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‘Super’ show comes with headaches

The Associated Press
By The Associated Press
3 Min Read Jan. 17, 2006 | 20 years Ago
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NEW YORK -- With any luck, the National Football League has gotten this year's Super Bowl halftime show controversy out of the way early.

Faced with an embarrassing story that the dancers it was seeking as extras for the Rolling Stones performance couldn't be older than 45, the NFL reversed field and opened it up to everyone. Mick Jagger, 62, may now be able to see wrinkles as he looks out over his audience.

It may seem incidental to the main event, but the halftime show has caused plenty of headaches for the NFL, from Janet Jackson's infamous breast-baring to some grumbling from host city Detroit that its musical legacy is being snubbed this year. The booking of rock royalty like the Stones -- who turned down the gig several times before agreeing this year -- is an indication of its importance.

The Feb. 5 show on ABC is being overseen by NFL executive Charles Coplin. He's a former ABC Sports producer who joined the league's front office in 2001 and took over the entertainment staff immediately after the 2004 unexpected exposure of Jackson's nipple jewelry.

That incident, after the NFL had largely handed over production of the show to MTV, persuaded the league to take a tighter grip on the plans, Coplin said.

"The guiding philosophy is to be unique, entertaining and appropriate, to cast entertainment that serves as wide a group as possible -- from grandparents to grandkids," he said.

Key years in making it more of an event were Michael Jackson performing with 3,500 children (1993) and U2's Bono opening his jacket to reveal an American flag stitched in, a few months after the terrorist attacks.

"There was a point in the early 1990s where (the NFL) thought, 'how can we make something this great even better,"' Coplin said. "There was a decision internally to look at all aspects of the Super Bowl presentation."

It was another opportunity to make money, too. Sprint paid the NFL a record $12 million to be sponsor of this year's halftime show, and is running a contest to fly the winners to Detroit to see the Stones up close.

Each year's TV audience generally approaches 90 million people. Usually only the Academy Awards comes anywhere close in pulling that many people together.

The times the NFL were most burned actually came when it placed too much faith in outside help: MTV, in Jackson's year, and a company that was hired this year to organize the on-field dancers for the Stones.

"They were very collaborative," said Joel Gallen, another longtime events producer who ran the 2003 show with Shania Twain and No Doubt. "They are easy to work with and understand the value of entertainment. It's not like dealing with people who only know football."

Some people in Detroit were unhappy this year's show overlooks the area's musical history -- from Motown to Madonna to Eminem. The NFL has booked Stevie Wonder to play before the game and has done halftime tributes to Motown twice in the past 25 years. More often than not, like with Paul McCartney last year, the show has no geographical references.

Aaron Neville, whose home was damaged by Hurricane Katrina, was selected to perform the national anthem in Detroit.

McCartney's booking was seen by many as a conservative reaction to the Jackson incident. The hiring of acts like Green Day, Destiny's Child and Ozzy Osbourne for various NFL events since shows that "we're beyond that," said NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy.

The stakes are high for the band, too. Sales of McCartney's catalogue went up 250 percent the week after his Super Bowl show, according to Soundscan, and U2's most recent album jumped from No. 108 to No. 8 on the Billboard chart after their gig.

"In a world where there are many different opinions and points of view, to try and find entertainment that appeals to as many people as possible is a tough challenge," Coplin said.

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