2. The handshake. For a moment with such buildup, it was, as my colleague Uri Friedman noted, unremarkable—it took less than half as long as Trump’s famed handshake with French President Emmanuel Macron, but went considerably better than his first handshake with Germany’s Angela Merkel (whose first request for a handshake with the president was, intentionally or not, snubbed).

3. “It’s about attitude.” Trump offered this before the summit by way of explanation for why, in his words, “I don't think I have to prepare very much.” To describe the summit’s attitude in one word: chummy. As it progressed, the two leaders were seen exchanging friendly pats on the back and effusive flattery, with Trump even going as far as to crack jokes about the pair appearing “young and handsome and thin and perfect” on camera. There was even the moment Trump gave Kim a tour of his presidential limousine, a $1.5 million armored Cadillac nicknamed “The Beast.”

4. “Destiny Pictures presents...” Observers, including my colleague Krishnadev Calamur, argued that the summit as a whole offered a propaganda coup to Kim Jong Un, in part by legitimizing him on the world stage. But there was also the literal propaganda coup: a movie-trailer style video Trump said “we had … made up,” depicting the two leaders as heroes determining the future. The four-minute clip features scenes of North Korea, the United States, sunsets, waterfalls, telephone wires, and so on, with an action-movie-style voice-over: “Two men. Two Leaders. One destiny.”

5. The real-estate plug. During an hour-long news conference after the summit, Trump mused about the possibility of developing North Korea’s coastline, where the North stages artillery drills. “They have great beaches,” he said. “You see that whenever they’re exploding their cannons into the ocean, right? I said, ‘Boy, look at the view. Wouldn’t that make a great condo behind?’”

6. Dennis Rodman. The former U.S. basketball star, who shares an unusual friendship with Kim, gave a teary interview on the sidelines of the summit, in which he took credit for predicting the summit would take place. “This is not about Dennis Rodman being the greatest person in the world, bringing the countries together,” CNN quoted Rodman as saying, noting that his “trip to Singapore is being funded by Potcoin, a Marijuana cryptocurrency.”

7. The security breach? A gift bag given to reporters included a suspicious item: a fan that plugs into a computer’s USB port, presumably because it was hot in Singapore. Barton Gellman of The Washington Post issued this cybersecurity warning: “So um, summit journalists. Do not plug this in. Do not keep it. Drop it in a public trash can or send it to your friendly neighborhood security researcher.”

8. The running bodyguards. Kim’s army of body guards sprinted back into the spotlight Sunday as they were spotted running alongside the North Korean leader’s limousine. The suited entourage, which made their international debut during the inter-Korean summit in April, serve as specially-selected human shields for the North Korean leader and, as the BBC reports, are among the few North Korean citizens permitted to carry arms around him.