Television United States The game was televised live in the United States on
CBS, capping CBS's 50th season of NFL coverage (1956–93; 1998–present). This was the 17th Super Bowl telecast for CBS, the largest total among the "big four" US television networks. CBS had also broadcast the previous Super Bowl held in South Florida (
XLI).
Play-by-play announcer
Jim Nantz and
color commentator Phil Simms were in the broadcast booth, with
Steve Tasker and
Solomon Wilcots serving as
sideline reporters. The game was preceded by
The Super Bowl Today, a four-hour pregame show hosted by
James Brown and featuring analysts
Dan Marino,
Boomer Esiason,
Shannon Sharpe and
Bill Cowher along with several other commentators, which started at 2p.m. EST. A kickoff show for the game aired from 6p.m. EST to 6:28p.m. EST. A Spanish language broadcast was aired on the second audio program, with play-by-play announcer Armando Quintero and color analyst Benny Ricardo. With an average U.S. audience of 106.5 million viewers, this was the third
most-watched Super Bowl, trailing only the 111 million viewers for
Super Bowl XLV the following year and 111.3 million viewers for
Super Bowl XLVI. At the time, it was the most-watched program of any kind in American television history, beating the 27-year-long record previously held by the final episode of
M*A*S*H, "
Goodbye, Farewell and Amen", which coincidentally, also aired on CBS, and was watched by 105.97 million viewers. An estimated 153.4 million total viewers watched all or part of the game. The game drew a national
Nielsen rating of 45.0 with a 68 share, the highest for a Super Bowl since
Super Bowl XXX in 1996 (46.0/68). The telecast drew a 56.3 rating in New Orleans and a 54.2 rating in Indianapolis, first and fourth respectively among local markets.
Advertising Notable returnees and absences Perennial Super Bowl advertisers
Anheuser–Busch InBev and
CareerBuilder stated their commitment to advertise in Super Bowl XLIV, showing eight and two different spots during the game, respectively. A 30-second spot cost
US $2.8 million with several advertisers getting discounts, down from the previous year's $3 million. All advertising slots were sold out on February 1, 2010, six days before the game.
Pepsi-Cola had previously stated their commitment to advertise, but then said they would not be buying any commercial time, marking the first time in 23 years that Pepsi did not run an ad during the Super Bowl itself.
FedEx also stated that they would not buy ad time. Both Pepsi and FedEx are official NFL sponsors.
Coca-Cola and
Dr Pepper Snapple Group capitalized on Pepsi's absence by buying ads in the game; Dr Pepper's ad featured
KISS performing "
Calling Dr. Love", while one of Coca-Cola's three ads featured
Montgomery Burns (of
Fox's
The Simpsons) losing everything he owns. Also for the second straight year, one of the Big Three American automobile makers –
General Motors – did not have a commercial in the game.
Ford had one commercial for the Ford Edge featuring
Mike Rowe.
Chrysler's
Dodge brand did advertise this year for its
Dodge Charger, narrated by
Michael C. Hall.
What aired Frito-Lay's
Doritos brand, in turn owned by PepsiCo, had four consumer-created advertisements scheduled. The first three ads – running in the first quarter – featured a sly dog using an anti-bark collar to his advantage to steal a man's Doritos, a fast-handed boy defending his Doritos and his mother from a potential suitor, and a man faking his death for free Doritos. The fourth ad, featuring an angry gym rat who was overprotective for his Doritos being stolen, aired in the fourth quarter. Had three of the ads topped the
USA Today Super Bowl Ad Meter rankings, the commercial's creators would have won a total of US$5 million ($1 million for first, $600,000 for second and $400,000 for third, plus a $1 million bonus for each of the three finalists). The previous year, Joe and David Herbert's "Free Doritos" ad topped the survey and won $1 million. The
United States Census Bureau spent $2.5million on a 30-second spot, directed by noted independent filmmaker
Christopher Guest, for the
2010 United States census, which urged Americans to answer its questionnaires that will be sent out in the next few weeks.
McDonald's aired a commercial, updating a famous ad from the early 1990s, in which NBA superstars
LeBron James and
Dwight Howard (replacing
Michael Jordan and
Larry Bird) play an otherworldly game of
H-O-R-S-E, with a McDonald's lunch going to the winner – however, they soon look over and see that Bird has helped himself to it.
Mars Chocolate returned three years after its controversial
Snickers ad that was protested by gay groups with two men kissing one another that was pulled one day following the game (see
Super Bowl XLI: Commercials). The commercial – winner of the annual Ad Meter survey – featured veteran actors
Betty White and
Abe Vigoda playing full-contact
backyard football. The rest of the Top Five: :2. The aforementioned Doritos's amateur ad featuring a dog strapped to an anti-bark collar getting revenge on a teasing man. :3. A Bud Light ad with a house completely made of beer cans of the sponsor's product. :4. A Budweiser ad featuring the relationship between a
Clydesdale and a
Longhorn steer. :5. Coca-Cola's man walking through an African
savanna in the middle of the night. The YouTube Top Five of their "2010 Ad Blitz" were: :# Another Doritos ad that showed a kid slapping his mom's suitor. :#
E-Trade's baby with his girlfriend. :# The Doritos dog collar ad. :# The Snickers Betty White/Abe Vigoda ad. :# The Doritos commercial with the gym rat.
ADBOWL results reflected the following ranking: • Snickers: You're Not You – Betty White & Abe Vigoda • Doritos: House Rules •
Volkswagen: "Punch Dub" Game • Google: Parisian Love • Doritos: Underdog Internet domain registrar
GoDaddy, which created a racy ad the year after the
Super Bowl XXXVIII halftime show controversy, bought two ads in the Super Bowl for the sixth consecutive year. Advertising Age reported that
Paramount Pictures bought a Super Bowl spot for the upcoming films
Iron Man 2 and
The Last Airbender. A trailer for the
HBO miniseries The Pacific was also aired. Other advertisers for 2010 included
Homeaway Inc., paying tribute to ''
National Lampoon's Vacation'' with their stars
Chevy Chase and
Beverly D'Angelo, and
Diamond Foods, who returned to promote both its
Emerald Nuts brand and
Pop Secret popcorn, which they bought from
General Mills two years before.
Boost Mobile aired a special ad, celebrating the 25th Anniversary of
The Super Bowl Shuffle, featuring many of the 1985 Chicago Bears to advertise their US$50 per month service. Also, in a CBS-produced promo for the
Late Show with David Letterman, the
eponymous host and his longtime talk show rival,
Jay Leno, appeared together with
Oprah Winfrey.
Controversies Three advertisers in particular raised eyebrows with their choice to advertise during the Super Bowl. One new advertiser,
Focus on the Family, aired a commercial featuring 2007
Heisman Trophy winner
Tim Tebow and his mother that elicited criticism from some women's groups who demanded CBS cancel the ad because they claimed it would be divisive, under the impression that it would mention Tebow's mother was advised, for health issues, to
abort her son Tim, but she chose to give birth to him. In the first quarter, CBS aired the advertisement, which had not been pre-released to the public. Per a statement released earlier, the ad did not mention the topic of abortion explicitly. One proposed sponsor,
ManCrunch, a gay dating site that bills itself as a place "where many many many men come out to play", had expressed interest in purchasing a 30-second advertisement. The ManCrunch advertisement would have depicted a male
Green Bay Packers fan and a male
Minnesota Vikings fan reaching into the same bowl of potato chips at the same time and, after a brief pause, begin to passionately kiss. ManCrunch's ad, which has since been released to the public, was initially put on a waiting list before the network outright rejected it due to it violating CBS's broadcast standards. ManCrunch immediately accused CBS of discrimination. Some observers suspect that their advertisement was an attempt at
ambush marketing and free publicity. Another ad that was rejected by CBS for failure to meet standards was for the texting service
kgb, which focuses on two men with CGI-enhanced images bent over with their heads in their posteriors, while an actor,
Sean Gunn, portraying an agent stated that "They had their head up their [backsides]". kgb instead aired an ad with two people who had to find the Japanese word for "I surrender" before being run over by a
sumo wrestler. Another ad for Bud Light which was rejected showed workers stripping down for a charity clothes drive in exchange for free beer. All of the rejected ads were shown on YouTube. Among other rejected or modified ads were one for
Electronic Arts' ''
Dante's Inferno'', which had to be edited for content (the closing phrase, originally intended to read "go to Hell", was replaced with "Hell awaits"), and GoDaddy's originally planned advertisement. Career Builder's ad, showing people dressed too casually for "Casual Friday" and a
Dockers ad to promote a free pair of their pants with men in shirts but sans trousers aired back-to-back early in the second quarter. An
E*TRADE advertisement, continuing their theme of talking babies on a Web cam, featured a boyfriend-stealing, "milkaholic" baby girl named "Lindsay." Actress
Lindsay Lohan, who has a history of alcoholism and was noted for having tried in the early 2000s to date popular young men who were already dating other women, attempted to sue E*TRADE over the advertisement, seeking US$100 million in damages, under the impression that the advertisement defamed her via
subliminal messaging and violated her
personality rights. E*TRADE denied the allegations and stated the name "Lindsay" came from a member of the accounting staff. Lohan and E*TRADE settled the lawsuit in September 2010; the terms were confidential.
International Viewers worldwide were able to watch on the following channels: • North America: :*'''''':
CTV (English) and
RDS (French) (subject to
simsub due to
CRTC mandates all cable/satellite providers to replace the American feed.) :*'''''':
Televisa,
TV Azteca (broadcasting in HD). :*'''''':
Tropical Vision Limited,
Great Belize Television. :*'''''':
ESPN,
Fox Sports Latin America. :*'''''':
ESPN,
Fox Sports Latin America. :*'''''':
ESPN,
Fox Sports Latin America. • Oceania :*'''''':
Fox Sports 3,
ESPN,
Channel Ten and
One HD :*'''''':
Sky Sport 2 and
ESPN • Europe: :*'''''':
Puls 4 started at 23:30 (
CET) :*'''''':
Prime Sport :*'''''':
TV3+/TV3+ HD starting at 22:00 (
CET) :*'''''':
ESPN America. :*'''''':
Nelonen Sport Pro and on
Viasat Sport/Viasat Sport HD started at 00:00 (
CET) :*'''''':
W9 :*'''''':
ARD Das Erste started at 23:35 (
CET) :*
:
Nova Sports started 01:30 (
EET) :*'''''':
Sport 1 :*'
and ':
BBC One and on
Sky Sports 1 and HD 1 at 10:55 pm and 11 pm (
GMT) :*'''''':
Rai Sport Più started at 22:00 (
CET),
Rai Due started at 00:15 (
CET), broadcast also in HD in selected areas. :*'''''':
NRK1 started at 23:15 (
CET) and on
Viasat Sport/Viasat Sport HD :*'''''':
Polsat Sport/Polsat Sport HD started at 00:00 (
CET) :*'''''':
SportTV 2 and on
SportTV HD started at 23:00 (
WET) :*'''''':
Sport 1 started 01:00 (
EET) :*'''''':
NTV Plus :*'''''':
Šport TV 1 :*'''''':
Canal+ :*'''''':
TV6 No longer available on TV6. Super Bowl is broadcast on
TV10 and on
Viasat Sport/Viasat Sport HD started at 00:00 (
CET). :*'''''': Fox Sports [Turkey] Spormax HD started 01.00 (
EET) • South America: :*'''''':
ESPN :*'''''':
ESPN and
Esporte Interativo :*'
and ':
ESPN,
Fox Sports Latin America :*'''''':
ESPN :*'''''':
ESPN • Asia: :*'''''':
CCTV-5,
G-Sports,
Guangdong Sports,
Sina TV :*'''''':
ATV :*'''''':
NHK,
NTV Radio On radio,
Westwood One had the national English-language broadcast rights to the game in the United States and Canada.
Marv Albert (play-by-play) and
Boomer Esiason (color commentator) called the game for the network; it was the last broadcast Albert would do for Westwood One, due to his desire to focus on his basketball coverage duties. The teams'
flagship stations also carried the game with their local announcers:
WLHK-FM and
WFNI-AM in Indianapolis (with
Bob Lamey and
Will Wolford announcing) and
WWL-FM/
AM in New Orleans (with
Jim Henderson and
Hokie Gajan announcing). The Saints' radio broadcast on WWL-AM was available throughout much of the United States, since WWL is a Class A clear channel station.
Univision Radio aired a Spanish-language feed for Hispanophone American listeners (with Clemson Smith-Muñiz and David Crommett announcing).
Sirius XM Satellite Radio carried 14 game feeds in ten languages to
Sirius subscribers, as well as to
XM subscribers with the "Best of Sirius" package. In addition to the four US feeds mentioned above, Sirius carried the following international feeds: :*'''''':
BBC Radio 5 Live (English;
Arlo White announcing) :*'''''':
Canal+ Spain (Spanish) :*'''''':
NTV Plus (Russian) :*'''''':
W9 (French) :*'''''':
NHK (Japanese) :*'''''':
ARD (German) :*'''''':
RAI (Italian) :*'''''':
Sport1 (Hungarian) :*'''''':
Prime Sport (Dutch) :*'''''':
Viasat (Danish)
FieldPass, the subscription Internet radio service provided by the league at NFL.com, also carried most of these feeds. Due to contractual restrictions, only Sirius XM and FieldPass were permitted to carry the local team broadcasts along with WLHK, WFNI and WWL, with the teams' other network radio affiliates instead airing the Westwood One feed. ==Entertainment and other ceremonies==