SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — How much has the NFL’s Super Bowl changed since its debut in 1967? 

For Greg Eaton — a businessman from Lansing, Michigan, who has attended every game and is one of three surviving members of the storied Never Miss A Super Bowl Club — it’s most obvious by the bells and whistles that go with it. 

“During that first game, it was college bands performing as entertainment and that’s how it went those first few years,” Eaton said. “Now, you have big name entertainers performing and so many other things tied to it. The NFL has done an amazing job marketing this.” 

Indeed, entertainers at the 57th this year include Rihanna, who is set to perform at Sunday’s halftime show, and Chris Stapleton, who will sing the national anthem. And companies like GM and Stellantis are paying millions to promote their brands during the game.  

Eaton, 83, is looking forward to the matchup between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Philadelphia Eagles on Sunday as Super Bowl LVII is held at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona. 

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As he looked back, Eaton recalled having to stay in separate hotels from his white friends attending an early Super Bowl in Florida in the Jim Crow South. It was a different era. And although Eaton doesn’t have any “skin in the game” on who wins Sunday, he’s particularly proud both teams are led by Black quarterbacks for the first time in the game’s history — the Chiefs’ Patrick Mahomes and the Eagles’ Jalen Hurts.