And Then There Were Two: The Super Bowl Halftime Dilemma

There’s an old saying in football. If your team has two primary quarterbacks, you actually have none. That’s because your quarterback must stand out, excel, be the undisputed leader, and be respected by the rest of the team universally. When you have two of them, it’s usually because both of them are inferior, and are failing at their job.
This year, the Super Bowl will have two halftime performances, which in truth means that it will have no true halftime performance at all because neither will command the universal audience it needs to bring the United States together, which the Super Bowl is supposed to do.
Beyond being a football game, the Super Bowl has become one of the most important musical events of the entire year. This is because of the massive audience the event draws. It’s also because of all the secondary musical performances beyond the halftime show, including the National Anthem, “America the Beautiful,” and the numerous other high-profile pregame performances.
But now that you have two halftime shows instead of one, it parses the audience, polarizes both sides, and destroys the unipolar moment the Super Bowl once presented. Just like everything else in American culture, the Super Bowl Halftime Show has now been bifurcated and Balkanized like the results of a bad divorce.
On Monday (2-3), conservative political organization Turning Point USA announced the lineup for their long-threatened alternative halftime show in response to the NFL and Jay Z’s Roc Nation booking Bad Bunny as the 2026 Super Bowl halftime performer. Called the “All American Halftime Show” focusing on “faith, family, and freedom,” the TPUSA presentation will feature Kid Rock, Lee Brice, Brantley Gilbert, and Gabby Barrett as performers.
In many respects, the NFL egged this on by booking Bad Bunny in the first place, which has turned out to be quite a polarizing pick. Though the Puerto Rico native’s music is super popular worldwide and he just won the 2026 Grammy for Album of the Year, he doesn’t perform in English. Though some especially uninformed critics have claimed he not even American (yes, Puerto Rico is a US territory), the Bad Bunny performance seems like yet another effort by the NFL to expand its reach into Central and South America as the interests of core NFL fans go under-served.
Even then, Bad Bunny is not a bad pick. Perhaps if skeptical fans gave him an opportunity, they would like his music. Country music fans have been interfacing with Spanish language songs for decades from artists like Johnny Rodriguez, The Texas Tornados, and The Mavericks. Down in Texas, it’s common to hear a song in Spanish at a dancehall or honky tonk.
But as Saving Country Music has been pointing out for years now, you have to go all the way back to 1994 to find the last and really only time country music was featured during the Super Bowl halftime. Clint Black, Tanya Tucker, Travis Tritt, and The Judds performed that year. That means it’s been 32 years since country music was featured. There hasn’t even been a country artist featured as a guest in 23 years when Shania Twain appeared briefly with No Doubt.
Instead, it’s been a steady diet of pop, rock, and most-recently, hip-hop performers during the Super Bowl halftime after the NFL partnered with Jay-Z’s Roc Nation in 2019 as their official “Live Music Entertainment Strategists.” Completely ignoring large swaths of the American population with their Super Bowl halftime was bound to result in a backlash at some point. It appears 2026 is that year.
The NFL could have booked Luke Combs to perform who then could have brought out Tracy Chapman for their version of “Fast Car.” Or they could have booked Chris Stapleton who’s universally beloved, or even George Strait who is responsible for the 2nd and 4th biggest ticket events in North American history. Someone launched a petition to get Strait to be the halftime performer that now has 120,000 signatures. Zach Bryan is now responsible for the #1 ticketed event in North American history, and would have been a good selection.
Country music is as hot as its ever been, and if the NFL had booked Post Malone or Garth Brooks, they probably wouldn’t be fielding this problem right now. Dolly Parton is one of the few universally beloved personalities still left out in American culture. Some surmise with a new football stadium being built in Nashville, when that lures a Super Bowl to Music City, they’ll do a big country music bash. But ignoring country music, and the tastes of core NFL fans for so long has created the appetite for alternative programming.

Kid Rock is commonly misappropriated as a country star, which he categorically isn’t, even if he owns a home and bar in Nashville, and has released a few country songs in his career. Lee Brice, Brantley Gilbert, and Gabby Barrett are very much of the country universe, even if all three strongly inhabit the B-level of country music has-beens.
It looks like country music finally did get it’s Super Bowl halftime we’d all been clamoring for, but it’s not exactly the one we ordered up.
Lee Brice is good for a few good songs (“I Drive Your Truck”), but his career was wrecked by the Curb Records talent retention program that stifles the output of artists so they can never fulfill their contracts. It’s been 6 years since Brice officially released an LP. Gabby Barrett is barely more than a one hit wonder (2020’s “I Hope”). And Brantley Gilbert, well, he’s always been a laughing stock, and was partially responsible for giving birth to the scourge that was Bro-Country.
Specifically, Brantley Gilbert was previously universally repudiated for a terrible performance at a Monday Night Football game, and regularly turns in tracks deemed some of the worst “country” songs of all time. He’s a yoke around Turning Point USA’s presentation whether they know it or not, and will be a useful idiot/ meme generator for all those who are sure to satirize and slander the alternative halftime show irrespective of how good it is. This lineup is a great example of how politics is a terrible curation point for music.
Say what you want about Kid Rock though, he knows how to put on a show, and he has a huge following. That’s the reason he’s the spearhead of the massive “Rock the Country” traveling festival happening for the second year in 2026, which is its own whole drama-filled and politically-charged topic to be dealt with at a later time.
Who knows, the whole All American Halftime Show could go off like the XFL, and become a laughing stock of history and a boondoggle for promoters. They definitely would have been better served by trying to put put together some bigger and better talent for the show.
The Puppy Bowl might pull in equivalent numbers, though perhaps curiosity, or even the car crash factor might result in elevated ratings for the Kid Rock show regardless of the quality of the presentation. And for sure, half of America will be rooting for this alternative halftime show to spectacularly fail, while the other half will be rooting for a ratings cratering for the official one.
And in many respects, that’s the biggest problem with this entire thing. We’re dividing ourselves down the middle, rooting for the demise and failure of the other half, even though our destinies are all intertwined and our communities commingled. We couldn’t commence a civil war even if we wanted to, since the battle lines would be drawn right down the middle of states, communities, neighborhoods, and sometimes even families and households.
Now even cultural touchstones like the Super Bowl and music are being asked to choose sides, usurping their important capability of bringing people together across the ideological strata. Things like the Super Bowl halftime show are being used to divide and conquer. Whatever Super Bowl halftime show you watch will be a litmus test. And as long as we’re all warring over trivial things like the Super Bowl halftime show, we’re ignoring how we’re all being fleeced by the super elite, and larger swaths of our country get engulfed by the homelessness and addiction crisis.
If you have two quarterbacks, you have none. If you have two halftime shows, you have none. And if you have two countries attempting to live side by side while undermining each other at every turn, you have no country. And that’s no damn way to win a football game.
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February 3, 2026 @ 8:16 am
This is a pretty bad take, Trig. There are not two equal halftime shows. Everyone knows that. Ratings will bear this out.
There’s the SuperBowl Halftime show, and then some other clown show.
February 3, 2026 @ 8:24 am
Well I don’t even know how you could have taken this whole take in and left a comment five minutes after the article was posted. But as I said in the article, I definitely think there a chance this thing becomes a laughing stock and a boondoggle. But don’t underestimate the pull of the American public to segregate and divide themselves via culture war issues. There will be tons of otherwise self-respecting country fans who were slandering the names of Yankee Kid Rock and Brantley Gilbert a few years ago who will be watching this thing and preaching about how awesome it is simply because they think it’s the way to own the other side.
February 3, 2026 @ 8:48 am
Also, you have to think about the Oliver Anthony situation, and the backlash to the Morgan Wallen cancellation that launched major hits, and mega stars. There’s a lot of cope in people thinking nobody will watch the Kid Rock extravaganza.
February 3, 2026 @ 10:33 am
Friction will be the biggest hurdle they encounter. Are that many people going to exist out of whatever app they are watching the Super Bowl in to either download another app OR open up YouTube?
Maybe they will, but I suspect the vast, vast, vast majority of folks will just leave the Super Bowl on (those watching it at least) and forget about the other show or watch it later.
Absolutely a dedicated group of individuals are gonna switch over. No doubt about that, but I also think this “alternative” has a big barrier before it which is a lot of people watch the Super Bowl in a “communal” setting. I.e., at a Bar or at a friends or family members home. In that setting is there gonna be a strong desire to turn off the Super Bowl and open up another app (or tune to a different station)? I question if that will happen.
Who knows, maybe it will happen. Many, many moons ago the WWE at the height of their popularity were able to get people to switch to “Half Time Heat”. But doing so also took a massively popular young adult brand at the time and WWE using their two biggest stars and weeks of hyping up the show. TPUSA is a big deal, but they don’t have the cultural cache that WWE did at the time and the artists playing this thing are not massive stars anymore either.
February 3, 2026 @ 8:20 am
As usual, reading your articles is a roller coaster of emotions. One minute I am thinking “well that’s one of the dumbest opinions I ever heard” and by the end I am thinking “I actually agree with Trigger on this point”;
February 3, 2026 @ 8:21 am
Correct.
And the NFL didn’t egg anything on with a “polarizing” take. Bad faith culture warriors like TPUSA have spent millions trying to make a US citizen look like a threat for singing in Spanish.
It’s ridiculous. Ignore it. Stop wasting words on whatever Kid Rock is doing.
February 3, 2026 @ 8:30 am
As I’ve said from the very beginning with this: I have no problem with the Bad Bunny pick. I listen to a lot of music in Spanish being from Texas. I love Tejano and Conjunto music. It’s the country music of South and Central America.
But what I do recognize is the NFL is not serving its core constituency, and instead is attempting to expand its fan base to enrich itself financially by opening new markets, while also taking almost a parental role when it comes to culture, trying to socially engineer outcomes in a manner that never works and that has resulted in the alienation of large swaths of the population.
February 3, 2026 @ 10:50 am
This has been the purpose of the halftime show for forever, though.
Did Madonna, or Michael Jackson, or Beyonce or U2 really serve the core football watching constituency? The NFL’s goal is to make the Superbowl a major social event that everyone watches, even if they don’t really care about football, and they’ve been successful. The halftime show exists to serve people that don’t really care about football.
If I watch at all it’s for the football, and I’ve really never enjoyed the halftime show. But the halftime show isn’t for me. Whatever.
February 3, 2026 @ 11:04 am
In previous eras, Madonna, Michael Jackson, Beyonce, and U2 were much bigger artists who found more universal name recognition and popularity because the American culture wasn’t stratified like it is today. That’s the whole point I’m trying to make with this article. We have become a culture of various microcosmic ideologies warring among each other, steeped in our own reality tunnels. Bad Bunny is one of the most popular artists in music, and before this Super Bowl controversy (and even now), most Americans can’t name a song from him. Everybody knew “Thriller” and “Like a Virgin.”
February 3, 2026 @ 12:14 pm
I think it’s a given that our culture is more stratified now than previously, I’m just not sure what you are asking the NFL or Bad Bunny to do about it.
Given the fact that there are no longer songs like Thriller being released that everyone knows, and that there will be haters for any pick, choosing the most streamed artist and best album winner of 2025 is about the most common ground you could get.
The purpose of any TV show is to draw as many eyeballs as possible to sell as many expensive ads as possible. As much as we in our niche here might have loved to see George Strait or Dolly Parton, it’s exceedingly obvious they wouldn’t draw near the viewership that Bad Bunny would.
So what is the point of getting worked up over it? Why play into the division? Why give trolls like TPUSA the attention they seek? I think this “backlash” they are trying to whip up is about as meaningful as a Bud Light boycott.
February 3, 2026 @ 12:44 pm
I just don’t understand what’s going on here. In this article, in a previous article I wrote on the subject, and in numerous comments in this comments section, I have not only said I’m okay with Bad Bunny playing the Super Bowl Halftime, I have also laid out specific information as to why it is a viable pick, including citing his streaming numbers, and the Grammy win, and even advocated for people being more receptive to him despite only singing in Spanish. Look at the article. Read what I said.
However, now that we have this alternative programming and it involves country artists, it felt relevant to broach my advocacy for a country artist to play the Super Bowl halftime at some point, since it hasn’t happened in 32 years and counting. It seems like an extremely reasonable request that after 32 years, you can at least let one country artist perform. I’m not advocating that Bad Bunny gets kicked off. Obviously, that’s not going to happen at this point.
But moreover, my concern is where this is all headed, and this comments section is a perfect illustration. We’re all programmed simply to win arguments online as opposed to addressing fundamental, universal concerns, listen to one another, and see the world from other people’s perspectives. That’s why I keep getting opinions assigned to me I never shared, because people can win those arguments, as opposed to the arguments I’m actually making, which is how we ALL lose the further we fracture culture.
February 3, 2026 @ 12:11 pm
Bad Bunny sold out a bunch of NFL stadiums and MLB ballparks on his last tour’s US leg in summer 2022. I’m pretty sure the NFL considers the Bad Bunny fans that sold out their arenas in markets they have teams playing in to be their “core constituency”. They want all the eyeballs, particularly when they live locally and got a enough disposable income to drop three figures on concert tickets.
February 3, 2026 @ 10:19 am
I have to agree. There isn’t a single Country performer who is big enough besides maybe Morgan Wallen (who would never get chosen) that can compete with other artists on the world stage. I am a Ron Paul conservative and I find what TPUSA is doing to be complete nonsense. I will watch some of the clips after the fact out of morbid curiosity. TPUSA’s response is to pull in douchebag Country acts who are nearly fairground acts at this point. (and that’s not to disparage Country acts who have aged out of the market but are still legit)
February 3, 2026 @ 8:28 am
Exactly. It’s a free country. Everyone’s allowed to put on a “Halftime Show.”
I hear my neighbor’s putting on one in his yard.
But, for better or worse, the Super Bowl is putting on just one.
February 3, 2026 @ 8:28 am
“I Drive Your Truck” and “Rumor” are the only Lee Brice songs that have ever moved the meter for me. The other three “stars,” no thanks. But then, I only watch for the football, so halftime will be a combination of eating, drinking, conversation and muting the music, no matter who’s playing, Go Pats.
February 3, 2026 @ 8:31 am
The NFL has tended to go with more current artists for the halftime show in recent years vs legacy acts. The two biggest artists in the world right now are Taylor Swift and Bad Bunny. There were reports that negotiations with Taylor broke down when they wouldn’t allow her to own the footage. Taylor said in an interview that she would never do it while Travis Kelce is still playing in the NFL. Either way, if you want the biggest artist and can’t book Taylor you only have one other choice – Bad Bunny.
February 3, 2026 @ 8:42 am
The problem is that the NFL is not a global sport. It is an American sport. And the fact that they’ve been trying to shove American football down the throats of Europe and now Mexico and South America has resulted in a lot of cultural resentment. Yes, Bad Bunny is super popular to a global market. That’s not necessarily representing the constituents that watch football. In fact, that’s the reason they booked Bad Bunny, to try to lure in new NFL fans. But you do that at the risk of alienating your core fans.
February 3, 2026 @ 9:50 am
I don’t disagree with your main point, about the NFL trying to expand, at the expense of their current fans sometimes. However, I do think you are sleeping on how much Spanish speaking Americans/or US residents, or whatever their demographic, are tuning into, and enjoying football. I work in a town that’s 90% hispanic , 75% Spanish speaking and they have Seahawk fever. In my town I took my kid to indoor soccer the weekend of the conference championship games and a group of Mexican dads were gathered around a phone watching the Pats/broncos. These are definitely dudes who listen to the majority of their music in Spanish. Probably not Bad Bunny though. Bimbo Bakery is the number one bread manufacture in the country. 15% of NFL viewers are first language Spanish speaking. This is a demographic that’s already watching the NFL in big numbers, with a lot more room to grow. The NFL would be silly to not try to tap into that market. If youre a 30 year old white guy and you aren’t a football fan by now, you won’t be. Lee Greenwood doing the halftime show isn’t going to change that.
February 3, 2026 @ 10:42 am
The point of this article was to underscore concern for how the the parsing of the Super Bowl halftime show into two separate programs further divides the American culture, invariably creating downstream effects that will continue to further divide us as a nation. I wouldn’t be surprised in subsequent years if there are 3-5 different Super Bowl halftimes as various constituencies decide they need their own specific event. To me, this is a catastrophic development. That is what this article is about.
I live in Texas, I’m a minority in my neighborhood, city, county, and state. I enjoy Spanish-speaking music, and I completely understand how the demographics of the United States play into this equation.
I’m also not advocating for Lee Greenwood to play the Super Bowl halftime. Nobody is except for maybe Lee Greenwood.
I understand this topic has a lot of tentacles, and I addressed them specifically in this article. What I’m frustrated about is that few if anyone is addressing or even recognizing the global point the article is attempting to make. And even more frustrating is that opinions and arguments that I did not make are being assigned to myself or this article because these are people’s pet arguments.
I have always administrated this website under the idea that music can unite people and solve problems politics can’t. But if we eliminate the one opportunity for us all as Americans to sit in the same audience, that power is drastically diminished. And I find that very concerning.
February 3, 2026 @ 10:26 am
I hear you, but I think you are underestimating Bad Bunny’s popularity in the US. His latest album has sold almost 2 million copies in the US and featured 3 top 10s on the Billboard Hot 100. He’s doing Taylor Swift and Morgan Wallen numbers. He may be more popular in the Spanish speaking world, but he’s plenty popular here too.
February 3, 2026 @ 10:31 am
I’m not under-estimating Bad Bunny’s popularity at all. I underscored that in the article itself. I am not advocating and have never advocated against Bad Bunny being featured on the Halftime Show. However, according to NFL sources, numerous owners are incensed over the pick, public sentiment on it is clearly polarized, and it resulted in alternative programming being produced. This cannot be good for the NFL. Ultimately, the pick has turned out to be an albatross over the event. I think it’s important that we recognize that, irrespective of Bad Bunny’s popularity.
February 3, 2026 @ 9:30 am
Wow that is really bad when the 2 biggest so called artists in the world are Taylor Swift and Bad Bunny. I wouldn’t pay $20.00 to see either of them.
February 3, 2026 @ 8:36 am
I’ll be watching Bad Bunny. Just like I watch the Grammy’s every year even though most of what I’m looking for happens before the televised part. Just love the exposure to new music even if it won’t stick in the rotation.
February 3, 2026 @ 10:28 am
Gay
February 3, 2026 @ 8:36 am
“he doesn’t perform in English.”
Neither does Morgan Wallen.
But who cares? He’s one of the biggest artists in the world.
It could have been a *LOT* worse. They could have had Cardi B or Tate McCrae or Jelly Roll or Harry Styles or Sabrina Carpenter or Kid Rock.
February 3, 2026 @ 9:40 am
“Neither does Morgan Wallen”! Dude that made me spit out my coffee. Bravo
February 3, 2026 @ 8:45 am
On the list of things I don’t give two fuzzy craps about, the Super Bowl half time show is way up there. Right behind the Super Bowl itself.
February 3, 2026 @ 8:49 am
The premise that the “Super Bowl is supposed to bring America together” is the worst take in the article. Mostly love ya, this time your wrong.
February 3, 2026 @ 9:26 am
In 2025, the biggest television event in the United States far and away was the Super Bowl with 127 million viewers, or over 1/3rd of Americans watching. No other event even came close, with the next biggest rated event being the AFC Championship game with 57.7 million viewers. The NFL accounted for 48 of the Top 100 television events in 2025.
You might not think that the Super Bowl brings Americans together, or that it’s designed to do that. But it does, and by such a demonstrable measure, it’s almost hard to fathom.
That presents an opportunity, and one that music can play a role in.
And this isn’t a “take.” It’s a statistical certitude.
February 3, 2026 @ 8:58 am
I’ll be too Kid Rock’d by that point to change the channel on the 4 TV’s I’ll be running at my party, anyways
February 3, 2026 @ 9:01 am
The universe of country music, at its hottest, pales in comparison to the universe of Pop, trigger, everybody knows this. And thats as much Country musics doing as anything else. Not theee weeks ago you had one of your associates laughing on here at the idea that neighborhoods in Chicago, New York, etc could be hotbeds of country music- laughing at the idea that urban cities would be ripe for country music, and now you’re on here contending that country music would be beloved for all? Your own followers are arguing against that! Theres way more pop music coming out of Nashville Artists than there is country coming out of any of the 21 cities larger than it with the exception of Austin. So your implication that country music would be universally cheered flies right in the face of what a lot of people on this very site are advocating for the genre.
As far as the TPUSA show goes, its probably best for country music that no actual stars or George Strait wanted anything to do with it, as that would just isolate the genre even further from getting serious consideration as a “universally beloved” genre.
February 3, 2026 @ 9:20 am
“Not theee weeks ago you had one of your associates laughing on here at the idea that neighborhoods in Chicago, New York, etc could be hotbeds of country music- laughing at the idea that urban cities would be ripe for country music, and now you’re on here contending that country music would be beloved for all?”
Wait, so someone in the comments section said something at some point. And now I’m beholden to that random person’s opinion, and being contradictory if I disagree with it?
Garth Brooks is the best selling artist in American history, and the 3rd best selling artist globally behind Elvis and The Beatles. Morgan Wallen was the biggest artist in 2024. Country artist hold the record for the #1, #3, and #4 ticketed events in North American history. So can country music appeal to a wide audience? Of course it can, and does.
The contortion people are twisting themselves into to somehow undermine the idea that not booking country at the halftime for 32 years is okay is pretty wild.
” So your implication that country music would be universally cheered flies right in the face of what a lot of people on this very site are advocating for the genre.”
I never said that. That opinion was never shared here. I never said it would be universally cheered, or even implied that. I said country music should have the opportunity to be featured at the Super Bowl halftime along with the other popular American genres.
February 3, 2026 @ 9:23 am
Look below, Country music juat isnt anywhere near as popular as the artists that get selected for the half time show. It just isnt
February 3, 2026 @ 11:49 am
Well that settles it then. Next year for Christmas dinner, I’m serving up McDonalds because it’s the most popular food in America. Thus, it means it will go over well.
February 3, 2026 @ 9:10 am
This is such a disappointment to real music fans. The NFL made a political move that likely isn’t backed by the majority of the team organizations, from ownership down to the players, and most certainly isn’t something that fans asked for. I don’t particularly care to trash Bad Bunny. He’s just a dude who was given a platform and ran with it. I’ve never heard his music and don’t intend to listen any time soon. He doesn’t deserve the negative press, the NFL does.
Less than 1 in 100 fans of professional football are happy about Bad Bunny as the halftime performer. Talk about placing ideology over all else.
As for the TPUSA event…Lee Brice is the only somewhat decent artist of the lot, and he hasn’t released anything good since his self-titled album with “Boy” and “Rumor” on it. That was a strikingly good album front to back, only to be followed up by the half-assed record with “Memory I Don’t Mess With” on it (talk about a terrible hook and phrase to have in a song! So damn clumsy). Brantley Gilbert was good until he watched too much Sons of Anarchy and decided to dress like a casting reject and filter his vocals through a shovel of gravel. Dude can’t even sing anymore. Gabby Barrett rehashed “Before He Cheats” to great annoyance and hasn’t done anything noteworthy since. Kid Rock is…eh..Kid Rock. “Picture” was a great song but we’re talking less than 10 great songs in his entire discography.
Both Halftime shows are lame as hell. I don’t plan to watch either of them.
February 3, 2026 @ 9:13 am
“as the interests of core NFL fans go under-served.”
Core NFL fans watch football and don’t give a shit about the halftime show. If the halftime show falls within my area of interest, I’ll enjoy it. If it doesn’t, I’ll ignore it and go take a leak or get some nachos. Not everything is meant for me, and that’s fine. Why is that so difficult for people to accept?
February 3, 2026 @ 10:05 am
I will go eat in the kitchen during the half time show, like I do every years, regardless of who is singing.
February 3, 2026 @ 9:15 am
63 yo football fan here. I can’t remember the last time I watched the half time show and went wow that was great. Frankly I could care less. This whole mess is just about the least important thing I can think of in 2026. It’s a football game with a bathroom break in the middle and has been (for me) for years. I could care less if he sings in Spanish. I saw Los Lobos the other night and the 99% white middle class crowd ate it up even if about half was in Spanish. This whole thing is just more sowing of division.
Kid Rock represents faith family and American values? Give me a fucking break. That’s coming from someone who saw him live and kind of enjoyed the performance. Family friendly I think not.
The point about people claiming to like music based on the artists perceived politics leads to a lot of people really not enjoying the music. Personally I can overlook it. I like some Kid Rock and even some Ted Nugent songs and I most definitely don’t agree with their politics.
This comment section should quickly go off the rails.
February 3, 2026 @ 9:22 am
“Kid Rock represents faith family and American values? Give me a fucking break. That’s coming from someone who saw him live and kind of enjoyed the performance. Family friendly I think not.”
Exactly. Kid Rock has never been family entertainment, and it speaks to the kind of contortions people will twist themselves into to justify their ideological viewpoint. Though I don’t doubt this particular presentation will be family friendly.
February 3, 2026 @ 9:30 am
Kyle defines what is not “family entertainment” while supporting a Puerto Rican transvestite.
February 3, 2026 @ 9:35 am
I didn’t say Bad Bunny was family entertainment either.
Man, I am just getting misquoted, misconstrued, and opportunistically pulled quoted like mad here.
February 3, 2026 @ 10:37 am
Tell that to LGBTQ at drag queen story hour.
You don’t get to define what is “family entertainment” or not.
February 3, 2026 @ 9:52 am
Los Lobos can unite people, as they’ve recorded songs like “Will the Wolf Survive” that someone like Waylon can cover and have a hit with. They are roots rockers at the core, so they have that in their corner.
Bad Bunny is a gender bending weirdo who isn’t going to elevate anything or anyone with his sexual weirdness. Traditional Americans who generally keep a more stoic approach to life are pushing back against that sort of thing becoming the norm. when a Supreme Court Justice won’t state publicly that a woman is an adult human female, Kid Rock being sold as family friendly can be a result of that. Roger Goodell needs to understand who his fan base is. However, it seems the he believes gamblers are their fans base and not working class folks.
And, yes, the comments section is going into the sewer again.
February 3, 2026 @ 10:45 am
I get people don’t always enjoy some of popular culture. Not a fan of drag shows myself. Pretty much can’t stand Bad Bunny and most of what passes as pop music. it’s just not worth it to me to get too worked up over something that will be 15 minutes out of the whole day. YMMV.
Now the thing you mentioned about gamblers being the target audience is a real problem that no-one wants to acknowledge. I’d love to see the Turning Point types speaking out over how gambling culture is damaging so many of our population, especially young men. Far more damaging than Bad Bunny. Again YMMV.
February 3, 2026 @ 9:16 am
I would venture a guess Hank Jr will perform with Kid Rock as a special,surprise guest.
February 3, 2026 @ 9:36 am
Now that would be a great halftime show.
February 3, 2026 @ 9:17 am
Tyler Childers should should be tapped to play Bitin’ List at the Superbowl;
It being the best country song after all.
And Kyle should publish all his Saving Country Music articles in Spanish.
February 3, 2026 @ 9:21 am
Politics is downstream from culture. The NFL is neglecting its core constituency and someone else is trying to serve it, however inadequately it may seem. This is what a free market does.
When the NFL hands over a property to Jay Z, who has referred to himself as Che Guevara with bling, this sort of thing can happen. There’s other issues that might take Jay Z out of this position…
I won’t watch either of them, but I’m kind of glad TPUSA is doing this. These things have tentacles running deep into the culture.
February 3, 2026 @ 9:21 am
Chris Stapleton: 24.4 M monthly listeners
Luke Combs: 25.3 M monthly listeners
Dolly Parton: 16M monthly listeners
Zach Bryan: 27.8 M monthly listeners
Morgan Wallen: 32.6 M Monthly Listeners
Bad Bunny: 83.9 M Monthly Listeners
Kendrick Lamar: 72.7 M Monthly Listeners
Usher: 44.8 M
Rihanna: 104.3 M
The Weeknd: 119.9 M monthly listeners
So no, no where near as many people want to listen to country music for the super bowl half time show as what JayZ is putting out there, and its not even close to close
February 3, 2026 @ 9:33 am
Again, Global vs. National.
And again, I’m not asking for country music to be featured every single year at the Super Bowl like hip-hop has been for the last seven. I’m just asking that maybe country music could be featured once in the past 32 years since it’s a popular American genre. This shouldn’t be a surprising request from a website that was built to advocate for country music.
February 3, 2026 @ 9:39 am
Id almost wager that Bad Bunny has more monthly streams out of Nashville than any country music star of today… I love some of these guys but I recognize the super bowl show is going to feature much bigger names than Country music has in its arsenal.
Theres a dude in his 20s on my sports team that is a dead ringer for Sturgill Simpson, yet when I told him that not he nor anyone on my team had heard of Sturgill. This group all knows who bad bunny is. I think you underestimate how much more popular even in the US these super bowl acts are than anything considered country.
February 3, 2026 @ 9:48 am
Mike,
You’re presenting facts for the argument you want to make as opposed to the argument that was presented. I posted in the article how popular Bad Bunny is. I even went on to say I don’t have a problem with him performing. This isn’t even an article about how country music needs to be featured at the Super Bowl Halftime. It simply mentions this as a sidebar, and in the context of the alternative halftime show features country artists.
Of course nobody knows who Sturgill Simpson is.
February 3, 2026 @ 10:08 am
You mention in this and many articles how you think country music should be on a half time stage at the superbowl. You even go to list some names that you think would work. How is pointing out specificly how much less popular those names are than the acts that are actually chosen not responding directly to your article?
Did you not advocate for Zach Bryan or Chris Stapleton to be considered?
February 3, 2026 @ 9:35 am
This is all true and Trigger acknowledges this in the article. It also misses the point. Everybody knows why the NFL picked Bad Bunny and the others. It’s that the NFL takes their fans for granted in the biggest game of the year and caters the halftime show to fans other than the ones who buy tickets for the rest of the games.
February 3, 2026 @ 9:43 am
Country fans are not 4x more represented than the US at larger when it comes to football fans. Sorry thats absurd… maybe an SEC game but viewership for the superbowl (and most NFL games) reflect the demographics of the US… it isnt close to be disproportionately country music fans
February 3, 2026 @ 10:12 am
But there are very few performers who are more popular in the U.S. than Bad Bunny. I don’t see how choosing a massively popular performer is taking fans for granted.
February 3, 2026 @ 9:27 am
This really is not a Bad Bunny issue, it’s an NFL issue, which you pointed out in the article. The outrage is mostly from NFL fans who are tired of the NFL, especially Goodell, giving fans the middle finger. The increasing number of games overseas, the increasing number of games on multiple pay TV channels, going to 18 game season, along with other examples is driving this outlash. Having a spanish speaking performer was the easy target to protest. I also find it interesting that for the paid events where they need actual people to show up during super bowl week they hired artists who will bring in the fans/consumers. Believe Stapleton is a headliner. Combs in doing something also.
I personally think the Super Bowl misses great opportunities to have local artists – New Orleans should have Trombone Shorty and this year in the SF area, Metallica would be the easy choice. Metallica also sells out all over the World, I have no doubt they could of drawn foreign to the show.
February 3, 2026 @ 9:55 am
You have a thoughtful response here. Goodell won’t go for a thoughtful approach, though.
February 3, 2026 @ 10:25 am
It’s funny because as a kid I was told by Christian adults that Metallica were Satanic, but now they’re presented as the wholesome alternative to some who sings in Spanish.
February 3, 2026 @ 12:08 pm
Where did I say Metallica was a “wholesome alternative” to anything? Also, what does being wholesome have to do with the super bowl performer (most aren’t)? This backlash from Bad Bunny isn’t about being wholesome. Metallica is from San Francisco and has said they would do it. I was touting local performers, and the super bowl is in the SF area. Metallica also sells out stadiums all over the world which provides broad appeal. Just one example.
February 3, 2026 @ 12:16 pm
Man I was just pointing out the humor in having arrived at a point in history where Metallica was some sort of safe consensus mainstream choice for the Super Bowl. I had to hide their tapes under the mattress with the porn mags.
February 3, 2026 @ 9:28 am
True Americans just want to see Shakira shaking her as- at halftime for 15 minutes. Bring her back and unite all of us!
February 3, 2026 @ 9:31 am
“This year, the Super Bowl will have two halftime performances.” That’s simply inaccurate.
The Super Bowl will have a halftime show. Turning Point USA will have a concert during the halftime of the Super Bowl.
One will be seen by millions of people worldwide. One will be seen by a smattering of people who can find it buried in their cable system.
February 3, 2026 @ 9:38 am
A lot of cope going on here. The distribution on social media will make the TPUSA presentation just as accessible as the Super Bowl.
February 3, 2026 @ 9:34 am
My initial thought is what you briefly touched on in the article, how could this impact the already fracturing Rock the Country Tour. Morgan Wade and Carter Faith (and for what it’s worth Ludacris) already dropped out. Ella Langley and Shinedown are feeling immense pressure to drop out from their fan bases.
Kid Rock headlining a divisive, controversial, alternative halftime show might push those artists over the fence.
As for the Super Bowl, it’s no longer for us common folk. It’s an international event. It will be held in London sooner than later (an earlier kickoff will be nice). College Football has been way more receptive to country music.
February 3, 2026 @ 9:37 am
As a non-American, I can only shake my head at the Super Bowl controversy. And I think to myself: What’s wrong with a country that creates such problems for itself? Why is “the other side” always to blame for everything? How is this supposed to end? Why does a “Christian nation” find it so difficult to be lenient, forgiving, and humble toward the “other side”? What about the commandment to love the enemies?
February 3, 2026 @ 9:50 am
I was gonna actually read the original article, …. then saw the direction of the comments and decided not to.
For those who are followers of Jesus…
Matthew 25:35-40
“35For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you invited me in,
36I needed clothes and you clothed me, I was sick and you looked after me, I was in prison and you came to visit me.’
…
40 “The King will reply, ‘Truly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me.’”
– Jesus Christ 🙌✝️
🛐☮️❤️✝️✡️☪️
February 3, 2026 @ 9:58 am
I’m sure Bad Bunny will put on a hell of a show. They should book a country act next year though.
February 3, 2026 @ 10:01 am
I do think the halftime show has always been for “not the nfls core audience”. The game is for those people. The halftime show is to give something to the folks watching the game at a Super Bowl party who don’t actually like football very much. Same thing with the commercials.
Unfortunately the big loser here is country music because once again kid rock and Brantley Gilbert represent what country music is to the casual fan. Oh yeah country music fans the people who will listen to kid rock because they’re so mad about hearing Spanish spoken on tv. Sure feeds into the negative perception people have of what country music is about.
I like Lee Brice though
February 3, 2026 @ 10:04 am
Man I wish I could time travel back to the 90’s. Any kind of unifying culture is dead. Sports gambling and all the extraneous nonsense and overdone effects makes me feel nothing about sports. TPUSA is propped up by Isreal money and anyone who finds Erika Kirk or any of the other TPUSA speakers compelling is a retard.
February 3, 2026 @ 10:41 am
Amazing how you lament the lack of unity and then immediately make some of the most offensive, divisive comments possible. You sound like an antisemitic, ignorant freak.
February 3, 2026 @ 12:09 pm
Well I am against what is happening in Palestine and my favorite show is Seinfeld, but keep going..
February 3, 2026 @ 10:05 am
Let’s just bring back “Up With People” and call it a day.
February 3, 2026 @ 10:16 am
Who watches any of this shit? Just turn the volume down and get another plate of food, refill your drinks, and bullshit with your friends for 25 minutes like a normal person.
February 3, 2026 @ 10:18 am
There is practically no difference between Bad Bunny’s current twist on hip hop versus Kid Rock’s twist on hip hop when he used to open for Ice Cube in the early 1990s when he wasn’t yet a household name.
February 3, 2026 @ 10:24 am
Turning Point USA is a predatory joke masquerading as a youth movement. Charlie Kirk runs it like a personal ATM, vacuuming up millions from terrified boomer donors while selling college kids the fantasy that reciting Ben Shapiro memes will make them edgy rebels. The organization is built on fear, resentment, and the cheapest brand of performative patriotism. Their entire existence is one long grift: scream about campus free speech while blacklisting anyone who disagrees, host “awake not woke” conferences that are just overpriced echo chambers, and now this laughable “All American Halftime Show” stunt. A desperate attempt to hijack the Super Bowl spotlight because they can’t stand fifteen minutes of a Puerto Rican megastar singing in Spanish without melting down. They trot out Kid Rock, a faded shock-rocker who peaked in the Bush years and now looks like a MAGA bikerbar mascot, alongside a roster of third tier country acts that even mainstream Nashville barely remembers. It’s not a countercultural statement. It’s a tantrum dressed up as entertainment.
Turning Point doesn’t empower youth; it exploits them. Together they form the perfect toxic symbiosis: a washed-up demagogue and a propaganda outfit that exists to keep his cult angry, afraid, and donating. Their version of “America First” has always been “Me First, You Last.” They poison every cultural space they touch, sports, music, education, now even the Super Bowl halftime, because unity is the enemy of their business model. Division pays. Rage sells tickets. Grievance keeps the checks coming.
This isn’t patriotism. It’s a racket. And it’s embarrassing that in 2026 we’re still watching these clowns try to turn a football game into their personal culture war battlefield. The rest of the country just wants to watch the damn game. They can’t even let that happen without making it about themselves. Pathetic doesn’t begin to cover it.
February 3, 2026 @ 10:26 am
I will watch the NFL halftime show because Bad Bunny will probably put on an amazing show. I really have not listened to much of his music…but I’m willing to open my mind/ears/eyes to his performance. By featuring an artist who sings in Spanish, they are reaching out to NFL fans who live in the USA and Mexico — and yes in Europe and SA. I have no problem with that. Country music may be my favorite genre…but I love sampling other genres.
February 3, 2026 @ 10:43 am
I’m glad to see another female country lover here who’s also open to other genres – and who kind of agrees that Bad Bunny performing in the Super Bowl isn’t even among this country’s ten million biggest problems 🙂
February 3, 2026 @ 10:28 am
The “Super Bowl” is now the “Ghetto Bowl.”
February 3, 2026 @ 10:32 am
We shouldn’t be promoting anti American talking points and those who promote them, especially at something as “American” as the superbowl. Bad Bunny promotes anti-Americanism and shouldn’t perform the halftime show. Not that it hasn’t been a trainwreck for years, but that’s not a reason it should continue being a trainwreck. The alternative halftime show is an ok first step to non-trainwreckery
February 3, 2026 @ 10:44 am
You’re the guy whose only comment on another well-meaning post here was “gay”, right? Because that’s apparently the most clever “insult” you could muster? I think that says it all about how bright you are and the degree to which we should value your opinion.
February 3, 2026 @ 12:13 pm
The higher tier insults are reserved for those who deserve them 😉
I’m glad you feel smarter than me because I said gay tho
February 3, 2026 @ 10:48 am
How does he promote anti-Americanism?
February 3, 2026 @ 12:19 pm
Based on his statements about Puerto Rico and ICE, it’s clear his allegiances lie not with America but with Puerto Rico and illegal immigrants primarily. Giving him such a massive platform at such an “American” event legitimizes his message and promotes it. He thinks it’s bad for America to enforce it’s laws because it’s mean, when in reality, it’s just enforcing the law.
February 3, 2026 @ 12:25 pm
Puerto Rico is America.
And immigration is incredibly nuanced. There are all sorts of different policy preferences that could be considered pro American.
February 3, 2026 @ 10:35 am
I’ve spent most of my life in NYC and am a huge country music fan (you might be pleasantly surprised by how many fellow country fans I’ve found here!). I try my best to ignore the sociopolitical hellscape this country has become in large part because I’ve always battled depression and it’s detrimental to what little remains of my sanity. I do my best not to let an artist’s political stance influence how much I enjoy his or her music. (Luckily for me, I’ve always despised Jason Aldean’s voice, music and overall demeanor, so I never had to make any decisions about whether to stop supporting him)
All that said, this “alternative” halftime show just feels like performative nonsense to me, more to MAKE A POINT than to genuinely serve an audience who feels like their needs aren’t being met. That impression is reinforced by the fact that the main headliners haven’t been popular for decades. And as an ardent country music defender, I really hate the idea that some viewers are going to assume Kid Rock, a way past his prime Lee Brice or screechy Gabby Barrett (who, by the way, is from Pittsburgh and has put on a bizarrely fake “country” accent that’s just cringy) is the best that our genre has to offer.
Sorry for the above rambling, but I mostly came here to ask whether I’m the only one who had to ask our friends at google who the hell Brantley Gilbert is?! I’m 51 and have loved country music since before I could write my own name, but I’d never even heard of this guy. Or maybe my brain was just doing me the favor of blocking him out from my memory 😉
February 3, 2026 @ 10:50 am
Comments will be closed upon occasion as I’m traveling and cannot properly screen them.
February 3, 2026 @ 12:15 pm
Counter-programming the Super Bowl halftime show is nothing new? Was the Puppy Bowl or the Lingerie Bowl a cultural crisis? https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Super_Bowl_counterprogramming&wprov=rarw1