The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Skipping Super Bowl not a problem for millions of Americans

- By Paul Newberry Paul Newberry is the national sports columnist for The Associated Press.

For years, Sue Ferrara has followed the same routine on Super Bowl Sunday.

And, no, it has nothing to do with the big game.

About the time the Philadelph­ia Eagles and Kansas City Chiefs kicked it off on Sunday for the NFL championsh­ip, Ferrara headed to her two favorite grocery stores, reveling in aisles and checkout lines that are more wide open than a wide receiver after busted coverage.

“I'm sure it will be a very, very well-watched game where I live,” said Ferrara, whose home in Princeton, New Jersey is pretty much the dividing line between those who root for the Eagles and those who back the New York Giants.

“Which means when I got to Trader Joe's, there will be no one there. When I go to Wegmans, there will be no one there.”

Get this: There are tens of millions of Americans who couldn't care less about the Super Bowl.

Count Ferrara, a freelance writer and school board member, among them.

“I never connected with football," she said. “Then they started doing studies on CTE and the brain damage that can be done. I think football is past its prime, quite honestly.”

Try telling that to all those folks who will be throwing elaborate parties and wagering billions of dollars on the outcome of a game that has become our unofficial national holiday.

The Super Bowl is essentiall­y the last major event that can unite so many Americans in a common purpose: sitting in front of a TV all day, washing down wings and nachos with plenty of ice cold beer, lamenting how they just lost 50 bucks because the coin toss was tails instead of heads.

The official viewing audience — which came in at more than 112 million a year ago — dwarfs anything else in our increasing­ly fragmented media landscape.

A survey commission­ed in part by the NFL claims 208 million-plus tuned in for at least some portion of last season's extravagan­za, perhaps just to watch the halftime show and/or commercial­s.

But even if you take the NFL's word for it, that means more than 100 million Americans didn't watch at all.

People like Deepak Sarma, a professor at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland who also serves as a cultural consultant for television shows and streaming networks.

Until he went to the gym the other day, he didn't even realize Super Bowl Sunday was here.

“I go to my locker and two guys I know are sitting around talking about some players and quarterbac­ks,” Sarma said, chuckling. “Now, I don't know the names of any of these things. I look at them like, ‘Ohhh, did someone say the Chiefs? Hey, are you talking about the Super Bowl?' And they're like, ‘Yeah, you big dummy.'

“So I said to them, ‘Who's in it?' And they said the Kansas City Chiefs and, uhh, the Philadelph­ia Eagles, I believe. They kept on going and I said, ‘When is it?' And they were like, ‘Dude, it's this weekend.' It was really funny. I had no clue because it's not interestin­g to me."

Many of Sarma's students apparently feel the same way.

When he assigned two papers that are due on Monday — again, before he even realized what was happening the day before — no one in the class objected.

“These kids will not be watching the game,” Sarma said.

Neither will Alonso Duralde, a Los Angelesbas­ed film critic. He and his husband don't have any special plans for Super Bowl Sunday, and they're hardly alone in Southern California.

“We used to live in Dallas,” he said. “Super Bowl Sunday was a great day to go to the movies. You could count on it being pretty empty. In California, not so much. There's a lot of people who watch the game, but a lot of people who don't. People act like the streets are empty during the Super Bowl, but that doesn't really happen here."

Putting on his academic cap, Sarma wonders why sports — and the Super Bowl, in particular — has such an effect on American society.

“It brings communitie­s together in a really artificial way,” he said. “Do we need this? Why do we need this? They are great distractio­ns when there's so many more important things going on.”

From a more practical standpoint, the Super Bowl provides the rarest of opportunit­ies for those who aren't worshippin­g at the Church of Goodell. (For those non-believers, Roger Goodell is commission­er of the NFL.)

“We get to enjoy empty restaurant­s, empty gyms,” Sarma said, a hint of glee in his voice. “In a way, we get to reclaim our country. It's become kind of a meditative space apart from it all. We're not going to get sucked into it.”

It's becoming easier and easier to avoid the Super Bowl hype.

With so many networks and streaming services, there are countless counter-viewing options for those who don't wish to watch a football game.

Come Monday morning, far fewer people will feel left out around the water cooler because so many are now working from home.

 ?? Gregory Shamus/Getty Images ?? A general view of inside State Farm Stadium ahead of Super Bowl LVII in Glendale, Arizona.
Gregory Shamus/Getty Images A general view of inside State Farm Stadium ahead of Super Bowl LVII in Glendale, Arizona.

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