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3S. FLASH NEWS: After his Grammy sweep, Jelly Roll drops a Super Bowl halftime idea that could change country music forever 

Jelly Roll didn’t just leave the 2026 Grammy Awards with trophies.
He left with an idea — and it’s one that could put country music back on the biggest stage in American sports.

The rapper-turned-country superstar had a banner weekend at the Grammys, finally breaking through after years of nominations without a win. This time, he walked away with three awards: Best Country Duo/Group Performance for “Amen” with Shaboozey, Best Contemporary Country Album for Beautifully Broken, and Best Contemporary Christian Music Performance/Song for “Hard Fought Hallelujah” alongside Brandon Lake.

But while the awards made headlines, it was what Jelly Roll said before the ceremony that may have sparked the most conversation.

While attending the Clive Davis Pre-Grammy Gala, Jelly Roll was asked by Entertainment Weekly about the possibility of a country music Super Bowl halftime show — and he didn’t hesitate.

“I’ve been waiting for someone to ask me a Super Bowl halftime question,” he said, before pointing out something that immediately caught fans’ attention: Nashville could realistically host the Super Bowl within the next three to five years thanks to the city’s new stadium.

And that’s where the dream began.

Jelly Roll floated the idea of a country-themed halftime show — not led by a single headliner, but built as a celebration of the genre itself. A moment where country music’s past, present, and future all share the same stage.

He even joked that he’d be happy with just “20 or 30 seconds” if it meant being part of it.

But the real headline came when he started naming names.

“I’d love to see Tim McGraw. I’d love to see Garth Brooks. I’d love to see Reba McEntire. I’d love to see Dolly Parton,” Jelly Roll said, before turning his attention to the modern era. “Morgan Wallen, HARDY… the new guard. Megan Moroney, Ella Langley, Lainey Wilson. All of our friends.”

He imagined a halftime show that doesn’t divide generations — but connects them. Legends standing shoulder to shoulder with today’s chart-toppers. Not one star dominating the spotlight, but a genre presenting itself as a unified force.

It’s an ambitious idea. And a risky one.

Country music hasn’t been the centerpiece of the Super Bowl halftime show in over two decades. The last time a country artist headlined the event was Shania Twain in 2003. Before that, the genre’s most iconic moment came in 1994, when Clint Black, Tanya Tucker, Travis Tritt, and The Judds took the stage in a show that’s still remembered as one of the most authentic halftime performances ever.

Since then, the halftime stage has largely belonged to pop, hip-hop, and crossover acts — reflecting shifts in mainstream culture and global audiences.

But country music has changed too.

It’s bigger, louder, and more commercially dominant than it’s been in years. Artists like Morgan Wallen routinely top all-genre charts. Stadium tours sell out in minutes. Streaming numbers rival any genre in the industry.

Jelly Roll’s proposal feels like a modern echo of that 1994 moment — updated for a new era, a new audience, and a new Nashville.

Of course, there are obstacles. Super Bowl halftime shows are global productions, carefully curated for maximum mass appeal. A country-only lineup would be a bold departure from recent trends — and not everyone would welcome it.

But that may be exactly the point.

Jelly Roll isn’t pitching safety. He’s pitching identity.

With Super Bowls already scheduled for Los Angeles and Atlanta in 2027 and 2028, Nashville wouldn’t be in play until at least 2030. That gives the idea time to grow — or time to be dismissed.

Either way, the conversation has started.

And for a genre that hasn’t held the Super Bowl spotlight in 20 years, that alone feels like a crack in the door.

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