The following is a list of Super Bowl halftime shows, held in the United States in the middle of the Super Bowl. Halftime shows are a tradition during football games at all levels of competition. In most years since the mid-1980s, the halftime show of the Super Bowl has feature popular recording artists and other well-known celebrities. Musical genres over the years have represented a broad range of music types, including pop, rock, classic rock, county, hip hop, rap, blues, and soul. In some years, short skits or drama scenes are acted out on a stage.
The Super Bowl halftime show represents a fundamental link to pop culture, which helps broaden the television audience and nationwide interest.
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During most of the Super Bowl's first decade, the halftime show featured a college marching band. The show's second decade featured a more varied show, with Up with People producing and starring in four of the performances. The middle of the third decade saw the introduction of popular music acts such as New Kids on the Block, Gloria Estefan, Michael Jackson, Prince, Clint Black, Patti LaBelle, and Tony Bennett. Starting with Super Bowl XXXII, commercial sponsors presented the half-time show; within five years, the tradition of having a theme—begun with Super Bowl III—ended, replaced by major music productions by arena rock bands and other high-profile acts. In each of the years since the 2004 halftime show controversy, many of the halftime shows have consisted of a performance by one artist or group. The NFL does not pay the halftime show performers an appearance fee, though it covers all expenses for the performers and their entourage of stagehands, family, and friends.[1] According to Nielsen SoundScan data, the halftime performers regularly experience significant spikes in weekly album sales and paid digital downloads[2] due to the exposure.
The following is a list of the performers, producers, themes, and sponsors for each Super Bowl game's show.
Super Bowl | Show details |
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I |
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II |
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III |
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IV |
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V |
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VI |
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VII |
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VIII |
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IX |
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X |
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XI |
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XII |
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XIII |
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XIV |
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XV |
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XVI |
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XVII |
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XVIII |
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XIX |
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XX |
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XXI |
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XXII |
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XXIII |
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XXIV |
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XXV |
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XXVI |
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XXVII |
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XXVIII |
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XXIX |
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XXX |
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XXXI |
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XXXII |
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XXXIII |
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XXXIV |
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XXXV |
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XXXVI |
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XXXVII |
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XXXVIII |
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XXXIX |
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XL |
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XLI |
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XLII |
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XLIII |
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XLIV |
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XLV |
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XLVI |
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For The Rolling Stones, the stage was in the form of the group's iconic tongue logo (first used in 1971 on their Sticky Fingers album). It was the largest stage ever assembled for a Super Bowl Halftime Show, with 28 separate pieces assembled in five minutes by a 600-member volunteer stage crew. The group performed three songs: "Start Me Up", "Rough Justice", and "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction". The show was viewed by 89.9 million people, more than the audiences for the Oscars, Grammys and Emmy Awards combined.[38] In the wake of the Super Bowl XXXVIII halftime show controversy with Janet Jackson and Justin Timberlake, ABC and the NFL imposed a five-second delay and censored lyrics considered too sexually explicit in the first two songs by briefly turning off Mick Jagger's microphone—censoring to which the group had previously agreed.[39] However, the choice of The Rolling Stones sparked controversy in the Detroit community because the band did not represent the traditional Detroit "Motown Sound", and no artists from the area were included.[40]
Shania Twain is the first artist to have performed at both the Super Bowl and the CFL championship, the Grey Cup, having done so in 2002.[41] The Black Eyed Peas joined Twain in 2011, having performed at the Grey Cup in 2005.