Feb. 5, 2007

No Malfunction As Prince Rocks Halftime

Prince Avoids "Wardrobe Malfunctions" As He Rocks Super Bowl Audience With '80s Hits

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  • Prince delivered one of the best Super Bowl halftime shows.

    Prince delivered one of the best Super Bowl halftime shows.  (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

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(AP)  Phew! CBS got through the halftime show without a "wardrobe malfunction." The Artist Formerly Known as a Munchkin of Wardrobe Dysfunction began by singing "Let's Go Crazy," but he didn't.

Prince, who became a Jehovah's Witness in the mid-1990s, no longer wears yellow, butt-baring pants as he did at the 1991 MTV Video Music Awards (prompting Howard Stern's send-up at the '92 VMAs). The closest thing to a fashion statement Sunday night was an odd kerchief on his head. So the NFL had no repeat of the 2004 Janet Jackson/Justin Timberlake show, which happened the last time CBS broadcast the game.

The 48-year-old Prince, who rose to stardom in the '80s with his distinctive fusion of R&B, funk, soul and rock, once looked androgynous and produced songs that (lest we forget) drove Tipper Gore nuts (and made her a fat target for anti-censorship types like Frank Zappa).

Photos: Super Bowl Performances
Photos: Billy Joel
Musically, the diminutive, erstwhile prodigy from Minneapolis kept it old-school, rockin' the house with "Purple Rain" and other golden hits.

He delivered one of the best Super Bowl halftime shows ever. Consequently, he didn't come across as a painfully safe choice or a has-been, the rap against the previous couple of Super Bowl halftime acts, Paul McCartney and the Rolling Stones.

Before and after Prince took the midfield stage (shaped like his symbol when he was The Artist Formerly Known As Prince), Jim Nantz and Phil Simms gave a bravura performance in the booth. Now in their third season together, the duo has a nice rapport.

Making his Super Bowl play-by-play debut, Nantz kept viewers on top of the action. Simms managed to be self-effacing about at least one comment that was off the mark. He insisted the weather would not be a factor; but the rain got heavier than he anticipated, and after the third of four turnovers in the first quarter, he chuckled about what he said.

"The rain is absolutely having a little effect," he acknowledged.

It had an effect on CBS, too.

CBS Sports spokeswoman Leslie Anne Wade explained that the production crew kept cutting away from cameras that had condensation from the soggy conditions and kept wiping down the lenses as fast as possible between shots. In the control truck, they could see which of the 48 cameras needed to be cleared up.

"They're working pretty hard, and they're getting pretty clear pictures for the most part, for what the weather's like here," she said.

"Not easy conditions for anyone. Even our crew," Nantz noted on the air.

Maybe high-definition TV owners annoyingly got more than their money's worth, being able to see every drop and just how sharp or not fog can look on their fancy flat screens.

But it certainly was refreshing to see the elements affect a Super Bowl.

As usual, much of the day's viewing diet had more to do with quantity than quality.

But, how can the nation's highest-rated TV program and the run-up to it NOT be bloated?

Ingesting 10-plus hours of Super Bowl coverage forces you to act like an anaconda: Just unhinge your jaws, swallow your prey and try not to be too conscious of your distended, distorted body.

There isn't enough party dip in the world to give you that much indigestion (although the food segment with chef Bobby Flay came close).

The six-plus hours of pre-game hoo-ha began at noon EST with an NFL Films recap of the season, "Road to the Super Bowl," with Tom Selleck capably filling the old John Facenda role of narrator.

Next came "Phil Simms All-Iron Team," which the neurotic Caveman from the Geico commercials gave a lighthearted beginning, middle and end.

The ever-needy Caveman tried to wheedle the picks out of Simms on the golf course before they were announced on the selection show with limited success, and limited satisfaction.

Derrick Brooks? "I just don't get it," said the Caveman, who would have picked, uh, Bonnie Raitt.

The quality of the players' character (including Brooks') was a big determinant in being chosen for Simms' squad, which gave the show a heartwarming touch and made it appealing to casual fans.

Then came the four-hour "The Super Bowl Today," which in the true commercial spirit of the whole affair began with Oscar-winner Cuba Gooding Jr., who also was promoting the upcoming film "Norbit."

Just like every other Sunday of the football season, the CBS studio quartet of host James Brown along with analysts Dan Marino, Boomer Esiason and Shannon Sharpe made you miss the guys on Fox. They simply lack the chemistry of Terry Bradshaw, Howie Long et al. And no one on either show is as funny as Fox's Frank Caliendo.

The heart-tugging stories really kicked in during the last pre-game extravaganza, almost ad nauseam among them, Everson Walls' willingness to donate a kidney to former Dallas Cowboys teammate Ron Springs; Chicago Bears running back Thomas Jones' supportive family; a visit with soldiers in Iraq; and Bill Walsh's much-chronicled battle against cancer.

They even went all the way back to the tragically early deaths of long-ago Bears running backs Walter Payton and Brian Piccolo. (Hmmm. Might Netflix get a run on "Brian's Song"?)

Almost all of the ground covered was well-trod: Indianapolis Colts receiver Marvin Harrison's taciturn tendencies; the Jekyll-Hyde performances of Rex Grossman; the matchup between the first two black coaches to lead their team to the NFL title game.

As you can imagine, all the feel-good segments got a lot more airtime than, say, the story about the Bears' Tank Johnson needing a judge's OK to get out of house arrest on gun-possession charges and travel to Miami.

The story barely got four minutes (remember: out of four hours!) including Esiason, Sharpe and Marino weighing in on whether Johnson should have been allowed to play. (Predictably, Esiason opposed Tank's participation, Sharpe defended it, and Marino came down hard in the middle of the issue).

Katie Couric, who can chant "We're No. 3" about CBS News, joined the guys, for yet another "very touching story indeed," as Brown put it after introducing the high-priced "Evening News" anchorwoman by citing her sports reporting credibility. ("She brings a sports background to the desk. She ran track, an outstanding cheerleader.")

She tackled the topic of Hines Ward, last year's Super Bowl MVP, and his Korean mother, who was shunned in her native country because of her biracial marriage, winding up a single mother here, and the bigotry that mother and son were subjected to.

But isn't this a year-old story? Where's the fresh, hard-hitting news?

Before all those hours fully dedicated to hyping the game, "Face the Nation" with Bob Schieffer was broadcast from Dolphin Stadium. At least the conversation was a little more serious with new league commissioner Roger Goodell as a guest.

Meanwhile, Tim Russert's "Meet the Press" was busy with presidential candidate John Edwards. Who cares about that, right?

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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by kpbkpb February 6, 2007 1:08 PM EST
Prince gave an awesome show & he is truly ageless, multi-talented, & ***... I also APPRECIATED when they had Sir Paul McCartney (he rocked too-even at his age!) Maybe they booked him "to be safe," but if you book class acts, that's what you will get. He played some great ageless, timeless, feel good rock. Enjoyed The Stones, but for the life of me can't look at Mick's prune-face & skeletal body flinging across the stage. And to see the rest of the band--scary! BUT I enjoyed their music while refilling the chip bowl & stiring the chili in the kitchen. Famu was great too! Justin is not all that-just average & Janet is all that, but didn't realize she didn't have to do stoop to creating such sensationalism; her music and talent was enough.
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by syphlis February 5, 2007 6:11 PM EST
hes 48? whoa. whatever, i'd do'm.





and im a dude. not gay. hes just *** sexeh
Reply to this comment
by adra1956 February 5, 2007 5:44 PM EST
although i certainly enjoyed prince's performance, i was certainly disapointed that there was no mention of the famu rattlers performance...........these kids work very hard to be the best and they are....even in all the rain..they were awesome
Reply to this comment
by rmsdm4 February 5, 2007 1:34 PM EST
Prince was king. That happens when you actually get talent to perform. Anybody can dance and sing a little, but a true talent does it all and can play. He was sexaul, but not vulgar. He was a showman, but not over the top. And to top it off, he did a Foo Fighters song. WOW
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by olebd February 5, 2007 1:29 PM EST
MUCH better than Justine and Janet.
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by olebd February 5, 2007 1:29 PM EST
Very well done. I liked the little Jimmie Hendricks infusion. It's amazing to think what logistics go into to setting up all that staging on the field and tearing it down in a matter of minutes.
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by ozziepooh90 February 5, 2007 12:56 PM EST
Prince did a wonderfull job !!!!! I don't know many other whow would of gotten out there and the rain and performed. It is one of the best half-time show in a get while.
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