This was the best Super Bowl in years

Super Bowl LIII wasn't boring. It was classic football.

Super Bowl LIII.
(Image credit: Illustrated | Jamie Squire/Getty Images, krishh/iStock)

When people talk about "the Super Bowl," they mean any number of related but emphatically not identical things. There is, first of all, the massive logistical undertaking of the event: the technocratic marvel of allowing hundreds of thousands of drunk people to come to a city to get even drunker and making sure they do not kill themselves or other people. Then there is the first-class feast of the capitalist religion — the consumerist equivalent of Candlemas — that closes out the "holidays." Did you know it costs 50 bazillion dollars to show this commercial? Look, Random Celebrity made a funny. Yawn.

Sunday in Atlanta seems to have been largely free of violence. I for one was saddened when the Bud Knight, that chivalrous persecutor of craft beer nerds, turned out to be a corn syrup-averse health nut after all. Maybe it was good that he got killed by a Game of Thrones dragon. Never mind Jim Nantz's weirdly insistent compliments: Hearing Tony Romo explain that Jared Goff will likely throw the football on third and eight or say, "This is what is known as the jet sweep," as if he were a marine biologist lecturing on the anatomy of the ocean sunfish, is not what I call broadcasting genius.

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Matthew Walther

Matthew Walther is a national correspondent at The Week. His work has also appeared in First Things, The Spectator of London, The Catholic Herald, National Review, and other publications. He is currently writing a biography of the Rev. Montague Summers. He is also a Robert Novak Journalism Fellow.