américain
By Romain FONSEGRIVES avec Robin LEGRAND à Washington Los Angeles (AFP) - L'ancienne superstar du football américain O.J. Simpson, dont le procès pour double meurtre en 1995 avait captivé l'Amérique avant son acquittement, est mort d'un cancer à l'âge de 76 ans, a annoncé jeudi sa famille. "Le 10 avril, notre père, Orenthal James Simpson a succombé des suites de son combat contre le cancer. Il était entouré de ses enfants et petits-enfants", a écrit sur X la famille de celui qui fut considéré comme l'une des premières grandes vedettes noires aux Etats-Unis. Ancien running back vedette de la NF...
AFP (Français)
New York (AFP) - Advertisers splurged more than half a billion dollars during the Super Bowl, smashing previous records for an event that is routinely one of the most-watched things on US television. Some of corporate America's biggest names coughed up an eye-watering average of $5.6 million for a 30-second spot in American football's razzmatazz-filled final. Car companies, fast food chains and delivery apps were among those clamoring to get their brands in front of the 96.4 million people who watched Tom Brady's resurgent Tampa Bay Buccaneers trounce young pretender Patrick Mahomes and his Ka...
AFP
New York (AFP) - The 2021 Super Bowl was watched by 96.4 million people across all platforms, the host broadcaster said Tuesday, the lowest viewership since 2007 -- despite record-smashing streaming audiences. The NFL championship match is the most-watched TV event of the year in the United States. Some 102.3 million people tuned in for last year's Super Bowl. By comparison, the second-most watched event was another American football game which recorded 43 million views. The most-watched non-sporting event in 2020 was "The Masked Singer," which attracted an audience of 27 million. Sunday's Sup...
AFP
New York (AFP) - Washington no longer hails the Redskins, and Cleveland is saying farewell to the Indians, in an accelerating push to rid the US sports world of all Native American names. But some teams -- like the Kansas City Chiefs, who will seek back-to-back Super Bowl titles on Sunday -- have held fast to their brand, with the support of their fans. In August 2020, at the start of the new National Football League season, Kansas City banned fans in Chiefs Nation from wearing feather headdresses or any face paint deemed to be appropriating Native American culture. But the team stopped short ...
AFP
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