2025 Super Bowl, Grammy Awards Lock Out Country Performances

For going on the third straight year, country music continues to be one of the most popular and dominant genres in all of popular music, rivaling and surpassing hip-hop’s decade-plus previous dominance. Yet on the biggest stages when America comes together to celebrate unifying cultural moments, country music continues to be locked out.
Kendrick Lamar was the halftime performer for Super Bowl LIX in New Orleans on Sunday (2-10)—a hip-hop artist in a long string of them ever since Jay-Z’s Roc Nation partnered with the NFL to produce the halftime show in 2019. It shouldn’t surprise anyone that it’s been one hip-hop performance after another ever since. And hey, previously, hip-hop had been deemed too hot for primetime, and had been locked out of Super Bowl opportunities itself.
But how long has it been since country music was featured during the the Super Bowl halftime? It’s now officially been 31 years. You have to go all the way back to 1994 when Clint Black, Tanya Tucker, Travis Tritt, and The Judds played the Super Bowl halftime to find the last and really only time country music was featured during the Super Bowl halftime. There hasn’t even been a country artist featured as a guest in over 20 years. Shania Twain appeared briefly with No Doubt in 2003.
Though a country critic is perfectly unqualified to commentate on the quality of Kendrick Lamar’s performance, what can be quantifiably determined is that ultimately, it was a (at least partially) lip-synced presentation punctuated by choreographic dancing, just like pretty much every single other popular music performance from the pop and hip-hop realm. There were no live musicians on a stage. Guest performer SZA didn’t even seem to attempt to act like she was actually singing. And how could you with all the precise gesticulations that are required for such a performance?
As hip-hop pundits and political activists harp about the iconography and Easter eggs employed by Kendrick Lamar and what they all mean, the majority of America stared at their televisions screens and couldn’t tell what the hell was going on, though there was a lot of movement, which apparently is the most important thing.
Even to a pre-recorded track, the lyrics were incoherent, and any messages veiled or overt were mostly lost, which frankly, is a shame when considering Kendrick’s more thoughtful, socially conscious, and clever lyricism. And that really is the kick in the pants. Kendrick Lamar is one of the most critically-acclaimed hip-hop artists of all time. And there he was, doing a song and dance routine to a pre-recorded track as opposed to being live and in-the-moment.
The week previous, Kendrick Lamar had earned five Grammy Awards, leading the field, including his Drake diss track “Not Like Us” winning Record of the Year and Song of the Year—the same song that capped off his Super Bowl performance. Early February is now arguably the epicenter for culturally unifying moments in media and music, with the Super Bowl being very much a musical event along with a sports one.
Similar to many recent Super Bowl halftime performances, the Grammy Awards were primarily dominated by lip-synced performances and choreographic dancing without a live instrument to be seen on stage.
Billboard remarked “Rock Is the Second-Biggest Genre in the U.S. Why Was It Missing From the Grammys?” That’s a good question. An even better question is why country can claim the same thing? Aside from Brad Paisley appearing in a multi-genre opening segment with Dawes centered around the L.A. fires, Lainey Wilson appearing in tribute to Quincy Jones, and an appearance by Shaboozey, country music was nowhere to be seen.
Actual music keeps going missing from musical performances in lieu of pre-recorded backing tracks and and what boils down to dance routines. Sierra Ferrell was the 2nd-highest Grammy winner in 2025 with four trophies, sweeping all of her nominations similar to Kendrick Lamar. She would have stunned the world with a Grammy performance. But none was bestowed, and all of her wins were relegated to the pre-telecast.
Why are rock and country surging in interest? And why is more earthy, twangy, songwriter-based country shading out hip-hop and drum-machine versions of commercial country? It’s because in a increasingly complex, digitized, AI-driven, cold and detached world, country and roots music feels real.
Even if young audiences are interfacing with this music through their phones and other technology, there is something about flesh and blood, wood and wire, the beautiful imperfections of a truly live performance that makes people feel connected in an increasingly disconnected world. It’s organic. It breathes, feels, cries, and bleeds.
But the institutions tasked with representing music fans are increasingly shirking the opportunities to feature actual music. This is one of the reasons there was such a backlash to Beyoncé’s Best Country Album win for Cowboy Carter. It’s not that if you select out certain songs, they don’t sound similar to what you might hear on country radio. It’s that ultimately Cowboy Carter was music that still leaned on electronic instrumentation, drum loops, samples, and other inorganic matter. That is why country radio is increasingly losing relevance, along with the Grammy Awards.
Country fans and pundits have been complaining about the lack of representation at the Super Bowl for years now. At least at past Super Bowls, country artists were selected for National Anthem performances (this year it was Jon Batiste). But now others are beginning to take note. Believe it or not, The New York Times recently asked the question, “The Super Bowl Finally Embraced Rap. Is There Also Room for Country?”
The article quotes the chief executive of Roc Nation, Desiree Perez, who says she “can’t wait until we get some country music” and follows up, “That’s definitely something we are working on — to make sure that we’re covering all kinds of music.”
It will be interesting to see how long the partnership between the NFL and Roc Nation continues itself. But it would be even more interesting to see a country artist get an opportunity at the 50 yard line. And not just because it would finally mean country music got its opportunity. It will also likely mean actual instrumentation, and live vocals. Or at least, it should.
Sure, with such a wide, mainstream audience tuning into the Super Bowl, you want to present something that is sensible. But don’t discount the sensibilities of the American music consumer in 2025. It’s the same population that has turned Zach Bryan and Noah Kahan into arena and stadium performers, and seen uncharacteristic superstars like Luke Combs do the same. After all, it’s not like Kendrick Lamar was safe for primetime. But that was kind of the point.
Just like football that’s played between the numbers by living and breathing humans where all digital enhancements and trickery are relegated to the sidelines, country music is that one last touch of the real world. All the more reason to finally showcase it on America’s biggest stage.
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February 10, 2025 @ 12:30 pm
I’m not sure who it would even be. I’m not interested in a Morgan wallen halftime show. Zach Bryan isn’t exactly the type of performer for what we usually see at these. There was a time where Garth could have carried this but that seems past.
I am mostly glad they got Kendrick for this one. For once the performer was an of the moment relevant act unlike say Usher from last year. Usher was good because he has about exactly 15 minutes of songs you want to hear but he’s definitely playing on nostalgia. But Not Like Us was in fact the song of 2024 so it was good they captured the moment. Not sure who could be a country equivalent for this.
February 10, 2025 @ 12:58 pm
I don’t want to criticize the Kendrick Lamar pick, though I do wish the performance would have been more live and focused on the lyricism and artistry as opposed to the dancing and choreography. But in many respects the NFL hit the jackpot with that pick in the way the Drake feud and Grammy wins fed into it.
I think the line forms to the left when it comes to country or country-adjacent performers who could play it. Zach Bryan included.
Chris Stapleton is a household name and would kill it, and would culminate his performance with “Tennessee Whiskey” with everyone in America singing along. Luke Combs would definitely be able to handle the moment. Carrie Underwood is a powerhouse who’s proven to rise to big moments. You could have utilized Post Malone and done collaborations this year, but that’s probably not viable into the future. George Strait is still setting attendance records.
February 10, 2025 @ 2:32 pm
Chris Stapleton is the right answer. Name recognition. Big songs that can fill the space. Has enough experience collaborating with a variety of artists that could come out to give some support.
Anyone who has seen Stapleton live knows that the songs kill, but he lacks a little personality on stage. But let the music do the talking for once at the halftime show.
February 10, 2025 @ 4:01 pm
His audition was the National Anthem a couple of year ago. Now it’s time to give him the job.
February 11, 2025 @ 7:18 am
I would love, love, love to see a Tom Petty type set from him. Just pick four songs to do them. Start with Midnight Train to Memphis. That would be my dream. But you’re right. He has enough collaboration experience and is very versatile such that he could make a more accessible to the masses set work. You’re right that he’s a little low energy on stage, particular between songs. But I think his soul shines through in the actual performance.
February 10, 2025 @ 7:03 pm
Unfortunately, as long as the NFL is partnering with Jay-Z for the Super Bowl halftime shows, it’ll likely be all-rap, all-the-time; and country (and rock, for that matter) will probably be relegated to the pre-game stuff, if even that..
Both of the next two Super Bowls will be held out here in California: next year’s (60) at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara (home of the 49ers), and 2027 (61) at Sofi Stadium in Inglewood (home of the Rams and Chargers); but I wouldn’t count on anything changing between now and then on the halftime front, I’m afraid.
February 11, 2025 @ 6:41 am
Zach Bryan was at the Super Bowl to cheer on his Eagles. He got his picture taken with President Trump at the game (along with Shane Gillis) and conservative media personality Arynne Wexler posted it on X with the non joking comment “Trump took time at the Super Bowl to meet with special needs kids, The media will never show you this.”
By all accounts, and the reactions in the comments, it wasn’t a joke. Bryan and Gillis both look a little extra chromosomy in the picture (maybe wasted).
February 11, 2025 @ 8:47 am
That comment on Trump meeting Gillis and Zach Bryan was 100% a joke.
February 10, 2025 @ 12:31 pm
Get RWH to do the halftime show.
February 10, 2025 @ 12:33 pm
I would like to see a Hank Jr. halftime performance instead of any of the pop country posers.
February 10, 2025 @ 9:47 pm
100% agree, he was the first person I thought of when I started thinking about how I’ve never seen a real Country singer play Halftime. I thought of AJ and Strait, but don’t know if they would be as good a fit for that rowdy cross genre crowd. There is no singer, in any genre, more fitting considering Monday Night Football and whoever didn’t like him he wouldn’t give a damn. Alas, I think how his relationship with MNF ended 86’d that from ever happening. Though, considering the NFL’s relationship with Shawn Carter and what he’s been accused of, maybe. Jr’s reputation is like Mr Roger’s compared to Mr Knowles and imo the NFL owes Bocephus big time
February 10, 2025 @ 12:40 pm
From The Who in 2010 to this shit.
February 10, 2025 @ 8:17 pm
That probably wasn’t live either.
February 11, 2025 @ 6:48 am
I’m a long time Who fan. For example, I think Tommy/Who’s Next/Quadrophenia is a three album run for the ages (four if you want to include Live at Leeds, which came out after Tommy). Got to see them in ’79 and ’82. And I’m here to tell you that their Super Bowl appearance wasn’t very good. For starters, Roger tried to be the Roger of old and just couldn’t (not surprisingly). To use a phrase that I’ve heard Pete Townshend use to describe some later Who tours, it was “The Who on Ice.”
I think The Rolling Stones did a better set a few years earlier. And Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers is my all-time personal favorite. They just picked four songs and did them properly. No medley shit.
February 10, 2025 @ 1:02 pm
I guess somehow we’re supposed to believe that was a talented performance,
I won’t tell you what I call it.
February 10, 2025 @ 2:00 pm
Apparently, it was loaded with symbolism. I did notice a lack of diversity.
February 11, 2025 @ 9:05 pm
That was a good start..
February 12, 2025 @ 2:34 pm
Pointing out hypocrisy is a duty of every citizen.
February 12, 2025 @ 3:15 pm
If you actually wrote that without laughing I applaud you. You have been busy these last few weeks.
With regards to the performance, pointing out the lack of diversity is like pointing out the lack of diversity at a klan rally.
Kind of the idea…
February 10, 2025 @ 1:05 pm
“But how long has it been since country music was featured during the the Super Bowl halftime? It’s now officially been 31 years.”
Wrong, Beyonce was there in 2013 and 2016
February 10, 2025 @ 1:59 pm
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
February 10, 2025 @ 1:24 pm
The NFL doesn’t care about Middle America, hence Jay Z being in charge of the halftime “entertainment”. I didn’t turn the TV on and I don’t regret it.
February 10, 2025 @ 3:28 pm
I wouldn’t say the “NFL doesn’t care about Middle America”. The NFL is clearly aiming for viral moments with the halftime show these days. The days of having Bruce Springsteen and the E-Street band run through their hits are over.
They hired Jay Z’s company to task them for that very impact and this year it worked. More folks are talking about Kendrick’s performance than they are talking about the actual game or ads. For the NFL that is a win.
If Luke Combs could drive a “viral moment”, they would absolutely consider him. But the harsh reality is the only even Country-lite artists who COULD pull off a viral moment are hacks (Wallen, Jelly Roll, etc.) and most of the people watching the halftime show are not interested in listening to an actual music performance of quality. They want something to banter about with folks on social media or in their living room.
February 10, 2025 @ 4:03 pm
Luke Combs had “the moment” of the 2024 Grammy Awards that everyone was talking about when he sang “Fast Car” with Tracy Chapman, and took the song to the top of the charts. So it’s definitely possible.
February 13, 2025 @ 7:53 pm
While I would agree that the NFL wants viral moments, I still contend that they don’t care about Middle America. At best, they take support from Middle America for granted, thinking that they’ll always be there or will come back if they step away. At worst, they think Middle America is full of dolts and not worth any efforts at outreach.
Case in point is their flag football commercial portraying young men as dimwitted, misogynistic meat puppets while peppering the ad with Girl Power (TM) tropes. Garbage ad, tone deaf, out of touch, and saturated with misandry.
I’ve checked out commentary from all around about the actual performance and watched a slew of clips from it. I’ve come around to the POV that this performance was actually an artful. thought provoking piece of work, completely opposite of what I would expect from an event like this would be. Kendrick Lamar is a legit artist in genre that’s largely a bunch of reprobates producing degenerate product. This could be recognized as a seminal moment in television history.
February 10, 2025 @ 1:33 pm
Maybe the gulf between artists who are popular and who are good is just much wider in country music. Stapleton is the only popular artist I’d be interested in seeing. Sturgil Simpson probably doesn’t have the Q rating. I have a pretty strong feeling we’ll get some combo of Post Malone, Jelly Roll, and Luke Combs next year though. With perhaps a legacy artist like Faith Hill or Shania Twain. Maybe Carrie Underwood, but that would be pretty lame. Morgan wallen will never get invited, and shouldn’t. He’s the obvious choice, but too big of an asshole.
February 10, 2025 @ 1:52 pm
How one can even call themselves an artist with any integrity and lip-sync is beyond me.
Sad thing is if country were represented, I’m afraid it would be the same. Didn’t the untouchable Dolly do it at the 2023 Cowboys Thanksgiving half-time show? And of course we all know Garth Pukes does it. Shania as well (boy she is a total embarrassment). But they are not eh only ones.
There is little artistic integrity in music nowadays, and that covers all genres. I’m not a big roots fan, and certainly not Americana, but it is that sub-genre that probably has the most musical integrity.
Why was Stapleton’s anthem so well-received? It was real, authentic, and oozing with artistic integrity. I’m not as big a fan as some, but I do recognize something when it’s good.
February 11, 2025 @ 1:12 pm
Even in the 90’s when they had country at the superbowl, they lip-synced. It’s because of the have no way to do a proper audio set-up and soundcheck in zero time. I think Bruce Springsteen was the last one to not lip-sync vocals – however the band audio was not live.
February 10, 2025 @ 1:56 pm
Stapleton would be a fit.
February 10, 2025 @ 1:59 pm
who cares. these things aren’t cool anymore anyways. I haven’t watched a Grammys in over 10 years, and haven’t laid eyes on a SB since 2016.
February 10, 2025 @ 2:04 pm
Super Bowl 59, broadcast on February 11, 2025, garnered impressive viewership numbers globally. The game reached an estimated *103.4 million viewers* worldwide. This number includes those watching the event through traditional broadcast television, streaming platforms, and other online outlets.
February 10, 2025 @ 3:23 pm
The Grammys? Sure
But trying to pretend the “Superbowl is cool anymore” is borderline edgelord-wannabe talk.
I would make an argument that in 2025, no singular event pulls more Americans to a shared experience than the Superbowl does. No TV show, political, or religious event even comes close to drawing in the number of eyeballs and attention spans of Americans than the Superbowl.
To pretend that artists wouldn’t kill for that kind of attention is just ridiculous. And that is all in spite of the fact this years game sucked (unless you were an Eagles fan) and the Chiefs have quickly become boring and unlikable to vast swaths of the nation.
February 10, 2025 @ 4:07 pm
15.4 million viewers for the Grammys is not nothing either, and that was without any real landmark performers.
I think as independent fans, we tend to act like things that don’t represent us are irrelevant. But there’s a lot of cope in that. These are big events that can make a big impact on culture, and we should engage with them as opposed to acting like if we ignore them, they will just go away. At least that’s my opinion.
February 10, 2025 @ 2:23 pm
“a hip-hop artist in a long string of them ever since Jay-Z’s Roc Nation partnered with the NFL to produce the halftime show in 2019.”
I get what your article is going for and agree with the overall sentiment, although I wouldn’t call most of the performers in this Roc Nation era of halftime shows hip-hop artists. Really only imo this performance and the ensemble that included Kendrick Lamar before would really be labeled hip-hop, the rest mostly pop and R&B. And Anderson Paak actually performed on drums during that hip hop ensemble performance.
February 10, 2025 @ 2:27 pm
Ok…two things….
1) Kendrick was, buy all accounts, NOT lip syncing for most of the performance. His song with SZA certainly was, but I think it’s inaccurate to characterize the performance as mostly lip synced, when if you watched closely– AND are familiar with the songs– it was clear that Kendrick was rapping live.
2) I didn’t find the lyrics to be hard to understand at all. But then again, I’m a Kendrick fan.I watched the show with my parents, who are both in their 70’s. The fact that they seemed to get most of the lyrics was a shock to me. So it seems like you’re painting with a broad brush here.
February 10, 2025 @ 4:15 pm
For the record, I changed the wording from “most” to that “it at least partially” included lip syncing, which it clearly did. I don’t know the percentages, but there were multiple times when it was obvious to me, this SZA song being the most obvious. I will take your word that he did sing live at other times.
As I said in another comment, I don’t want this article to come across as hating on Kendrick Lamar. Hip-hop is not my expertise, and it drives me crazy when hip-hop/pop critics veer into country and act like they know what’s going on. I’m not terribly familiar with his music, but I respect the respect his fellow artists and people who know hip-hop show to him. After the performance I went back and pulled up some of the lyrics just so I could understand where he was coming from. But I don’t think it’s a unfair assessment to say that most of what happened went well over he average viewer’s head. If you are familiar with his music, obvious that’s less likely to be the case.
February 13, 2025 @ 7:58 pm
It definitely went over most viewers heads. There was a lot of substance in that performance. It made a greater impression on me than I would have thought possible.
February 10, 2025 @ 4:30 pm
I have a hard time believing your parents in their 70’s understood the lyrics. I was at a Super Bowl gathering and everyone said they couldn’t understand the lyrics. (I also can’t understand Nirvana lyrics so calm your asses down some of you)
February 10, 2025 @ 8:15 pm
the audio for the super bowl halftime show is always so shit (unless you have like dolby surround sound or something apparently), it’s not a surprise you didn’t hear it at a super bowl party. It’s easier to hear in the youtube video they uploaded after the fact.
February 10, 2025 @ 8:59 pm
Volume-wise I could here it just fine it was just very difficult to pick out individual words. I also do not listen to modern rap but I can differentiate Kendrick’s style of rap vs the mumble rap and trap rap (or whatever it’s called) that uses that same repetitive pattern (da-da,da-da,da….over and over).
February 11, 2025 @ 8:28 pm
Meh… I’m a Leonard Cohen fan but it does take me 4 or 5 listens to fully grasp the meaning behind some of his lyrics too. As a non-American, even a lot of idioms and metaphors in country music go over my head.
But I dont see it as a blight on the artist. Its interesting that you and some people on here do. Personally, I see, not understanding the lyrics as, more often than not, a reflection on me rather than the artist. I’ve always admired Kendricks authenticity at least on the few songs I’ve heard from him . He raps, the way he speaks. There’s no pandering or pretension.
February 10, 2025 @ 2:49 pm
Just seeing all these maga heads explode like hit tomatoes is all the justification I need to know Kendrick hit em right between the pads!
Zach Top for SB ‘26
February 10, 2025 @ 4:18 pm
Funny, when I open social media I see way more democrats complaining about Elon auditing the Fed.
February 11, 2025 @ 4:26 pm
It shows how depraved they are when they are more upset about corruption being exposed than the corruption itself.
February 11, 2025 @ 8:52 pm
Could you believe they spent 50 million dollars on rubbers in Gaza!??
February 11, 2025 @ 9:10 pm
No.
February 12, 2025 @ 2:35 pm
I’m not surprised at all by reckless government spending even if the condom amount is overblown.
Taxation is theft. And the fact the public has been gaslighted into believing we should hand over 40% of our income is egregious.
February 12, 2025 @ 4:23 pm
I applaud your concern for government over site as well. When a single person spent a quarter billion dollars on one persons run for president i am sure they have your best interests in mind. Everyone should be worried that a non elected billionaire is running the country dismantling services people rely on.
Who provides 15 minutes of halftime entertainment pales in comparison.
February 10, 2025 @ 3:06 pm
1. I would rather hear 40 babies crying and a police siren at full blast than R&B or rap turned down low
2. I imagine it would be extremely difficult to make a halftime show with a bunch of choreographed dancers and lighting changes and a singer walking all over a field. I imagine from an entertainment standpoint that it would be far more difficult to blow the doors off of America with real music as an act.
February 10, 2025 @ 3:17 pm
Great article insight as always! I just wanted to add that Lainey Wilson did get to sing during the televised portion of the Grammys. She sang the Ray Charles track “Let The Good Times Roll” during a tribute to Quincy Jones. I thought she did a great job.
As for a country superbowl halftime show, I think that a meshup of legends and current artists would be awesome to watch.
February 10, 2025 @ 3:52 pm
That brings to mind when they had Aerosmith with Britney Spears and NSYNC. I’m not a big Britney or NSYNC fan, but it was an entertaining show, a combo of classic and then-current artists.
February 10, 2025 @ 4:16 pm
Hey KC,
Thanks for the reminder of the Lainey Wilson appearance. But again, there really wasn’t a dedicated country or rock appearance on the program. Also interesting to note that ratings were down 9% this year.
February 10, 2025 @ 4:23 pm
We’ll see if this gets posted. Trig might consider it “political”, though he’s fine with nonsense complaining about drag queens or commenters saying “the thugs are coming” when a black country singer is accused of rape, but, anyways…
I used to take Trig at his word that he was a reasonable, neutral voice (well, THE voice) on this website, but in the past year (ever since the Jason Aldean nonsense…I’ll just keep it short.
Trig, you’re full of it. In this specific instance you’re catering (or just revealing yourself) re culturally/politically conservative people freaking out about a “controversial” rapper performing at the Super Bowl. Anything having to do with country music is tangential.
February 10, 2025 @ 5:24 pm
First, people’s comments aren’t getting deleted here unless they cross very obvious lines, or I’ve specifically requested people move on from a thread full of back and forth name calling. So I’m not sure what you’re insinuating here. You can go up and down these comments sections and see all kinds of varying viewpoints represented.
Second, this is the mother of all stretches. I’ve been advocating for a country music Super Bowl performer for years now, and the fact that there were zero original country (or rock) performances on the Grammy Awards is probably something that is going to be remarked upon by a country music website that advocates for country music. I honestly haven’t even seen any conservative freakout about the performance, though I’ll take your word it’s out there. Mostly what I’ve seen re The Super Bowl is people pointing out how Taylor Swift was booed, and Trump was cheered.
This is a country music website that advocates for country music advocating for country music.
February 11, 2025 @ 6:40 pm
Kendrick Lamar didn’t do anything controversial. The only legit controversy is Serena Williams doing the ‘Crip Walk’ dance in that video when her sister was murdered by a crip gang member. (And she did the Crip Walk dance to shame her ex Drake, while she is currently married.)
Since this all-black Super Bowl performance is being celebrated as a Civil-Rights movement online I think this blindspot by Serena gives legitmacy to “thug” arguments.
February 10, 2025 @ 4:27 pm
Radio is a dead medium now so there will no longer be this mass overlap of familiarity across demographics for artists. Zach Bryan is very successful but many people have never heard of him and can’t name any of his songs – much like myself and other people with Kendrick Lamar. I have heard the name but I am hard pressed to name more than 5 rap songs from over the past 30 years.
I also think the days of non-lipsynced Super Bowl shows is over.
February 10, 2025 @ 4:51 pm
To me the biggest opprotunity lost was not having Half time entertainment be from New Orleans. It was nice to John Batiste sing the national anthem but he could have easily been center stage for the show. Or a multitude of performers from NO. A Mardi Gras themed halftime would have been great.
February 10, 2025 @ 6:02 pm
Check out the last sentence of the second paragraph. Whoever wrote this article needs to learn the difference between “to” and “too” before posting another article.
February 10, 2025 @ 6:14 pm
Hey Paul,
I appreciate you pointing out the typo. Obviously, I know the difference between “to” and “too.” Typos happen.
February 10, 2025 @ 6:23 pm
That is why they invented proofreading, but okay.
February 10, 2025 @ 7:57 pm
Obviously, I know what proofreading is as well. I left a single ‘o’ out of this article, and it has been corrected. 1,000 apologies.
February 10, 2025 @ 6:30 pm
I think that Lainey Wilson would be a great choice for a future Super Bowl. Megan Moroney too. Kenny Chesney obviously.
They did have Lauren Daigle, and she is kind of country.
February 10, 2025 @ 7:08 pm
Trigger and others have already listed who could hypothetically be CHOSEN to perform the Super Bowl halftime show. It boils down to Luke Combs, Chris Stapleton, or Carrie Underwood. I think there is a sweet spot to land these people while they’re still relevant and at the top of their performance game. Stapleton would’ve been perfect this year.
As far as who could HANDLE such a performance, Luke Bryan is one (even though he’s on the hate list on this website), Tim McGraw and, by far the most obvious, Morgan Wallen. Wallen would NEVER be chosen at this point in his career due to a reason outside of music but musically, he might be the best choice of all. He just had TWO smash hit albums and a song (Last Night) that even topped the Billboard Top 100. The guy is churning out one radio friendly hit after another and, anecdotally, is popular across genres with all types of people. Additionally, he sells out stadiums night after night.
The caveat I will say is that his vocal performance hasn’t been very good when I’ve seen him live. However, his show as a whole was pretty spectacular. He had lots of flames, spectacle, and “vibes and bangers” as the kids would say. Again, I’m aware he can’t be chosen but he’s an almost too obvious choice for an event like the Super Bowl.
February 10, 2025 @ 7:46 pm
I didnt watch the halftime, have zero interest in rap music. I dont see them ever again doing it with a true country artist. I know people are clamoring for stapleton but hes an outlier far as country goes. You can say what u want about wallen but he has lots of country songs in his library, they just arent what he usually brings to radio. I just dont care about that 15 minutes or so but best be careful what you ask for. You might get beyonce in cowboy boots and hat along with a mess of others. Who knows how long a article that would turn into.
February 10, 2025 @ 8:28 pm
For a sport that preaches about diversity and a musical genre that does the same, there is very little diversity taking place. Hypocrites please feel free to chime in. I’m sure you’d just love some 5ft asians and morbidly obese white guys on your favorite NBA team as well, right? Walk it if you’re going to talk it.
February 11, 2025 @ 4:29 pm
Diversity in America only cuts one way.
February 10, 2025 @ 9:45 pm
I would say the best chance is when the new football stadium is completed in 2027 in Nashville. I would expect them to get a super bowl within a few years of that stadium being completed. It’s gonna be hard to not have some type of country act with the game being in Nashville, TN.
February 10, 2025 @ 9:53 pm
Good point. If they don’t ham up the redneck motif in 2027 with hay bales, corn stalks, and some ex-coach commentator in a cartoonish 50-gallon foam cowboy hat, they never will.
February 10, 2025 @ 9:49 pm
What?
You’re not going to talk about the “N” word that was thrown around in the halftime performance?
Let’s go!
February 10, 2025 @ 10:26 pm
Careful what you wish for. Going to get a Florida Georgia line reunion on the 50 yard line almost immediately
February 10, 2025 @ 11:57 pm
The NFL is a heavily black league, when it comes to players, and when it comes to superficial things like style and music, the NFL zeitgeist goes in favor of what its player constituency likes. That means that the SB music is going to be hip-hop oriented (along with some legacy classic rock that its well-heeled older white partners and bankers and lawyers and clients and excutives favor). Hey, white NFL players probably listen to hip-hop, too.
That’s simply the way it is, so No, you’re not going to see 75-year-old Hank Jr. headlining a SB halftime show. They may give a younger white country star a big slot, but it will be one who’s comfortable with hip-hop and collaborates with hip-hop artists.
February 11, 2025 @ 3:30 am
Superbowl tends to lean towards high profile and high energy performers and there just aren’t a lot of country artists with that combination. Stapleton is high profile but is he high energy? I don’t know. Never seen him live but his most famous songs are all ballads.
I think what might work would be to have a country music tribute show as half time entertainment. You can bring a bunch of country artists together, Stapleton, Sierra, Carrie, Miranda, Morgan, Luke, Lainey, Brad etc to perform country classics similar to what Snoop Dogg and Dr Dre did a couple of years ago. They brought Eminem, Mary J Blige, Kendrick, 50 Cent to perform their famous hits. Crowd went nuts.
February 11, 2025 @ 7:15 am
Whereas the NFL has went completely HipHop, College Football and ESPN, who owns most of the rights (excluding Big Ten) and production for college football games, has really embarrassed country music of late. The GameDay theme song is done by Lainey Wilson, Cadillac Three, and Darius Ruckers (previously Big & Rich for years). Charles Wesley Godwin has filmed ESPN in-studio hits during Back Yard Brawl week and his music is an intro/outro game day staple (not just WVU games).
“Take Me Home, Country Roads” is West Virginia’s Theme Song, “Dixie Land Delight” is an Alabama in-game sing-a-long, and Tennessee’s theme song is “Rocky Top,” but has recently started using “Delta Dawn” a second theme song in stadium and all in its production videos.
Jelly Rolls “Get it” (country adjacent) was ESPN’s 2024 college football anthem and quick search brought back the following country songs used in ESPN college football production hits last season:
The Boys of Fall: A song by Kenny Chesney
Country Nation: A song by Brad Paisley
All-American Girl: A song by Carrie Underwood
Beer Never Broke My Heart: A song by Luke Combs (another ESPN favorite)
Drinking Town With A Football Problem: A song by Billy Currington
Lights Of My Hometown: A song by Brantley Gilbert
Home Game: A song by Cole Swindell
Nate Smith (shitty country music) was the Orange Bowl Halftime show in January. Last season Jon Pardi and Jake Owen performed (with other non country artists) at the college football championship game’s free concerts in Houston.
While writing this, I realized a lot of this has to do with the SEC’s regional affiliation with country music. But ESPN’s recent interests in CWG, Jason Isbell, Luke Combs, and Jelly Roll is organic and maybe counterintuitive to the rise in HipHop in the NFL.
February 11, 2025 @ 9:41 am
Where all my N word haters at?
Huh?
How many times was the N word thrown around at the halftime freak “show?”
February 11, 2025 @ 10:59 am
What is actually wrong with you? Did you actually hear the word said or you disappointed it wasn’t said?
February 11, 2025 @ 1:33 pm
Precious?
Did he “sing” Not Like Us?
Let’s get it!
February 11, 2025 @ 1:45 pm
Di,
Once again you’re embarrassing yourself. It’s been widely reported that Kendrick Lamar censored the N-word and the word “Pedophile” out of “No Like Us.”
And even if he didn’t, the idea that you’re going to “get” Kendrick Lamar for using the N-word is about as dumb as thinking you’re going to stop a Canadian cold front with a hand fan.
February 11, 2025 @ 2:42 pm
Not embarrassing myself.
How many times does the word n- appear in Not Like Us?
Not Like Us, is pure garbage.
How many times does the word n- appear in Not Like Us? This is one of your favorite subjects.
February 11, 2025 @ 3:25 pm
The n-word appeared zero times in the rendition of “Not Like Us” Kendrick Lamar performed at the Super Bowl.
I don’t run a hip-hop website, and I make it a point to not tell the hip-hop community how to conduct itself, any more than I want the hip-hop community to tell country how to conduct itself.
“This is one of your favorite subjects.”
No clue what you’re talking about.
February 11, 2025 @ 1:17 pm
I can’t recall hearing it and I heard the entire show.
If they did they would have had snipers with bean-bag rounds in the rafters ready to shoot any white folk who sang along and pronounced more than N
February 11, 2025 @ 1:26 pm
I did not hear the N-word either. In fact, some are criticizing Lamer for editing the N-word and the word “Pedophile” out of “Not Like Us,” saying he should have gone harder.
February 11, 2025 @ 4:49 pm
The best choice is Dolly. Dolly is universally loved by everyone, easy for her to have guests from Beyonce, Miley Cyrus, and whoever the hell else she wants to appease just about anyone. They are really screwing up if they don’t do a Dolly performance
February 11, 2025 @ 5:30 pm
Oh, cut it out. Dolly Parton will be 80 years old by the next Super Bowl and she has not done a concert tour since 2016. Genre aside–If you’re staging a concert in a stadium in front of 60,000 people, a good starting point would be to pick from artists who actually go out on the road and perform in front of large throngs of people.
February 12, 2025 @ 7:40 am
I saw a post from a guy that said he doesn’t remember black people complaining about the super bowl when they had country performers. So I asked him how old he was. He said he was in his 30s. I told him you don’t remember because the last time a country artist was featured at the super bowl you were probably still in your diapers. He replied that he still didn’t think they were on social media complaining. I said you’re right. That super bowl was in 1994. There was no social media because people were still connecting to AOL through their phone line. Smart phones didn’t exist. Facebook didn’t even startup until 2004, and Twitter two years later.
It’s crazy that there is now a whole generation that doesn’t know a world before the internet, and that it’s been before that time that country music was featured at the super bowl.
February 12, 2025 @ 7:47 am
Nah. I’m sorry I don’t get this perspective.
Real ‘Country’ music is introspective, not noisy and flashy. it’s thoughtful, not dazzling.
I cannot think of a real ‘country’ artist who wouldn’t go over at the super bowl like a bowl of soggy cabbage on date night.
It’s not the right crowd or atmosphere.
Pearls before swine and all that.
The super bowl halftime show is SUPPOSED to be loud and flashy.
I feel like this is one of those rare instances where even though the premise is technically right there’s no practical solution.
What real country artist who isnt a pretender from pop can go on that stage and dazzle an audience, who is also relevant in pop culture?
Childers or Sturgill couldn’t please a super bowl crowd. it would be a career ending move.
Maybe Yoakam could do it. maybe brad paisley could do it.
Those guys aren’t current enough to be a good fit.
Trigger, in order for me to make sense of this. please state some current, proper country acts who are legit and who could also dazzle a super bowl crowd (no soft numbers that would be ruined by the acoustics, obviously) and who are both current and also have name recognition to the average football fan
February 12, 2025 @ 2:09 pm
I disagree. I think a country superbowl would be best filled by a more than one artist. A combo of Stapleton, Jinks, Childers, Whitey, or something similar would definitely keep the audience entertained. Unfortunately a country superbowl would most likely consist of artists like Wallen, Beyoncé, and Malone. A mix of popular and independent would probably be the best we could hope for.
February 13, 2025 @ 1:38 am
I agree. .. I don’t think they’re intentionally locking out country. It’s just based who can pull the most viewers and keep a football audience entertained. There are a lot of high profile artists that have never performed either – Taylor Swift, Adele, Billie Eilish. It’s more about the style of the performer rather than the genre.
And it’s ok if country music never gets acknowledged with Superbowl. It’s not something to be offended by. They had irrelevant singers like Usher and J.Lo in recent years so who cares
February 12, 2025 @ 7:51 am
I forgot to mention, I thought Trumbone Shorty and Lauren Daigle were great. Not country, but a southern Cajun vibe. Definitely stole the show.
February 12, 2025 @ 8:34 am
Agree. I thought the best lineup for this Super Bowl was to open with Preservation Hall Jazz Band, then Galactic, Harry Connick Jr. and then have Trombone Shorty close and blow the roof off. Great blend of new and old from New Orleans. Any Marsalis would of been fine also. Would of been great.
February 12, 2025 @ 2:16 pm
Didn’t catch the other artists you mentioned. I skipped the pre game show, so I’m guessing they performed then.
February 12, 2025 @ 2:38 pm
They have played Louis Armstrong albums at halftime.
February 12, 2025 @ 4:14 pm
If Luke Combs had been the Super Bowl LIX halftime show,it would have been one of the most popular Super Bowl halftime shows ever,owing to Luke’s and Tracy Chapman’s class at the CMA Awards when they teamed up for their “Fast Cars” duet.(Tracy became the first black woman to write a Number One Country hit when Luke covered her “Fast Cars” original from 1988,two years before Luke’s birth).
February 13, 2025 @ 12:49 pm
Grammys? Why not save yourself some classifying energy and just put RAP in the SPOKEN WORD category? – Signed, Claiborne, a soul + Motown + jazz + rock + country fan for 60 years
bonus opinion: This 2025 halftime? and the Maroon 5 guy’s halftime? equally lame in their own way