Super
Bowl Opening Night open to all
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[January 31, 2017]
By Steve Keating
HOUSTON (Reuters) - It was Super Bowl
Opening Night on Monday when the National Football League opened its
borders to all saying; give us your weird, your strange and wackiest
questions.
Members of the New England Patriots and Atlanta Falcons, who will
clash on Sunday to decide the NFL championship, kicked off Super
Bowl week taking turns facing an eclectic media mob in a televised
prime time question-and-answer free-for-all where very little is out
of bounds.
While Houston busily put the finishing touches on its Super Bowl
preparations, Minute Maid Park, home of Major League Baseball's
Astros, was transformed into an NFL rave kicking off a week-long
football-fest.
There were glitzy introductions, thumping music and hundreds of
media members from Japan, Britain, Mexico, Austria, Australia and
other corners of the globe all happily mingling as fake news
purveyors brushed up against more serious minded journalists.
The NFL, which normally tightly controls access to players, has made
no noticeable effort to clamp down on the irreverent vibe and seems
content for one night to let non-traditional media have a piece of
the Super Bowl pie.
It is an evening where award winning reporters struggle to have
their questions heard above those from a reporter dressed as a
Prince accompanied by his cameraman with a bushy beard wearing a
princess dress.
Rio Olympic gymnastic gold medalist Simone Biles, turned
correspondent for Inside Edition, ended her interview doing back
flips asking Atlanta linemen if they could do the same, while
another interviewer from Mexico's Azteca TV attempted to coerce any
Falcon player she could corner into dancing the Dirty Bird.
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General view of the entrance to the NFL Experience in downtown
Houston prior to Super Bowl LI between the New England Patriots and
the Atlanta Falcons in Houston, Texas, U.S. on January 28, 2017.
Mandatory Credit: Troy Taormina-USA TODAY Sports
Some players such as Patriots quarterback Tom Brady, who is
participating in his seventh Super Bowl, embraced the experience
smiling through the entire one-hour session answering every question
- no matter how strange.
One moment Brady was asked to name his favorite actors (Matt Damon,
Ben Affleck, Mark Wahlberg) and the next asked to explain the
relationship between a quarterback and his receivers.
"This is a once in a lifetime opportunity I have had seven chances
at," said a weary Brady as he looked out at a wall of television
cameras and reporters.
"We got up at 5:30 AM for meetings, then a long flight and a long
night here.
"There's a lot going on and hopefully our focus is on the game."
(Editing by Larry Fine)
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