Just a couple of Super Bowl-related things to share before we all completely lose interest in it for another year:

David Roth had a post at The Awl on Sunday wherein he talks about getting to see the very rare video of the very first Super Bowl at the Paley Center for Media (formerly the Museum of Radio and Television). For years it was believed that there was no existing video of the game, which was simulcast on NBC and CBS, because both networks had policies of reusing the expensive reel-to-reel videotape that was standard in the 1960s. But apparently a copy of the CBS broadcast survived and is now in the hands of the museum. The first half of the Awl piece talks about how differently television handled football coverage back in the day, and how much smaller the Super Bowl was as an event (the L.A. Coliseum, where the game was held, was only 2/3 filled with spectators). He goes on to consider what an overinflated behemoth the game has become (which is basically the same thing EVERYBODY writes about the Super Bowl), but I was mainly interested in this first part.
Via MetaFilter comes this ESPN story about the very sad fate of William “The Refrigerator” Perry, one of the stars of Super Bowl XX. (WARNING: that link has a very loud commercial that autoplays, so mute your computer volume). It’s not an unfamiliar story at all: young player unable to handle sudden fame succumbs to alcohol abuse, his post-career life is a complete ruin. Still, it’s both unfortunate and unnecessary, since many people, including Mike Ditka, made a lot of effort to help him get over his problems. Super Bowl XX remains a Big Deal for Chicago Bears fans and New England Patriots fans alike, and The Fridge was absolutely one of the biggest things about that game, physically and emotionally.




