Skip to content
Sunday 19 July 2026EN · DE
City PM

European business, markets and politics

  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • Markets
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • Markets
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • DE
Sunday 19 July 2026 5:00 am  |  Updated:  Friday 17 July 2026 11:12 am

World Cup final half-time show has been coming, but Fifa must be careful

By: Simon Dent

Add as a preferred source on Google
Getty Images logo displayed on a digital screen, representing the media companys visual content and stock photography serv...
Madonna is among the stars set to perform in the first World Cup final half-time show

For a very long time, the World Cup final has needed no additional entertainment. The match was the spectacle. The players, the history and the occasion were enough.

That is why Fifa’s decision to stage the first World Cup final half-time show has made me and plenty of others feel a bit uncomfortable. Madonna, Shakira, BTS and Justin Bieber will headline what has been billed as an 11-minute performance in New Jersey on Sunday with Burna Boy, Gustavo Dudamel and the PS22 Chorus (featuring Coldplay – of course!) also appearing. 

My view is simple. Football may not need a half-time show, but the decision tells us something important about where the global game now is.

The biggest sporting events are no longer competing only with one another. They are competing with streaming platforms, music, gaming, creators and every other form of entertainment fighting for our time. The modern fan doesn’t separate sport from culture as neatly as previous generations did. A supporter may follow a club, an artist, a label and a streamer with equal intensity.

Fifa president Gianni Infantino understands that the final is not merely a match. It is one of the few genuinely global moments left. A live programme capable of bringing billions of people together at once. The commercial opportunity is much larger than selling sponsorship around 90 minutes of football. It is about turning the entire occasion into a global entertainment property. 

The line-up gives the moment enormous scale. Madonna offers cross-generational recognition, Shakira has a long-standing association with the tournament, BTS brings one of the most powerful international communities in entertainment, Bieber adds another large global audience, and Burna Boy gives the performance further cultural reach.

This is not simply booking some famous musicians; this is audience architecture. Each artist brings a different geography, generation and fandom into the game.

World Cup half-time show: landmark or gimmick?

Fifa needs to be very careful. Football cannot simply copy and paste the Super Bowl case study. The World Cup has its own traditions and emotional baggage. The show must complement the final rather than make the football feel like the supporting act. 

Read more

Cruyff turn: Starmer allows pubs to stay open for England World Cup game

Getty Images logo with a backdrop of diverse business professionals collaborating energetically in a modern office setting

Eleven minutes may sound brief, but any interruption risks irritating the supporters if it feels contrived or excessively commercial. Pauses in play are rarely popular in football, as the hydration breaks have shown us this summer. Football fans, unlike American football fans, aren’t used to breaks and half-time is often used for a pee, pint or fag break.

Authenticity will decide whether this becomes a landmark or a gimmick. The performance needs to feel genuinely international, respectful of football culture and connected to the purpose it claims to support. I also think the supporters of teams in the final may dictate how the spectacle is received and whether it’s repeated.

Sponsorship can no longer consist of putting a logo beside a famous event and expecting people to care. Audiences respond to entertainment, participation and Instagramable moments. The brands that win will create something that contributes to culture rather than merely borrowing attention from it.

This is the direction in which football has already been moving: clubs becoming media businesses, players becoming creators, and matches becoming platforms for entertainment, fashion and music.

This show will not please everyone, and nor should it. Big cultural moves rarely do. But it recognises a commercial reality. The World Cup’s scale is extraordinary, yet scale alone does not guarantee relevance.

The game will always be the main event. The opportunity is to build a wider cultural moment around it without diminishing what happens between the nations in the final.

Simon Dent is an entrepreneur and brand builder with more than 20 years’ experience across sport, entertainment and the creative industries.

Read more

Hydration breaks: World Cup ad cost could eclipse Super Bowl’s $7m price tag

Unfortunately, without specific details about the articles title, content, or the subject of the image, creating a precise...

Share this article

  • Facebook
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • WhatsApp
  • Email

Similarly tagged content:

Sections

  • Sport
  • News

Categories

  • Sport Business
  • Business
  • Fifa World Cup
  • Football
  • Sport

People & Organisations

  • 2026 Fifa World Cup
  • BTS
  • coldplay
  • football
  • Gianni Infantino
  • Justin Bieber
  • Madonna
  • Shakira
  • World Cup final half-time show

Trending Articles

  • Revealed: KPMG and Deloitte offer bumper redundancy packages to slash headcount

  • Citroën 2CV returns as a £13,000 electric car, and the timing is no accident

  • Burnham set for crunch decision on JP Morgan’s £10bn tower

  • Octopus tells Burnham to ‘cut bills’ with £189 energy plan

  • Motsepe backed to succeed Fifa’s Infantino by South African minister

More from City PM

  • Cruyff turn: Starmer allows pubs to stay open for England World Cup game

    Sport Business
    Getty Images logo with a backdrop of diverse business professionals collaborating energetically in a modern office setting
  • Hydration breaks: World Cup ad cost could eclipse Super Bowl’s $7m price tag

    Sport Business
    Unfortunately, without specific details about the articles title, content, or the subject of the image, creating a precise...
  • England chiefs lay bare Fifa World Cup logistics schedule

    Sport Business
    GettyImages 2270122974 features a dynamic cityscape with modern skyscrapers under a vibrant sunset sky, showcasing urban d...
  • What can the Rugby World Cup learn from US nailing of Fifa World Cup?

    Sport Business
    Getty Images logo displayed on a digital screen against a blurred background, highlighting the brands global presence
  • Calls for Argentina to be banned from World Cup over Falklands banner

    Sport Business
    Business professionals engaged in a collaborative meeting at a conference room discussing strategic growth opportunities
  • Over 1,000 World Cup final tickets unsold as resale site demands $2.3m

    Sport Business
    Breaking news concept with abstract digital globe and binary code on a blue background, symbolizing global data connectivity
  • Tickets for England World Cup quarter vs Norway on sale for $8m

    Sport Business
    Economic analysis charts and graphs showcasing global market trends in 2023 with a focus on stock performance indicators.
  • World Cup hydration breaks see bookies offer quarter by quarter odds for England v Norway

    Sport Business
    Getty Images logo on a smartphone screen, representing a focus on digital media and stock photography industry trends

City PM — European politics, business and analysis.

Europe

  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • UK & Ireland

Topics

  • Business
  • Markets
  • AI
  • Technology
  • Opinion
  • Energy

More

  • Politics
  • Economics
  • Fintech
  • Legal
  • Sport
  • Life

Company

  • About City PM
  • Editorial Policy
  • Corrections
  • Contact
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
© 2026 City PM · Published by CityPM Media, Bahnhofstrasse 65, 8001 Zürich, Switzerland
About · Editorial Policy · Corrections · Contact · Privacy · Facebook