Followers in San Juan, Puerto Rico, watch Dangerous Bunny’s efficiency on tv in the course of the halftime present of the NFL Tremendous Bowl 60 soccer recreation Sunday, Feb. 8, 2026.
Alejandro Granadillo/AP
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Alejandro Granadillo/AP
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — The Tremendous Bowl lasted all of 13 minutes for a lot of Puerto Ricans in San Juan and past.

Individuals turned their backs to TV screens as meals, music and chatter crammed the primary half of the sport till a hush fell throughout the island. The halftime present was beginning.
This was Puerto Rico’s second, a highlight on a collective son who give up bagging groceries a decade in the past and have become the world’s most streamed artist on Spotify final yr. Since then, Dangerous Bunny has used his platform to applaud immigrants, sing about Puerto Rico’s identification and turmoil and denounce U.S. immigration insurance policies.
“He appeared on the proper second within the historical past of Latin America,” stated Marielys Rojas, 39, who’s initially from Venezuela however has lived the final 22 years in Puerto Rico.
She was among the many lots of who gathered by a grassy knoll close to a seashore in Puerto Rico’s capital to look at the halftime present on an enormous display as waves crashed behind them and the sounds of coquís, an endemic frog, crammed the salty air.
Amarilys Reyes, 55, arrived on the seaside watch occasion along with her 22-year-old daughter.
She had by no means watched a Tremendous Bowl and did not know who was enjoying, but it surely did not matter. Like many others, she was solely there for Dangerous Bunny.
“It is the largest present of his life,” Reyes stated.
Power, nerves and pleasure had been constructing throughout Puerto Rico ever for the reason that NFL, Apple Music and Roc Nation introduced that Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio would headline the Tremendous Bowl XL Halftime Present.
Watch events had been rapidly organized throughout the U.S. mainland and the island. Some dubbed it “Tremendous Bori Sunday,” a shortened nod to “Boricua,” which refers to somebody with Puerto Rican ancestry, whereas others referred to it “The Benito Bowl: Morcilla, Sancocho, Mofongo, Reggaetón and a bit little bit of Soccer.”
One lady wrote on social media that she would watch the halftime present along with her 87-year-old mom in Puerto Rico so they might dance collectively, whereas one other particular person posted that they’d ready a PowerPoint presentation for his or her American mates dubbed “Dangerous Bunny 101.”
Creativity flowed as Feb. 8 approached: One bar in Puerto Rico posted a promo that includes the quarterbacks from the Seattle Seahawks and New England Patriots sitting on the long-lasting white plastic garden chairs that grace the duvet of Dangerous Bunny’s latest album.
Even the Teletubbies received in on the joy, shaking their colourful rumps to Dangerous Bunny’s “Baile Inolvidable” a day earlier than the present.
Marvel Girl additionally lent her assist, with Lynda Carter noting on social media that she was a “enormous fan” of Dangerous Bunny, whom she famous was an American citizen: “Make no mistake.”
However criticism of the primary all-Spanish NFL halftime present spiked as the primary half ended.

Jake Paul, a YouTuber-turned-boxer who has property in Puerto Rico and has posted about life on the island, wrote on X: “Flip off this halftime. A faux American citizen performing who publicly hates America. I can not assist that.”
Puerto Ricans rapidly responded.
“Do not you reside the place he is from?” wrote one particular person whereas many others famous that Puerto Ricans are U.S. residents.
Luke Lavanway, a 35-year-old who lives in New York however was vacationing in Puerto Rico to flee the continuing chilly snap, stated he had no drawback with a halftime present in Spanish.
“That is a part of us,” he stated. “That is what makes us nice, and we must always simply get pleasure from it.”
The group that had gathered for the halftime present started streaming out of the watch occasion as quickly because the second half began, smiling as they mirrored on what they’d simply witnessed.
“I believed it was phenomenal that Dangerous Bunny introduced all Latinos collectively in a single place and represented all of them equally,” stated Carlos Ayala, 36, of San Juan. “It is an vital second for Latino tradition.”
He additionally thought it incredible that Ricky Martin sang Dangerous Bunny’s, “Lo que le pasó a Hawaii,” which laments gentrification in Puerto Rico, a worsening challenge for a lot of on an island with a greater than 40% poverty price.
“Transmitting that message is extraordinarily vital in these instances,” he stated, including that he additionally appreciated the sunshine posts and exploding transformers featured in the course of the present, a nod to Puerto Rico’s continual outages “so the world can see what we reside via.”
Amongst these beaming after the present was Juliana Santiago, 35, who stated her coronary heart swelled with delight on Sunday night time.
She stated Dangerous Bunny proved that “you’ll be able to accomplish issues, that the American dream actually is actual.”

