The biggest moments of Super Bowl 50 had nothing to do with the play on the field.
The 50th game of Super Bowl drew 111 million TV viewers to see the Denver Broncos trounce the Carolina Panthers Sunday. But if you kept your eye on #SB50, you'd have noticed social media going ape for the halftime show featuring Coldplay, Beyonce and Bruno Mars.
Many fans said they considered the first half of the game the opening act for "Queen Bey," the world's nickname for Beyonce. Still others said she completely overshadowed Coldplay, which had been billed as the main act.
The commentary showed how much social media can color our memories and our reactions to an event. That became all-too obvious during the Super Bowl, as advertisers urged viewers to tweet, musicians grabbed attention away from the field and broadcaster CBS (which owns CNET) posted photos and opinion.
Without question, Beyonce became the star of Sunday's action. With backup dancers wearing afros and and costumes suggestive of the Black Panther movement of the 1960s, she sang her new single, "Formation," which is an overt take on politics, feminism and black history. She hit a nerve. Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, for example, called her performance "ridiculous," "outrageous," and an "attack on police officers."
In contrast, Actor-comedian Sarah Silverman tweeted: "Can anyone else in the history of the world release a song and the same day sing it on the [expletive] Super Bowl & we all know the words!"
Beyonce also used the moment to announce a new concert tour, prompting fans to rush to her website in such numbers that it crashed.