COUNTRY MUSIC TAKES OVER THE SUPER BOWL: ALAN JACKSON, DOLLY PARTON, REBA MCENTIRE & GEORGE STRAIT TO DELIVER THE GREATEST HALFTIME SPECTACLE IN HISTORY – A ONCE-IN-A-LIFETIME CELEBRATION OF REAL AMERICAN ROOTS!

Introduction

COUNTRY MUSIC TAKES OVER THE SUPER BOWL: ALAN JACKSON, DOLLY PARTON, REBA McENTIRE & GEORGE STRAIT SET TO DELIVER THE GREATEST HALFTIME SHOW IN HISTORY – A ONCE-IN-A-LIFETIME CELEBRATION OF REAL AMERICAN ROOTS!

Hold onto your cowboy hats, America — Super Bowl LX has officially carved its name into history!

In an announcement that sent shockwaves through Music Row and electrified fans worldwide, four living legends of country music — Alan Jackson, Dolly Parton, Reba McEntire, and George Strait — have been confirmed as co-headliners of the Apple Music Super Bowl LX Halftime Show on February 8, 2026, at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California.

The news broke via a heartfelt, down-home video shared across social media. Alan Jackson, tipping his signature white cowboy hat with a quiet smile, said:

“Dolly, Reba, George — we’ve shared stages and stories for decades. When they asked us about the biggest stage in the world, we all said the same thing: if we’re doing this, it has to be together, bringing pure country heart to every soul watching.”

Dolly Parton, sparkling like a rhinestone sky, added with her trademark warmth:

“Honey, this isn’t just a show — it’s a full-on country revival! The four of us are going to pour our hearts out with songs that raised generations and create magic that’ll have folks from coast to coast singing along until sunrise.”

Reba McEntire chimed in with steady confidence and a playful tone:

“The best part? We’re not holding back. This is about the stories, the music, and the heart. It’s for every fan who’s ever loved country, every kid who dared to dream big, and every soul ready for a night they’ll never forget.”

George Strait, tipping his Resistol hat with effortless grace, said simply:

“We’ve all been blessed to share these songs with the world. Now we’re bringing them to the biggest stage there is — and it’s going to be special.”

This unprecedented 18-minute epic promises to be unlike anything the Super Bowl has ever seen: a massive stage blending rolling Georgia hills with the majesty of the Smoky Mountains, backed by a 1,500-strong choir of fans, fiddlers, and steel guitar masters. Expect soul-stirring duets on timeless classics like “Chasin’ That Neon Rainbow,” “Coat of Many Colors,” “Livin’ on Love,” “Here You Come Again,” and a tear-jerking mashup of “Where Were You (When the World Stopped Turning)” flowing into “I Will Always Love You.”

Special guests from country’s golden eras will join the celebration, leading to a powerful finale: a brand-new original anthem co-written by Jackson, Parton, McEntire, and Strait themselves — a soaring tribute to resilience, family, and the American spirit. With pyrotechnics synced to banjo riffs, laser lights dancing like summer fireflies, and a grand closing beneath a sea of American flags, this $60 million production is poised to shatter every viewership and streaming record.

The internet exploded instantly: #CountrySuperBowl surged past 50 million posts within hours, ticket resale prices skyrocketed, and fans proclaimed it “the night country finally claims the crown on America’s biggest stage.”

Four timeless voices. One unforgettable stage.
Every heartbeat in the stadium — and hundreds of millions watching at home — is about to feel the power of real country music.

Y’all ready to witness history? Sound off below — the heartland is roaring! 🤠🎶

Video

You Missed

REJECTED BY SUN RECORDS AND DROPPED BY MERCURY IN 1957—BEFORE THE 50 NUMBER ONE HITS, IT WAS A CRUSHING BEGINNING FOR A YOUNG MAN LOCKED ENTIRELY OUT OF HIS OWN DREAM. To the public, Conway Twitty is the undisputed king of country romance. He had the velvet voice, the tailored suits, and an untouchable string of records. He looked like a man who was simply born to succeed. But the reality of a legend is rarely written in gold from the start. After returning from military service, a hopeful young Harold Jenkins traveled to Memphis. He stood at the very doors of Sun Records—the exact place that had just built Elvis Presley. They listened to his voice, and then left his early recordings sitting unreleased in the dark. He was standing so incredibly close to the magic, yet entirely locked out of the room. Desperate for a breakthrough, he changed his name to Conway Twitty. He thought a brand new identity would force those heavy doors open. It didn’t. By 1957, a brief deal with Mercury Records completely crumbled. His singles fell flat, the contract was abruptly canceled, and the new name couldn’t save him from the bitter taste of early defeat. It is a quiet, heavy pain to stand on the edge of greatness and be told you simply do not belong. Most men would have packed up their guitar and gone home. They would have let the rejection become their whole story. But Conway refused to let the silence win. He took those brutal rejections, swallowed the humiliation, and kept walking down the lonely road. We remember the unstoppable star under the neon lights. But we should never forget the quiet resilience of the young man in the shadows, who was told “no,” and decided to sing anyway.