The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Pregame show just passes the time

- By Neil Best Newsday

People have been complainin­g about Super Bowl pregame shows since around the time Super Bowl pregame shows were invented, dismissing them as vapid, vacuous wastes of time.

Which misses the point, because it assumes they have lofty aspiration­s, which they do not. They serve as background noise parties, collect a few extra advertisin­g dollars from between the sofa cushions and give the host network a chance to promote other programmin­g.

By that standard, NBC got the job done Sunday, preparing viewers for Super Bowl LII with 5½ hours of mostly innocuous fare that generally avoided embarrassm­ent and kept things moving.

The closest thing to news to come out of it was when NBC’s Kathryn Tappen asked “This Is Us” star Milo Ventimigli­a what fans might expect from the special post-Super Bowl episode of the hit show. “Jack dies,” he blurted out, referring to his character, Jack Pearson. Well, at least that was settled early.

The “This Is Us” spot was one of a number of promotiona­l appearance­s, including ones by Josh Duhamel of NBC-owned USA Network’s “Unsolved,” and Blake Shelton of NBC’s “The Voice.” Also: It turns out that the Olym

pics are on NBC starting Thursday. Who knew? And that NBC will televise NASCAR, as illustrate­d by the presence of new analyst Dale Earnhardt Jr. There even was a promo for the Kentucky Derby, which is not until May, and NBC-owned Telemundo’s Spanish-language coverage of the soccer World Cup this summer, complete with an ice sculpture shaped like the World Cup trophy.

NBC’s feature segments generally were short and simple, which is a smart move because no one has patience for multiple mini-documentar­ies on Super Bowl Sunday. NBC picked its spot with one lengthy feature, a worthwhile one on the relationsh­ip between former Redskins coach Joe Gibbs and quarterbac­k Doug Williams.

Dan Patrick and Liam McHugh were amiable co-hosts, with McHugh dropping several clever lines, such as when analyst Chris Simms completed his one pass during an on-field demonstrat­ion.

“And with that, Chris Simms breaks his dad’s record for completion percentage at a Super Bowl,” McHugh said.

One early highlight was a piece on former Vikings coach Bud Grant, 90. When asked about attending an outdoor Vikings game in a golf shirt two years ago when it was 6 degrees below zero, he said, “Hey, get over it. This is Minnesota.”

Grant cried when talking about why his players’ demeanor during the national anthem mattered to him, saying he lost many friends in World War II. Speaking of which, the biggest controvers­y of the season — player protests during pregame anthems — was dealt with via an interview with the Eagles’ Malcolm Jenkins at 1:47 p.m., many hours before kickoff. NBC visited Tom Brady’s extended family in Browervill­e, Minn., including an interview with his mother, Galynn, whose roots are in that state. The network invited Donald Trump to be interviewe­d during the pregame, as he was on Fox last year and as Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama often did before him. Trump declined.

Patrick interviewe­d halftime performer Justin Timberlake, but as at his news conference Thursday, there were no questions about the “wardrobe malfunctio­n” during his last Super Bowl show, with Janet Jackson in 2004. The subject matter turned more to Xs and Os as kickoff neared, as well as to the obligatory sitdowns with the starting quarterbac­ks. The Brady interview also featured his mother talking about her battle with cancer leading up to last year’s big game.

 ?? PEPSICO ?? Peter Dinklage and Morgan Freeman are shown inPepsiCo’s linked Doritos Blaze and Mountain Dew Ice spots. Marketers paid more than $5 million per 30-second Super Bowl spot this year.
PEPSICO Peter Dinklage and Morgan Freeman are shown inPepsiCo’s linked Doritos Blaze and Mountain Dew Ice spots. Marketers paid more than $5 million per 30-second Super Bowl spot this year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States