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Tag: Super Bowl

  • Super Bowl 60: Bay Area Host Committee event at Levi’s Stadium

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    Super Bowl 60 is now less than 60 days away, and the Bay Area is showing how ready it is to maximize the experience for fans and for the local communities.

    South Bay mayors and the Bay Area Host Committee on Thursday looked ahead to February and back at Super Bowl 50, the first time Levi’s Stadium hosted the big game.

    49ers linebacker Fred Warner and former Niners great Patrick Willis also appeared at Levi’s Stadium as the BAHC honored the impact of some notable figures and organizations.

    Kris Sanchez has more in the video above.

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    NBC Bay Area staff

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  • Prescott’s Cowboys overcome Mahomes’ fourth-down magic in 31-28 Thanksgiving win over Chiefs

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    ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Dak Prescott and the Dallas Cowboys still face long odds in trying to rally for a spot in the playoffs.

    They won’t be short on confidence with a win over last season’s Super Bowl runner-up just four days after beating the defending champs.

    Prescott threw for two touchdowns, Malik Davis sprinted 43 yards for a score and the Cowboys overcame two fourth down TD throws from Patrick Mahomes in a 31-28 Thanksgiving Day victory over the Kansas City Chiefs on Thursday.

    CeeDee Lamb scored the first Dallas touchdown and finished with 112 yards on seven catches after drops plagued the star receiver in a 24-21 victory over reigning Super Bowl champion Philadelphia.

    The Cowboys (6-5-1) have won three straight and dropped the defending AFC champion Chiefs (6-6) back to .500 in a matchup of playoff-chasing teams.

    Dallas is 3-0 since 24-year-old defensive end Marshawn Kneeland was found dead of an apparent suicide during the club’s open week. The Cowboys came back from the emotion-filled break with a 33-16 victory over the Las Vegas Raiders.

    “On top of where we put ourselves right before these games and just the place that we’re in, having to get these wins against two elite teams,” Prescott said. “I mean, two teams that played in the Super Bowl last year. Last year’s last year, but you’re talking about two organizations that obviously know how to win and we just beat them both in two great games.

    “On top of everything that we’ve been through.”

    Mahomes had four touchdown passes in his first professional game at the home of the Cowboys, where he played three times for Texas Tech not far from his East Texas roots.

    “They’re the same desperation that we are and they play better over four quarters than we did,” said Mahomes, who threw for 261 yards and was sacked three times, twice by Jadeveon Clowney. “So even though we have good plays here and there, we have be more consistent at the end of the day.”

    Travis Kelce caught Mahomes’ first fourth-down TD toss on a 2-yarder, and Rashee Rice’s second scoring catch came on fourth-and-3 early in the fourth quarter.

    Kansas City was down 10 when Mahomes was almost tripped in the backfield by Quinnen Williams but kept his feet and found Xavier Worthy wide-open down the field for 42 yards, setting up a 10-yard scoring toss to Hollywood Brown with 3:27 remaining.

    Prescott and company didn’t give Mahomes another chance.

    After two pass interference penalties gave Dallas first downs, Prescott hit George Pickens for 13 yards and a clinching first down at the two-minute warning. Prescott knelt three times after that.

    The Chiefs had five pass interference penalties, one that was declined, and another defensive holding that gave Dallas a first down. Kansas City finished with 10 penalties for 119 yards.

    “Bottom line is we’re having too many penalties, and we have to make sure to take care of that,” Chiefs coach Andy Reid said. “No excuses with it. We’re going to clean it up.”

    Rice had eight catches for 92 yards, his first score coming on a 27-yard catch-and-run on the sideline two plays after Prescott was intercepted by Jaylen Watson on the first Dallas possession.

    Davis had just three carries, but his long run gave Dallas its first lead at 17-14 late in the second quarter. Lead running back Javonte Williams scored on a 3-yard catch early in the fourth quarter, and Pickens’ catch on a 2-point conversion put Dallas back in front 28-21.

    The Cowboys were 10th in the NFC entering the game, same as the Chiefs in the AFC coming off nine consecutive AFC West titles. The schedule doesn’t get much easier, although two of the next four opponents — all playoff teams from a year ago — aren’t in the postseason picture at the moment.

    “We’ve got to continue with the same mentality,” Lamb said. “Obviously it’s been a short week. Now we get a little time to rest, a regular week so to speak. We get our bodies back, relax, build, grow, get better and on to next week.”

    Injuries

    Chiefs: The Chiefs lost two offensive linemen to injuries after beginning the game without RG Trey Smith, who was inactive because of an ankle injury. RT Jawaan Taylor injured an elbow, and rookie LT Josh Simmons went out with a wrist injury. … S Bryan Cook injured an ankle in the first half.

    Cowboys: CB Caelen Carson, who had started the previous two games, was inactive after being listed as questionable. He was added to the injury report during the week. … CB DaRon Bland injured a foot in the second half.

    Up next

    Chiefs: Play host to Houston in prime time on Dec. 7.

    Cowboys: Visit Detroit next Thursday night.

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    AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl

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  • Keeler: Broncos, Sean Payton want to make Bo Nix’s life easier? Get Marvin Mims Jr. more touches.

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    If you’re going to play with your food, Sean Payton, why not make it filet mignon?

    The Broncos are 6-0 this season when Marvin Mims has carried the ball at least once. They’re 11-3 in the regular season when that’s happened over the last two years. They’re 3-1 since September 2024 when Mims has received multiple carries.

    It’s all hands on deck, and this ship is wading into Super Bowl waters, just like Sunshine Sean said it would.

    J.K. Dobbins, your offensive MVP for Weeks 1-10, is lost for the season. You’re replacing those touches by committee from here on out. A dash of RJ Harvey. A smidgen of Jaleel McLaughlin, now your best downhill, between-the-tackles runner by default.

    But might we humbly suggest replacing a pinch of Tyler Badie with more pinches of Mims out of the backfield?

    Or Mims out of the slot?

    Or Mims out of anywhere?

    You can fake a run game over the last seven games of the regular season. You know when you can’t fake it? Against Buffalo or Baltimore in mid-January. Even at home with 80,000 Broncomaniacs at your back, screaming to Mile High Heaven.

    Parker Gabriel’s 7 thoughts after an AFC West-shaping win over K.C., including Bo Nix ‘begging’ Sean Payton to get plays called faster

    “(When) I get the ball. I want to make the most out of it,” Mims told me this past summer. “That’s something I pride myself in, is being an explosive playmaker.

    “So being a ‘gadget’ guy is a good thing; when someone (ESPN) tells you you’re the NFL’s best at something. It’s something that you kind of raise your ears at … but, yeah, I mean, when I see ‘gadget’ (player) I think, ‘explosive playmaker.’ Whether it’s in the return game, offense, screen game, deep pass, give me the ball. I want to make the most out of it.”

    Want to make the most of what’s left of this offense after the bye? Feature more of Mims in it.

    The ex-Oklahoma star appeared on 15 snaps against the Chiefs — just 24% of the offensive plays. Fullback Adam Prentice (19 snaps) got more run with the first-team offense against Kansas City than Mims, a two-time Pro Bowl return man.

    Yes, some of that was choosing discretion over valor. Mims can’t scare anybody from injured reserve. He’s coming off concussion protocol.

    Although by the time the Broncos take the field at Washington on Nov. 30, he’ll be four weeks removed from the ding he took against Dallas on Oct. 26.

    That said, do you want to win a Super Bowl or not?

    No skill player left at Payton’s disposal is as singularly explosive as Mims. And he reminded us all why against KC with another special-teams masterpiece — 101 punt return yards, a new single-game high, and the most by a Bronco since Trindon Holliday’s 121 in 2013. Mims’ 70-yard runback in the first quarter was another career best, putting the defending AFC champions on their heels at the Chiefs’ 21-yard line.

    He’s averaging 11.0 yards per touch from scrimmage since he entered the league. Badie is averaging 7.0 yards. McLaughlin is averaging 4.6 yards. If you don’t want to trust your eyes, fine. Trust the math.

    Payton knows how to do quirky, how to improvise when injuries wreck his best-laid plans. In New Orleans, he made Taysom Hill the archetype modern “gadget” weapon. The former BYU star became a 6-foot-2 utility piece. From 2019-2023, Hill bounced between tight end, receiver and quarterback, depending on whatever Sean had cooked up. Hill recorded five straight seasons with Payton in which he threw at least six passes, ran the ball at least 27 times, and picked up at least four receptions. Over those years, Hill averaged 456.8 passing yards, 392.6 rushing yards and 150.4 receiving yards per season.

    Broncos stock report: Jahdae Barron emerges as Vance Joseph’s tight-end stopper

    Payton is the NFL’s Baron Frankenstein, the mind of a mad scientist merged with Bill Parcell’s crusty soul. So why does it feel as if the only guy who can truly stop Mims with a head of steam in the open field is his own head coach?

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    Sean Keeler

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  • Renck & File: Dre Greenlaw’s body let him down. Then he let down Broncos. Time to change that Sunday

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    You thought we forgot about Dre?

    Everything Dre Greenlaw brings to a team, we have not yet seen. His leadership, controlled violence and sticky coverage. That was the hype. Eight months later, it is time to examine Greenlaw’s reality in Denver.

    Hmm. Absent or incomplete? Which one fits best?

    First, his body let him down, a quadriceps injury costing him the first six games. Then he let his team down, yelling at official Brad Allen after the walk-off win over the Giants, resulting in a one-game suspension.

    This must change Sunday at Houston. A Broncos upset could hinge on his performance.

    Greenlaw has made an impact behind the scenes, setting an example with his work ethic and daily intensity. But it has not translated to the field, where his season consists of six tackles on 21 snaps against the Giants. Greenlaw showed accountability on Thursday, admitting he should not have put the Broncos in position to play without him because of his outburst. This was an important step.

    Now, the Broncos need the best of Greenlaw moving forward. They are a contender. Whether or not they can win the AFC West or host a playoff matchup hinges on games like Sunday. The Texans are scrambling for a wild-card berth. The Broncos can move 3.5 games ahead of them with a win. After demolishing the hapless Raiders, the Broncos would then host the Chiefs on Nov. 16 in the franchise’s biggest game since Super Bowl 50.

    This will not happen without Greenlaw returning to his 2023 form, without the former star filling the vacuum left by Pat Surtain II’s absence. There is evidence that Greenlaw’s ability remains; that he can instill fear for roughly 45 snaps on Sunday.

    But he cannot talk about it. He has to be about it.

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    Troy Renck

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  • Bad Bunny Super Bowl LX halftime show not being reconsidered, Goodell says

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    The NFL is not considering dropping Bad Bunny as its Super Bowl halftime headline performer, Commissioner Roger Goodell said Wednesday, reaffirming a decision to put the Grammy-winning Puerto Rican artist on the league’s biggest stage that led to criticism from U.S. President Donald Trump and some of his supporters.

    Goodell addressed the Bad Bunny controversy at his news conference following the annual fall owners meeting. It is the first time he has commented on the move announced in late September that garnered worldwide attention, including an increase in streams of Bad Bunny’s music, along with backlash.

    “It’s carefully thought through,” Goodell said. “I’m not sure we’ve ever selected an artist where we didn’t have some blowback or criticism. It’s pretty hard to do when you have literally hundreds of millions of people that are watching.”

    The 31-year-old born Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio has been vocal in his opposition to Trump and his policies. He decided to do a 31-day residency in Puerto Rico, avoiding stops in the mainland U.S., citing concerns about the mass deportation of Latinos.

    He performs in Spanish and is expected to do so at the Super Bowl.

    “We’re confident it’s going to be a great show,” Goodell said, acknowledging there could be more talent added to the lineup along with Bad Bunny. “He understands the platform that he’s on, and I think it’s going to be exciting and a united moment.”

    The San Francisco 49ers are hosting the Super Bowl on Feb. 8 at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California. It is unclear if Trump plans to be there, though he has made appearing in person at major sporting events a significant part of his second term in the White House.

    Trump in an interview on conservative news network Newsmax said he had “never heard of” Bad Bunny.

    “I don’t know who he is,” Trump said. “I don’t know why they’re doing it. It’s, like, crazy. And then they blame it on some promoter they hired to pick up entertainment. I think it’s absolutely ridiculous.”

    Goodell defended the decision on Wednesday, explaining it was made because of Bad Bunny’s immense popularity.

    “He’s one of the leading and most popular entertainers in the world,” Goodell said. “That’s what we try to achieve. It’s an important stage for us. It’s an important element to the entertainment value.”

    Echoing what senior VP of football operations Troy Vincent said Tuesday, Goodell said there has not been much discussion about the tush push quarterback sneak since an effort to ban it narrowly failed to pass in the spring.

    Vincent said the primary concern is how tough it is to officiate the maneuver that the Philadelphia Eagles have successfully executed so often. It was not on the formal agenda at this meeting, though owners did get an update on penalties and other football matters.

    “It’s something we will continue to monitor on all phases, just like we do every other aspect of the game,” Goodell said. “We don’t have any proposals to bring it back up. It wouldn’t surprise me if something does evolve. But it’s not something we’re really focused on during the season.”

    Asked about replay reviews and the length of time they are taking, Goodell said game times are actually down through the first seven weeks compared to last season, despite a surge in kick returns after an adjustment was made to the so-called dynamic kickoff.

    “That’s quite remarkable when you add the number of kickoffs,” Goodell said. “You’re going to get more fouls. You’re going to get different sets of fouls. You’re going to have a little bit (more) length of the game.”

    Goodell said he had breakfast with interim Players Association executive director David White before one of the league’s international games this season but expects any talk about a move to an 18-game regular season and other collective bargaining discussions to wait until the union chooses its long-term leader.

    The current CBA runs through the 2031 league year. White told The Associated Press last month that an 18-game season was not inevitable.

    “The negotiations will be a lot more than just simply the 18 and two (exhibition games),” Goodell said. “There are a lot of issues that we are going to raise and I’m certain that the players will raise, and that’s what it should be. That’s what collective bargaining is all about. They’re going to need time to make sure that they’re prepared, that they’re ready for the negotiations (and) they have their priorities straight, and then we can begin negotiations.”

    Goodell said work is being done to choose sites for the Super Bowl to cap the 2028 and ’29 seasons and expects an announcement on those next year.

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  • The NFL’s Pro Bowl is moving to Super Bowl week

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    (CNN) — The Pro Bowl is moving to Super Bowl week.

    The NFL announced Wednesday the 2026 Pro Bowl Games will be held during Super Bowl LX week in the Bay Area. The main event will still be a flag football game, pitting the NFC against the AFC, and that now will take place on the Tuesday of Super Bowl week.

    The NFL in a press release alluded to flag football – a sport that the league has continued to spotlight – making its Olympics debut at the 2028 Summer Games in Los Angeles.

    “Building on our strong partnerships with the Bay Area Host Committee and ESPN, we’re thrilled to make the 2026 Pro Bowl Games presented by Verizon part of Super Bowl week, our biggest platform of the year, elevating flag football and our best players in a way that’s never been done before,” said Peter O’Reilly, NFL executive vice president of events, international and club business, in a statement.

    “The Pro Bowl Games will not only be an exciting showcase of our best talent, but also a taste of the elite athleticism and dynamic action we can expect to see on the Olympic stage.”

    The Pro Bowl AFC vs NFC flag football game will be held at 8 p.m. ET February 3 and will air on ESPN. It will take place at the Moscone Center in San Francisco.

    The format of the game will be 7-on-7 and will take place on a 50-yard field with 10-yard end zones. Scoring plays are worth the traditional 6 points, with a 1-point conversion from the 5-yard line and a 2-point conversion from the 10-yard line.

    Voting for the Pro Bowl begins on Thanksgiving Day, which falls on November 27.

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  • Lara Trump Is Right: Lara Trump Should Totally Perform at the “All American Halftime Show”

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    Booking talent can be very tricky—but thankfully, the team in charge of Turning Point USA’s “All American Halftime Show” can rest easy. None other than Lara Trump—wife of Donald Trump’s middle son Eric, Fox News host, and aspiring country singer, apparently—has offered to perform at the event protesting Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl LIX headlining performance. Bad Bunny must be sweating.

    During an episode of her podcast The Right View with Lara Trump, the presidential daughter-in-law gave a few suggestions for potential headliners for the “All American Halftime Show” including country star Chris Stapleton (who wouldn’t reveal which candidate had his vote in 2024, saying only “I’m voting for America!”) and MAGA rapper Tom MacDonald. Then Lara-who married Eric in 2014 and shares two children with him—decided to toss her own name in the ring. “You know what? You can throw Lara Trump in there. Yeah! That’s right,” she said with a laugh.

    She may be joking, but a quick run through her discography proves that Lara Trump would indeed be the perfect choice for the “All American Halftime Show.” For starters, her family is already aligned with the brand founded by the late Charlie Kirk: Donald Trump spoke at the Turning Point USA founder’s memorial service and recently posthumously awarded Kirk the presidential medal of freedom. Performing at Turning Point USA’s Super Bowl counterprogramming would probably give Trump some brownie points with her father-in-law.

    Lara Trump also fancies herself something of a performer. She’s released a number of singles—no albums just yet—all available to stream on Spotify. Maybe she could begin her set with a crowd pleaser: her 2023 cover of Tom Petty’s “I Won’t Back Down.” And, hey, if she wants to go unplugged, she can perform her acoustic version, also available on Spotify.

    Trump’s original tunes tend to lean patriotic—perfect for an event celebrating faith, football, and American-but-not-Puerto-Rican family values. There’s “Anything is Possible,” a rousing anthem meant to inspire. “Don’t think, just jump // You can’t give up,” she sings. Lara could also try “Colors Don’t Run,” her 2024 single with the Moonshine Bandits, which is about—you guessed it—the American flag. In the middle of “Colors Don’t Run,” there’s a spoken-word section in which the Moonshine Bandits attempt to rhyme ”Bible by my pistol // Pistol by my whiskey” with “Politicking just to trick me // If you want it come and get it.” Bibles, pistols, and whiskey? What could be more MAGA that that?

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    Chris Murphy

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  • No, Taylor Swift did not turn down the 2026 Super Bowl halftime show

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    NEW YORK (AP) — Taylor Swift says she did not turn down the 2026 Super Bowl halftime show, which will be headlined by Bad Bunny.

    “The Life of a Showgirl” singer paid a visit to “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon” on Monday and dispelled a few rumors. Most notably, she shared she did not turn down the NFL’s biggest stage because she wouldn’t be allowed to own the performance footage, as claimed in a popular internet rumor.

    “No, no, no,” Swift said.

    The Super Bowl halftime show is produced by the NFL, Apple Music and Roc Nation — the latter founded by music mogul Jay-Z.

    “Jay-Z has always been very good to me. Our teams are really close. Like, they sometimes will call and say, ‘How does she feel about the Super Bowl?’ And that’s not like an official offer or, like, an official conference room conversation,” Swift told Fallon. “We’re always able to tell him the truth, which is that, like, I am in love with a guy who does that sport on that actual field,” she continued, referring to fiance Travis Kelce — a star tight end for the Kansas City Chiefs and a Super Bowl champion.

    “Like, that is violent chess. That is gladiators without swords. That is dangerous. The whole season I am locked in on what that man is doing on the field,” she said.

    “Can you imagine if he’s out there every single week, like putting his life on the line, doing this very dangerous, very high pressure, high intensity sport and I’m like, ‘I wonder what my choreo(graphy) should be?,’” Swift joked.

    “‘I think we should do two verses of ‘Shake It Off’ into ‘Blank Space’ into ‘Cruel Summer’ would be great.’ And this is nothing to do with Travis, he would love for me to do it, I’m just too locked in.”

    Last month, it was announced that global superstar Bad Bunny will bring his Latin trap, reggaeton swagger and Puerto Rican pride to the Super Bowl live from Levi’s Stadium on Feb. 8 in Santa Clara, California.

    It’s an ideal casting: Bad Bunny is fresh off a historic Puerto Rico residency that drew more than half a million fans and is leading all nominees at the Latin Grammys in November.

    “What I’m feeling goes beyond myself,” Bad Bunny said in a statement. “It’s for those who came before me and ran countless yards so I could come in and score a touchdown… this is for my people, my culture, and our history.”

    On Saturday, Bad Bunny hosted the season 51 premiere of “Saturday Night Live” with a few jokes about his forthcoming Super Bowl halftime show.

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  • Online petition to replace Bad Bunny’s performance at Super Bowl sparks debate

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    An online petition is looking to replace Bad Bunny at the Super Bowl halftime show with 37-year-old country artist George Strait.

    As of now, the petition has close to 32,000 signatures.

    The petition says that in recent years, the halftime show has leaned toward modern pop and international artists and they believe it’s “pivotal to remember the roots that have made American music what it is today.”

    Dr. Nate Rodriguez, a professor at San Diego State, plans on teaching a course on Bad Bunny’s worldwide impact next spring.

    “Bad Bunny himself I think embodies what it is to be American, it embodies what it means to be diverse, it embodies what it means to have a dream and achieve it, and I think for a lot of people that’s only uncomfortable because he’s brown and he speaks Spanish,” Rodriguez said.

    Rodriguez points out Bad Bunny is from Puerto Rico, which is a US territory.

    Bad Bunny is also one of the biggest names in music today. According to Spotify, Bad Bunny has more than 81 million monthly listeners.

    By comparison, country star George Strait has more than 8 million.

    In the Bay Area, political experts say the pushback against Bad Bunny’s performance at the Super Bowl it’s a reflection of our society now.

    “The way things are developing in our society, everything is contested,” said James Taylor, a professor of politics at the University of San Francisco. “People are choosing to make the halftime show site the site of contention around what should be presented to America as American culture.”

    NBC Bay Area reached out to the person who started the petition but hasn’t heard back.

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    Jocelyn Moran

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  • Renck: With Broncos’ offense out of sync, time for Sean Payton to let Bo Nix go more uptempo

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    Denver is well known for LoDo and RiNo.

    GoBo better join that list if the Broncos are serious about becoming a Super Bowl contender.

    The Broncos delivered a second-half performance against the Jets that was embarrassing. So, you let me have it.

    Preparing to board my flight from London Heathrow to DIA, the criticisms veiled as questions included, “Who calls a pass on the 1-yard line and risks a safety? Was that a fullback draw on third-and-10? Why doesn’t Evan Engram play more?” And my personal favorite from a man with a heavy British accent, “If I wanted to watch a game with no scoring,” you guessed it, he could have saved his money for a fútbol game.

    The fans are mad. They are angry. They are right.

    We will find out more about the Broncos, so much more with a normal practice schedule and no travel, when they host the New York Giants. We will find out an answer to the question hanging over this season: Will coach Sean Payton do more to help Bo Nix?

    Will he employ doses of uptempo?

    Until Payton provides that answer, the question on whether or not the Broncos are a legitimate AFC threat will remain an unequivocal no.

    Teams that play deep into January don’t rank in the middle of the pack or worse in every meaningful offensive category.

    The reason this is the case? Nix and Payton are not in rhythm.

    This season has been an exercise in frustration.

    For every eye-opening quarter, there has been a dizzying array of punts. Nix admitted Wednesday that it was “a relief” when Engram converted a first down on the cgame-winning drive last Sunday.

    Is that the new reality for Nix and this offense? It better not be or the Broncos will waste one of the greatest defenses in franchise history.

    What unfurled against the Jets was so odorous that it suggests that the Nix and Payton have contrasting visions of how to achieve success.

    Nix needs to go fast. At least for the foreseeable future.

    He was 11-for-15 for 96 yards in uptempo against the Jets, according to Next Gen stats. He excels at the quick hitters, not surprisingly since he mastered it over his final two years at Oregon. The Jets and the Giants are the not the same defensively, but they have this in common: they bring the heat.

    Nix is already getting rid of the ball quickly. Why not add wrinkles with sprinkles of tempo? The quarterback sure sounds like he would be all for it.

    “It gets the defense off balance. We play well from the quick game. It’s tough on defenses,” said Nix, who is completing 64.6 % of his passes with nine touchdowns and four interceptions. “You are more attacking them, instead of letting them attacking you.”

    Will Payton consistently hit the throttle? Unlikely. He has pumped the brakes anytime the issue has been raised over the past two seasons. His reasoning is sound, that going too fast too much will compromise his own defense.

    Let’s be clear, I am not suggesting there is a disconnect between the coach and the quarterback. But there appears to be a difference in preference.

    Nix believes uptempo “can limit what the defenses will do, and they may not be in the right set.”

    Payton sees its value, but likes it more as a situational weapon.

    “I think a lot of it is dependent on what personnel we’re in, what do we want to get to. I think it’s always part of our plan. It’s just a matter of where we’re at field position-wise and what we’re trying to accomplish,” Payton said. “I can’t recall that we went away (from it last week). There are times when— like the touchdown was kind of an up-tempo play. We’ll use it each week where we see fit.”

    He’s the boss. But it is obvious the Broncos need more of it and fewer personnel groups.

    As it stands, Denver’s passing attack is akin to an NBA team that relies on layups and 3-pointers. There is no intermediate game, though Engram could change that if, you know, he ever becomes a focal point of the offense.

    Given the reliance on the short passes to set up deep strikes, it makes sense to press the pedal. Nix admits that he picks his spots when going over the game plan with offensive coordinator Joe Lombardi and Payton, a concession to their experience.

    But the six-game sample size is something. Nix has raised his voice before during games, and would be well-served to speak up now with a third of the season over. This could shift him into high gear.

    The offensive issues are more than a Nix problem. But wouldn’t the speed game help solve some of them?

    “Yeah, I think he likes that we’ll probably get a really simple or base defense, or coverage from lining up fast and putting tempo on ’em. For example, like, with the Giants, those guys up front – they’re real. It also has a little bit to do with like, wearing guys down,” receiver Troy Franklin said. “Just getting them to move fast, they’re bigger guys. So it’ll help us in the long run and stuff, for sure.”

    This week will begin answering questions. No matter how you break down the numbers, the Broncos’ offense has been average at best, disappointing at worst. Payton is fond of saying that all teams begin the season a race to find their identity.

    It is clear that the coach can speed up that process for his quarterback by going uptempo.

    It is time for BoGo.

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    Troy Renck

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  • Renck vs. Keeler: Bigger concern for Broncos’ offense, the play-caller or the players?

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    Troy Renck: The exit brought an insult. As Broncos fans left the overground train at White Heart Lane, an NFL usher offered, without prompting, this assessment. “You all need a new chant. Go Broncos! is lazy work.” Hate to think of what he thought of the offense. The Broncos were a mess against the Jets. They collected 246 yards on 57 plays, a total that would have spelled doom if not for a Denver defense delivering of the most dominating performances in franchise history. The Broncos have yet to take the step forward that was expected. So is it because of the play-caller or the players?

    Sean Keeler: It takes a village to build that much ugliness. But I’ll give the edge to Sunshine Sean here. Let me ask you this, my friend. Was it Adam Prentice’s fault that his coach calls a fullback draw on third-and-10 with 1:56 left in the third quarter while trailing by one in a foreign country? Was it Jaleel McLaughlin’s fault that he had a screen dialed up for him on third-and-4 in the third quarter while Denver was nursing a 1-point lead? And should we mention that this was McLaughlin’s first action of the young season? The same five words kept banging in my head Sunday afternoon, and I hope they’re banging in Payton’s: What are we doing here?

    Renck: The Broncos’ lack talent at skill players. In four of the first six games, the opponents have boasted better receivers, tight ends and running backs. Enough with the experiments, coach. This problem traces back to Payton. It’s time for the best players to get the lion’s share of reps. That means more cJ.K. Dobbins and Evan Engram and less everyone else. The Broncos lack consistency offensively because they lack consistency with the personnel. At one point in the second quarter, Payton used Dobbins on first down, R.J. Harvey on second and Jaleel McLaughlin in three downs. Uncle. Time to taper off the line changes that would make Jared Bednar blush. The Broncos need to establish an identity. But, It is hard to know who you are when you don’t know who is in the game.

    Keeler: Payton’s worst enemy? Sean Payton. Sean Payton, Offensive Genius. Sean Payton, Riverboat Gambler. Sean Payton, Super Bowl Champ. The shadow of a mad scientist is always creeping over his shoulder, tapping on it, reminded him to be clever. To experiment. Reminding him of the pressure, the expectation, to prove that he’s the smartest guy in the room. The problem with being the NFL’s Baron Frankenstein is that the creature that rises from the slab is inevitably a patchwork job — but it’s rarely a monster.

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    Troy Renck, Sean Keeler

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  • 5 Performers Who Make Perfect Sense to Headline Turning Point USA’s “All American Halftime Show”

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    The counterprogramming culture wars have begun. Charlie Kirk’s Turning Point USA has announced that it’s planning its own Super Bowl halftime show, in protest of the NFL’s decision to have Latin music superstar Bad Bunny headline the main event. The so-called All-American Halftime Show will take place on February 8, 2026, the same date as Super Bowl LX.

    Conservatives were up in arms after it was announced that Bad Bunny—one of the biggest artists in the world, with more than 80 million Spotify listeners each month, as well as an American citizen from Puerto Rico—would be headlining the Super Bowl halftime show. Speaking to right-wing podcaster Benny Johnson, Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem threatened that ICE would be “all over that place” at the Super Bowl, which will be held at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California. Noem maintained that she has every intention to “enforce the law.” House Speaker Mike Johnson called booking Bad Bunny “a terrible decision” and offered an alternative: 82-year-old country singer Lee Greenwood, who Johnson said would attract a “broader audience.” (For the record: the “God Bless the USA” singer has less than 450,000 monthly Spotify listeners, roughly 190 times less than Bad Bunny). Even President Donald Trump called Bad Bunny an “absolutely ridiculous” choice to headline the Super Bowl, despite claiming he had “never heard of him.”

    As of now, it’s unclear where the All-American Halftime Show will take place or air. On social media, Turning Point USA said, “performers and event details coming soon.” On a website for the event, there’s a survey that asks the public, “What music genres would you like to see featured?” Various options include: “Americana,” “Worship,” and “Anything in English”—seemingly a dig at Bad Bunny, who mostly performs in his native Spanish.

    Although Puerto Rico is, again, an American territory, Turning Point USA has decided that Bad Bunny is not American enough to headline the Super Bowl. So, who might they book to compete with the biggest televised music event of the year? Perhaps they’ll reach out to Carrie Underwood, the American Idol winner turned country music star who made the controversial decision to sing at Trump’s inauguration in January. But while her politics may (or may not) align with those of Turning Point USA, Underwood might be reticent to take a stand against the NFL. After all, she famously sings the “Sunday Night Football” opening song. Counterprogramming football’s biggest night would probably jeopardize her bag.

    A few weeks ago, Turning Point USA probably would have loved if country rock phenom Zach Bryan headlined the event. Bryan is one of the biggest names in country music at the moment, recently breaking the record for largest ticketed concert ever held in the US with over 112,408 fans attending his concert at Michigan Stadium on September 27, 2025. But he might be a tough sell as well. Last week, Bryan teased the lyrics to his upcoming song “Bad News,” which seemingly criticizes ICE. “I heard the cops came / Cocky motherf–kers, ain’t they? / And ICE is gonna come bust down your door,” he sings in the song, as teased on Instagram. Kristi Noem took Bryan to task for the song, calling it “completely disrespectful.” Bryan, who previously described himself as a “total libertarian,” wrote on his Instagram story that he is “on neither of these radical sides,” and that the song “is about how much I love this country and everyone in it more than anything.” So perhaps Bryan may not be considered conservative enough for Turning Point USA to book him as a headliner.

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  • The GOP Is Having an Extended Bad Bunny Tantrum

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    Johnson, of course, is far from the only Republican to complain about the Super Bowl appointment of Bad Bunny. GOP senator Bernie Moreno claimed in an interview this week that “the NFL made a decision that was clearly partisan,” adding, “Why else would you pick, you know, some second-rate musician to play in our greatest sporting event? It makes no sense whatsoever…. I hope they reverse course and bring a great American performer in there that brings pride into America.”

    Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene ranted that his halftime performance would be “perverse” and “unwanted” after Bad Bunny called out his critics during a monologue on Saturday Night Live last weekend—telling his Latin base, in Spanish, that his Super Bowl selection was “demonstrating our footprint, our contribution,” and also suggesting that viewers learn the language. Greene also said that now would be a good time for Congress to pass her legislation making English the official language of America.

    After Bad Bunny was announced as the performer, Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem declared that ICE agents would be “all over” the Super Bowl. And on Monday, the president of the United States—who has a long, contentious history with the NFLsaid of the halftime choice: “I’ve never heard of him. I don’t know who he is. I don’t know why they’re doing it. It’s crazy…. I think it’s absolutely ridiculous.”

    During Donald Trump’s first term, Jennifer Lopez and Shakira’s Super Bowl LIV halftime show featured children in metal structures, a display meant to reference the children placed in cages as part of the administration’s border policy. Lopez also wore a jacket featuring both the American and Puerto Rican flags. Lopez later shared that the NFL had tried to nix the cages, but that she had been adamant about their inclusion, saying in her Netflix documentary about the event: “For me, this isn’t about politics. This is about human rights…. To take out the cages and sacrifice what I believe in would be like never being there at all.” Trump did not appear to comment on the performance.

    Last month the Puerto Rican–born Bad Bunny said in an interview that he was not including the US in his world tour out of concern that his fans could be targeted by ICE, a fear that does not seem unwarranted in light of Noem’s remarks. As a reminder, Trump has a not-great track record with Puerto Rico, which includes having not wanted to send aid to the US territory after it was ravaged by Hurricane Maria; having told Puerto Ricans their natural disaster wasn’t “a real catastrophe like Katrina”; having personally intervened to cut Medicaid funding for the commonwealth; reportedly having suggested that the US trade Puerto Rico for Greenland; and having held a campaign rally during which a comedian described Puerto Rico as “a floating island of garbage.”

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  • Coca-Cola isn’t pushing to end Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl show

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    Has your titi asked you about Coca-Cola’s ultimatum to the NFL to remove Bad Bunny from the Super Bowl halftime show? Well, tell auntie that isn’t right.

    An Oct. 5 X post says Coca-Cola CEO James Quincey demanded the NFL pull Puerto Rican rapper Bad Bunny from the 2026 Apple Music Super Bowl LX Halftime Show, or risk the company’s important sponsorship.

    “‘I will end my sponsorship of the Super Bowl if they let Bad Bunny perform at the Halftime – Coca Cola CEO James Quincey issues shocking ultimatum, NFL’S response stuns millions!,’” says the image in the post. 

    Other posts on TikTok, Facebook and Instagram made similar claims about the supposed news; some of the posts showed disappointed users pouring bottles of Coca-Cola down the drain. 

    (Screenshot of X post.)

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    These posts sharing fabricated news come after the Sept. 28 announcement that Bad Bunny will headline the Feb. 8 halftime show drew criticism from some Trump supporters and Republican officials. Sen. Bernie Moreno, R-Ohio., told a journalist the NFL choice to pick a “second-rate musician” was political, and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., touted her bill to make English the official language of the U.S. President Donald Trump called the decision “absolutely ridiculous” Oct. 6 on Newsmax.

    The rapper also drew controversy in early September, when he said he didn’t include any U.S. stops on his concert tour for his latest album “DeBÍ TirRAR MáS FOToS” for fear of Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids at his shows.

    In July, Bad Bunny also criticized Trump immigration policies by featuring in his music video for “NUEVAYol” a voice that sounds like Trump’s saying, “I made a mistake, I want to apologize to the immigrants in America.”

    None of the controversy makes headlines about Quincey’s “ultimatum” real. 

    A Coca-Cola spokesperson told PolitiFact that the claim is fabricated. 

    Coca-Cola doesn’t sponsor the Super Bowl. 

    Variety reported that Coca-Cola pulled back from the Super Bowl in 2019 after an 11-year sponsorship run. Apple Music is the 2026 halftime show sponsor. The show’s producer and director is from Roc Nation, an entertainment company founded by Jay-Z. 

    There is no mention of Coca-Cola as a sponsor on the NFL players union website. Instead, Coca-Cola’s chief competitor, PepsiCo, is on the list. PepsiCo sponsored the Super Bowl halftime shows from 2013 to 2022 and is the NFL’s official drink sponsor

    Coca-Cola’s most recent Super Bowl ad was in 2020, according to websites that archived the ads.

    PolitiFact reached out to the NFL for comment but did not receive a response.

    The earliest versions of the claim that we could find link back to an Oct. 2 fictitious story on a website called News247. The article has many red flags: It has no byline, no attribution for the CEO’s quote, and includes esoteric word choices such as “ricocheted,” “explosive” and “parochialism,” which can be signs of text generated by artificial intelligence.  

    The Facebook account that posted the claim has shared multiple bogus claims, such as fake quotes from comedian Jimmy Kimmel and actor Johnny Depp about Bad Bunny’s upcoming performance. 

    We found more than 10 posts on Facebook alone sharing the claim, calling users to visit other fake websites with the same colors and layout that republished the same article from News247. 

    The Coca-Cola CEO didn’t give an ultimatum to the NFL about Bad Bunny and the company isn’t sponsoring the 2026 Super Bowl. We rate the claim Pants on Fire! 

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  • Taylor Swift denies turning down Super Bowl halftime show

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    Taylor Swift says she never formally turned down the Super Bowl LX halftime show — although she wasn’t gunning for it, either. 

    On “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon,” Swift said her team is very close with Jay-Z’s Roc Nation, which books the gig. Roc Nation sometimes calls to ask how she feels about a show before making a formal offer, she said. Though Roc Nation called to inquire about her interest in the Super Bowl, the pop star said she is too focused on her fiancé Travis Kelce’s performance during the NFL season to perform.


    MORE: Philly artist Andre Chaney, inspired by his late mother, brings message of hope to Mural Arts Month


    “We’re always able to tell (Roc Nation) the truth, which is that I am in love with a guy who does that sport on that actual field, like that is violent chess, that is gladiators without swords, that is dangerous,” Swift told Fallon on Monday night. “The whole season, I am locked in on what that man is doing on the field.”

    There was speculation that Swift might do the halftime show after she got engaged to Kelce, who plays for the Kansas City Chiefs. One report said she was offered the chance, but that she turned it down because she wouldn’t own the performance footage. Rapper Bad Bunny was named as the performer in late September. 

    Swift has never performed at the Super Bowl halftime show. The original report said she previously was unable to perform because she had sponsorships that were in conflict with the NFL, but that she’s now available. However, Swift said it would feel odd to think about doing the show while Kelce was playing. 

    “Can you imagine if he’s out there every single week, putting his life on the line, doing this very dangerous, very high-pressure, high-intensity sport, and I’m like ‘I wonder what my choreo should be?'” Swift said. “This has nothing to do with Travis, he’d love for me to do it, I am just too locked in.” 

    Swift was asked about the halftime show during a segment in which Fallon had her confirm or deny online rumors about her life. She also shot down speculation that she was seen walking a mystery dog in Florida and that she had joked that Selena Gomez “beat her to the alter” during a wedding speech for her friend.

    However, she did confirm reports that friend Ed Sheeran learned about her engagement on Instagram. After getting engaged, Swift said she was searching through her recent texts to find friends and family to call, and she accidentally missed Sheeran, because he doesn’t have a phone. 

    “This is one of my absolute favorite people on the planet, and then when the news came out I was like ‘Oh my god, we forgot to call Ed! Oh no,'” Swift said. “He’s like family, I love him, but he doesn’t have a phone.” 

    Watch the full video below: 

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    Michaela Althouse

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  • Taylor Swift Explains Why She’s Not Playing Super Bowl Halftime on ‘The Tonight Show’

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    Not gonna lie, Taylor Swift’s interview with Jimmy Fallon on “The Tonight Show” broadcast Monday evening was on the lite side — at one point they talked at length about bread. However, the expanded interview on the show’s website contains some actual news.

    During one of Fallon’s trademark games that he plays with guests, Swift was asked to say which of five rumors he’d found online were true, and the first was that she’d declined an offer to be the Super Bowl‘s Halftime performer because she would not own rights to the performance footage. On the broadcast, she makes a face but is not seen saying anything about the issue.

    However, in the expanded version of the interview posted on the show’s social media and website, she speaks at length about why she’s not performing at the big game, as had been rumored before Bad Bunny was officially announced as the 2026 halftime entertainer.

    After denying with a flat “No” that footage rights were the reason she declined to perform, Swift explained that her management had only received unspecific questions about it from Roc Nation, which programs the Super Bowl’s entertainment, rather than a formal offer. She added that regardless of whether or not an offer was official, she’d be too concerned about her fiancé, Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, to even think about performing in the middle of the Super Bowl (which does not necessarily mean she presumes that he or the Chiefs will be in the game: Halftime performers are announced too early in the season to know which two teams will be playing).

    Speaking of Roc Nation, which is led by Jay-Z, she said, “Jay-Z has always been very good to me — our [business] teams are really close. They sometimes will call and say, ‘How does she feel about… [she murmurs something vague meaning ‘whatever’]. And that’s not, like, an official offer or a conference-room conversation, more ‘How does she feel about it in general?’

    “And we’re always able to tell him the truth, which is that I am in love with a guy who does that sport on that actual field,” she explained. “Like, [professional football] is violent chess. That is gladiators without swords. That is dangerous. I am, [for] the whole season, locked in on what that man is doing on the field. Can you imagine if he’s out there every single week, putting his life on the line, doing this very dangerous, very high-pressure, high-intensity sport, and I’m like [she puts on a ditzy voice and face], ‘I wonder what my choreo should be? I think we should do two verses of “Shake It Up,” into “Blank Space,” into “Cruel Summer,” that would be great!’”

    She laughed before adding, “This has nothing to do with Travis — he would love for me to do it. But I’m just too locked in.”

    So — Swifties will have to wait for a Super Bowl Halftime performance… until further notice.

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    Jem Aswad

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  • Bad Bunny Used His Saturday Night Live Gig to Roast MAGA

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    Like he did in 2023, Bad Bunny delivered the most impassioned part of his monologue in Spanish, promising his Latin base that the Super Bowl show would be as much their triumph as his. “It’s an achievement for all of us,” he said. “Demonstrating our footprint, our contribution. No one will ever be able to remove or erase it.” His trolls can stomp and fume and insist that “real” Americans should feel disrespected, not stupid but tricked and left out by a mainstream star daring not to always speak directly to them. Our evening’s host offered an elegant prescription for their conniption. “If you didn’t understand what I just said,” Bad Bunny purred of his Spanish riff, “you have four months to learn.”

    Before Bad Bunny, the cold open went straight into the CrossFit belly of Trump’s inner cabinet. Jost was a too-natural Hegseth, all puffed up chest and Crood arms, broviating at Quantico about how the military needed to stop being so gay and start clocking more kipping pull-ups. Johnson’s Trump put Jost in a frozen time-out as he strode into frame, warning that he had SNL in his cross hairs. “I know late night TV like the back of my hand,” he warned, revealing a crater of mold that no makeup could cover. He got in some barbs about the loss of so many cast members (Godspeed Ego Nwodim, Heidi Gardner, and Michael Longfellow) and enlisted the crew to keep an eye on Marcello Hernandez for him. “Remember, Daddy’s watching,” Trump warned, as Mikey Day as Brendan Carr scuttled behind him.

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    Karen Valby

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  • ICE agents to attend Bad Bunny Super Bowl halftime show, Trump adviser says – National | Globalnews.ca

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    U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents will be present at the 2026 Super Bowl and Grammy-winning rapper Bad Bunny’s halftime show, longtime Trump adviser Corey Lewandowski warned.

    Lewandowski, who serves as an adviser to the Department of Homeland Security as a special government employee, confirmed the news days after it was announced that Bad Bunny would be the halftime show performer.

    During an appearance on The Benny Show on Wednesday, Lewandowski was asked by podcast host Benny Johnson if “ICE will have enforcement at the Super Bowl for the Bad Bunny halftime show.”

    “There is nowhere you can provide safe haven to people who are in this country illegally. Not the Super Bowl and nowhere else. We will find you. We will apprehend you. We will put you in a detention facility and we will deport you,” Lewandowski said.

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    “So know that is a very real situation under this administration, which is contrary to how it used to be.”

    Lewandowski went on to criticize the NFL for selecting Bad Bunny as the halftime show performer.

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    “It’s so shameful they’ve decided to pick somebody who seems to hate America so much to represent them at the halftime show,” Lewandowski said about the three-time Grammy Award-winning performer.

    He told Johnson that the NFL should “be trying to be inclusive, not exclusive.”

    “There are plenty of great bands and entertainment people who could be playing at that show that would be bringing people together and not separating them,” Lewandowski said.

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    “If there are illegal aliens, I don’t care if it’s a concert for Johnny Smith or Bad Bunny or anybody else, we’re going to do enforcement everywhere. We are going to make Americans safe. That is a directive from the president.

    “If you’re in this country illegally, do yourself a favour, go home. We’ll buy you the plane ticket. Get out of the country and you’ll have a chance to come back legally,” he added.


    The NFL, Apple Music and Roc Nation announced Sunday that Bad Bunny will lead the halftime festivities from Levi’s Stadium on Feb. 8 in Santa Clara, Calif.

    The Puerto Rican superstar’s selection comes amid another career-defining run: He’s fresh off a historic Puerto Rico residency this month that drew more than half a million fans and is leading all nominees at the Latin Grammys in November. He has become one of the world’s most streamed artists with albums such as Un Verano Sin Ti, a Spanish-language LP.

    In an interview with I-D last month, Bad Bunny explained that part of the reason he did his Puerto Rico residency and won’t tour in the U.S. this year was because “f—ing ICE could be outside (my concert). And it’s something that we were talking about and very concerned about.”

    “There were many reasons why I didn’t show up in the U.S., and none of them were out of hate — I’ve performed there many times,” he added.

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    “All of (the shows) have been successful. All of them have been magnificent. I’ve enjoyed connecting with Latinos who have been living in the U.S. But specifically, for a residency here in Puerto Rico, when we are an unincorporated territory of the U.S. … people from the U.S. could come here to see the show.”

    With files from The Associated Press

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  • Latin rap star Bad Bunny to play the 2026 Super Bowl halftime show – National | Globalnews.ca

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    Bad Bunny will bring his Latin trap and reggaeton swagger to the NFL’s biggest stage next year: The Grammy winner will headline the Apple Music Super Bowl halftime show in Northern California.

    The NFL, Apple Music and Roc Nation announced Sunday that Bad Bunny will lead the halftime festivities from Levi’s Stadium on Feb. 8 in Santa Clara, California.

    The Puerto Rican superstar’s selection comes amid another career-defining run: He’s fresh off a historic Puerto Rico residency this month that drew more than half a million fans and is leading all nominees at the Latin Grammys in November. He has become one of the world’s most streamed artists with albums such as “Un Verano Sin Ti,” an all-Spanish-language LP.

    Bad Bunny will host “Saturday Night Live” on Oct. 4.


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    “What I’m feeling goes beyond myself,” Bad Bunny said in a statement. “It’s for those who came before me and ran countless yards so I could come in and score a touchdown… this is for my people, my culture, and our history. Ve y dile a tu abuela, que seremos el HALFTIME SHOW DEL SUPER BOWL.”

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    Roc Nation founder Jay-Z said in a statement that what Bad Bunny has “done and continues to do for Puerto Rico is truly inspiring. We are honored to have him on the world’s biggest stage.”

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    The 31-year-old artist born Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio has won three Grammys and 12 Latin Grammys. He has become a global ambassador for Latin music, starred in films such as “Bullet Train,” “Caught Stealing” and “Happy Gilmore 2,” and collaborated with top fashion houses. He’ll enter the Latin Grammys as the leading nominee with 12, dethroning producer and songwriter Édgar Barrera.

    Roc Nation and Emmy-winning producer Jesse Collins will serve as co-executive producers of the halftime show. Hamish Hamilton will serve as director.


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    “We know his dynamic performances, creative vision, and deep connection with fans will deliver the kind of unforgettable experience we’ve come to expect from this iconic cultural moment,” said Jon Barker, SVP of Global Event Production for the NFL.

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    Last year, Kendrick Lamar shined with guest SZA in New Orleans, setting the record for the most-watched Super Bowl halftime show with 133.5 million viewers. His performance surpassed the audience for Michael Jackson’s 1993 show.

    “His music has not only broken records but has elevated Latin music to the center of pop-culture and we are thrilled to once again partner with the NFL and Roc Nation to deliver this historic performance to millions of fans worldwide,” said Oliver Schusser, the vice president of Apple Music and Beats. “We know this show will be unforgettable.”


    &copy 2025 The Canadian Press

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  • 9/29: The Takeout with Major Garrett

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    9/29: The Takeout with Major Garrett – CBS News










































    Watch CBS News



    Trump, Netanyahu outline peace plan to end the war in Gaza; Far-right influencers express outrage over Super Bowl halftime performer Bad Bunny.

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