Is this worth spending $180?

LX Hammer Burger (Levy)

Being sold at the Super Bowl is the $180 LX Hammer Burger, which is said to serve four people.

It is the creation of Levy, a company that sells food and drinks at sports venues, special events and other venues, such as the Memphis Zoo.

The cheeseburger comes with a braised bone-in beef shank, a roasted mirepoix demi-glace and Point Reyes bleu cheese fondue on a baked brioche bun.

Only 200 will be made, but Forbes reports fans at Levi’s Stadium will have more options besides the burger.

Super Bowl Sunday detour in the Golden Triangle

The state is again closing eastbound Highway 82 for more work on the bridge for Old West Point Road.

This will start Sunday morning and run for nearly 24 hours. The closure will again only affect the eastbound lanes from the Highway 45 Macon exit to Main Street in Columbus.

Traffic heading for Columbus on Highway 82 will be sent through West Point before drivers can reenter the eastbound lanes from Highway 45 North. Those driving from Columbus to Starkville will not be affected.

The firm working on the bridge told The Commercial Dispatch more work will be required on the bridge after this weekend. However, that future work will not shut down eastbound traffic.

On journalism

At this point in our country, great reporting isn’t a craft or a talent. It is a patriotic act. It presents the facts on which we can build a serviceable picture of what happened, of right and wrong. This steadies the civic mind.

What reporters do is hard—find human beings in the thicket, in the wild, earn their trust, convince them to speak, read opaque documents, decipher things, restrain their own views, get the facts accurately and then let those facts speak for themselves.

A little side trip here to Walter Cronkite, whose name is being mentioned a lot. “Everyone trusted Cronkite.” True. I knew him, he was human, and he wasn’t trusted because he had nice eyes or a nice way or a well-lit set or smoked a pipe.

People trusted him because for much of his career he’d been a workaday reporter at United Press International. And it formed him, shaped his journalism. UPI, the Associated Press and other wire services told America what was happening each day in the country and the world.

Here is what the wires taught you. Their product was purchased and had to be acceptable to every newspaper in the country—liberal and conservative, big city and small. So wire service reporters had to play it straight—get it first but get it right, facts are gettable, verification necessary. You disciplined yourself out of the story. Accuracy was all.

Because of that training, viewers could tell Cronkite was a professional operating under clear and continuing standards.

People think journalism is hopelessly tainted, just another partisan player, can never get its reputation back. Wrong. You can build it each day. You can open up a new account in the credibility bank, see it grow. When Cronkite said Vietnam was a failure, he was believed because he had a big personal account to draw on.

Peggy Noonan in The Wall Street Journal on January 31, 2026

When press freedom erodes

An analysis by The Economist found strong links between media-muzzling and corruption. Looking at 80 years of data from about 180 countries collected by v-Dem, the news outlet found that a reduction in media freedom in a given country was a strong predictor that graft in that country would subsequently grow worse. This held true even after correcting for past and current levels of corruption, change in incomes and worldwide trends.

The full story can be read by clicking here (must be a subscriber).