For decades, Thanksgiving in Detroit has meant two things: football and tradition. Now, it’s getting a serious dose of hip-hop authority.

Eminem — born Marshall Mathers — has inked a multi-year agreement to executive produce the Detroit Lions Thanksgiving halftime show through the 2027 season. Alongside longtime manager and business partner Paul Rosenberg, the 53-year-old icon is stepping into a new kind of spotlight: creative control.

And in Detroit, that means something.

A Homegrown Power Move

The Lions’ Thanksgiving Day game is one of the NFL’s longest-running traditions, broadcast nationally and watched by millions every year. It’s Motor City’s most visible annual stage — a cultural moment as much as a sporting event.

By taking over executive production duties, Eminem isn’t just attaching his name to the show. He’s reshaping it.

For the next three seasons, talent selection, performance tone, and overall production direction will run through Mathers and Rosenberg. That means Detroit artists could take center stage. That means the sound of the city — gritty, resilient, unapologetic — could finally headline its biggest platform.

25 Years of Industry Muscle

Few artists understand production like Eminem. Over a 25-year career that redefined rap’s global reach, he has shaped albums, curated talent, and built an empire rooted in authenticity.

This new role taps into that behind-the-scenes authority.

Executive producing isn’t about grabbing a microphone; it’s about building the moment — choosing the performers, structuring the flow, crafting the narrative that unfolds between kickoff and the third quarter.

For a city that has long championed its own, the symbolism is powerful. One of Detroit’s most famous sons now controls its most-watched entertainment slot.

Redefining Thanksgiving Tradition

The Lions’ Thanksgiving halftime has featured major stars in the past, but this move signals a deeper cultural shift.

Instead of booking big names disconnected from the city, the focus could pivot toward performers with Detroit ties — or artists who align with its musical legacy. From Motown echoes to modern hip-hop grit, the possibilities are wide.

And with Rosenberg’s strategic expertise alongside him, the operation won’t lack polish.

More Than Football

Thanksgiving football in Detroit isn’t just a game — it’s a ritual. Families gather. Generations tune in. The halftime show reaches audiences who might not attend a concert but will watch from their living rooms.

That makes the creative responsibility enormous.

For Eminem, whose career was built on defying expectations and controlling his narrative, this three-year stretch offers something rare: sustained influence over a national broadcast rooted in his hometown.

A New Era for the Motor City

“Three years of control” isn’t just a headline — it’s a statement.

Through 2027, the Lions’ Thanksgiving halftime will carry the fingerprints of Marshall Mathers. After decades of dominating charts and global stages, he’s redirecting that power back to Detroit.

And when millions tune in each November, they won’t just be watching football.

They’ll be watching Detroit — curated by one of its fiercest champions.