The Weeknd Could Attract a Younger, More Progressive Crowd to Super Bowl LV
Key Takeaways
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41% of self-identified fans of The Weeknd said they’re more likely to watch the Super Bowl this year compared to past years, while 37% of NFL fans said the same.
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The Weeknd was most popular among millennials (61%) and members of Generation Z (54%).
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Half of NFL fans and two-thirds of Weeknd fans said it’s appropriate for halftime performers to promote social justice during their set.
After dominating last year’s charts, The Weeknd is gearing up to headline Sunday’s Super Bowl halftime show. And new polling finds that his performance will bring new eyeballs to the game and could expand the “Blinding Lights” singer’s fan base, although the attitudes of Weeknd fans differ from those of NFL fans in a few important ways.
The Super Bowl halftime show, known for its special guests and buzzy moments, has long been seen as a way to draw new fans to the NFL’s biggest game.
But a Jan. 25-26 survey of 2,200 U.S. adults found that fans of The Weeknd are already likely fans of the NFL: 75 percent of the singer’s fans said they were fans of the NFL, while 45 percent of NFL fans said they also favored The Weeknd. Of the adults surveyed, 29 percent said they were fans of both the NFL and The Weeknd.
Fans of the Canadian singer, born Abel Tesfaye, are intuitively more likely to watch the Super Bowl for the halftime show (24 percent) than NFL fans (14 percent), and they’re also more likely to say they’ll throw a Super Bowl party this year.
很多人签出big game — more than100 million peoplewatched last year — artists have used the halftime performance to make political and social statements during polarized times in America.
In 2016, during an appearance with Coldplay, Beyonce performed "Formation," a song celebrating Black empowerment, while dancers donned costumes inspired by the Black Panther Party. Jennifer Lopez proudly dawned a cape on last year’s stage featuring both the American flag and the Puerto Rican flag.
Viewers tuning in to see their favorite artist are more open to political and social statements, according to Morning Consult polling: 39 percent of The Weeknd’s fans said it was appropriate for halftime performers to make political statements, compared to 26 percent of NFL fans.
The Weeknd is no stranger to incorporating social and political commentary into his work.
He toldTMRW杂志in December that his next album will be inspired by the “pandemic, the Black Lives Matter movement and the tensions of the election.” Earlier this week, he toldVarietythat the facial bandages he’s worn while promoting his latest album, “After Hours,” are a reflection “on the absurd culture of Hollywood celebrity and people manipulating themselves for superficial reasons to please and be validated.”
Both NFL and Weeknd fans are receptive to performers promoting social justice during their Super Bowl performances, with half of the former and two-thirds of the latter saying those statements are appropriate. The survey has an overall margin of error of 2 percentage points, while the NFL fan and Weeknd fan demographics have margins of error of 3 and 4 points, respectively.
The poll also looked at The Weeknd’s fan base and found that, while 38 percent of adults overall have a favorable rating of the pop singer, his fan base skews younger with 61 percent of millennials and 54 percent of Gen Zers having a favorable view of the singer respectively.
According toViberate, a platform that collects analytics on songs, artists and albums, The Weeknd has 67.7 million monthly listeners on Spotify, up from 47.5 million a year ago, and has 28.1 million followers on the popular streaming service. After he was announced as the halftime headliner on Nov. 12, The Weeknd gained 2 million Spotify followers in November and December.
2020 was another big year for the three-time Grammy winner. His fourth album, “After Hours,” was thesecond-most streamed album, and The Weeknd was the fifth-most streamed artist worldwide on Spotify last year. “Blinding Lights” was also the most streamed song,earning 1.6 billion streamson the platform in 2020.
Sarah Shevenock previously worked at Morning Consult as a reporter covering the business of entertainment.