I Will Sell This Headline As Ad Space: Commercials Ruining The Super Bowl
September is the greatest month of the entire year.
Summer is winding down, giving way to the brisk, refreshing autumn air. All the children are returning to school, the leaves are changing colors, and it's time to bust out the jersey that's been sitting in the closet since January and get ready for another season of NFL football.
Nothing could be better than that very first kickoff.
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Throughout the season, all 32 teams claw and battle in an effort to be one of the six teams in their conference to head on to the second round of the NFL season.
The season will bring surprising teams rising to the top, and early season favorites falling in a blaze of glory. Drama is sure to ensue somewhere—on and off the field—and there will be at least one game that will forever be remembered by any fortunate enough to see it.
Just when it couldn't get any better, here comes the playoffs.
12 teams who proved to be better than their opponents now facing off against one another—all to earn a shot at taking a part in that big dance known as the Super Bowl.
The Super Bowl has given us some of the NFL's most incredible moments.
Joe Namath's guarantee, David Tyree's one-handed helmet grab, Steve Young's six touchdown performance, and many many more.
But over the years, something peculiar has happened to this monumentous game.
In a game that will pit the league's—no, the world's—two best teams against one another...the main focus is coming between plays and at halftime.
The commercials and halftime show have taken precedence over the game itself.
The talk around the water cooler is no longer key matchups of each team and insane predictions of the score or individual performances.
Find articles about your favorite NFL team right here at Bleacher Report, where the fan is the writer!
Even articles about the Super Bowl apparently aren't safe from the ad-tastrophe.
The unfortunate part in all of this is that there is no way to reverse what has been done. Money is the root of the problem and therefore will not be going away anytime soon.
The Super Bowl has become so popular that companies are willing to spend three million dollars to pitch their product to millions of viewers across the country in what has become more of a 30-second comedy sketch rather than a commercial.
Between the commercials and the halftime show starring a washed-up rock legend (ever since the Timberlake/Jackson debacle), the Super Bowl has become less about football and more about the spectacle of the things outside of the game.
Come Monday, February 2nd, the casual fan may not know the score or the stats of the game, but they will know what songs Bruce Springsteen performed and their top 10 favorite commercials.
From September to January, the NFL is the center of many peoples' focus, love, and attention.
But in February, the NFL is nothing more than a large, moving billboard.
So grab a Coke, a Bud Light, order some Pizza Hut pizza, turn on your Sony TV that you bought from Best Buy, and try not to be too annoyed when the game interrupts your commercials.

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