Brandi Carlile sings 'America the Beautiful' at Super Bowl LX, highlighting queer representation on a national stage.
Brandi Carlile sings 'America the Beautiful' at Super Bowl LX, highlighting queer representation on a national stage.
Image generated by AI

Brandi Carlile sings 'America the Beautiful' at Super Bowl LX, calls it a moment for queer representation

Image generated by AI
Fact checked

Brandi Carlile performed “America the Beautiful” during Super Bowl LX on Sunday, Feb. 8, 2026, describing the appearance in a Variety interview as a rare chance to bring queer representation to one of the country’s largest stages.

Super Bowl organizers selected singer-songwriter Brandi Carlile to perform “America the Beautiful” as part of the pregame program at Super Bowl LX on Sunday.

Carlile, an 11-time Grammy Award winner, told Variety she viewed the performance as a personal responsibility amid what she described as political tension and division in the United States.

“I have my own moral code, my own moral imperative, that I have to answer to at the end of the day, as a wife and mother, and I believe in my ability and responsibility to do this, and that’s why I’m here,” she said in the interview.

Carlile also connected the moment to her identity, adding: “And the throughline to being queer and being a representative of a marginalized community and being put on the largest stage in America to acknowledge the fraught and tender hope that this country is based on, it’s something you don’t say no to. You do it.”

She argued that the song’s message can serve as a reminder of common ground. “I think if we’re gonna save this country as a people, we have to be reminded on some level that deep down we love it,” she said.

“America the Beautiful” was written by poet Katharine Lee Bates in 1893. In the interview, Carlile discussed the lyric “God mend thine every flaw,” and continued by quoting: “Confirm thy soul in self-control / Thy liberty in law!” She added that she did not want to “put words” in Bates’s mouth, but said the song felt like an expression of “fragile hope” about what the country could be.

Carlile also said she was motivated by Bates’s life and by scholarly speculation about Bates’s sexuality, while acknowledging that no definitive proof has established that Bates was in a same-sex romantic relationship. In the Variety interview, Carlile described Bates as “very likely gay” and referenced Bates’s long domestic partnership with Wellesley economist Katharine Coman.

What people are saying

Reactions on X to Brandi Carlile's Super Bowl performance and her comments on queer representation are polarized. Conservative commentators criticize it as injecting identity politics into a patriotic tradition, while supporters view it as a meaningful moment for visibility on a major stage.

Related Articles

Illustration depicting Bad Bunny's Puerto Rican-themed Super Bowl halftime show on stage with U.S. flag, contrasted by foreground MAGA protesters criticizing lack of American representation.
Image generated by AI

Maga backlash targets Bad Bunny's Super Bowl halftime performance

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

Puerto Rican artist Bad Bunny headlined the Super Bowl 60 halftime show with a Spanish-language tribute to his heritage, drawing praise from fans but sharp criticism from President Trump and MAGA supporters who questioned its American representation. The 13-minute set at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, California, featured cultural elements like sugarcane fields and bodegas, ending with a procession of flags led by the U.S. banner. Conservatives countered with an alternative all-English halftime event headlined by Kid Rock.

Singer Coco Jones delivered a soulful rendition of the hymn 'Lift Every Voice and Sing' during the Super Bowl LX pre-game ceremony. Accompanied by an all-female string ensemble, she brought passion and depth to the performance known as the Black national anthem. The 28-year-old R&B artist shared insights on her authentic approach in a pre-event interview.

Reported by AI

Brantley Gilbert, Lee Brice, and Gabby Barrett are set to perform at Turning Point USA's 'All-American Halftime Show,' an alternative to the Super Bowl halftime featuring Bad Bunny. The event, organized after Bad Bunny's announcement, has sparked concerns about divisiveness in country music. Gilbert defended his participation, emphasizing unity over controversy.

Mariah Carey opened the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan with a medley of the Italian classic 'Volare' and her own ballad 'Nothing Is Impossible.' The performance highlighted her recent honors and marked the return of full in-person crowds after restrictions from the Covid-19 pandemic. Other artists, including Andrea Bocelli, joined the ceremony lineup.

Reported by AI

Puerto Rican artist Bad Bunny will headline the halftime show at Super Bowl LX on February 8, 2026, at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, California. The performance features the most-streamed artist in the world, a six-time Grammy winner, alongside pregame performances by Charlie Puth, Brandi Carlile, and Coco Jones. The event pits the New England Patriots against the Seattle Seahawks in a high-stakes NFL championship.

Former President Donald Trump has criticized Bad Bunny's performance at the 2026 Super Bowl halftime show, describing it as 'disgusting.' The Grammy-winning artist's set featured expressions of love and cultural pride, contrasting sharply with Trump's negative reaction. The event highlighted Puerto Rican influences through collaborations with artists like Lady Gaga and Ricky Martin.

Reported by AI

A survey shows NFL players are split on selecting Bad Bunny for the Super Bowl LX halftime show, with 58.6% in favor and 41.4% opposed. Many critics admit not knowing the Puerto Rican artist, while supporters emphasize cultural diversity. The event is set for February 8, 2026, at Levi’s Stadium.

 

 

 

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline