Janet Jackson and Justin Timberlake immediately after he tore off part of her clothing covering her breast at the end of the Super Bowl XXXVIII halftime show. The Super Bowl XXXVIII halftime show, which was broadcast live on February 1, 2004, from Houston, Texas, on the CBS television network, is notable for a moment in which Janet Jackson's right breast and nipple—adorned with a nipple Janet Jackson has now admitted that her breast baring at the Super Bowl was more than just a “wardrobe malfunction.” But even before Jackson apologized for the incident, there were hints that The half time shows at Super Bowls have grown more and more spectacular over the years, and Super Bowl XXXVIII topped them all. As Justin Timberlake sang "Rock Your Body" onstage with Janet 20 Years Ago Today: Janet Jackson & Justin Timberlake have a seemingly planned “Wardrobe Malfunction” during the Super Bowl halftime show that matches to the lyric “better have you naked by In 2004, a planned "costume reveal" went awry during the Super Bowl halftime show. Janet Jackson and Justin Timberlake's careers took different turns after the backlash to the event. Janet Jackson’s former stylist has insisted there was no “wardrobe malfunction” when her breast was exposed during the Super Bowl halftime show in 2004. Advertisement 2 Story continues below As we gear up for the Super Bowl this weekend, it’s the perfect time to revisit some of the more memorable halftime show performances from the past. Of course, there’s no halftime show more infamous than Janet Jackson’s 2004 set with Justin Timberlake — dubbed “Nipplegate” thanks to an unfortunate wardrobe malfunction that led to [] But that’s exactly how FCC chairman Michael Powell described the 2004 halftime show. Specifically the portion of the show that featured Janet Jackson, Justin Timberlake, and the wardrobe malfunction seen around the world. The show’s other acts (yes, there were other performers) Kid Rock, P. Diddy and Nelly, all escaped Powell’s ire. A singularly sensational event occurs during the halftime show of the Super Bowl on February 1, 2004. While performing a duet with Janet Jackson, Justin Timberlake briefly exposed one of her Janet Jackson and Justin Timberlake's 2004 Super Bowl "wardrobe malfunction" is the subject of a new documentary. Learn what really went down and what Jackson and Timberlake have said since. It was Timberlake, after all, who along with Janet Jackson at the 2004 Super Bowl halftime show gave birth to the phrase “wardrobe malfunction’’ and together were embroiled in “Nipplegate A new documentary looks at the "wardrobe malfunction" during the 2004 Super Bowl halftime show in a new light – but doesn't definitively answer some important questions. Cheated on Brittney for years. When rumors began Brittney was a cheater he did nothing to refute this. He capitalized on the rumors by putting out “Cry Me a River” with a Brittney look-a-like. He planned the Super Bowl Half-Time Show with Janet, then when there was backlash he threw her under the bus. During his 1993 performance at the Super Bowl in Pasadena, California, Michael Jackson immediately grabbed the audience’s attention by standing completely still in silence on stage for nearly Janet Jackson performed at the 2004 Superbowl Halftime show alongside Justin Timberlake. The wardrobe malfunction that occured gave way to a public outcry. The Best Super Bowl Commercials of Generally I don't need to be convinced that people are willing to shit on women for anything sexual. But Janet Jackson was almost 40 at the time and her sales and popularity peaked in the early 90's. She didn't plateau after the Super Bowl issue. She continued slowly tailing off like she had been doing for the prior decade and like most pop Janet and Justin's controversial Super Bowl wardrobe malfunction may have happened 10 years ago, Additionally, the FCC alleges that the incident was planned by Timberlake and Jackson, who Do you really think Janet Jackson, a black woman in America, and 30+ year TV/entertainment veteran, woke up one morning and truly thought that exposing her breast on live TV would be received with love and adoration to boost her career? (Which by the way, was never failing. You don't get invited to do the Super Bowl if you're a has-been.) The 2004 Super Bowl halftime show, starring Janet Jackson, had everyone talking, texting, and blushing in their living rooms. In this excerpt from the new book Toxic: Women, Fame, and the Tabloid 2000s (published by Abrams Press), author Sarah Ditum brings you a tale that goes beyond football — a story where fashion meets fumble, and the The Super Bowl was always weirdly conventional, but the commercials were all weirdly edgy. Two years earlier, there was that Coor’s Light Superbowl commercial that was a parody of Tom T Hall’s “I Love (Little Baby Ducks)” but the punchline is having threesome with twins (because lesbianism and incest are comparable, and both acceptable
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