Entertainment
Recapping Snapchat’s Inagural Snappys Award Show
Snapchat rolled out the yellow carpet for their inaugural award show, the Snappys? The event was hosted at the company’s headquarters in Santa Monica, California. For the Snappys, the Snapchat building was converted into a theatre and event space, hosting top content creators invited to the event and nominated for awards. The Snappys were streamed live last night on the Snapchat app. So who took home awards and what bumps in the road happened at the event?
Matt Friend, a comedian known for his impressions, hosted the awards show. Friend has performed at previous Snapchat events and has an active following on the platform. In his monologue, Friend made jokes poking fun at the recent abundance of award shows in his monologue (TikTok had their first award show in December) and at content recycled between social media platforms.
Kehlani was scheduled to perform but did not attend, cancelling for personal reasons. Some top influencers did attend the event including nominees like David Dobrik, Dixie D’Amelio, JoJo Siwa and Harry Jowsey, but turnout was lower than expected. Roughly half of all Snappy winners did not even attend the event. Lifetime Achievement winner DJ Khaled accepted his achievement award virtually, also announcing Kehlani’s scrapped performance. Additionally, some social media users reported issues trying to watch the show live on the app.
Despite the setbacks, the award show was still a relative success, with Dobrik, Kylie Jenner and former NBA player Dwight Howard winning awards. Dobrik dedicated his win to Snapchat Head of Content Partnerships Jim Shepherd. Shepherd was quoted in Snapchat’s press release for the award show toting the platform’s commitment to creators. During the event, it was announced that paid creator subscriptions would be available to all Snap users. Winners took home a golden statue of the company’s ghost logo à la the Oscars.
2026 Snappys Winners
Best Use of Creative Tools – Zaina Sesay
Best Storyteller – Rachel Levin
Spotlight MVP – AdamW
Top Lens Creator – Mohamad el Asmar
Community Builder – Cheyenne Davis
One To Watch – Ella Moncrief
Off-Platform Buzz – Nic Vans
Comeback Star- Kylie Jenner
Breakout Creator – Ashton Hall
Lifetime Achievement – DJ Khaled
Creator of the Year – David Dobrik
Top Beauty Creator – Leilani Green
Top Lifestyle Creator – Ari Fletcher
Top Athlete Creator – Dwight Howard
Top Music Creator – Leon Thomas
Top Food Creator – Jack Mancuso
Top Fashion Creator – Ashley Graham
Top Comedy Creator – LaLa Milan
Top On-Camera Correspondent – Lauren Ashley Beck
Top Gamer Creator – Dimucc
Top Family Creator – Justus and Kayla Tucker
Top Fitness Creator – Katie Austin
Entertainment
Google And Meta Found Liable In Watershed Social Media Trial
Google, owner of YouTube, and Meta, owner of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, had been found liable in a notable case on childhood social media addiction. A jury in Los Angeles, California found that the two tech companies had deliberately built addictive social media applications that harmed the mental health of the 20-year-old plaintiff, according to BBC News. Both Meta and Google said they disagree with the court’s verdict and would be appealing the decision, releasing separate statements to news organizations about the case. The plaintiff in the case, known as “Kaley” or “KGM”, was awarded $6 million in damages, $3 million each in compensatory and punitive damages, with Meta expected to pay 70% of damages and Google the leftover 30% owed. The ruling could have major implications in many similar social media cases currently being tried across the United States.
Although Google was a defendant in the case through its platform YouTube, the case focused primarily on Meta, specifically because of Instagram. Notably, Meta chairman and CEO Mark Zuckerberg testified before the court in February in his first appearance in front of a jury. Snap and TikTok settled with the plaintiff for undisclosed amounts before the case went to trial. The lawsuit for “Kailey” is the first in a region-wide consolidated case (where a court merges multiple lawsuits) of roughly 2,500 against the four tech and social media giants, Meta, Google, Snap and TikTok. In an unrelated but notable case, Elon Musk’s XAI, parent company of X (formerly Twitter) is currently being sued by the city of Baltimore, Maryland over allegations of sexually explicit images generated by its AI agent Grok.
The plaintiff said that she started using Instagram at nine years old and was using YouTube at age six, without being blocked from using either platform. She went on to claim that she stopped interacting with her family and began having symptoms of anxiety and depression at age 10. She was reportedly diagnosed with both conditions later by a therapist. According to the Associated Press, Meta argued that the mental health struggles faced by Kaley were unrelated to her social media use. Lawyers for YouTube argued that their platform was more like television than a social media platform, also pointing to company data they said showed that Kaley’s usage of the platform had declined over time. Both companies emphasized the safety features of their platforms, echoing similar statements from Zuckerberg during his February testimony.
The Los Angeles case comes just a day after a jury in New Mexico ordered Meta to pay $375 million. The company was found liable for misleading users about the safety of its platforms Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp. Another California court case involving social media platforms and alleged harm to minors is also scheduled to start this month. The UK, Australia and Indonesia are also restricting access to social media for children. Indonesia will ban social media for children under 16 starting March 28, with a similar law for people under 16 in Australia already in place. In the UK, a pilot program testing social media time limits, digital curfews and bans is currently underway. Slovenia, Spain, France, Germany and Denmark are also moving to ban social media for minors. Today’s ruling is likely to influence other court cases around the country as governments around the world are considering limiting social media access for children.
Entertainment
The Snappy Awards Are Here
On March 31, Snapchat will host the inaugural Snappy Awards at its Santa Monica headquarters, becoming the latest major platform to build its own awards show from scratch, complete with nominees, categories, a celebrity host, and a lifetime achievement honoree, DJ Khaled. The show, which will span 21 categories recognizing creators across entertainment, comedy, music, sports, beauty, fashion, and gaming, represents Snapchat’s most visible effort yet to position itself as a serious player in the creator economy.
Comedian and Snapchat creator Matt Friend will host, and the nominee list reads like a who’s who of the platform’s most active faces: David Dobrik, Khloe Kardashian, JoJo Siwa, Catherine Paiz, and Landon McBroom are all up for Creator of the Year. In the music category, Alex Warren, fresh off a 10-week run atop the Billboard Hot 100 with “Ordinary,” competes alongside two-time Grammy winner Leon Thomas, rapper JT, singer ENISA, and Shenseea. Other categories feature nominees like media executive David Bullock (known by his nickname “Alaska”), Kylie Jenner and NFL wide receiver Tyreek Hill.
The categories themselves tell a story about what Snapchat values, or at least what it wants to be known for valuing. Alongside traditional honors like Best Storyteller and Breakout Creator of the Year, the Snappys include craft-focused awards like Best Use of Creative Tools and Top Lens Creator, platform-specific metrics like Spotlight MVP, and a category called Off-Platform Buzz, which essentially rewards creators for making Snapchat content that people talk about elsewhere. Vertical-specific awards cover food, gaming, fashion, beauty, sports, and athletics. It is a wide net, cast deliberately.
Jim Shepherd, Snapchat’s head of content partnerships, framed the event as recognition of the creator community’s growing influence. “The Snappys Awards Show is a reflection of how powerful the creator community on Snapchat has become,” said Shepherd. “The Snap Stars we’re honoring aren’t just entertaining audiences–they’re driving conversations, building businesses, and shaping culture. This show represents our long-term commitment to giving creators meaningful recognition and real opportunity as they continue to define what’s next.”
The decision to give DJ Khaled the event’s first Lifetime Achievement Award is the kind of choice that makes perfect sense. Before Instagram Stories existed, before TikTok was a global force, Khaled was the most entertaining person on Snapchat, with his captivating stories and absurd sense of humor. His most legendary series of snaps involved him narrating getting lost on a jet ski journey after coming home from Rick Ross’s house, accompanied by his usual motivational commentary.
Khaled used Snapchat the way the platform always hoped people would: as a place for raw, unscripted moments rather than polished content. The platform says the award recognizes his lasting impact as a creator, artist, and entrepreneur. Khaled’s most recent album, God Did, came out in 2022, he has leaned other aspects of entertainment. He signed a nine-figure deal with Influence Media Partners last year that includes TV and film development alongside an investment in his music catalog. He remains a figure whose career was meaningfully shaped by how he used Snapchat early on, and the platform clearly wants to remind people of that connection.
The Snappys arrive in the middle of a race among social platforms to create their own award shows. TikTok held its first U.S. awards in December at the Hollywood Palladium, handing out 14 awards in a live ceremony hosted by La La Anthony. The event had some setbacks, including LED screens that malfunctioned for part of the night, but it drew big names as presenters, including Paris Hilton and Olympic gymnast Jordan Chiles, and it furthered the use of traditional, live awards shows for digital platforms.
Instagram took a different approach. In October 2025, it launched Rings, which honors just 25 creators annually with physical gold rings designed by Grace Wales Bonner and digital gold halos around their profile pictures. Rather than a live show, Rings operates more like a juried prize, with a selection panel that included Spike Lee, Marc Jacobs, and Instagram head Adam Mosseri..
YouTube has featured its play button system for years, awarding physical plaques when channels hit subscriber milestones. But those are automatic and based on subscriber numbers. What TikTok, Instagram, and now Snapchat are doing is qualitative and curated, which makes the awards function more like marketing than pure celebration. Each show is a testimonial for why creators should invest their time on that particular platform.
Snapchat saw more than a 40 percent year-over-year increase in creators posting content during the last quarter of 2025, driven in large part by its Snap Star monetization program. The company also recently launched a Subscriptions product that lets fans pay creators directly, following a model established by YouTube and Twitch. The Snappy Awards are a showcase for those initiatives, a way to present Snapchat as a place where creative work can become a career.
As platforms become more interchangeable and creators increasingly distribute their work everywhere, these award shows serve a specific strategic function. They create platform-specific narratives. They give creators a reason to feel loyal, or at least to feel seen. And they generate the kind of coverage and conversation that keeps a platform in the mix when a creator is deciding where to post next. Snapchat is certainly setting itself apart with the Snappy Awards and establishing itself as a creator-first platform. A full list of Snappy nominees is available here.
Entertainment
Where Are They Now: Olivia Maher, the Woman Who Coined “Girl Dinner”
In May 2023, Olivia Maher posted a short TikTok video of a plate of bread, cheese, grapes, and pickles. She explained that someone online had pointed out how medieval peasants survived on bread and cheese and called it miserable, and that she found this baffling, because that was basically her ideal meal. She called it “girl dinner,” or alternatively, “medieval peasant.” The video collected over 1.5 million views and videos with the caption or hashtag “girl dinner” have billions of views. Another creator, Karma Carr (@karmapilled on TikTok), set the concept to a catchy original sound, and the whole thing took off from there. Maher later described girl dinner as a meal doe when she was eating “bits and bobs” of items from her fridge (like cheese, pickles and salami, for example). The phrase appeared as a clue on Jeopardy!, which Maher watched live with her family and posted about in a video she described as the “cherry on top” of girl dinner’s first year. It entered the Merriam-Webster lexicon discourse and became shorthand for a whole philosophy of eating: low-effort, single-serving, no performance required. So what happened to the person who started all of it? Quite a lot, as it turns out.
Maher, who works in television, has since jumpstarted the “House of Maher” weekly podcast with her sisters Adrianna, who works in human rights and Ilona, an Olympic rugby player. Ilona became one of the most visible athletes on social media during the 2024 Paris Games, telling People Magazine at the 2024 Olympics that Olivia was “the inventor of Girl Dinner” and also “my manager, my boss, my everything.”
That manager role is not just hyperbolee. Olivia is based in Los Angeles and handles much of the business and logistics behind Ilona’s career, which has expanded rapidly over the past two years. She was in the crowd at Dancing with the Stars when Ilona competed in late 2024. She was also in England when Ilona signed a three-month deal with Bristol Bears in the Premiership Women’s Rugby league at the start of 2025, drawing a club record crowd of over 9,000 to her debut match.
In March 2025, the three Maher sisters launched House of Maher, a weekly podcast through Wave Sports and Entertainment.. The show, which Samsung Galaxy signed on as exclusive launch partner for, has released over 40 episodes since launch and holds a 4.9-star rating on Apple Podcasts. The dynamic is loose and personal: they discuss pop culture, dating, sisterly conflicts, and whatever comes up in the group chat. They have hosted guests including Olympic gymnast Jordan Chiles. The show has become a significant piece of Olivia’s public identity, shifting her from “person who coined a phrase” to one-third of a media operation.
Outside of the podcast, Olivia has continued making food and lifestyle content on TikTok and Instagram, pivoting to full-time social media work. She hosted a brief video series called Girl Dinner with a Chef for Cherry Bombe magazine, visiting chefs like Susan Feniger to see how they approached the concept. She was also listed as a speaker at ADWEEK House during Cannes Lions 2025, where she was billed as a creator who “crafts engaging food and lifestyle content while managing the demanding business and life of her professional athlete sister.”
In November 2025, Olivia ran the New York City Marathon as part of Team Maybelline, finishing in 5 hours, 17 minutes, and 9 seconds. It was her first marathon. Ilona cheered from the sidelines holding a sign that read “Girl Dinner, Running Winner.” The House of Maher podcast dedicated an episode to the recap, in which Olivia discussed the experience with their parents. The NYC marathon set a world record that year with over 59,000 finishers.
Most recently, in February 2026, Olivia and Adrianna attended the Winter Olympics in Milano Cortina as part of the Team USA Creators Program. In an interview with Olympics.com, Olivia talked about exploring Italian cuisine, citing Venetian spritzes, pasta, and bowls of olives as her version of Italian girl dinner. She and Adrianna described themselves as “full-time female fans,” there to support athletes across disciplines while their rugby-playing sister sat this one out.
The internet has a short memory, and most viral creators fade quickly once the trend cycle moves on. Maher has avoided that, partly through luck (having a sister whose fame skyrocketed at the exact right time), partly through work (managing Ilona’s career is a full-time job), and partly through a willingness to keep showing up without pretending to be anything other than what she is: someone who likes snack plates and takes her role as oldest sister seriously.