Following the incident, the National Football League (NFL) excluded MTV, which had also produced the halftime show for Super Bowl XXXV, from future halftime shows. In addition, CBS parent company Viacom and its co-owned subsidiaries, MTV and Infinity Broadcasting , enforced a blacklist of Jackson's singles and music videos on many radio formats These pictures were obviously fabricated from screen shots of the 2003 Super Bowl halftime show — given the crush of media attention resulting from one partially-exposed breast at the 2004 Super On February 1, 2004, the now-infamous “Nipplegate” incident occurred at the Super Bowl XXXVIII halftime show as Janet Jackson performed with Justin Timberlake, crescendoing to a costume 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 Hoosiers react to 2004 Super Bowl halftime show. “All you can do is listen to the words of the song and you could tell what she was going to do," Roberta Hopkins said. “She's at that age now where she's on the down side of her career and she needs an uplift.” “Britney got married, I think she did that for publicity,” Kathy Williams said. 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 Even casual football fans will remember, the fiasco that was the 2004 Super Bowl Halftime Show involving popstars Janet Jackson and Justin Timberlake. In a moment that will likely live on in Immediately following the “incident,” MTV and Viacom, the channel producing the Halftime Show at the time, published a statement apologizing for such indecent exposure, explaining that, “The 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. The Janet Jackson Super Bowl incident was the source of numerous jokes and much derision at the time. Many late-night talk show hosts discussed the incident, but even at the time, there was a NEW ORLEANS — Throughout the years, the Super Bowl halftime show has proven to sometimes be more memorable than the game itself. A wardrobe malfunction turned national incident. A perfectly Incident. During the halftime show at Super Bowl XXXVIII on February 1, 2004, [15] Jackson performed a medley of hits, beginning with "All for You", "Rhythm Nation" and a brief excerpt of "The Knowledge". Surprise guest Timberlake then appeared onstage to perform a duet of his song "Rock Your Body" with Jackson. Since the Super Bowl’s inception in 1960, the championship football game has always included a halftime show, but it took the NFL several decades to find the winning formula for it to become the 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. Typically, the Super Bowl is remembered by an exciting game ending with a football team deemed champion, but 2004's Super Bowl XXXVIII was overshadowed by a halftime show that goes down in the Fifteen years after the “Wardrobe Malfunction” incident with Janet Jackson, Justin Timberlake played the Super Bowl LII Halftime Show at U.S. Bank in Minneapolis, but this time solo. The halftime show at Super Bowl XXXV featured a bit of everything. The show opened up with a skit featuring Ben Stiller, Chris Rock and Adam Sandler appearing alongside Aerosmith and NSYNC, with In 2012, during the halftime show for Super Bowl XLVI, rapper M.I.A. pointed up her middle finger during her performance. That incident drew comparisons with the exposure of Janet Jackson's breast in the Super Bowl halftime show eight years prior. Arguably no halftime show has ever been as memorable as Janet Jackson and Justin Timberlake's February 2004 performance at Super Bowl XXXVIII. The show was a relatively standard halftime concert Watch Janet Jackson's legendary performance at the 2004 Super Bowl halftime show in high definition on YouTube.
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