This browser does not support the Video element.
Super Bowl halftime poll highlights cultural divide as political fights continue
A YouGov America poll released Friday found 35% of respondents said they planned to watch Bad Bunny’s halftime performance, compared with 28% who planned to watch alternative programming on the conservative Turning Point network.
The Super Bowl is the largest sporting event in the United States every year.
But how did it get its name?
An early title that didn’t stick
The backstory:
Then-NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle’s first idea was to call the game "The AFL-NFL World Championship Game," but it never stuck due to its length.
A toy that inspired a billion-dollar brand
Dig deeper:
As the owners were continuing to brainstorm, Lamar Hunt Jr., son of former Kansas City Chiefs owner Lamar Hunt, said that the idea for the Super Bowl actually stemmed from a toy.
Hunt Jr. had a toy called the "Super Ball," and his father drew inspiration from it.
"My dad was in an owner’s meeting. They were trying to figure out what to call the last game, the championship game. I don’t know if he had the ball with him as some reports suggest. My dad said, ‘Well, we need to come up with a name, something like the ‘Super Bowl.' And then he said, ‘Actually, that’s not a very good name. We can come up with something better.’ But ‘Super Bowl’ stuck in the media and word of mouth," Hunt Jr. said via Time.
And that’s how the Super Bowl, America’s largest sporting event, got its name.