Bad Bunny, Super Bowl and Puerto Rico
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Conservative influencer Tomi Lahren was brutally mocked in her own comment section after a progressive guest reminded her that people born in Puerto Rico are U.S citizens during a tense debate that aired Tuesday. “Tomi, I’m not going to sugarcoat this. You got humiliated,” read one comment with over 2,000 likes.
Does a video authentically capture Donald Trump saying planned Super Bowl 2026 half-time performer Bad Bunny is from "the Mexican City of Puerto Rico" ? No, that's not true: The audio was lifted from a Trump impressionist's YouTube video
Bad Bunny isn't one to do things halfway. He embarked on a career-defining 31-date residency, giving back to his fans and his people of Puerto Rico.
Bad Bunny’s “Debí Tirar Más Fotos” world tour kicks off on November 21 in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic before further stops throughout Latin America and later in Australia, Europe and Japan in 2026. The musician has opted not to tour in the US, citing fears of ICE actions.
Bad Bunny’s residency in Puerto Rico has boosted the island’s economy and stoked conversations about its identity and struggles.
During Bad Bunny's final residency show, Salsa icon Marc Anthony made a surprise appearance. He joined the rapper on stage to perform Preciosa. Other appearances included Arcángel, Ñengo Flow, De La Ghetto, Dei V, RaiNao, Chuwi, and the reggaeton duo Jowell & Randy. All of them helped Bad Bunny close his residency.
After 30 sold out shows, Bad Bunny is concluding his "No Me Quiero Ir de Aquí" residency with one final performance available to stream live.
Saturday's finale hit new heights as he rapped alongside Puerto Rico heavyweights Ñengo Flow, Jowell y Randy, Dei V, Arcángel and De La Ghetto, then shocked the audience when Marc Anthony joined him for a song he hadn't performed in public in nearly 20 years.
Bad Bunny became a global superstar, and the next Super Bowl headliner, by leaning into his native Puerto Rico — which remains the driver of his creativity.