The Super Bowl was born in 1967, three years too late to be called a Boomer.
The Super Bowl lawyers and marketing people go after anyone who uses the Super Bowl name without permission … in other words, without paying for that usage. My radio station and our clients cannot call a Super Bowl party a Super Bowl party; we have to call it the Big Game.
My opinion: that’s stupid. If some bar in Rockville, Maryland wants to have a Super Bowl party, the NFL isn’t going to lose any money and no customer will think it’s an officially-licensed NFL party. No one will care either, except the Super Bowl lawyers and marketing people.
I guess that means I could get a cease and desist order for calling this a Super Bowl post. Do you, as one of my dozen faithful readers, think this post is an official NFL post?
A few more things:
When the Colts were the BALTIMORE Colts they played in two of the first five Super Bowls and won one of them. The Colts left Baltimore the same week I moved there, so I didn’t experience the fanaticism first-hand, but many Baltimore people still consider the Colts their team.
Washington, my favorite team, has played in five Super Bowls and won three of those. The Saints, a very close second on my fave list, haven’t been there yet.
Chicago kept the Saints out of the Super Bowl this year, so I’m cheering for Indianapolis.
My wife and I often have my “birthday dinner” on Super Bowl Sunday because the restaurants are so empty. We were one of only two couples in the whole restaurant tonight – cool, ey?
A Little Something I Wrote
2 months ago
2 comments:
Your radio station can't call it a Super Bowl party? Oh, that's just silly. I would never, ever associate any of these things with the Super Bowl. (Wait, am I allowed to even type "Super Bowl" without their permission? See you in the clink!)
Smart dining plans. :)
-velvet
Extremely crappy of the NFL to do this kinda stuff.
I've driven past the old Colts practice field, I think it's in Cockyesville, MD?
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