The New Yorkers were very rapt by the Super Bowl Lix halftime show, so they avoided another type of bowl altogether.
Big Apple residents used the Eagles' inactive matchup as a welcome toilet break to prepare for the show's real star: Kendrick Lamar halftime performance.
Data provided by the Ministry of Environmental Protection shows that Lamar's 13-minute blockbuster concert saw a whopping 558,594 people flushing toilets during Lamar's 13-minute blockbuster concert.
When the “humble” star came on stage, overall water demand fell from 1,125 million gallons to around 1,026.
Water demand was absolutely lowest when the rapper plunged into Grammy-winning diss track “Not Ilo Us” at 8:38pm.
Flash data was relatively high in the first half of the game, indicating that fans are not too fascinated by the two-time champion chiefs choking out of the gate. They entered the second half trailing 24-0 behind the Eagles.
Kansas City was desperately back and back, and it remained low across five districts, crossing five districts as viewers were watching on predicted letters.
The Eagles confidently celebrated the victory before the match ended. Three minutes before Philael Fia set sail for a 40-22 victory, she dumped a bucket of Gatorade over Nick Silianni's head.
Around 250,000 New Yorkers hit John when the final whistle blew at 10:17pm, the DEP said.
That number is significantly lower than last year's surge in water currents. When Francisco's nail bitter from Kansas City Sun finally worked overtime, there were around 467,881 flashes.
The water usage spikes in the Super Bowl are nothing new. Audiences are usually glued to chairs during plays, commercials and halftime shows and run to the bathroom for some small breaks that can be found during the luxury period.
A few hours before the game, the water supply operator sends extra water to the Hillview Reservoir in the North Bronx in preparation for the spikes.
“For reference, on normal Sundays, water demand continues with the typical daily pattern of cities. As nights become autumn and more people fall asleep, water demand steadily declines. I'll do it.” The DEP said earlier this month.
“That pattern continues until people wake up, shower, brush their teeth, make coffee and prepare for the future.”
