I’m a passionate football fan, and a devoted Giants fan.
So, I watched beginning to end the last time the Giants beat the Pats, right?
Wrong!
I have a 10 year old son who has major ADHD and no interest in most spectator sports. So, as a practical matter, I just don’t get to see much football on TV any more. At any given moment, he may be antsy and/or bursting with energy, and the it will be on me to take him out to burn off that energy.
I may be walking our dog with him or kicking around a soccer ball or riding bikes with him at kickoff. The joys of being a Dad!
I may see a full Super Bowl again in 8 years (but only if he goes away to college)!
I’ve got that Monday off, but I’ll probably sleep in instead.
My understanding is that this Peyton Manning fellow is good enough that he deserves another “World Championship” ring, but I also like Seattle because it has a strong soccer culture.
That’s one great fix to avoid the commercials, but do you mute to keep from hearing the blather of the announcers? During college games there are only a few commentators that say anything useful beyond what you can see for yourself.
Aikman and Buck are calling the game. Better than some, worse than others. It seems to me like Super Bowl commentary is usually dumbed down, to account for the fact that much of the audience is less conversant with the rules and strategies of the game than they are for run-of-the-mill matchups. Good for the expanded audience, but useless for people who follow the game.
Fortunately, I don’t have to mute it - I have an amazing capacity to tune out distractions. My SO hates it, but it comes in handy sometimes.
I’m not a fan of all the “spectacle and hoopla” and traditionally ignore the Super Bowl, unless I have some rooting interest. But this year’s game has an interesting story-line; whether or not Peyton comes up big or chokes it away. Plus I’ve always felt that Pete Carroll got a bad rap as the Patriot’s “interim” coach back in 1997-99, stuck between two “legends” - Parcells (a legend in his own mind, at least) and Belichick.
I’ll be happy if either team wins, as long as they play well.
I bleed blue and lime-green, but I don’t think my delicate constitution can handle the stress. Especially if the “Incompetent Seahawks” show up for the game, instead of the “Overpowering Seahawks”. I don’t like who I become when the Seahawks start stinking.
The stuff that’s come out about football and CTE over the past couple of years has been the deal-breaker for me. After watching football regularly since the mid-1960s, I’ve had to finally let go of the game. It’s just further than I can go, to derive entertainment from a process that I know will leave a nontrivial number of the entertainers permanently and severely brain-damaged. I just can’t do that.
I’ll be at work, where most of the crew will be gathered around one of the TVs watching it. I could hang with them or be the only one doing actual work. So I’ll join them and watch the commercials and probably play on my phone for the actual game stuff.
I’ll be watching most of the coverage…will miss some of the pregame stuff to catch the Puppy Bowl, and I think there is also a Kitten Bowl on the Hallmark Channel that might get dvr’d.
Well, you good people have helped me to decide that I will at least have it on in the same room as I am and I hope the game is good enough to keep me awake. I will listen to the commentary at least for a while, but may mute it until the commercials come on.
The poll answers don’t quite fit mine. Each year a friend from church hosts a Super Bowl party. She invites the whole church, her neighbors, and people she works with.
She always makes ribs and pecan pie. Everything else is pot luck. There are large flat screen TVs on two levels of her house. Game watchers go in the basement. Commercial only folks and jibber jabberers in the living room.
I drive some of the more senior church ladies who don’t drive. They also don’t stay up past 9:00 most nights so we leave at halftime. Whether I watch the rest of the game after I get home or don’t will depend on a variety of factors.
So I will for sure watch the first half of the game and all the commercials.