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Greetings again from the darkness. Which pro football team had a hit song that reached number 41 on the pop charts and was awarded a gold record? Well, if you were around in 1985, you probably know it was the Chicago Bears and their song, “The Super Bowl Shuffle”. Director Jeff Cameron (“Hard Knocks”) in partnership with NFL Films proceeds to tell us more than we ever cared to know about the team, the song, and the video.
The film opens with the 12-0 Bears headed to Miami to play on Monday Night Football. As Jim McMahon says, that “was not our night”. The perfect season was no longer possible after Dan Marino and the Dolphins won 38-24. The nugget of information that makes this interesting is that it was the day after this game when the Bears were scheduled to film their music video. You can imagine the mood of the team had changed. Willie Gault knew linebacker Mike Singletary was key to uniting the guys and keeping to the commitment.
Mix Engineer Fred Breitberg is interviewed and spills a bit of trivia when he lets us know that the song was adapted from “The Kingfish Shuffle”, part of “The Amos ‘n Andy Show” (from the 1950’s). It was Jovan CEO Dick Meyer who had the brainstorm for the music video, and his surviving spouse lets us know that was her in the referee uniform blowing the whistle in the video (another bit of trivia). Sportswriter Rick Telander provides some perspective on the times and the impact of the Bears and video … they were media stars.
We do get to go behind the scenes (on set) as the video is filmed, and it’s pretty funny to watch these sports giants struggle to get the dance steps down. Poor Leslie Frazier is crowned the team’s worst dancer and takes a bit of grief from his teammates, as you would expect. Then we see Walter Payton and Jim McMahon superimposed over the team portion, as they both skipped the initial filming. Was the team challenging karma by recording the video prior to qualifying for the Super Bowl? Or were they just confident? Either way, Singletary firmly believes the project led to a deep bonding with teammates that never would have happened without the video.
This was the MTV era and the video (VHS) and record (45 rpm) went viral – well what was considered viral in the pre-internet days. The team raised over $300,000 for Chicago Community Trust (a charity) and ultimately lost the Grammy to a fellow from Minneapolis that went by the name Prince. After the Bears trounced the Patriots in the Super Bowl, it left us wondering if the lyrics were misleading … it certainly seemed like this team really was there to start some trouble. A final piece of buried trivia that the film uncovers is that the Patriots actually responded with a video of their own. No one seemed to notice.
Debuts November 25, 2025 on HBO
- Documentary Review: ‘You Got Gold: A Celebration Of John Prine’ - November 25, 2025
- Documentary Review: ‘The Shuffle’ On HBO Looking At The 1985 Chicago Bears Hit Song - November 24, 2025
- Review: ‘How The Grinch Stole Christmas: 25th Anniversary Edition’ - November 24, 2025
