See Michael Hewitt, "Late-game heroics remind us Super Bowl not just about commercials, halftime show (those were good too)":
The biggest TV show of the year delivered on all fronts Sunday: laughs, tears, controversy, music, dance – and a heck of a football game.Keep reading.
Nothing in American culture is quite like the Super Bowl, an unofficial national holiday that about one-third of the country celebrates by watching four-plus hours of television together.
Super Bowl XLIX proved worthy of the attention, thanks mostly to the seesaw battle between the New England Patriots and the Seattle Seahawks, won by New England, 28-24, and a nearly flawless performance by NBC Sports.
So many years we spend Monday morning talking about the commercials or the halftime show, but much postgame chatter this year will be about New England rookie Malcolm Butler’s game-saving goal-line interception or Seahawks receiver Jermaine Kearse’s improbable catch seconds earlier. Both plays were perfectly captured by NBC’s cameras, allowing us to drop our jaws again and again with the replays.
The visual image that will stick the longest may well be NBC’s sideline reporter Michele Tafoya chasing after Butler to score a post-game interview, as the unlikely hero ran off, seemingly overwhelmed by the moment.
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