Los Angeles Super Bowl aims to bring back hope
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[February 10, 2021]
By Rory Carroll
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Following the
first Super Bowl of the COVID-19 era and with vaccine distribution
on the rise, preparations are underway to make next year's game in
Los Angeles a triumphant return to normal.
Sunday's championship game in Tampa and the week leading up to it
were unlike any before, with no wacky opening media night, no
highly-anticipated concert on the eve of the big game and just
25,000 mask-wearing fans in the stands.
Yet those involved in planning for next year's game are optimistic
that by kickoff on Feb. 6, the good times will be back and social
distancing will be a thing of the past.
"Today more than ever the Super Bowl stands for hope and
perseverance," Casey Wasserman, chairman of Los Angeles Super Bowl
Host Committee, said on Tuesday.
"We are proud and excited that Los Angeles will once again host the
nation's biggest sporting event, however it's the promise of
recovery and opportunity that Super Bowl LVI brings to our city's
people and industries that reigns supreme."
Jack Murphy, CEO of Iconography Entertainment, which has produced
pre-Super Bowl, Saturday-night concerts featuring A-list stars such
as Lady Gaga, Foo Fighters and Taylor Swift, did not travel to this
year's game for the first time in more than a decade.
Yet he said the break offered the opportunity for "rejuvenation",
adding that sponsors and artists are already in talks about how to
deliver an unforgettable experience for fans who are desperate for a
return to the fun-filled, pre-pandemic times.
"We've had a lot of excitement being generated around what we want
to do in LA," he told Reuters.
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A Vince Lombardi trophy
is seen outside SoFi Stadium. The stadium will host Super Bowl LVI
in 2022. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports
In the past AT&T, DirecTV, Pepsi and EA Sports have sponsored the
concerts and companies looking for exposure in LA are eager to get
involved early on.
"We don't know if the Super Bowl in Los Angeles will be an official
coming out party for the world, but the timing seems pretty sweet,"
said Rob Ichelson, chief marketing officer at Iconography.
"And from what we've heard from sponsors and a lot of people is that
they agree with that. It is a little bit of a wait-and-see, but
we're very, very optimistic so far."
Anthony Fauci, the leading U.S. infectious disease specialist, has
said he foresees America achieving enough collective COVID-19
immunity through vaccinations to regain "some semblance of
normality" by autumn 2021, despite early setbacks in the vaccine
rollout.
On Monday he said the best defence against emerging variants of the
coronavirus and the pandemic is getting as many people vaccinated as
quickly as possible.
More than 41 million vaccine doses have been administered to more
than 31 million Americans, according to U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention data posted Sunday.
"We're ready to go in LA," Murphy said. "There's a lot of good stuff
to come."
(Editing by Toby Davis)
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