SUPER BOWL PARTY PLANNER
RT Clown, has excellent super bowl party ideas that are fun and will give your guests the most memorable moments. Our super bowl party experience ranges from Casino Party planning, to Mardi Gras, Western, Rock n' roll party theme, and more. Please view our super bowl party gallery for ideas and so that you can see our experience in planning theme parties.
Super Bowl 2010 is right around the corner. That's right, Super Bowl XLIV is nearing kickoff. Millions of Americans and people all over the world are already planning their Super Bowl party. In fact, we'll help you make your Super Bowl party better than the game. So just put on your favorite team's colors and get ready for some football!
People love to have a Super Bowl party—fans can grunt while they watch the game and non-fans can chat it up while their mates and friends are well occupied. Who hasn't been to their fair share of these Super celebrations? More often than not, the real fans are in the den or great room watching the action, and everyone else is in the kitchen indulging in a Super Bowl of eating or drinking. Entertaining two groups of people at once is definitely a challenge.
The road to the Super Bowl has been determined, let us plan your playoff party. Provide your guest with great entertainment, magicians, casino event theme or DJ.
Print our Entertainment Planning Services Catalog and you'll find a range of super bowl party ideas we can plan for you.
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(310) 376-2250
If you're having a Super Bowl party, then hire us to coordinate your Super Bowl party. We offer planning services,
Entertainment and Corporate Party Planning as well.
Call our Friendly Staff for any ideas or to discuss rates & packages.
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Entertaining Southern California since 1985.
R.T. Clown, Inc. was founded in 1985 by former Broadway musical performer, Robin Charin, and has completed over 32,000 successful events. Our 85% repeat business rate speaks for itself. We have access to over 200 festive character costumes. We also have magicians, musicians, jugglers, D.J.'s, strolling players, animal entertainment and more!!! We have sent gaily clad performers to personal parties for a diversity of clients and audiences from the L.A. Kings to Barbara Streisand. Our numerous corporate clients include Bloomingdale’s, Westfield Shopping Malls, Nokia, and United and Delta Airlines. And… we've created magical events for many prestigious hotels including The Beverly Hills Hotel, The Four Seasons and the Ritz-Carlton Laguna Niguel.
The Super Bowl was created as part of the merger agreement between the National Football League (NFL) and its competitive rival, the American Football League (AFL). After its inception in 1920, the NFL fended off several rival leagues before the AFL began play in 1960. The intense competitive war for players and fans led to serious merger talks between the two leagues in 1966, culminating in a merger announcement on June 8, 1966. One of the conditions of the AFL-NFL Merger was that the winners of each league's championship game would meet in a contest to determine the "world champion of football". According to NFL Films President Steve Sabol, then NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle wanted to call the game "The Big One".[3]During the discussions to iron out the details, AFL founder and Kansas City Chiefs owner Lamar Hunt had jokingly referred to the proposed interleague championship as the "Super Bowl". Hunt thought of the name after seeing his kids playing with a toy called a Super Ball;[4] the small, round ball is now on display at the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio. The name was consistent with postseason college football games which had long been known as "bowl games." The "bowl" term originated from the Rose Bowl Game, which was in turn named for the bowl-shaped stadium in which it is played. Hunt only meant his suggested name to be a stopgap until a better one could be found. Nevertheless, the name "Super Bowl" became permanent.
After the NFL's Green Bay Packers convincingly won the first two Super Bowls, some team owners feared for the future of the merger. At the time, many doubted the competitiveness of AFL teams compared with NFL counterparts. That perception all changed with the AFL's New York Jets defeat of the Baltimore Colts in Super Bowl III in Miami. One year later, the AFL's Kansas City Chiefs defeated the NFL Minnesota Vikings 23-7 and won Super Bowl IV in New Orleans, the last World Championship game played between the champions of the two leagues.
The game is played annually on a Sunday as the final game of the NFL Playoffs. Originally the game took place in early to mid-January following a 14-game regular season and playoffs. Over the years the date of the Super Bowl has progressed from the second Sunday in January, to the third, then the fourth Sunday in January; the game is now played on the first Sunday in February, given the current 17-week (16 games and one bye week) regular season and three rounds of playoffs. This progression of the date of the Super Bowl has been caused by the following: the expansion of the NFL regular season in 1978 from 14 games to 16, the expansion of the pre-Super Bowl playoffs from two rounds to three (also in 1978), the addition of the regular season bye-week in the 1990s, and the decision prior to the 2003 season to start the regular season the week after Labor Day, moving the start of the season to a week later than it had been (in 1997, for example, the regular season started on Sunday, August 31). Former NFL commissionerPete Rozelle is often considered the mastermind of both the merger and the Super Bowl. His leadership guided them into the merger agreement and cemented the preeminence of the Super Bowl.
The winning team gets the Vince Lombardi Trophy, named for the coach of the Green Bay Packers, who won the first two Super Bowl games and 3 of the 5 preceding NFL championships (1961–62, 1965). Following his death in September 1970, the trophy was then named the Vince Lombardi Trophy, first awarded as such to the Baltimore Colts at Super Bowl V in Miami. Super Bowl III was the first to be numbered. Super Bowls I and II were not known as such until the game's third year and were named "The AFL-NFL World Championship Game". This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Metasyntactic variable".


