No limits at Super Bowl media day, the
ultimate freak show
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[January 28, 2015]
By Steve Keating
PHOENIX (Reuters) - If the Super Bowl is
one of the greatest one-day sporting events then Media Day is the
ultimate football freak show, a zany mix of journalism, superheroes and
players in an anything-goes media mosh pit.
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The Seattle Seahawks and New England Patriots, who will meet in
Sunday's NFL championship, faced the media mob on Tuesday as
thousands of reporters circled the floor during a
question-and-answer free-for-all watched by thousands of fans in
attendance.
Very little is off limits at the annual Super Bowl Media Day.
Without a hint of shame, "Entertainment Tonight" reporters can ask
Patriots tight end Rob Gronkowski to sing a Katy Perry song or New
England coach Bill Belichick can get quizzed on what his favorite
Joe Pesci movie is - and actually get an answer.
Strangely, it's also a day where retired figure skaters Tara
Lipinski and Johnny Weir, now fashion critics and red carpet
interviewers, can work the room and not look out of place.
And if the scene is not surreal enough, it is a place where
award-winning journalists struggle to have their questions heard
above those from another accredited member of the media wearing a
barrel and cowboy hat or a guy in a superhero costume.
There are players interviewing players, and television
correspondents conducting intense interviews with mascots. Kids with
microphones jockey for position with glamorous Mexican television
presenters in towering high heels.
While Media Day has developed an irreverent tone and fun-filled vibe
it is also very serious business for the National Football League.
The event has grown from a one-off chance for reporters to fill
their notebooks into a fixture of Super Bowl week, the league
selling tickets to the chaotic spectacle for $28.50.
Some players, such as Patriots quarterback Tom Brady, who was taking
part in his sixth Media Day, embrace the experience by smiling
throughout the one-hour session and answering every question - no
matter how strange.
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For others, like media-shy Seattle running back Marshawn Lynch, it
is the worst kind of torture. A man of few words, Lynch had just
seven words for the hundreds of media gathered around his podium.
"I'm here so I won't get fined," Lynch said in response to every
question he faced.
Lynch spent five minutes repeating that phrase to 30 different
questions before shouting "time" and walking away from the
microphone, leaving others to explain the enigmatic running back.
"He is probably one of the best teammates I have ever been around,"
said Seahawks wide receiver Doug Baldwin. "He is a comedian.
"Obviously he doesn’t like talking to the media because that is just
not him.
"We all know him in the locker room as the true teddy bear that he
is and we love him for it because like I said he is one of the best
teammates we have been around."
(Editing by Frank Pingue)
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