A music festival on Market Street in Inglewood, online sports competitions at the Rams and Chargers' Tailgate Tour Super Week in Santa Monica, performances by the likes of Halsey and Miley Cyrus at the Crypto.com Arena downtown: Los Angeles is getting better celebrated on every corner before the Super Bowl.

The National Football League (NFL) final, in which the Los Angeles Rams meet the Cincinnati Bengals in Inglewood on Sunday, is also drawing non-football fans out of the house with falling incidences.

In addition, more than 150,000 Americans from other regions of the country traveled to the Super Bowl.

As the market research company Micronomics calculated, they spend more than 475 million dollars on hotels, restaurants and shopping by Sunday.

Adam Burke, head of the Los Angeles Tourist Office, celebrates the sports spectacle as a turning point after two years of the pandemic: "The Super Bowl LVI is the perfect milestone for our comeback." Hotels like the Bel-Air and the Beverly Hills Hotel - average room price at this Weekends around 2,000 dollars per night - have long been fully booked.

Parking near So Fi Stadium in Inglewood reportedly costs up to $5,000.

The Super Bowl will be a home game not only for the Rams, who have been back in Los Angeles since 2016.

During the famous half-time break, the highlight of the sports spectacle for many of the approximately 100 million viewers in front of the screens, three Californian musicians will be on the stage in Inglewood.

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Like Kendrick Lamar, Dre hails from neighboring Compton, and Snoop Dogg from Long Beach south of Los Angeles.

Eminem, the fourth Super Bowl LVI rapper, flies in from Detroit, Mary J. Blige, the "Queen of Hip-Hop Soul", flies to Los Angeles from New York.

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Dre announced the singers will also be joined by deaf hip-hop musicians Sean Forbes and Warren "WaWa" Snipe on Sunday.

Shawn Carter, better known as Jay-Z, producing Halftime for sponsor Pepsi for the third time,

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Dre and his hip-hop colleagues plan for the twelve-minute halftime, meanwhile, remains a secret.

The fact that the National Football League is particularly big in Los Angeles has a long tradition.

Michael Jackson's performance in Pasadena, where he rose from clouds of smoke before singing "Heal the World" with 3,500 children, is still one of the most spectacular halftimes almost 30 years later.

At that time almost 90,000 spectators were there live, on Sunday there will be more than 100,000 football fans, about one in three from California.

The last few tickets to the highest-rated sporting event on Stub Hub cost at least $3,000.

After the kick-off, the admission ticket is also available as a digital souvenir in the form of a non-fungible token.

Those who keep their distance in Corona times rent a box.

The booths in the more than five billion dollar So Fi Stadium, which opened almost two years ago, cost 250,000 dollars or more.

In addition to a bar, catering and screens for the iconic Super Bowl commercials, the luxury suites offer the best views of the centerline and end zones.

But football fans have to do without bare skin like in 2004.

After Janet Jackson's "Nipplegate" with Justin Timberlake, who at the time bared the singer's chest at halftime during their duet, Dr.

Dre out more mishaps for Sunday.

"I was able to convince Snoop and Eminem to keep their penises in their pants," the rapper and producer joked at a press conference on Thursday.

"It wasn't easy, especially with Eminem."