Statistically it was Kurt Warner's day. He threw for 377 yards, completed 31 of 43 attempts and connected for three touchdowns. But it was Warner's lone interception -- a 100-yard pick by James Harrison for a touchdown in the first half -- that kept the Arizona Cardinals from winning Super Bowl 43. And oh what a game it was. Warner and receiver Larry Fitzgerald rallied from a 20-7 deficit to take the lead 23-20 with just over two minutes left in the game. But the Pittsburgh Steelers would answer
Not the Super Bowl T-shirt and not organic.You know the green movement has become nothing more than a shallow marketing tool when the National Football League adopts it for the benefit of selling T-shirts. Yes, the NFL. The league that brought excess and bling to new levels. The league whose wanton devotion to consumerism has made its television commercials as big as the game itself. The league whose carbon-footprint from tailgaters, stadium waste and jet fuel can make the slums of Mumbai look a
You've seen the best, you've seen the rest, now it's time for the worst. Yesterday, I covered the very best advertisements that Super Bowl XLIII had to offer. (By the way, why in the world does the NFL insist on using Roman numerals? Every year, I have to dust off my knowledge of them, just so I can figure out what number Super Bowl we're on. It's a pain in the ass.) And any time you have bests, you have to have worsts, right?