FIFA’s World Cup Halftime Show Puts American-Style Spectacle on the World Stage
During the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, the Coldplay frontman called Hugh Evans, the CEO of Global Citizen, for whom he curates the Global Citizen Festival, with something new to pitch.

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During the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, the Coldplay frontman called Hugh Evans, the CEO of Global Citizen, for whom he curates the Global Citizen Festival, with something new to pitch. “Wouldn’t it be incredible,” Evans recalls Martin saying, “if we could do the first-ever halftime show for the World Cup?” Evans agreed, and connected with FIFA president Gianni Infantino at the organization’s headquarters in Switzerland to sell him on Martin’s plan. He didn’t need to.
Infantino had already had a similar idea—and was a Coldplay fan. “So he actually had already independently decided that he wanted to work with Coldplay and that he wanted to achieve this dream,” Evans says.
The result of those conversations, set to take the pitch during Sunday’s World Cup final between Spain and Argentina at New York New Jersey Stadium, is a massive but just 11-minute-long show featuring Justin Bieber, Madonna, BTS, and Shakira. They’ll be joined by Coldplay and a chorus from Staten Island’s PS22 school, and watched by millions of people in homes, bars, and street corners around the world.
The show is also part of an effort to raise $100 million for Global Citizen’s youth education efforts worldwide. FIFA is donating one dollar from each ticket sold during the tournament to the fund, and Shakira is donating royalties from her World Cup anthem with Burna Boy—”Dai Dai”—to the effort as well.
Not that all World Cup fans are necessarily excited to see the show. Soccer fans have been skeptical of the final having a halftime show for months. The World Cup has never done such a thing, the argument goes, and doesn’t need one now. Given that halftime shows are practically synonymous with the Super Bowl , some fans think having a halftime show is part of an effort to “Americanize” the World Cup, or make it more appealing to viewers in countries where soccer is less popular. Others have, for example, chafed at things like “ hydration breaks ” which are seen as just another way to get eyeballs on ads.
“The World Cup has traditionally centered its musical identity on a single iconic anthem and an opening ceremony rooted in the host nation,” says Tiffany Naiman, director of the Berry Gordy Music Industry Center at UCLA. “So when FIFA unveils an 11-minute halftime spectacle, featuring Madonna and Justin Bieber, and Tom Cruise attached to the closing ceremony, it reads to some as importing an American made-for-TV sensibility.”
Oh yeah, Tom Cruise. Much like he did with the closing ceremony for the 2024 Olympics in Paris , Cruise is scheduled to appear during the World Cup’s closing ceremony ahead of the final match.
Source: Wired