Obscenity punctuates halftime show

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<br/>Madonna performs during the halftime show of Super Bowl XLVI at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis on Sunday, February 5.

Madonna performs during the halftime show of Super Bowl XLVI at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis on Sunday, February 5.















































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Madonna's Super Bowl halftime show

Madonna's Super Bowl halftime show

Madonna's Super Bowl halftime show

Madonna's Super Bowl halftime show

Madonna's Super Bowl halftime show

Madonna's Super Bowl halftime show

Madonna's Super Bowl halftime show

Madonna's Super Bowl halftime show

Madonna's Super Bowl halftime show




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STORY HIGHLIGHTS



  • During the 2004 halftime show, Janet Jackson's breast was briefly exposed

  • NBC says its system was late to obscure the gesture

  • The NFL says the gesture was inappropriate and disappointing

  • The halftime show generated 8,000 tweets per second





(CNN) -- Ahead of her Super Bowl halftime show, singer Madonna promised there would be no "wardrobe malfunction." What she didn't guarantee was no obscene gestures.


Rapper M.I.A. provided a middle finger salute to network cameras Sunday night during the 12-minute extravaganza, when she joined Madonna during a performance of the latter's new single, "Give Me All Your Luvin'."


The apologies from the NFL and the broadcaster, NBC, came quickly -- they blamed each other.


"There was a failure in NBC's delay system," said Brian McCarty, the league's vice president of communications. "The obscene gesture in the performance was completely inappropriate, very disappointing, and we apologize to our fans."




Nicki Minaj, left, Madonna and M.I.A. perform during halftime of Super Bowl XLVI.

Nicki Minaj, left, Madonna and M.I.A. perform during halftime of Super Bowl XLVI.


"The NFL hired the talent and produced the halftime show," NBC said. "Our system was late to obscure the inappropriate gesture and we apologize to our viewers."


The episode was reminiscent of the 2004 Super Bowl when singer Janet Jackson's nipple was briefly exposed during a performance with singer Justin Timberlake.






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The infamous "wardrobe malfunction" episode, as it came to be known, prompted the Federal Communications Commission to fine broadcaster CBS $ 550,000. In November, a divided 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals ruled the FCC improperly punished the network.


Since then, the NFL has maintained tight control over the show's production.


After the Jackson-Timberlake showstopper, the halftime show largely relied on classic rock artists such as Paul McCartney, Bruce Springsteen, The Rolling Stones, The Who and Tom Petty.


Fast forward to Sunday when the New England Patriots were again playing in the big game, just as in 2004.


M.I.A, along with Nicki Minaj, Cee-Lo Green and LMFAO, joined Madonna as she treated fans to a greatest hits medley that included "Vogue," "Music" and "Like a Prayer."


The "spontaneous gesture," as NBC called it, came during a performance of Madonna's latest single. M.I.A not only flipped her middle finger but uttered "I don't give a sh*t."


Madonna did not issue a comment. But on Twitter, where the halftime show generated 8,000 tweets per second, the reaction was swift and mixed.


"What was that singer M.I.A. thinking?! Flipping off America during halftime can't be a good career move," Will Ripley of Denver tweeted.


But Devon Soltendieck of Montreal was less concerned.


"Can we all stop pretending #MIA flipping the Finger during the halftime show is offensive in 2012?" he asked.


Said Josh Jackson, editor in chief of the music magazine Paste: "M.I.A. Didn't flip us all off. She just had a middle finger malfunction."



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