Photo Gallery: Super Bowl XLIX (Patriots vs. Seahawks)

Pre Game (photo by Shawn McCullough - Sports Radio Service)
Pre Game (photo by Shawn McCullough – Sports Radio Service)
Pre Game - John Legend (photo by Shawn McCullough - Sports Radio Service)
Pre Game – John Legend (photo by Shawn McCullough – Sports Radio Service)
Pre Game - Idina Menzel (photo by Shawn McCullough - Sports Radio Service)
Pre Game – Idina Menzel (photo by Shawn McCullough – Sports Radio Service)
Kickoff (photo by Shawn McCullough - Sports Radio Service)
Kickoff (photo by Shawn McCullough – Sports Radio Service)
Game - Katy Perry (photo by Shawn McCullough - Sports Radio Service)
Game – Katy Perry (photo by Shawn McCullough – Sports Radio Service)
Halftime - Katy Perry and Lenny Kravitz (photo by Shawn McCullough - Sports Radio Service)
Halftime – Katy Perry and Lenny Kravitz (photo by Shawn McCullough – Sports Radio Service)
Halftime - Katy Perry (photo by Shawn McCullough - Sports Radio Service)
Halftime – Katy Perry (photo by Shawn McCullough – Sports Radio Service)
Halftime - Katy Perry (photo by Shawn McCullough - Sports Radio Service)
Halftime – Katy Perry (photo by Shawn McCullough – Sports Radio Service)
Halftime - Katy Perry (photo by Shawn McCullough - Sports Radio Service)
Halftime – Katy Perry (photo by Shawn McCullough – Sports Radio Service)
Halftime - Katy Perry (photo by Shawn McCullough - Sports Radio Service)
Halftime – Katy Perry (photo by Shawn McCullough – Sports Radio Service)
Halftime - Katy Perry (photo by Shawn McCullough - Sports Radio Service)
Halftime – Katy Perry (photo by Shawn McCullough – Sports Radio Service)
Bill Belichick (photo by Shawn McCullough - Sports Radio Service)
Bill Belichick (photo by Shawn McCullough – Sports Radio Service)
Pete Carroll (photo by Shawn McCullough - Sports Radio Service)
Pete Carroll (photo by Shawn McCullough – Sports Radio Service)
Rob Gronkowski (photo by Shawn McCullough - Sports Radio Service)
Rob Gronkowski (photo by Shawn McCullough – Sports Radio Service)
Russell Wilson (photo by Shawn McCullough - Sports Radio Service)
Russell Wilson (photo by Shawn McCullough – Sports Radio Service)
Shane Vereen (photo by Shawn McCullough - Sports Radio Service)
Shane Vereen (photo by Shawn McCullough – Sports Radio Service)
Richard Sherman (photo by Shawn McCullough - Sports Radio Service)
Richard Sherman (photo by Shawn McCullough – Sports Radio Service)
Richard Sherman (photo by Shawn McCullough - Sports Radio Service)
Richard Sherman (photo by Shawn McCullough – Sports Radio Service)
LeGarrette Blount (photo by Shawn McCullough - Sports Radio Service)
LeGarrette Blount (photo by Shawn McCullough – Sports Radio Service)
Julian Edelman (photo by Shawn McCullough - Sports Radio Service)
Julian Edelman (photo by Shawn McCullough – Sports Radio Service)
Darrelle Revis (photo by Shawn McCullough - Sports Radio Service)
Darrelle Revis (photo by Shawn McCullough – Sports Radio Service)
Darrelle Revis (photo by Shawn McCullough - Sports Radio Service)
Darrelle Revis (photo by Shawn McCullough – Sports Radio Service)
Danny Amendola (photo by Shawn McCullough - Sports Radio Service)
Danny Amendola (photo by Shawn McCullough – Sports Radio Service)

Photo Gallery: Super Bowl XLIX Halftime and National Anthem Press Conference

Katy Perry at the Super Bowl Halftime Press Conference in Phoenix, AZ (photo by Shawn McCullough, Sports Radio Service)
Katy Perry at the Super Bowl Halftime Press Conference in Phoenix, AZ (photo by Shawn McCullough, Sports Radio Service)
Katy Perry at the Super Bowl Halftime Press Conference in Phoenix, AZ (photo by Shawn McCullough, Sports Radio Service)
Katy Perry at the Super Bowl Halftime Press Conference in Phoenix, AZ (photo by Shawn McCullough, Sports Radio Service)
Katy Perry at the Super Bowl Halftime Press Conference in Phoenix, AZ (photo by Shawn McCullough, Sports Radio Service)
Katy Perry at the Super Bowl Halftime Press Conference in Phoenix, AZ (photo by Shawn McCullough, Sports Radio Service)
Katy Perry at the Super Bowl Halftime Press Conference in Phoenix, AZ (photo by Shawn McCullough, Sports Radio Service)
Katy Perry at the Super Bowl Halftime Press Conference in Phoenix, AZ (photo by Shawn McCullough, Sports Radio Service)
Katy Perry at the Super Bowl Halftime Press Conference in Phoenix, AZ (photo by Shawn McCullough, Sports Radio Service)
Katy Perry at the Super Bowl Halftime Press Conference in Phoenix, AZ (photo by Shawn McCullough, Sports Radio Service)
Idina Menzel at the Super Bowl Pre-Game Press Conference in Phoenix, AZ (photo by Shawn McCullough, Sports Radio Service)
Idina Menzel at the Super Bowl Pre-Game Press Conference in Phoenix, AZ (photo by Shawn McCullough, Sports Radio Service)
Idina Menzel at the Super Bowl Pre-Game Press Conference in Phoenix, AZ (photo by Shawn McCullough, Sports Radio Service)
Idina Menzel at the Super Bowl Pre-Game Press Conference in Phoenix, AZ (photo by Shawn McCullough, Sports Radio Service)
Idina Menzel at the Super Bowl Pre-Game Press Conference in Phoenix, AZ (photo by Shawn McCullough, Sports Radio Service)
Idina Menzel at the Super Bowl Pre-Game Press Conference in Phoenix, AZ (photo by Shawn McCullough, Sports Radio Service)
Idina Menzel at the Super Bowl Pre-Game Press Conference in Phoenix, AZ (photo by Shawn McCullough, Sports Radio Service)
Idina Menzel at the Super Bowl Pre-Game Press Conference in Phoenix, AZ (photo by Shawn McCullough, Sports Radio Service)

Katy Perry Set to Perform in Super Bowl Halftime Show

Katy Perry at the Super Bowl Halftime Press Conference in Phoenix, AZ (photo by Shawn McCullough, Sports Radio Service)
Katy Perry at the Super Bowl Halftime Press Conference in Phoenix, AZ (photo by Shawn McCullough, Sports Radio Service)

by Shawn McCullough

In the biggest game of the year, the Patriots and the Seahawks will battle for the Lombardi Trophy, but halfway through, one of the biggest pop icons with take the stage to entertain the world.

Katy Perry will perform in the Super Bowl XLIX Halftime Show in Phoenix.

“I feel very honored and very proud and very blessed that I get to play the halftime show at this age,” said Perry. “I feel like it’s an incedible, humbling, spiritual experience in some ways.”

She will be joined by special guest Lenny Kravitz.

“Lenny is going to be sharing the stage with me. We’ve worked up something incredibly soulful, of course he brings the soul and I think it’s just going to make the night even sexier.”

Perry will be following some legendary Super Bowl Halftime Shows from the past including Michael Jackson, Bruce Springsteen, Madonna, Paul McCartney and Prince.

Asked about what she wanted to be remembered for after the show, “I just hope at the end of the day that over 100 million people are smiling in unison and I want for all of it to be about the music.”

Perry said that she will be rooting for the Seattle Seahawks because of her close friendship with Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson.

Sacramento teacher Ken Gimblin, 76, was noted Northern California sportscaster

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By Robert D. Dávila
bdavila@sacbee.com

 

Ken Gimblin, an influential teacher and sports journalist who covered Northern California teams for many radio and TV stations, died April 15 of a heart attack, his family said. He was 76.

Decades before Ryan Seacrest turned up everywhere as a TV host, radio personality and producer, Mr. Gimblin was a expert multitasker who juggled careers as an educator and sportscaster. He started teaching at California Middle School in Sacramento in 1961 and later ran a successful student internship program at the state Capitol. Meanwhile, he reported on local high school and college sports for KROY radio and was the first sports anchor for KTXL Channel 40 in the 1970s.

“He told me once that he would get up, do a radio show, teach all day and then drive down to San Francisco to do an interview,” his sister Jean Cress said. “In the van on the way back, he’d sleep. Then he’d go into the station, write everything up and do the show. The next day, he did it all over again.”

For more than 50 years, Mr. Gimblin hustled harder than many top-dollar athletes as one of the most respected sports journalists in Northern California. In addition to college teams – from Sacramento State to Stanford and UC Berkeley – he covered the San Francisco Giants and 49ers, the Oakland A’s and Raiders, and the Golden State Warriors and Sacramento Kings for major Sacramento and Bay area media outlets.

“When I was covering the Giants at Candlestick (Park) in the 1970s and ’80s, Ken helped me so much,” said Amaury Pi-Gonzalez, a Spanish-language Major League Baseball announcer. “He was a real gentleman who treated everyone with respect, no matter who it was. He was a very talented man, and we’re going to miss him.”

Besides working as sports director at KTXL, Mr. Gimblin built a loyal following in Sacramento reporting for KCRA, KGMS and KWOD radio, including live coverage of the Camellia Bowl at Hughes Stadium. While working as a sportscaster for KXTV Channel 10, he eased into game shows as the popular host of “Bowling for Dollars,” a nationally syndicated program. In addition, he spent spent many years as a spokesman for the California State Fair.
Widely admired for his extensive knowledge of professional sports and teams, he founded his own company, Multi-Media News and Sports, as an umbrella organization for his services as a journalist, public relations expert and tour host for Giants and Raiders booster clubs. He was spotted in the press box at a Giants game a few days before he died, family and friends said.

“Ken was top-notch,” said Lee Leonard of Sports Radio Service. “He was always giving tips and helping people who were trying to break into the business. He had relationships with so many people in radio and TV. He was a classy guy.”

Kenneth Earl Gimblin was born Dec. 2, 1937, in Sacramento. He began doing on-air sports for KXOA and KFBK radio while attending McClatchy High School and earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees in education and social studies from California State University, Sacramento.

He taught for many years in the Sacramento City Unified School District and oversaw Practical Politics, a program that placed high school students in internships at stage agencies and Capitol offices. In recent years, he was a substitute teacher at Capital City School, a Sacramento City independent studies program.

Mr. Gimblin was divorced and is survived by two daughters, Carolyn Bonanno and Jennifer. In addition to Cress, he is survived by two other sisters, Catherine Wilson and Nancy, and a granddaughter.

A memorial is set for 1 p.m. May 10 at St. Peter’s Lutheran Church, 8701 Elk Grove-Florin Road, Elk Grove. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Sacramento State, through a secure site accessed at http://www.csus.edu/giving.

NOTE: This story was written by Robert D. Dávila of the Sacramento Bee

Ken Gimblin: A Man for All Seasons

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By George Devine, Sr.
 
Ken Gimblin, who died suddenly this week, was among the most respected members of the sports journalism community in Northern California. His talents and achievements were not limited to athletics, however. A native of Sacramento, Ken spent many years as a TV news anchor and covered the Capitol. He was in frequent communication with, and a friend of, Governor Ronald Reagan among other leaders of the State. In addition Ken worked with local schools in introducing students to the inner workings of government by such means as visits to the Capitol.
 
Among Ken’s credits were his role as a publicist for the California State Fair and his stint as the host of “Bowling for Dollars” which was telecast coast-to-coast for a number of years. He did not limit himself to broadcast media, however, and was a talented print journalist as well. As time went on, he launched a successful company, Multi-Media News and Sports, whose name embodied the scope of his activities.
 
Beginning in the early 1960s he covered Northern California sports teams including the San Francisco Giants, San Francisco 49ers, Oakland Athletics, Oakland Raiders and Golden State Warriors, in addition to the collegiate teams of Sacramento State, UC Berkeley, Stanford and the University of San Francisco. He was well respected in all those venues and knowledgeable about the goings-on of the various teams. Once the Kings of the NBA located in Sacramento, he was full of inside knowledge over their ownership situation and the successful effort to keep the team in Sacramento. Until very shortly before his death, he was a key source for information on the proposed new arena near Old Sacramento.
 
Over the years he was engaged with his longtime friend and colleague Lee Leonard in the formation and expansion of Sports Radio Service and was a key contributor to its success, in both the web site and the broadcasts which were heard throughout Northern California. His friends and admirers were legion, and many writers and broadcasters credit him for being generous with his advice and encouragement. He was one of those rare people that had no detractors.
 
Upon hearing of his death, one media colleague put it tersely: “He sure knew how to class up a press box!”