Showing posts with label Carolina Panthers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carolina Panthers. Show all posts
Sunday
Quick Hits: Carolina Panthers at Tennessee Titans
CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- Saturday the Carolina Panthers square off against the Tennessee Titans in the second preseason game of 2016.
The two teams faced each other during the regular season last year, which resulted in a Carolina Panthers victory. You may not remember the game so well, but I would wager you remember the silly “Tennessee Mom” drama that permeated the internet for the week after, like an old sweat sock that was lost in the bottom of your gym bag. Strangely enough, the Tennessee mom did not complain about the Titans Cheerleaders and their provocative performance. (slideshow here)
While I don’t expect the same level of drama Saturday, you never know. Cam Newton may have a special hip thrust rehearsed just for her.
Cam Newton and the Carolina Panthers offense should see three or four series on the field Saturday. Ron Rivera stated earlier this week that he would like to see touchdowns out of that starting unit, not just field goals like in Baltimore a week ago.
Tight ends Greg Olsen and Ed Dickson will not play today. This gives a huge opportunity for several young players trying to make the roster. Keep an eye on Scott Simonson, in particular. He may be pushing for that second tight end position.
Expect a heavier work load for running backs Cameron Artis-Payne and Brandon Wegher this week. Both practiced with the first string offense this week which tells me that either, or perhaps both, will be put in the game early.
The Carolina Panthers second string offensive line had a very poor showing last week against Baltimore. As of now, the Panthers are still in the market for a backup offensive tackle. However, if this group performs poorly again this week, more jobs could be on the line. It would not shock me to see two new offensive lineman on the Carolina Panthers roster come September.
Rookie undrafted free agent Keyarris Garrett has shown big improvement since the first day of training camp. While I do not think he has a regular roster spot locked up, his improvement thus far does warrant consideration for the practice squad.
As a reminder, the score is not important Saturday. Don’t get caught up in preseason wins and losses. Instead, focus on individual performances. After all, that is all the Panthers coaches are looking at currently.
source: wcnc.com
Monday
Offbeat humor, upbeat messages dominate Super Bowl 50 ads
NEW YORK— From a strange creature called “Puppymonkeybaby” to a tear-inducing Audi ad, Super Bowl ads ran the gamut this year from offbeat humor to heartfelt messages.
On advertising’s biggest night, Chrysler celebrated Jeep with an ad filled featuring black-and-white portraits of veterans, kids and pop icons. In Audi’s spot, a depressed aging astronaut remembers his joy for life by driving an Audi sports car with his son. And in a quirky Doritos ad, a fetus in a sonogram appears to rocket out of the womb to chase a bag of chips the mother angrily tossed away.
The goal for advertisers: to stand out and win over the 114 million-plus people watching the big game on Super Bowl Sunday, much the way the Denver Broncos triumphed over the Carolina Panthers. With ads costing a record $5 million for 30 seconds this year, the stakes are high to stand out from the 40-plus advertisers and be remembered.
In general, advertisers played it safe with universally liked celebrities such as Anthony Hopkins (TurboTax) and Ryan Reynolds (Hyundai), cute animals and pro-America themes.
“It’s been a pretty safe night,” said David Berkowitz, chief marketing officer at advertising agency MRY. “There’s relatively little going over the top.”
Offbeat humor reigned with a creature called “Puppymonkeybaby” — pretty much exactly what it sounds like — in an ad for Mountain Dew’s Kickstart. The ad sought to show that three great things go together, since Kickstart combines Mountain Dew, juice and caffeine.
“It’s on my list of the weirdest ad of the night, but it’s very catchy and people will be talking about it,” said Kelly O’Keefe, a marketing professor at Virginia Commonwealth University.
Most ads managed to avoid the somber tone struck last year, when an ad for Nationwide about preventable household accidents bummed out many in the audience.
There were a couple of misfires. Two pharmaceutical ads highlighted unappealing digestive conditions. One promoted an anti-diarrhea medication Xifaxan with a small-intestines mascot taking a seat at the Super Bowl. Another sought to raise awareness about “opioid-induced constipation.”
“This just isn’t a topic that people want to hear about during a Super Bowl,” said Villanova University marketing professor Charles Taylor.
Offbeat humor
Mountain Dew’s ad might have been the weirdest ad of the night, but Doritos’ ad also seemed likely to divide viewers. The spot showed a couple during a sonogram. When the mother throws away a bag of Doritos, the fetus seems to zoom after it, to the consternation of all present.
“It caught you a little off guard, but it fit the brand,” said O’Keefe.
Some Super Bowl watchers agreed. Brian Kearney, from Morris County, New Jersey, was watching the game with about 15 people and said the ad was a hit with his friends.
“I thought it was hysterical, we all cracked up,” Kearney said.
Other ads with offbeat humor: Bud Light featured Amy Schumer and Seth Rogen traveling around America promoting “The Bud Light Party.” A Shock Top ad showed actor T.J. Miller trading insults with the brewery’s talking orange wedge mascot. And the outdoor goods-and-clothing company Marmot showed a man palling around with an actual marmot he appears to be falling for, all to illustrate falling in love with the outdoors.
Money Money Money
Eight years after the financial meltdown, financial companies are feeling more comfortable promoting their products and services. Six advertised in the big game, including including SunTrust Banks, PayPal, Quicken Loans, Intuit brand and Intuit’s TurboTax and Social Finance Inc.
Most promoted optimistic messages about money. TurboTax, for instance, enlisted Anthony Hopkins to get out the message that you can file your taxes for free with TurboTax. PayPal’s music-video style ad asked people to embrace “New Money.”
“We’re officially over the mourning of 2008 (financial crisis),” said Mediapost columnist Barbara Lippert.
Cinematic ads
Some advertisers created mini-movies. Toyota went long with a 90-second ad depicting bank robbers who use a Prius 4 to escape from police. LG enlisted Liam Neeson in a futuristic spot showing off LG’s new OLED 4K TV. Hyundai’s “The Chase” ad, echoed “The Revenant,” showing people escaping grizzly bears by using Hyundai’s remote start feature.
“Super Bowl advertisers are sticking with light themes,” said Tim Calkins, a marketing professor at Northwestern’s Kellogg School of Management. “Last year we had serious ads about fathers and mortality. This year the ads are funny and creative.” TVJ
source: business.inquirer.net
Saturday
Bruno Mars finally confirms Super Bowl performance
SAN FRANCISCO— Bruno Mars has finally officially confirmed he would perform at Sunday’s Super Bowl halftime show with Coldplay and BeyoncĂ©.
The pop singer posted a photo on Instagram on Friday of himself at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California, where Super Bowl 50 will take place.
Mars wrote, “It ain’t a party if Mr $how Up & $how out doesn’t show up,” along with the hashtag “confirmed.”
The Grammy-winning singer-songwriter-producer had a show-stopping performance at the 2014 Super Bowl in East Rutherford, New Jersey. His hits include “Locked Out of Heaven,” ”Just the Way You Are” and “Uptown Funk” with Mark Ronson.
The Denver Broncos will take on the Carolina Panthers at the Super Bowl.
source: entertainment.inquirer.net
Thursday
Halftime at the big game is among the top culture
NEW YORK—Warren Duncan has something in common with Madonna, Beyonce, Mick Jagger, Bruce Springsteen and Prince—and doesn’t hesitate to let his grandchildren know about it every year about this time.
All performed at the Super Bowl halftime show, although it wasn’t quite the spectacle in Duncan’s time that it is now. He was at snare drum for the Florida A&M University marching band at Super Bowl III in 1969, when the New York Jets upset the Baltimore Colts.
“I really hated to see it transition to what it is,” Duncan said. “I really wish it would be like the traditional band halftime show.”
Those days have gone the way of leather helmets. The halftime show has become one of the year’s top cultural moments, so anticipated that it is commonly seen by more people than the game itself. The British band Coldplay steps into the spotlight this weekend, with an expected cameo by Beyonce.
The Super Bowl show can easily be divided into two eras: Before Michael Jackson and after. His 1993 performance established halftime as something more than an afterthought. With the fireworks and extras, Jackson proved no gesture could be too big.
The NFL begins planning its halftime show months in advance, negotiating with chosen artists and mapping out how things will proceed, said Mark Quenzel, NFL senior vice president in charge of the halftime show. Following Janet Jackson’s breast-baring episode in 2004, the league has maintained strict control.
“In some ways, it is the worst 12 and a half minutes of my year,” said Quenzel, who watches from the sideline hoping for no wind, rain, electronic glitches or – shudder – wardrobe malfunctions.
By the time Katy Perry rode in on a mechanical lion last year, and soared away on a platform designed to look like a shooting star, she had rehearsed the show some 40 times. “Anyone who has ever done it has been scared,” she told Elle magazine later. “You stay off the Internet for five days afterward.”
Today, it’s almost impossible to conceive that the second Super Bowl featured Miami-area high school bands at halftime. Florida A&M’s band performed in 1971, after Duncan graduated, and backed Prince in 2007. The University of Michigan and Grambling State University bands performed twice.
Duncan can barely recall what his band played that day; a James Brown tribute sticks in his mind. He better remembers hanging with his friends on a Miami street at 3 a.m. when Jets quarterback Joe Namath rode by in a car filled with women, holding out his index finger in a promise of a victory he later delivered.
The lineup for the 1980 halftime show – a salute to the Big Band Era with the youthful singing group Up With People – practically screams at anyone under age 50 to find something else to do.
Up With People was such a regular part of Super Bowl halftime that Tim Lane participated in four of them: singing “Philadelphia Freedom” for the 1976 Bicentennial-themed show, in the chorus for the Big Band tribute, operating a spotlight for 1982’s salute to Motown and picking participants for the 1986 show.
The youth education organization still exists, and celebrated its own 50th anniversary last year. Lane is its vice president of alumni engagement.
“We love the fact that we did it as often as we did,” he said. “We don’t know if we ever will again.”
It finally dawned on the NFL in the 1990s that halftime was a massive missed opportunity.
For artists, it is a chance to perform before an audience whose size cannot be duplicated. “It has become kind of a bucket list item for even the biggest acts in the world,” Quenzel said.
Following Janet Jackson’s unanticipated exposure, the NFL ushered in a dinosaur era of big rock acts like The Who, Paul McCartney, Bruce Springsteen and Tom Petty whose best days were behind them. McQuenzel has sought to make the bookings more current. One of his proudest moments was hiring Bruno Mars in 2014 despite fears the singer wasn’t well known enough, but the show turned out well.
He encourages acts to invite special guests; Perry brought along Lenny Kravitz, Missy Elliott and some rhythmically-challenged dancers in shark costumes.
Artistic statements are fine, but Quenzel’s goal is strictly mercenary: to move from the end of the first half to the beginning of the second without anyone tuning out.
“We don’t micro-manage the artists,” he said. “We try not to. They understand our goals and we understand their goals. We respect what they do, and I think they respect the fact that we know our audience.”
He won’t talk about a wish list of future performers. It doesn’t take a long look at the charts to figure out two of the biggest music stars who haven’t stepped out on a halftime stage, though.
Adele? Taylor Swift? Are you listening?
source: sports.inquirer.net
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)