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Members of Gen Z take .5 selfies.

Courtesy of Duncan Grant, Rebecca Smith, Rachel Aquino and Gabriel Lesser.

When 16-year-old Riley Galfi met an artist she loves at a concert back in May, she didn’t ask to take any ordinary selfie with him, she asked to take a .5 selfie.

In a flash, Galfi flipped her phone around, angled it above her head and pressed the volume button to capture a fun, wide-angled picture. As she recounted the experience to CNBC, Galfi was beaming.

“I took a .5 with Aidan Bissett,” she said. “What? That’s really cool.”

The wide-angled image is colloquially called a .5 selfie, called a “point five” by Galfi and her peers. The cheeky photo trend has taken social media platforms by storm. 

The .5 selfie rose to prominence after Apple first introduced an Ultra Wide camera lens to its iPhone 11 product line. The style is particularly popular with members of Generation Z, or people born after 1997, according to the Pew Research Center

Gen Z has already witnessed the rise of smartphones, social media, and more recently, artificial intelligence, in their lifetimes, so these savvy users are accustomed to keeping up with ever-changing technology trends. 

On platforms like Instagram, for instance, Gen Z users don’t favor a perfectly curated feed full of posed and filtered photos. Instead, many are embracing a seemingly more effortless, messy, I-did-not-have-to-try-very-hard-to-capture-this-cool-outfit aesthetic. 

Enter the .5 selfie. 

“They’re not like the usual selfie, they shouldn’t be a well thought out picture that you take,” 24-year-old Rachel Aquino told CNBC in an interview. “It’s something that you just usually take on a whim, and something that really captures the moment in real time.” 

Aquino has taken a .5 photo every day for the past year. She said she uses them as an easy form of personal record keeping to capture her everyday life, her outfits, events and moments with family. 

She also likes to take .5 selfies when hanging out with friends, and she joked that if she doesn’t reach to take one, someone else will. Aquino said it usually takes her just two or three times to nail the shot since she isn’t striving for perfection. 

Rachel Aquino takes a .5 selfie.

Courtesy of Rachel Aquino

“Sometimes, I don’t look at the camera, sometimes, it’s literally the back of my head and me walking in the streets of New York, sometimes, it’s me sitting at a table with friends,” she said. “Sometimes, if I’m having a really good time and I don’t want to bother anyone, it’s like the back of everyone’s heads.”

At her job, Aquino is known as “the .5 queen,” and she said she often shares the photos to her Instagram and TikTok accounts. 

The .5 selfie is now a fixture of Instagram Stories and a popular Gen Z Instagram trend called a “photo dump,” where users share a group of up to 10 random, nonchronological photos to their main feed. Spliced between gorgeous landscapes and fancy meals, a .5 selfie can serve as a way for Gen Z to show off their personalities on the platform. 

Gabriel Lesser, a 21-year-old college student, said lots of his friends share their .5 photos on Instagram, and that they “always make the cut” in a photo dump. He said he has one friend who abides by the slogan “make Instagram casual again,” so she mainly posts .5 photos.     

“I think it just creates less of an expectation for the photo,” Lesser told CNBC in an interview. “You get some cool angles and funny, goofy proportions and you’re like, ‘This is hilarious.'”

Members of Gen Z take .5 selfies.

Courtesy of Emma Kelly, Rachel Aquino and Annika Kim Constantino

For many professional social media creators, the more casual online aesthetic has proved to be a lucrative one. Popular Gen Z creators like Alix Earle and Emma Chamberlain, who has more than 15.7 million Instagram followers, have built brands around their relatability. 

Chamberlain’s photos are edgy, fun and not totally polished, which means they could theoretically be recreated by anyone. Her more attainable vibe has helped her reach some less attainable early career milestones like inking a podcasting deal with Spotify, starting her own coffee company and traveling the world with brands like Louis Vuitton. 

Some creators have also gotten their start purely thanks to the .5 lens.

Internet users have become enamored with Sabrina Bahsoon, a creator on TikTok who is more affectionately known as “Tube Girl.” Bahsoon blew up on the video-sharing platform this year because of the .5 videos she films while taking public transit in London. Her videos ooze confidence and style, and they landed her a spot at a number of designer fashion shows this fall.

“Just to see someone out there recording and so confident and looking so good at the same time is crazy,” Aquino said. “I think that’s why Gen Z goes insane over the Tube Girl.”

How to take a .5 selfie

A member of Gen Z takes a .5 selfie.

Courtesy of Duncan Grant

To take a .5 selfie, start by opening the camera app on your iPhone. Flip the camera so you are looking at the scene in front of you, and not at your face like you would to take a traditional selfie. Tap the 0.5 button that appears over the word “photo” to access the camera’s Ultra Wide lens, and then turn your phone around so you can’t see the screen. 

The next step is all about the angle. Hold your arm out straight, raise your phone above your head and press the volume button to capture the shot. Be careful not to hit the power button by mistake. 

Since the angle of the camera is so wide, you usually don’t have to worry about squeezing multiple people into frame. As a result, .5 selfies can serve as a great way to capture large group settings or pretty backgrounds.

“Make sure you’re not shaking your arm when you’re taking them, because then you’ll get a distorted photo,” Lesser added. 

With some .5 photos, wacky distortion is actually the goal. Members of Gen Z were quick to discover that if you take a .5 photo really close to someone’s face — by pressing the phone to their forehead, for instance — you can make their eyes bulge, their nose stick out or their legs disappear. 

“If someone makes a funny face, it looks even funnier with .5,” Galfi said. “It’s kind of like making a caricature where you can make one feature stand out. I think that’s really fun.” 

Capture big and small moments

Gabriel Lesser takes a .5 selfie.

Courtesy of Gabriel Lesser

Lily McIntyre, 23, said she uses the .5 selfie to capture both the exciting and the normal events in her life. She has .5 photos depicting the scenery of her trip to Ireland, and others where she’s just hanging out in her living room.  

“I have all of these pictures that celebrate the mundane parts of my life for sure,” she told CNBC in an interview. “I feel like the beauty of the .5 is that you can apply it to anything.”

Similarly, Lesser takes at least one .5 photo a day to capture moments like a nice walk or breakfast with his grandparents. He said the .5 images serve as an easy way to document something without worrying too much about what he looks like. 

“People are tired of trying and performing for all the right angles,” Lesser said. “I think .5s are fun to take, especially as selfies, because you don’t see yourself while you’re taking it. So you don’t get to judge yourself, you don’t get to critique yourself.”

His grandparents also get a kick out of the photos, he added.

McIntyre said her generation often gets criticized for taking lots of photos and spending too much time on their phones, but she is grateful to have the “silly pictures” to look back on.

“I just think it’s a fun form of self-expression,” she said. “And it’s not limited to Gen Z. If you want to get on the .5 selfie train and you’re in a different generation, you can.”

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Meta stock climbs 4% on report of planned metaverse cuts

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Meta stock climbs 4% on report of planned metaverse cuts

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has repositioned the social media giant as an AI company.

Vincent Feuray | AFP | Getty Images

Meta Platforms shares popped about 4% higher on Thursday after Bloomberg reported that CEO Mark Zuckerberg was looking to make significant cuts to the company’s metaverse resources.

Bloomberg said that executives have considered budget cuts as high as 30% for the unit, citing people familiar with the talks.

The move would be notable for the Facebook parent company, which changed its name to Meta in October 2021 to signal its pivot beyond social media.

Zuckerberg said at the time that “the metaverse is the next frontier just like social networking was when we got started.”

The proposed cuts would likely include layoffs, according to Bloomberg, which said the cuts were part of budget planning for 2026. The cuts will likely hit the company’s virtual reality group.

Meta did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

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Meta’s Reality Labs unit, which develops the Quest family of VR headsets and Ray-Ban and Oakley AI smart glasses, reported a $4.4 billion loss in the company’s most recent quarter.

The division had recorded over $70 billion in cumulative losses since late 2020 as of the third-quarter report.

Read the full Bloomberg report here.

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Meta year-to-date stock chart.

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Nvidia has a cash problem — too much of it

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Nvidia has a cash problem — too much of it

When Nvidia this week said it would take a $2 billion stake in chip design company Synopsys, it was just the latest in a string of massive investments announced by the chipmaker this year.

Nvidia has also said it would take a $1 billion stake in Nokia, invest $5 billion in Intel and $10 billion in Anthropic — $18 billion in investment commitments from those four deals, not counting smaller venture capital investments.

That doesn’t even include the biggest commitment of all: $100 billion to buy OpenAI shares over a number of years, although there is still no definitive agreement, Nvidia finance chief Colette Kress said Tuesday.

It’s a lot of money and a lot of deals, but Nvidia’s got the cash to write big checks.

At the end of October, Nvidia had $60.6 billion in cash and short-term investments. That’s up from $13.3 billion in January 2023, just after OpenAI released ChatGPT. That launch three years ago was key to making Nvidia’s chips the most valuable tech product.

As Nvidia has transformed from a maker of gaming technology into the most valuable U.S. company, its balance sheet has become a fortress, and investors are increasingly wondering what the company will do with its cash.

“No company has grown at the scale that we’re talking about,” said CEO Jensen Huang, when asked what the company plans to do with all its cash, on Nvidia’s earnings call last month.

Analysts polled by FactSet expect the company to generate $96.85 billion in free cash flow this year alone and $576 billion in free cash flow over the next three years.

Some analysts would like to see Nvidia spend more of its cash on share repurchases.

“Nvidia is set to generate over $600B in free cash flow over the next few years and it should have a lot left over for opportunistic buybacks,” wrote Melius Research analyst Ben Reitzes in a note on Monday.

The company’s board increased its share repurchase authorization in August, adding $60 billion to its total. In the first three quarters of the year, it spent $37 billion on share repurchases and dividends.

“We’re going to continue to do stock buybacks,” Huang said.

Nvidia is doing the buybacks, but it’s not stopping there.

Huang said that Nvidia’s balance sheet strength gives its customers and suppliers confidence that orders in the future, which he called offtake, will be filled.

“Our reputation and our credibility is incredible,” Huang said. “It takes a really strong balance sheet to do that, to support the level of growth and the rate of growth and the magnitude associated with that.”

Kress, Nvidia’s CFO, on Tuesday said that the company’s “largest focus” is making sure it has enough cash to deliver its next-generation products on time. Most of Nvidia’s largest suppliers are equipment manufacturers like Foxconn and Dell, which can require that Nvidia provide working capital to manage inventory and build additional manufacturing capacity.

Huang called his company’s strategic investments “really important work” and said that if companies like OpenAI grow, it drives additional consumption of AI and Nvidia’s chips. Nvidia has said that it does not require any of its investments to use its products, but they all do anyway.

“All of the investments that we’ve done so far — all of it, period — is associated with expanding the reach of Cuda, expanding the ecosystem,” Huang said, referring to the company’s AI software.

In an October filing, Nvidia said it had has already made $8.2 billion in investments in private companies. For Nvidia, those investments have replaced acquisitions.

Nvidia’s $7 billion acquisition of Mellanox in 2020 is the largest the company has ever made, and it laid the groundwork for its current AI products, which aren’t single chips but entire server racks that sell for around an estimated $3 million.

But the company faced regulatory issues when it tried to buy chip technology firm Arm for $40 billion in 2020.

Nvidia called off the deal before it could be completed after regulators in the U.S. and UK raised concerns about its effects on competition in the chip industry. Nvidia has purchased some smaller companies in recent years, to bolster its engineering teams, but it hasn’t completed a multi-billion acquisition since the Arm deal failed.

“It’s hard to think about very significant, large types of M&A,” Kress this week said, speaking at an investor conference. “I wish one would come available, but it’s not going to be very easy to do so.”

WATCH: Nvidia CEO says he supports export controls ahead of Senate Banking Committee meeting

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Weak jobs data, Salesforce earnings, GM’s ‘Silicon Valley cowboy’ and more in Morning Squawk

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Weak jobs data, Salesforce earnings, GM's 'Silicon Valley cowboy' and more in Morning Squawk

A sign at a NYS Department Of Labor job fair at the Downtown Central Library in Buffalo, New York, US, on Wednesday, Aug. 27, 2025.

Lauren Petracca | Bloomberg | Getty Images

This is CNBC’s Morning Squawk newsletter. Subscribe here to receive future editions in your inbox.

Here are five key things investors need to know to start the trading day:

1. Silver linings playbook

Yesterday highlighted the relevance of a market adage: Bad news can actually be good news for investors. After private payroll data showed weakness in the labor market, stocks climbed as investors hoped the report would strengthen the case for an interest rate cut at the Federal Reserve’s meeting next week.

Here’s what to know:

  • The ADP reported a surprise decline of 32,000 jobs in November. Economists surveyed by Dow Jones were forecasting a gain of 40,000.
  • The Dow Jones Industrial Average rallied more than 400 points in Wednesday’s session, pulling the 30-stock index into positive territory for the week.
  • Traders are now pricing in a roughly 89% likelihood of a rate cut, up from under 70% a month ago, according to CME’s FedWatch tool.
  • Data released by Challenger, Gray & Christmas this morning also showed layoff announcements this year totaled the most since 2020, another sign of the labor market’s slowdown.
  • Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told CNBC yesterday that the poor ADP numbers were due to the government shutdown and mass deportations — not tariffs.
  • Speaking of tariffs, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said that the Trump administration can replicate the sweeping levies if the Supreme Court rules the president exceeded his authority to enact the duties.
  • Follow live markets updates here.

2. In full force

Sheldon Cooper | Lightrocket | Getty Images

Salesforce blew past earnings per share expectations for the third quarter, sending shares higher in today’s premarket. While the company’s quarterly revenue came in slightly under Wall Street’s consensus forecast, Salesforce offered stronger-than-anticipated revenue guidance for the current three-month period.

Salesforce also said annualized revenue from its Agentforce AI software jumped 330% year over year. The firm set a better-than-expected revenue target of $60 billion for fiscal 2030 for Agentforce.

3. Jensen’s jaunt

Nvidia President and CEO Jensen Huang speaks to the media as he arrives for a meeting with the Senate Banking Committee on Capitol Hill on December 3, 2025 in Washington, DC.

Anna Moneymaker | Getty Images

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang returned to Washington, D.C. yesterday to meet with Trump and discuss chip export restrictions. Huang then went to Capitol Hill, where lawmakers are weighing whether to approve a rule that would limit AI chip exports.

Huang said the Guaranteeing Access and Innovation for National Artificial Intelligence Act — known as the GAIN AI Act — “is even more detrimental to the United States than the AI Diffusion Act.” Huang also broke with some of his fellow AI executives by slamming state-by-state AI regulation. Such oversight would “drag this industry into a halt” and would “create a national security concern,” he said.

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4. Vaccination vote

Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor Retsef Levi speaks during an Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices meeting at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, Sept. 19, 2025.

Alyssa Pointer | Reuters

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s hand-picked Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices is slated to vote today. On the docket: whether to change its longstanding recommendation that babies gets the hepatitis B vaccination within 24 hours of birth.

While it’s unclear how the committee will rule, any change to the recommendation would have major impacts within public health. Some experts caution that doing away with the decades-old recommendation could lead to a higher rate of chronic infections in children.

5. New terrain

GM Chief Product Officer Sterling Anderson during the automaker’s “GM Forward” event on Oct. 22, 2025 in New York City.

Michael Wayland / CNBC

Meet Sterling Anderson, General Motors‘ new executive vice president and product chief. As CNBC’s Michael Wayland reports, the self-proclaimed “Silicon Valley cowboy” is taking the Detroit automaker by storm.

Anderson’s remit includes overseeing “the end-to-end product lifecycle” of GM’s vehicles, according to the company. He told CNBC that the he wants to see a faster rate of innovation and create a “unified approach” to product.

Also helping General Motors: Trump’s decision to cut tariffs on South Korea. The company is the second-largest new vehicle importer from the country, behind South Korea-based Hyundai Motor.

The Daily Dividend

Delta Air Lines detailed the impact of the government shutdown on its profit. Here’s what the air carrier said:

  • Approximate cost to pretax profit: $200 million
  • Current-quarter earnings per share impact: 25 cents

CNBC’s Sean Conlon, Jeff Cox, Kevin Breuninger, Jordan Novet, Annie Palmer, Ashley Capoot, Annika Kim Constantino, Mike Wayland and Leslie Josephs contributed to this report. Josephine Rozzelle edited this edition.

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