Contains strong language.

News imageSport's Strangest Crimes, Confessions of a Super Bowl Streaker, 3. On the Map

Sport's Strangest Crimes

Confessions of a Super Bowl Streaker

3. On the Map

6 February 2026

35 minutes

Available for over a year

Before Mark could streak the Super Bowl, both streaking and the Super Bowl had to become what they are.

Streaking has a history. The Super Bowl has a history. And host Rich Hall? Well he has a history too, which might explain a few things.

Rich Hall pulls apart the rise and fall of streaking in 1970s America - a cultural flash in the pan that somehow never quite died. Then, the evolution of the Super Bowl from a simple championship game into a global spectacle of music, money, and over-the-top showmanship.

Jim Steeg, the man who ran the event for 26 years, explains how half-time transformed from a small-time, marching-band interval into a billion-dollar pop extravaganza.

Meanwhile, Mark brings his act home. A charity streak at the Merseyside Derby is just a warm-up for the moment that truly makes him famous: crashing Fred’s floating weather map live on national television. Overnight, Britain knows exactly who he is.

Archive: Famous for Fifteen Minutes, BBC Radio 4.

Presented by Rich Hall

Produced and written by Elle Scott

Production co-ordinator: Juliette Harvey.

Production manager: Debbie Waddell.

Development Executive: Emma Shaw.

Production Executive: Ian Taitt

Sound Design and Composition: Julian Corrie

Executive Producer: Georgia Catt

Assistant Commissioner: Rob Green

Commissioning Executive: Stevie Middleton

A BBC Studios Production for BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Sounds.