Bad Bunny, the Puerto Rican superstar born Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio, is making history tonight as the headliner of the Super Bowl 2026 halftime show at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California. According to The Independent, he'll be the first male solo Latin artist to perform the set entirely in Spanish, promising a fun spectacle where listeners only need to focus on dancing.
This comes just a week after his album Debí Tirar Más Fotos became the first Spanish-language record to win Album of the Year at the Grammys, as reported by ABC News and Apple Music's announcements. During his acceptance speech, Bad Bunny called out President Trump's immigration policies, shouting “ICE out,” which has fueled political backlash. The Independent notes Trump claims he won’t watch, disapproving of Bad Bunny and Green Day, who's performing earlier with hits like “American Idiot.” Conservative groups like Turning Point USA are countering with their own Kid Rock-led alternative show, per ABC News.
Apple Music is amplifying the hype with Bad Bunny’s Road to Halftime playlists like Dance Bunny and Trap Bunny, plus a career-spanning megamix by producer Tainy, and live broadcasts all weekend. California Governor Gavin Newsom playfully declared today “Bad Bunny Day” in an all-caps tweet, mocking Trump-style rhetoric while celebrating the artist’s “soothing, beautiful voice,” according to LAist.
Social media buzz includes a viral “mass block” reports on TikTok and X since February 6, where fans claim Bad Bunny blocked them out of nowhere, as covered in YouTube shorts. Speculation runs wild on potential guests like Cardi B for “I Like It,” J Balvin, Rosalía, Daddy Yankee, or Ozuna—Shakira even shared support reminiscing their 2020 Super Bowl collab, per The Independent. Fans are hosting “Benito Bowl” watch parties in LA, blending joy and resistance amid ICE tensions, LAist reports.
CBS News highlights the cultural milestone, with experts like Petra Rivera-Rideau calling Bad Bunny a “master of surprise” who mixes party vibes with protest. Euronews frames it as a clash of language, identity, and U.S. immigration debates.
As Green Day and Charlie Puth kick off festivities, all eyes are on Bad Bunny’s barrier-breaking set in the Patriots-Seahawks matchup.
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