- HOME
- NEWS
- WEATHER
- COMMUNITY
- ENTERTAINMENT
- SPORTS
- LIVING
- TOOLS
- Deals
- Jobs
- Autos
- Homes
- Shop/Classifieds
- Services
Al Lopez Park helped kick off Super Bowl weekend Thursday by hosting the Super Tailgate Throwdown.
Advertisement
Celebrities In Tampa For Super Bowl Were Almost Too Many To Count
What was the best and worst of the Super Bowl commercials, Watch and comment.
It brought a new meaning to the lyrics "Born to Run." When one gets swept up between high school cheerleaders and middle-age mothers whose teenage daughters are embarrassed that their moms are on national TV, there's only one thing to do. Run.
By the end of the first quarter, Steelers fans who traveled through a blizzard to reach the promised land, Tampa, were far from disappointed.
A closer look at the hoopla of Super Bowl commercials - the winners, losers and some facts you might not have known.
Pamela Anderson had strong opinions about the TV camera lights that would be allowed to illuminate her on the red carpet.
Will he or won't he walk the white carpet? That was the question on everyone's mind at The Good Life Experience. Sean Combs, aka P. Diddy, is known for sneaking in the back way to his parties.
Tampa has quite literally rolled out the red carpet for celebrities this weekend. Even if you can't afford to walk down the red carpet yourself, you might be interested in knowing where you can go to watch the Beautiful People as they stroll by on it.
No pads, no helmets needed. Some familiar faces traded in the pigskin for a round ball Friday night. Buccaneer Cato June hosted the Celebrity Superslam Basketball Game. Teammate Aqib Talib and former Buc Simeon Rice joined him on the court. Proceeds from the charity event are to benefit the June Family Foundation.
They call The Taste of the NFL culinary extravaganza a "party with a purpose" for the tens of thousands of dollars it raises for hunger relief groups.
Because so many people are walking around in Ybor City tonight, Tampa Police are shutting down 7th Avenue to vehicle traffic.
Frank Henderson, donning an Arizona state flag as a cape, a Cardinals banner and holding a "Shock The World" sign, reveled in the Rodney Dangerfieldness of it all. "We get no respect," said the civil engineer from Desert Hills, AZ. "No one expected us to be here."
Memo to Tampa Bay Buccaneers: Sign up Doug Flutie. Sign Jeff Blake. Sign Steve Young - again. They played quarterback really well in Saturday afternoon's Super Bowl XLIII-related flag football games on the sand in Pinellas County.
Jimmy Wasserman's dad brought him from New York to Tampa for Super Bowl weekend and all he got was a lousy $2,000 game-day Super Bowl football. The 11-year-old and his dad, Steven Wasserman, were among the small crowd that gathered today for a sports memorabilia show at the NFL Experience.
Bruce Springsteen, you have no idea what you did to Melanie Campbell about 25 years ago.
Read this story aloud, with your best NFL Films "on the frozen tundra of Lambeau Field" voice: For the seventh time, the glitzy, glamorous team from the City of Angels has crossed this nation's vastness in search of football foes in far-flung cities. The squad has visited the hostile venues of Arizona, Atlanta, Miami and New Orleans.
Celebrities and celebrity-seekers dance the night away at some of the area's hottest Super Bowl parties.
Snoop appeared like an appellation through the stage smoke with his entourage, his hoodie and his personal, iconic microphone - a majestic contraption with a sword-like shield around the shaft, encrusted with silver and diamonds that spell out "SNOOP."
The Leather and Lace party was no ordinary night at Jackson's Bistro on Harbour Island. The party has been one of the most exclusive events of Super Bowl weekend.
Ladies and Gentlemen, we have a dynasty.
ESPN the Magazine offered a lavish opening to the Super Bowl weekend on Friday night, welcoming more than 1,000 VIP invite-only celebrities and guests to its annual NEXT party inside a 22,000-square-foot tent at the corner of Morgan and Bell streets in downtown Tampa.
Bitter cold wind whipped around the soon-to-open Hula Bay Club Friday night but it didn't stop singer Nick Lachey, NASCAR driver Jimmie Johnson and more than 600 of their friends and fans from partying.
Super Bowl Week is about to get spicy with the Taste of the NFL event at Tropicana Field.
The NFL Players Party is a rarity among Super Bowl happenings - the attendees are mostly football players.
Advertisement
Advertisement