As the Kansas City Chiefs face off against the San Francisco 49ers this evening, the United States hunkers down for the most watched television broadcast of all time. In fact, the top 10 television broadcasts in the U.S. history are Super Bowls, with the notable exception of President Richard Nixon’s 1974 resignation speech coming in last place.
Though the Apollo 11 Moon landing is the most-watched television event in American history (150m) its technically considered news, meaning the Fox live telecast of Super Bowl LVII in 2023 holds the record for the largest average viewership of any live single network U.S. television broadcast with 115 million viewers.
While the most watched non-Super Bowl primetime programs include, M*A*S*H (106m); Roots Part VIII (100m); and Roots The Day After (100m), therein it seems the nation tunes in to a theme. Are networks cashing in on a collective identity ignited by sporting rivalries and rematches, or is the nation itself reckoning with a power dynamic?
The origin of professional football can be traced back to 1892 when Pudge Heffelfinger's $500 contract to play for the Allegheny Athletic Association against the Pittsburgh Athletic Club was signed.
On August 20, 1920, representatives from 4 of the clubs — Akron Pros, Canton Bulldogs, Cleveland Indians, and Dayton Triangles — met to create the American Professional Football Conference (APFC). According to the Canton Evening Repository, they intended to "raise the standard of professional football to eliminate bidding for players between rival clubs." By 2023, the combined valuations of 32 NFL teams was $163 billion.
With Taylor Swift upon decent from Tokyo, the monocultural icon steps into rumors and conspiracy theories swirling around Super Bowl LVIII and Election 2024. Fox News host “Jesse Watters Primetime” asks, "Is Swift a front for a covert political agenda?” Podcaster Mike Crispi speculates, “I bet she takes the stage at half time to endorse Sleepy Joe.”
Swift 'shakes it off,' but Newsweek’s recent poll offers perspective. “Up to 18% of voters can be swayed by a Swift endorsement.” Though Alicia Keys may join Usher at halftime, Swifties could tip ratings above the 115m mark into the stratosphere of American broadcasting history.
The protests to perceived injustices began with the NFL after San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick sat, and later knelt during the anthem before his team's preseason games of 2016. Kaepernick and 49ers teammate Eric Reid say they choose to kneel in San Diego during the anthem to call attention to the issues of police brutality and racial inequality.
On June 2, 2021, the NFL announced that they would halt the use of Race-Norming that assumed Black NFL players started out with lower cognitive functioning in a $1 billion dollar brain injury settlement.