NFL, Lions and Chiefs
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Did Patrick Mahomes boycott Bad Bunny in honor of Charlie Kirk? Viral NFL Super Bowl comment claim debunked
Patrick Mahomes, the football quarterback for the Kansas City Chiefs, is going viral on Facebook after a post claimed that Patrick Mahomes allegedly said that he would boycott the 2026 Super Bowl if Bad Bunny performed at the Halftime show.
Did the NFL announce the Super Bowl half time show will have a Charlie Kirk tribute including a performance by Brandon Lake? No, that's not true: A viral story making that claim was published by a foreign-run spam network
W e’re five weeks into the NFL season and so much has changed. Teams we thought were absolute locks to challenge for a Super Bowl have been wracked by injury and bad performance, while others nobody expected to be good have stepped up.
Every team now has at least one loss and the Chiefs are below .500. Is Kansas City in trouble? Are the Jaguars true contenders?
A new report claims the league’s halftime playbook misfired. The report alleges that Jay-Z never delivered a formal invitation for Taylor Swift to perform at the Super Bowl, despite weeks of hype. As per an insider cited in Rob Shuter’s Substack report dated,
The NFL's selection of Bad Bunny for the Super Bowl halftime show has drawn criticism from some politicians and public figures. Objections to the artist are often tied to his identity, his use of Spanish in music, and his criticism of U.S. policy.
As many of the NFL's favorites have wilted over the past month, the Detroit Lions have quietly built one of the best resumes, winning four straight and scoring 34 or more points in every win.
For years, the Pro Bowl was an actual game played in Hawaii. The league held the full-pads Pro Bowl at least twice in the Super Bowl host city. Eventually, the NFL scrapped the game, given that no player in his right mind would risk injury by playing hard in a meaningless exhibition.
Goodell addressed growing speculation after British officials pushed for London to host the league's biggest game
Referees do, however, receive bonuses for each game—reportedly ranging from $2,500 per contest to an astronomical number for the Super Bowl, which we'll get to. Only the NFL's highest-rated officials from the regular season are assigned to work playoff games.