Super Bowl fans packing Nashvilles Lower Broadway this Sunday will not all be watching the same halftime show, as a slate of prominent honky-tonks plans to cut away from the NFLs official broadcast in favor of a conservative alternative.
According to The Post Millennial, multiple major downtown venues have confirmed they will switch to Turning Point USAs All-American Halftime Show during their Super Bowl parties, offering patrons an alternative to the leagues increasingly politicized spectacle. The counterprogramming push reflects growing frustration among many football fans who see the NFL using its biggest stage to advance progressive cultural themes rather than focus on the game.
The effort traces back to October, when TPUSA announced it would stage its own halftime event after the NFL selected Puerto Rican rapper Bad Bunny to headline Super Bowl LX in Santa Clara, California, on February 8. The leagues official halftime lineup also includes Kid Rock, Brantley Gilbert, Lee Brice, and Gabby Barrett, but the choice of Bad Bunny immediately became the lightning rod.
Bad Bunny has drawn attention for his outspoken opposition to President Donald Trump and for previously stating he would not tour in the United States because of the administrations immigration policies. He plans on wearing a dress while performing in Spanish and promoting queer culture, a decision many traditional viewers see as yet another attempt to inject identity politics into what used to be a unifying national event.
TPUSA, the organization founded by the late Charlie Kirk, responded by announcing an alternate broadcast positioned as a cultural counterweight. The group describes the show as celebrating faith, family and freedom, and plans to air it across several television networks while streaming it live on both the TPUSA and Charlie Kirk Show YouTube channels.
Every Broadway bar owned by Steve Smith will carry the TPUSA broadcast, including Tootsies Orchid Lounge, Honky Tonk Central, Rippys, The Diner, and Kid Rocks Big Honky Tonk Rock & Roll Steakhouse. Smith confirmed the venues would not air Bad Bunnys halftime performance and had made plans in advance to ensure the alternate show would be on screen.
Redneck Riviera, the Broadway bar owned by country star John Rich, also plans to show the TPUSA halftime program. For many patrons on Lower Broadway, the decision offers a rare choice: a halftime show rooted in faith, family and freedom, or an NFL production increasingly defined by progressive cultural messaging rather than shared American traditions.
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