighting it. Last year, the IMO was expected to adopt new regulations that would have imposed carbon fees on shipping, which supporters said would have pushed companies to use cleaner fuels and electrify fleets where possible. Then Trump intervened, lobbying hard for nations to vote no.The measure was postponed for a year, its prospects at best uncertain. Given that, it's hard to see the IMO making fast progress on the current proposal to limit black carbon in the Arctic.

Even inside Arctic nations, which are most impacted by black carbon and other shipping pollution, there are internal tensions around such regulations. Iceland is a good example. While the country is a world leader in green technologies such as carbon capture and the use of thermal energies for heating, conservationists say the country has made less progress on regulating pollution in its seas. That is because the fishing industry, one of the country's most important, holds huge sway.

"The industry is happy with profits, unhappy with the taxes and not engaged in issues like climate or biodiversity," said Arni Finnsson, board chair of the Iceland Nature Conservation Association.

Finnsson added that the costs of using cleaner fuels or electrifying fleets have also prompted resistance.

"I think the government is waking up, but they still have to wait for the (fishing) industry to say yes," he said.

The country has not taken a position on the pending polar fuels proposal. In a statement, Iceland's Ministry of Environment, Energy and Climate said the proposal was "positive with regard to its purpose and basic content," but that further study was needed. The statement added that Iceland supports stronger measures to counter shipping emissions and reduce black carbon.

Arctic ship traffic and black carbon emissions both rise

Soot pollution has increased in the Arctic as cargo ships, fishing boats and even some cruise liners are traveling more in the waters that connect the northernmost parts of Iceland, Greenland, Canada, Russia, Norway, Finland, Sweden and the United States.

Between 2013 and 2023, the number of ships entering waters north of the 60th parallel increased by 37%, according to the Arctic Council, an intergovernmental forum made up of the eight countries with territory in the Arctic. In that same period, the total distance traversed by ships in the Arctic increased 111%.

Black carbon emissions have also increased. In 2019, 2,696 metric tons of black carbon was emitted from ships north of the 60th parallel compared with 3,310 metric tons in 2024, according to a study by Energy and Environmental Research Associates. The study found that fishing boats were the biggest source of black carbon.

It also found that the 2024 ban on heavy fuel oil would only result in a small reduction in black carbon. Waivers and exceptions allow some ships to continue using it until 2029.

Environmental groups and concerned countries see regulating ship fuel as the only way to realistically reduce black carbon. That is because getting nations to agree to limit traffic would likely be impossible. The lure of fishing, resource extraction and shorter shipping distances is too great. Ships can save days on some trips between Asia and Europe by sailing through the Arctic.

Still, the path known as the Northern Sea Route is only traversable a few months of the year, and even then ships must be accompanied by icebreakers. Those dangers, combined with Arctic pollution concerns, have driven some companies to pledge to stay away — at least for now.

"The debate around the Arctic is intensifying, and commercial shipping is part of that discussion," wrote Søren Toft, CEO of Mediterranean Shipping Company, the world's largest container shipping company, in a LinkedIn post last month. "Our position at MSC is clear. We do not and will not use the Northern Sea Route."

The Associated Press' climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP'sstandardsfor working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas atAP.org.

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Thousands protest Israeli President Herzog's visit to Australia

February 08, 2026
Thousands protest Israeli President Herzog's visit to Australia

By Scott Murdoch and Alasdair Pal

SYDNEY, Feb 9 (Reuters) - Thousands gathered across Australia on Monday to protest the arrival of Israeli President Isaac Herzog, who is on a multi-city trip aimed at expressing solidarity with ​Australia's Jewish community following a deadly mass shooting last year.

Herzog is visiting Australia this week following an invitation ‌from Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese in the aftermath of the December 14 shooting at a Hanukkah event at Sydney's Bondi Beach that killed 15.

The ‌visit has attracted the ire of some people in Australia, who accuse Herzog of being complicit in civilian deaths in Gaza. Pro-Palestine groups have organised protests in cities and towns across the country on Monday evening.

In Sydney, thousands gathered in a square in the city's central business district, listening to speeches and shouting pro-Palestine slogans.

"The Bondi massacre was terrible but from our Australian leadership there's been ⁠no acknowledgment of the Palestinian people and ‌the Gazans," said Jackson Elliott, a 30-year-old protestor from Sydney.

"Herzog has dodged all the questions about the occupation and says this visit is about Australia and Israeli relations but he is complicit."

There was ‍a heavy police presence with a helicopter circling overhead and officers patrolling on horseback.

About 3,000 police personnel will be deployed across Sydney during Herzog's visit to the city.

PRESIDENT COMMEMORATES LIVES LOST

Herzog began his visit at Bondi Beach, where he laid a wreath at a memorial for ​the victims of the attack. He also met survivors and the families of 15 people killed in the shooting.

"This was ‌also an attack on all Australians. They attacked the values that our democracies treasure, the sanctity of human life, the freedom of religion, tolerance, dignity and respect," Herzog said in remarks at the site.

In a statement, the Executive Council of Australian Jewry Co-Chief Executive Alex Ryvchin said Herzog's visit "will lift the spirits of a pained community."

Some Jews oppose the visit.

The Jewish Council of Australia, a vocal critic of the Israeli government, released an open letter on Monday signed by over 1,000 Jewish Australian ⁠academics and community leaders, urging Albanese to rescind Herzog's invitation.

POLICE DEPLOY SPECIAL ​POWERS

Authorities in Sydney have declared Herzog's visit a major event and have ​been authorised to use rarely invoked powers during the visit, including the ability to separate and move crowds, restrict their entry to certain areas, direct people to leave and search vehicles.

The Palestine Action Group ‍organising the protest failed in a ⁠legal challenge in a Sydney court on Monday against restrictions placed on the expected demonstration.

"We're hoping we won't have to use any powers, because we've been liaising very closely with the protest organisers," New South Wales Police ⁠Assistant Commissioner Peter McKenna told Nine News on Monday.

"Overall, it is all of the community that we want to keep safe ... we'll be there in ‌significant numbers just to make sure that the community is safe."

(Reporting by Renju Jose, Alasdair Pal and Scott ‌Murdoch in Sydney; editing by Diane Craft and Michael Perry)

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Ghislaine Maxwell won't answer questions during congressional deposition, lawmaker says

February 08, 2026
Ghislaine Maxwell won't answer questions during congressional deposition, lawmaker says

By Karen Sloan

Feb 8 (Reuters) - Jeffrey Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell intends to refuse to answer ​questions at a Monday deposition before the House's ‌Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, according to a Sunday letter ‌from U.S. Representative Ro Khanna.

Maxwell, who was found guilty in 2021 for her role in helping Epstein sexually abuse teenage girls and is currently serving a ⁠20-year prison sentence, plans ‌to invoke her Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination and decline to answer all substantive ‍questions, according to Khanna's letter to Representative James Comer, the committee chair.

Maxwell's attorney did not immediately respond to a ​request for comment on Sunday.

Instead of answering individual ‌questions, Maxwell plans to read a prepared statement at the beginning of her deposition, Khanna, who serves on the committee, said without detailing the source of his information.

"This position appears inconsistent with Ms. Maxwell's prior ⁠conduct, as she did not ​invoke the Fifth Amendment when ​she previously met with Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche to discuss substantially similar subject matter," ‍Khana, a California ⁠Democrat, wrote in his letter seeking clarification on her testimony.

Maxwell's deposition comes as the U.S. Department ⁠of Justice has released of millions of internal documents related ‌to Epstein.

(Reporting by Karen Sloan; Editing by ‌Sergio Non and Lincoln Feast.)

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Super Bowl 2026: Sam Darnold officially sheds the bust label as he becomes a championship winning QB

February 08, 2026
Super Bowl 2026: Sam Darnold officially sheds the bust label as he becomes a championship winning QB

SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Sam Darnold, Super Bowl championship quarterback.

Whatever other chapters that are yet to be written about Darnold's career — keep in mind, he's still just 28 years old — what happened in Super Bowl LX will be the biggest part of it. Not being called a bust with the New York Jets and Carolina Panthers. Not even the year in which he was very good with the Minnesota Vikings but that was washed away due to two bad games to end an otherwise fantastic season.

We remember the quarterbacks who win Super Bowls. Darnold is in that club now after the Seattle Seahawks beat the New England Patriots 29-13.

"Unbelievable story. I don't know if there's a quarterback in NFL history that's done what he's done. " Seahawks receiver Cooper Kupp said. "To go through the things he had to go through the first, whatever, five years. To believe in himself, to overcome everyone who told him he wasn't that guy anymore, to say he couldn't be a starter or productive quarterback, to come back to work and commit to his process, and then go out there in the biggest moments this year, over and over again, show up.

"It's an unbelievable story."

Darnold admittedly wasn't at his best on Sunday against the Patriots. He was just 19 of 38 for 202 yards. But he was good most of the season, including a 346-yard, three-touchdown game in the NFC championship game that helped Seattle get to the Super Bowl.

Afterthe long odds Darnold facedjust to be a regular starter again, much less a Super Bowl champion on his fifth team in just eight seasons, the white Super Bowl champions hat and black Super Bowl champions T-shirt he wore after the game fit just fine.

"The reason I'm here is because of my journey," Darnold said. "Because of the ups and downs, especially the downs I went through early on in my career. I learned so much about myself, about football.

"It's funny how it works."

SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA - FEBRUARY 08: Sam Darnold #14 of the Seattle Seahawks reacts after defeating the New England Patriots 29-13 to win Super Bowl LX at Levi's Stadium on February 08, 2026 in Santa Clara, California.  (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

Sam Darnold keeps believing

Darnold said after the Seahawks' win over the Patriots was done, he had an emotional moment with his parents and his fiancee.

"I think that's what got me a little bit," Darnold said. "Me and my dad don't cry very often."

Things were bleak for Darnold's career. Usually quarterbacks who fail in their first two stops and then hit the backup phase of their career don't rebound to have success stories. But Darnold said, in that moment after the game, he let his parents know how important they were to his comeback story.

"I'm here because of their belief in me," Darnold said. "They believed in me throughout my entire career, and that's why I was able to believe in myself. Some people called me crazy throughout for believing in myself so much and having so much confidence, but it was because of my parents."

Sunday wasn't Darnold's finest moment, and he admitted that. Neither team scored a touchdown until the fourth quarter, but his 16-yard touchdown to A.J. Barner gave the Seahawks a 19-0 lead. Darnold struggled to generate much offense, but he also didn't turn it over during a game in which the defense was stifling.

"Offense, I feel like we didn't play as good as we could have," Darnold said. "I certainly didn't play as good as I could have.

"I didn't have my best stuff but our team had my back."

Darnold joins a select list

The list of quarterbacks who have started and won a Super Bowl is fairly small and serious football fans remember every name. There have been some very good quarterbacks through the years who have been forgotten, but names like Trent Dilfer, Jeff Hostetler, Nick Foles, Doug Williams and Brad Johnson will always be associated with their Super Bowl championship teams.

That will be Darnold from now on, and he still has plenty of time to add to his legacy. And it's a pretty good Seahawks team he'll be associated with. The Seahawks went 14-3 in the regular season, with the losses by a combined nine points. They punctuated the season with a dominant performance over the Patriots. That win was driven by the defense, but don't diminish what Darnold meant to the Seahawks all season just because he didn't have a great Super Bowl.

"Put some respect on it! He's the best!" Seahawks receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba said,cutting into a Darnold interview in the locker room. "We're not here without that guy."

Many of Darnold's teammates through the week and after Super Bowl LX talked about how easy he is to root for, understanding the adversity he went through.

"Everyone in that locker room believes in me," Darnold said.

Darnold has plenty of critics who won't let go of the reputation he built early in his career, after he didn't pan out as the third overall pick to the Jets. When this season is brought up they'll mention that he was carried by a great defense and in the Super Bowl he didn't have the type of performance we typically equate to the winning quarterback.

And, who cares? Josh Allen and Lamar Jackson haven't been to a Super Bowl yet. Neither has Justin Herbert or Dak Prescott. Joe Burrow hasn't won one. Some of the greatest quarterbacks ever, like Brett Favre, Drew Brees and Aaron Rodgers, only won one Super Bowl. Dan Marino, Jim Kelly and Dan Fouts are among the great quarterbacks to never win one.

Darnold has one. That'sall a legacy needs.

"I don't think it's really hit me yet," Darnold said. "But it's special."

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Ilia Malinin Secures Team USA Figure Skating Gold with a Backflip in 2026 Winter Olympics Team Event Nail-Biter

February 08, 2026
Ilia Malinin Secures Team USA Figure Skating Gold with a Backflip in 2026 Winter Olympics Team Event Nail-Biter

Jared C. Tilton/Getty

People Team USA at the 2026 Winter Olympics on Feb. 8. Jared C. Tilton/Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Team USA won a gold medal at the figure skating team event at the 2026 Winter Olympics on Feb. 8

  • Ilia Malinin, Alysa Liu, Amber Glenn, Madison Chock, Evan Bates, Ellie Kam and Danny O'Shea all contributed to the win

  • The medal comes after Team USA's gold medal in the same event in 2022, which was marred by scandal

Gold looks good on Team USA!

The American figure skaters jumped, spun and backflipped their way to a gold medal in the figure skating team event at the2026 Winter Olympicson Sunday, Feb. 8 at the Milano Ice Skating Arena.

It was a group effort forIlia Malinin,Alysa Liu, Amber Glenn, Madison Chock, Evan Bates, Ellie Kam and Danny O'Shea, who all contributed to Team USA's winning score of 68 via four events: ice dance, pair skating, women single skating and men single skating.

Team USA previously won the same event at Beijing in 2022 — but only after a scandal involving Russian skater Kamila Valieva, who tested positive during the Games for a banned substance. After a lengthy investigation, her team's first-place finish was downgraded, and the U.S.'s second-place finish was bumped up to first. They eventually received their gold medals in Paris in 2024.

Ilia Malinin at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan on Feb. 7. Joris Verwijst/BSR Agency/Getty

Joris Verwijst/BSR Agency/Getty

On the first of the two-night final, Chock, 33, and Bates, 36, kicked things off with a bang, notching the top spot on the ice dance leaderboard with 133.23 points.

Kam, 21, and O'Shea, 34, kept things moving the next night, earning a seventh-place finish (and seven team points) with 135.36. The two were overcome with emotion following their performance, with O'Shea yelling out with joy and Kam fighting tears.

Glenn, 26, was next, scoring 138.62, enough to earn her a third-place finish and eight team points. The athlete was visibly disappointed as she sat amongst her teammates and heard her score read aloud.

"I feel guilty. My team has done so well and my performance was lackluster," she told reporters, including PEOPLE, after her skate. "I scored lower than my median in what they were counting on, and I placed lower than what would have been expected... I made a few too many mistakes."

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All eyes were on Malinin, 21, known by fans as the "Quad God," heading into the men single skating round, as the U.S. and Japan were tied with 59 total team points each.

Though he stumbled toward the end of his routine, Mailin ultimately clinched the win for Team USA with help from his signature backflip, scoring 200.03.

"It's honestly just such an incredible, like raw feeling in this environment," he told reporters, including PEOPLE, after his qualifiers event on Feb. 7. "Once I do that backflip, everyone's like, screaming for joy and they're just out of control."

Amber Glenn competing at the 2026 Winter Olympics on Feb. 8, 2026. Jamie Squire/Getty

Jamie Squire/Getty

Liu — who came out of retirement in 2024 — contributed, too, notching a second-place finish in the women single skating qualifier.

The medal marked the second of the Games for the U.S., following skierBreezy Johnson's first-place finishin women's downhill.

"We are always excited to take [to the] Olympic ice," Chock said after her and Bates' ice dance free dance on Feb. 7. "We knew what we had to do when we stepped on the ice and were prepared to do it."

O'Shea, meanwhile joked at a press conference that his strategy heading onto the ice was simply "to skate well."

To learn more about all the Olympic and Paralympic hopefuls, come topeople.comto check out ongoing coverage before, during and after the games. Watch the Milan Cortina Olympics and Paralympics, beginning Feb. 6, on NBC and Peacock.

Read the original article onPeople

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Lauren Betts leads No. 2 UCLA to 69-66 win over No. 8 Michigan, takes 2-game lead in Big Ten race

February 08, 2026
Lauren Betts leads No. 2 UCLA to 69-66 win over No. 8 Michigan, takes 2-game lead in Big Ten race

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) —Lauren Bettshad 16 points, 16 rebounds, five assists and three blocks to helpNo. 2 UCLAhold off No. 8 Michigan for a 69-66 win on Sunday.

The Wolverines trailed by 11 points with less than two minutes left and with a chance to tie the game, Syla Swords shot an airball on a 3-pointer with 2.2 seconds left.

UCLA (23-1, 13-0 Big Ten) took a two-game lead over Michigan (20-4, 11-2) in the conference with its 17th straight victory sincelosing to No. 4 Texasin November.

The Bruins outscored Michigan by 14 over the second and third quarters, leading by as much as 13 points, and finished with theirNCAA-high ninth win over anAP Top 25team.

The Wolverines' school-record, nine-game winning streak in Big Ten games was snapped by a big and experienced team that plays stifling defense and is led by a 6-foot-7 preseason All-America center that does it all.

Betts was 8 of 17 from the field, grabbed rebounds at both ends of the court, set up teammates for shots after drawing double teams and used her size to block or alter shots.

Her surrounding cast is talented, too.

UCLA's Kiki Rice scored 20, Gabriela Jaquez had 13 and Gianna Kneepkens scored 12.

Michigan's Olivia Olson had 20 points, Mila Holloway had 15 and Te'Yala Delfosse added 10. Swords was limited to eight points, missing 10 of 13 shots.

The highly anticipated matchup drew a season-high 6,108 crowd to Crisler Center a few hours before the Super Bowl.

UCLA: At No. 12 Michigan State on Wednesday.

Michigan: At Northwestern on Thursday.

Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign uphereandhere(AP News mobile app). AP women's college basketball:https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-womens-college-basketball-pollandhttps://apnews.com/hub/womens-college-basketbal

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Ben Stiller breaks down his bananas Super Bowl commercial with Benson Boone: 'This guy is really, really insane'

February 08, 2026
Ben Stiller breaks down his bananas Super Bowl commercial with Benson Boone: 'This guy is really, really insane'

Frazer Harrison/Getty; Emma McIntyre/WireImage

Entertainment Weekly Ben Stiller in Los Angeles on May 3, 2025; Benson Boone in Beverly Hills, Calif., on May 13, 2025 Frazer Harrison/Getty; Emma McIntyre/WireImage

Key points

  • Ben Stiller discusses working with Benson Boone in an Instacart ad that aired during Super Bowl LX: "This guy is really, really insane."

  • Stiller says Boone is "incredible" and remains in awe of his acrobatic skills: "I still don't understand how he does it."

  • The Meet the Parents star said that his costar ate "cheeseburgers and a milkshake" before performing his signature flip.

Ben Stilleris in awe ofBenson Boone.

TheMeet the Parentsactor stars alongside the "Beautiful Things" singer in one of the wildest ads that aired during the 2026Super Bowl: a retro commercial inspired by '80s variety shows that sees the two entertainers play brothers who sing a synth-pop anthem about Instacart's Preference Picker feature with nebulous European accents.

The ad, which was directed byHerfilmmakerSpike Jonze, wasprecededbytwo teasersthat established the tense relationship between Gary (Stiller) and John (Boone), and was also expanded toa longer director's cutthat fleshes out the characters' backstory.

The final 30-second commercial sees John pull off an impressive standing backflip, which should look familiar to anyone who's ever seen Boone's real-life concerts that consistently incorporate the singer's acrobatics. Gary subsequently attempts to one-up his brother by trying — and spectacularly failing — to flip off of the highest point on the set.

In a conversation withEntertainment Weekly, Stiller reflects on working with Boone, pulling off that wild stunt, and crafting his goofy character — and reveals what Boone ate for lunch just before flipping all over the stage.

Ben Stiller in Instacart's 'Bananas' commercial Instacart/YouTube

Instacart/YouTube

ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: How did you end up in this Instacart ad?

BEN STILLER:That's a good question. They sent this concept over that I thought was really funny and could be really ridiculous, and so out-there and absurd but very specific in terms of tone and style. It's as if you were tuning into a show or commercial from another time. So that's what excited me about it and of course, how it developed with the creative team. Another huge thing was being able to do something with Benson and Spike, for sure.

How did you settle on the voice that you ended up using in your performance here?

Well, I don't think I ever settled on the voice. [Laughs] We're not quite sure where these guys are from, and sometimes when you're working on an accent, you're trying to make it very specific, but I think our goal was to make it incredibly nonspecific and inconsistent.

Was there any prior performance or project of yours that you were either trying to evoke or trying to avoid repeating? Or was it just its own thing?

I don't think I've ever done any sort of a variety show-type vibe before. I don't think of it that way. Really just from what was described — the references we had were some retro European variety shows and music performances from the '80s, mainly. So it was just going for that, just trying to see what evolved. With a lot of these things, you just sorta start playing around with it and you just see what happens. And then when we connected together, Benson and I, we started just kind of playing off of each other and it sort of evolved, and the relationships developed, too, in terms of who these two guys were.

What was it like working with Benson Boone?

That guy is incredible. I loved him. First of all, he's so talented. He's got such a great, open attitude towards trying something new. I don't think he's done a lot of acting, and he just jumped into the improv and he just has this incredible ability to put himself out there in his musical talent, his physical abilities, and his willingness to kind of go and have fun.

To me, it was just such a blast to work with him. And as I said, we started to improvise together and I'd never met him before, so it was really fun to see that he had that skill and was really into just kind of going for it.

And he just does these insane flips. I don't even understand how he does it. We were shooting after lunch and he's about to do the flip. I'm like, "What did you have for lunch?" He's like, "I had a couple of cheeseburgers and a milkshake." And then he goes and does these crazy flips. Yeah, I love him.

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Benson Boone and Ben Stiller in Instacart's 'Bananas' commercial Instacart/YouTube

Instacart/YouTube

Do you remember how many times he had to do the flip for this particular ad?

He probably did it… I'd say at least 20 times. And he told me he does 10 to 12 flips a show or something like that, and I was standing right next to him watching him do it, and I still don't understand how he does it. It's crazy. It's crazy.

But the thing about him is that's kind of how he first came to everybody's attention, but he is actually really such a well-rounded performer. His voice is really amazing. We had to record the song, and he recorded his track first, and when he did his, he was going on those crazy vocal runs, I was like, "Oh my God, this guy is really, really insane." So it was fun. It was just fun to be around that and see how he does it. I was talking to him about a show — he doesn't have any backup dancers or anything like that. It's just him doing his thing. He's just pure talent.

Do you know what his impression of you was when you first met? He was born afterZoolandercame out, so I'm curious if he was a fan of yours or if he shared any thoughts on your work.

Yeah, when we met, he said that he had kind of grown up seeing some of my stuff. It's great. I think when you get to this point in life of people are telling you they've grown up watching yourself, I appreciate that. It stopped being surreal, age-wise, a few years ago.

But what I was most excited about is that this guy's really an actor, and it was cool to see that, oh, he could do this if he wanted to do it. And he also seems like he discovered he was a singer when he was, I don't know, 18 or 19. He didn't even start out singing when he was a kid. He was more of an athlete, then he discovered he could sing. So I feel like on this spot, he discovered he can improvise and do comedy, too.

Benson Boone and Ben Stiller in Instacart's 'Bananas' commercial Instacart/YouTube

Instacart/YouTube

How did you achieve the insane stunt at the end?

We hired Tom Cruise. [Laughs] I mean, to me, my favorite part of the whole thing was just how incredibly painful both emotionally and physically it was for John and Gary. The relationship is obviously very broken and it comes out in the performance. But we wanted to emphasize the pain of the fall, and that was really Spike, who I knew would be able to dial that in a way to just make it feel at once very real, but also really, really funny. And we had an incredible stunt team.

For yourself, what's the most difficult stunt or physical act that you've ever pulled off personally without a double?

I don't have any specific memories of doing something crazy. I appreciate when you can do your own stunt, but I also feel like if there's something that I think somebody can do better than I can, I will always allow them to do that. Oh, you know what? I think my most fun stunt thing ever actually was being Tom Cruise's stunt double in the thing we did for the MTV Movie Awards. That was probably the most fun.

Ben Stiller and Benson Boone in Instacart's 'Harmonizing' teaser Instacart/YouTube

Instacart/YouTube

Have you ever had a moment like your character in this ad where you get so professionally jealous that you do something incredibly stupid?

It's funny because I think with performers, there's always this sort of internal kind of thing that's going on — internal competition that sometimes ends up pushing people to go for something that might be out of their comfort zone. And so I don't know if I've ever had an experience like that, but I think for my guy Gary, he clearly is so envious of his much younger brother's flip skills, and I think it goes much deeper because I think it really all comes about performing for the love of your parents who withheld that love.

And so I think the greater psychological underpinnings of that relationship — the human level of that in such an absurd commercial — is, to me, what makes it funny because it kind of does connect with real stuff that everybody can identify with. And I think that's what's fun about it, it's having this kind of crazy, dark psychodrama going on between these two guys in this ridiculously silly ad.

This interview has been edited for clarity and length.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

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