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Super Bowl halftime show at Levi’s Stadium with fireworks and the performance displayed on the jumbotron for the television broadcast.

Watching the Super Bowl From the Wrong Seat

While watching yesterday’s Super Bowl halftime show with Bad Bunny commanding the stage and cameras sweeping and spinning with precision, I couldn’t help but think back to another Super Bowl entirely.

Ten years ago, I was at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara for Super Bowl 50. Same venue. Different version of me. I honestly don’t even remember what teams were playing at this point, which probably tells you everything you need to know about my relationship with football. What I do remember vividly is the halftime show.

Coldplay. Beyoncé. Bruno Mars. Fireworks. Pyro. The kind of spectacle that makes your chest vibrate even from outside the venue.

I was seated in a designated section of the stadium where we were instructed to hold up colored placards at very specific moments to create large-scale images for the broadcast. These card stunts are carefully coordinated elements of live broadcast production, designed primarily for the television audience rather than in-stadium spectators. Somewhere, millions of people watching at home saw a perfectly timed visual.

In the stadium, I was busy watching something else entirely.

The cameras.

Beyoncé on the field, the broadcast on the jumbotron – two different experiences happening at the same time.

Camera operators sprinting into position. Cranes gliding just above above the action. Entire crews moving in tight choreography of their own. It felt less like attending a concert and more like observing a film shoot unfold in real time.

At one point, I realized I had missed the exact moment I was supposed to lift my card. Somewhere in the giant image meant for television viewers, there was probably a small, very noticeable hole. That feels about right.

Halftime show card stunt instructions given to audience members at Super Bowl 50
Instructions for a perfectly timed moment I definitely missed.

Even though the performers were physically right there – Beyoncé and Bruno Mars larger than life – the show wasn’t really for us in the seats. Nearly every beat, angle, and cue was oriented toward a single, roaming camera on the field.

It was impressive. It was powerful. And oddly, it felt distant.

Watching this year’s halftime show from my couch, I felt more connected. I saw what the directors wanted me to see. I experienced the spectacle as it was designed to be experienced.

It made me realize how similar this is to film.

Movies can be massive, communal, larger-than-life experiences, but they’re designed for audiences who aren’t physically present. The intimacy comes not from proximity, but from intention. From framing. From choosing exactly where the audience is meant to look.

So which is more thrilling? Being a tiny spectator inside a massive event, or being the intended viewer of a carefully constructed moment?

I’m still not sure. But I do know this: sometimes the most meaningful seat in the house isn’t the one closest to the stage. It’s the one the story was built for.

What about you? Have you ever been at something incredible, only to realize it was meant for someone somewhere else?


Comments

4 responses to “Watching the Super Bowl From the Wrong Seat”

  1. Charles Fontana Avatar
    Charles Fontana

    The Super Bowl is a unique event, especially from a musical perspective. But in sports, we have the Champions League final in Europe. I was lucky enough to attend it at the stadium last year, when my team, Paris, defeated Inter Milan. The atmosphere created by the fans made everyone forget Linkin Park’s great show before the match.

    1. This reflection beautifully captures the paradox of scale versus intention in live production. Your experience at Super Bowl 50 illustrates how massive spectacles like halftime shows are engineered primarily for the broadcast lens rather than the in-person spectator. While physically present at Levi’s Stadium, you were positioned as part of the production apparatus — holding placards, following cues, contributing to an image crafted for millions at home. In that sense, you weren’t just an audience member; you were a production element.

  2. This reflection beautifully captures the paradox of scale versus intention in live production. Your experience at Super Bowl 50 illustrates how massive spectacles like halftime shows are engineered primarily for the broadcast lens rather than the in-person spectator. While physically present at Levi’s Stadium, you were positioned as part of the production apparatus — holding placards, following cues, contributing to an image crafted for millions at home. In that sense, you weren’t just an audience member; you were a production element.

  3. Lydia K Ball Avatar
    Lydia K Ball

    I mainly work in live television events. Being -at- these events can actually become very tedious. One trick I’ve learned is that for longer shoots, production will use a rotating live audience. Audience 1 comes in, watches a few takes or performances while they’re still fresh and excited, then once they start to dwindle, are ushered out. The crew used that time to set up for the next shot, then Audience 2 is brought in. This cycle continues for as long as needed to make sure that production is getting the energy they need from the audience!

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