
Bad Bunny transformed the Super Bowl LX halftime show into a vibrant, emotional celebration of Puerto Rico, delivering a 13-minute performance that blended spectacle, culture, and message. From the moment he emerged at Levi’s Stadium, the field was reimagined as a Puerto Rican landscape, complete with sugarcane fields, plantain trees, and “La Casita,” a stage design familiar to fans from his recent residency on the island.
Opening with high-energy hits like “Tití Me Preguntó” and “Yo Perreo Sola,” the global superstar guided viewers through a carefully crafted journey that mixed joy, nostalgia, and pride. Visual moments—like crashing through La Casita’s roof or handing a Grammy to a child—highlighted both his showmanship and a deeper nod to his own roots and dreams.
Fashion played a subtle but important role, with Bad Bunny sticking to clean, cream-toned looks that felt both understated and intentional. Surprise guests elevated the moment even further, as Lady Gaga and Ricky Martin joined him on stage, adding emotional depth and cross-generational star power to the performance.
Beyond the music, the halftime show carried clear symbolism. Dancers dressed as jíbaros, references to Puerto Rico’s fragile power grid, and performances of songs like “El Apagón” underscored themes of resilience, identity, and social justice. The message of unity peaked when Bad Bunny held a football reading “Together we are America,” reinforcing a broader statement about love, inclusion, and shared humanity.
He closed the set with “DtMF,” a reflective ballad that brought the performance full circle—less about spectacle, more about connection. In the end, Bad Bunny didn’t just headline the Super Bowl halftime show; he used one of the world’s biggest stages to honor his culture, speak his truth, and remind millions where he comes from—and why it matters.
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