Good morning. Today is the Super Bowl, and we've got a guide to the game.
A national holidayNothing brings together more Americans — not awards shows, not television series finales, not even presidential debates — than the Super Bowl. Will this year's game, between the Kansas City Chiefs and the San Francisco 49ers, be the most watched ever? By one measure — the total number of people watching — it seems likely to be. Last year's game set the record, with 115 million viewers in the U.S., and it did not have Taylor Swift. Swift's expected presence at the game, to cheer on her boyfriend, the Chiefs' tight end Travis Kelce, has the potential to help it break the 1982 record for the highest proportion of Americans who watched: 49 percent. In the rest of today's newsletter, we'll tell you what you need to know about this year's Super Bowl; the teams, the strange bets, the halftime show and more. The teamsKansas City Chiefs: If you're someone who watches football only on Super Bowl Sunday, it may seem unremarkable that the Chiefs are playing today. They've reached the Super Bowl in four of the past five seasons. Yet this season was not a great one for the Chiefs. They lost six games, the most they have since Patrick Mahomes took over as starting quarterback. Their offense struggled with turnovers and dropped passes. Kelce's performances seemed to falter even as his celebrity grew; he failed to score a touchdown in the final six games of the regular season. Since the playoffs began, though, the team has looked more like the Chiefs of old. Kelce has scored three touchdowns in the past two games. And the defense has been excellent all season. San Francisco 49ers: The 49ers, on the other hand, were great during the regular season, but have looked beatable in the playoffs. The star of their offense is Christian McCaffrey, a running back who led the league in rushing yards and touchdowns, and who is also an option on passing plays. The team is full of such multiskilled players: George Kittle, a tight end who is also a great blocker; Deebo Samuel, whose ability to both catch and run led him to create a new name for his position, the "wide back." At the center of the operation is the quarterback, Brock Purdy. Less than two years ago, the 49ers drafted Purdy 262nd — making him the last pick in the last round, a distinction known in the N.F.L. by the nickname "Mr. Irrelevant." Now, after a season in which he was, by some metrics, the league's best quarterback, Purdy will be the first Mr. Irrelevant to lead his team at the Super Bowl. The settingLas Vegas is hosting its first Super Bowl today. The city has a fraught history with professional sports because of its association with gambling, and leagues have kept teams away to maintain their sports' appearance of integrity. That changed in 2018, when the Supreme Court cleared the way for legalized sports betting. Vegas officials, eager to boost tourism, lured professional baseball and football teams to the city. Hosting the Super Bowl is a crowning achievement. Not everyone is happy about the transformation, though. Officials provided $750 million in subsidies to help build Allegiant Stadium, where the Super Bowl will take place, even as the city's public schools have languished. "It just represents that we don't care," LaTasha Olsen, who works at a local elementary school, told my colleagues Ken Belson and Jenny Vrentas. The halftime showUsher, the headline act at halftime, is a showman made for the Super Bowl. He sings, he dances, he boasts a three-decade-long catalog that makes for recognizable medley fodder. But tonight's performance is more than a nostalgia trip. Usher has experienced a recent renaissance, prompted by a Las Vegas residency. (Last year, videos of him serenading celebrities, including Keke Palmer and Issa Rae, spread widely on social media.) Usher has framed his performance as a celebration of his career. It's also a moment in the spotlight for his genre: "This night was specifically curated in my mind to have R&B take the main stage," he told Vogue. The betsIndustry experts expect this year's Super Bowl to be the largest sports betting day in American history, with more than 67 million people wagering on the event. The most traditional type of bet is predicting the victor, with the underdog — in this case, the Chiefs — spotted a few points. But a growing trend in recent years has been making so-called prop bets, which allow you to gamble on just about anything, including:
The Athletic put together its own prop bets, which you can play along with here without risking your money. What to cookEditors from Cooking suggest three recipes, depending on where you'll be watching.
More Super Bowl coverage
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Arts institutions should be treated as though they are public infrastructure, Laura Raicovich and Laura Hanna write. Biden should withdraw from the presidential race — but not right away, Ross Douthat writes. The Sunday question: Is Biden too old to be president? A special counsel report on Biden's handling of sensitive documents highlighted his poor memory. "That does not sound like someone capable of executing one of the world's most important jobs," USA Today's Ingrid Jacques writes. But Biden's old age also means a long, experienced political career. "Aging brains make more connections, perhaps because they have more history to work with," Bill McKibben writes for The Los Angeles Times. Discover more of the insight you value in The Morning. The Times is filled with information and inspiration every day. So gain unlimited access to everything we offer — and save with this introductory offer.
A celebration through time: One man has collected thousands of film photos and negatives that reveals the history of Rio's carnival. Vows: They became good friends before she proposed becoming something more. He took three months to consider. Lives Lived: John Bruton was an Irish former prime minister who played a central role in ending decades of sectarian violence and securing peace in Northern Ireland. He died at 76.
Jon Stewart will return to "The Daily Show" as a once-a-week host, beginning on Monday. Ahead of that, I'm revisiting my 2020 interview with him, in which he examined the show's legacy. We used to have news and we had entertainment. Now those categories are totally intertwined. I don't think it's too far off base to suggest that, unintentionally or not, "The Daily Show" played a part in that transformation. What do you think about those changes and what they've wrought? The news didn't become "The Daily Show," because at its core, "The Daily Show" was a critique of the news and a critique of those systems. If they'd taken in what we were saying, they wouldn't be doing what they're doing now: creating urgency through conflict. The entire system functions that way now. We are two sides — in a country of 350 million people. That reminds me of the old George Carlin joke about how in America you have 23 kinds of bagels to choose from but only two political parties. Politically in this country, you have Coke or Pepsi. Every now and again, Dr Pepper comes along and everybody is like, "You ruined this for everyone else." Dr Pepper is Ralph Nader, let's say. When you were doing "The Daily Show," part of what made you unique was your last-sane-man-in-Crazytown quality. You would actually say that someone in power was telling a lie when the nightly newscasters wouldn't. Now they will say that. Is that a step in the right direction? The media's job is to deconstruct the manipulation, not to just call it a lie. It's about informing on how something works so that you understand the lie's purpose. The media shouldn't take the political system personally, or allow its own narcissism to rise to the narcissism of the politicians, or become offended that the politicians are lying — their job is to manipulate. Read more of the interview here. More from the magazine
Since 1894: The longtime owner of Vroman's, a 130-year-old bookstore and community landmark in Pasadena, Calif., says he's ready to turn over the reins. Our editors' picks: "The Storm We Made," a sweeping novel exploring the fallout of a Malayan woman's decision to become a spy for Japanese forces in World War II, and eight other books. Times best sellers: A struggling stand-up comic tries to work out why the woman he loves stopped loving him in "Good Material," one of the new titles on the hardcover fiction list.
Watch a celebrity documentary that's worth your time. Try a Wirecutter-tested laundry detergent. Show your friends love with a Galentine's Day gift.
What to Watch For
What to Cook This Week
The microwave is not only useful for cooking vegetables. In this week's Five Weeknight Dishes newsletter, Emily Weinstein offers up a recently added recipe in which it could be used to poach a "buttery" salmon. Other new arrivals suggested by Emily includes chimichurri meatballs that could work as an appetizer or as part of a meal; and brussels sprouts bathed in a tart and sweet tamarind-maple glaze.
Here is today's Spelling Bee. Yesterday's pangrams were archival, archrival and chivalric. Can you put eight historical events — including the moon landing, the Golden Gate Bridge and the 19th Amendment — in chronological order? Take this week's Flashback quiz. And here are today's Mini Crossword, Wordle, Sudoku and Connections. Thanks for spending part of your weekend with The Times. Sign up here to get this newsletter in your inbox. Reach our team at themorning@nytimes.com.
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domingo, 11 de febrero de 2024
The Morning: Guide to the Super Bowl
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