If you didn’t know before Super Bowl LX that 2026 is America’s 250th anniversary, the Big Game made sure to weave the event into every part of the game. The players wore a “USA 250” patch embroidered into their jerseys, and the coin-toss participants sought to capture the past, present, and future of the NFL for the next 250 years. But Super Bowl LX’s most powerful example of how America has evolved since signing the Declaration of Independence in 1776 came at halftime when Bad Bunny—the first Spanish-language artist to win Album of the Year in Grammy history—took the stage to uproarious applause.
“My name is Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio,” Bad Bunny said in Spanish. “If I am here today at Super Bowl 60, it is because I never, ever stopped believing in myself.”
Congrats to anyone betting on the opening song. The Puerto Rican singer, wearing an all-white suit sporting his last name on the back, began the show with “Titi Me Pregunto.” Pedro Pascal, Jessica Alba, and Cardi B danced underneath him, and the football field was transformed using prop plants and power lines into a vibrant and active miniature Puerto Rico. Benito passed piragua stands, played a bit of Daddy Yankee’s “Gasolina,” and adorably passed his Grammy Award to a young child. “Always believe in yourself,” he told him, in Spanish. Ricky Martin performed too!
It was such a fun scene that I could have easily watched Bad Bunny run around the field while singing “DTMF” and waving the Puerto Rican flag instead of another half of this terrible game. It was 6-0 at halftime, with the Seattle Seahawks in the lead over the New England Patriots, making for one of most boring halves in Super Bowl history. Not a single touchdown. So, Benito dancing on top of a car (and semi-officiating a live wedding while Lady Gaga sang a Latin remix of “Die with a Smile”) was the energy we desperately needed this year.
For months leading up to this halftime show, there was a sad contingent of America that was against this performance. They even staged their own “All-American” halftime show for the late Charlie Kirk’s Turning Point USA platform that featured Kid Rock and a smattering of white country artists. Their viewership numbers, big or small, will likely surprise us for different reasons tomorrow morning. But what’s more surprising—especially for such a country and an NFL that is historically against change of any kind—is that the NFL has come a long way in the past decade.
In 2016, Colin Kaepernick was essentially ousted from the league after kneeling in protest during the National Anthem. President Donald Trump, in his first term, called for kneeling players to be fired. And NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, who initially condemned the protests and ordered their players to stand, didn’t acknowledge until after the deaths of George Floyd and Jacob Blake to police violence that the league should’ve listened to the players. So, when Kendrick Lamar split a field of dancers in the red, white, and blue of the American flag in half and harked to Gil-Scott Heron by stating “The Revolution’s About to be Televised,” it was a massive leap forward for the Super Bowl Halftime Show.
This year, Bad Bunny’s performance marks another major step forward. Though he promised that the event would be a “huge party,” there was no way in hell that he was leaving one of the biggest platforms in the world without delivering a political message. At the Grammy Awards last week, his “ICE Out” statement inspired many artists who accepted awards after him to speak out against the government’s racist attacks on its own citizens. And when the Puerto Rican artist added that the halftime show would still highlight “a lot of my culture” in a press conference earlier this week, he was referring to a culture that—the last time I checked—was still a territory of the United States.
So, Benito didn’t speak a word of English throughout the entire show outside of stating “God Bless America” near the very end. He plastered “THE ONLY THING MORE POWERFUL THAN HATE IS LOVE” on the big screen behind him, and he passionately shouted out the countries of Latin America one by one before displaying a football with the phase “Together We Are America” written on it.
There are likely some viewers who thought Bad Bunny would have said much more. Much like M.I.A. giving the camera the middle finger before him, he would’ve risked paying fines from the NFL so that he could continue to protest the actions of Trump’s administration. But from what we saw from the reaction to Kendrick Lamar’s halftime show last year, It’s a hard line to balance. To Lamar’s own credit, as well, most of his political messaging was buried under his own showboating for winning his rap battle with Drake. It’s hard to blame him for wanting to take the victory lap. So, if all Bad Bunny did was put on a good show, no one would have faulted him either.
Instead, he put a great show. A show so celebratory of his career and his impact on music that I’m sure no one will be able to hear in Puerto Rico when they wake up tomorrow morning because of how loud they were screaming for their hometown hero. And if it wasn’t three degrees Fahrenheit where I am in Brooklyn, NY, I bet I could have opened up my windows to hear Bad Bunny’s anthems blasting out of every home in the neighborhood. Hopefully, it won’t take America another 250 years to learn how to have that much fun again.










