I Actually Listened to the New Bad Bunny Album. This is What I Heard

Yeah yeah. I’m very aware this is a country music outlet. And I know that Bad Bunny is not a country artist. And no, there weren’t any country artists harmed in the writing of this article because they could’ve been covered and Bad Bunny is. Don’t worry. Saving Country Music remains very, very committed to producing content about independent country artists for you and everyone else to patently ignore. That is a solemn promise.
But as this imbroglio has unfolded about Bad Bunny winning the Grammy’s Album of the Year ahead of his halftime performance at the Super Bowl, it struck me that the vast majority of people were discussing an album and an artist they had heard little to no music from. The first and foremost rule of music criticism is that you have to listen to the material, and do so from an objective perspective, and with an open heart and mind.
It happens to be that recently I was taking a very long road trip from the tip of Florida back to Texas, and had plenty of listening time to spare. So I thought I would just pull up Bad Bunny’s Grammy-winning Debí Tirar Más Fotos (I Should Have Taken More Photos) to see what it was all about. Am I in any way qualified to “review” the album as a country music critic? Absolutely not, and that is not what this is. Though in my defense, I am not entirely foreign to Latin music either, and know a decent amount of Spanish to usually be able to discern the theme of a song.
I had no idea what to expect from this album. Because again, I’m a country music critic. But what I did know about Bad Bunny was that the top line description for him was that he was a rapper from Puerto Rico. So that’s generally what I expected to hear, which meant there was a chance I only got 45 seconds or a song or two into the album before bailing. Because I’m not particularly interested in listening to hip-hop, especially if it’s in a second language.
But what I found was not a hip-hop record at all. Debí Tirar Más Fotos is very distinctly a Latin record, and probably too diverse, and at times, too traditional to even label it as distinctly Latin pop. There are most certainly pop moments in the album, just as there are hip-hop moments and influences. But it’s not just the Spanish language that makes this album distinctly separate from mainstream American music culture. It’s the rhythms, the instrumentation, the textures and the intent.
Frankly, this album is too rich, to eclectic, too involved and ethnic for the at-large American appetite to ever even consider adopting wholesale. Those worried that Bad Bunny will use the bully pulpit of the Super Bowl halftime show to take over American culture need not worry. This is not Ricky Martin and his sellout American Spanglish bullshit. This is not Pitbull and his hype man gimmick where he spreads bovine fertilizer all over the audience while trying to not get any on his pearly white suit.

Previously, Bad Bunny has collaborated with big North American artists like Cardi B and Drake on pop crossover hits for United States consumers. Debí Tirar Más Fotos doesn’t have any of that. Instead Bad Bunny collaborates with other Puerto Rican artists like singer RaiNao, and a traditional Puerto Rican ensemble called Los Pleneros de la Cresta.
Music critics and Bad Bunny himself have said that Debí Tirar Más Fotos is his most personal record to date. But every artist says that about every single album they release. In this instance though, it’s probably true. This is an album for Puerto Rico, and of Puerto Rico. And yes, let’s not overlook that Puerto Rico is officially part of the United States, even if it’s separated by ocean similar to Hawaii, which gifted country music the sound of the steel guitar.
Reggaeton is the term that’s used for the prevailing version of Puerto Rican hip-hop music, including much of Bad Bunny’s material. But even that labeling doesn’t seem entirely apt here. There is still a lot of Electronica happening for sure, and the album still feels distinctly modern. But the verses are way too melodic to label it rap in many instances. There is straight up salsa music on certain tracks, along with “plena” music, which is the more traditional and Indigenous music of Puerto Rico.
This is not a sellout record. It’s a record that captures an artist entrenching himself back into his native roots. This would be the country music equivalent of an artist like Taylor Swift making a record with strong traditional country elements, soliciting Asleep At The Wheel to guest on a track, and kind of out of the blue, and kind of at the height of her career. It’s probably fair to say that Bad Bunny took some risks making this project. It’s also probably fair to say those risks were rewarded.
Arguably the biggest track on the record is called”BAILE INoLIDABLE.” After the minute introduction, it’s a straight up salsa song, and is written as a tribute to Puerto Rico and its history. The video features Bad Bunny learning how to salsa dance in scenes that are similar to going to places like The Broken Spoke, The White Horse, and Sagebrush in Austin, Texas to learn to Texas two-step. The fact that he’s wearing a Yankees/Dodgers hat symbolizes how Bad Bunny has been Americanized away from his own culture.
Within this context, you can understand why irrespective of any commercial success, the album also became critically-acclaimed, including winning the Grammy for Album of the Year. Bad Bunny career’d out with this album in many ways.
Now, does any of this mean that the album is any good? That of course is in the ear of the beholder. But what it also means is that when it comes to this particular album, the idea that it’s being roundly supported by American Music consumers outside of the Latino diaspora living in the United States is very fair to question. The constant defense of Bad Bunny and his pick for the Super Bowl halftime performance has been that he’s super popular. Sure he is. The numbers don’t lie. But with who?
This music is way too involved and esoteric for the average American listener. The vast, vast majority of support from this music is coming from outside of the United States, or expats from other countries living within it. It also doesn’t feel like Bad Bunny has any upside potential with the general American population by performing on the Super Bowl. As has been surmised by many before, booking Bad Bunny is all about broadening the appeal for the NFL in South and Central America and in the Caribbean, not broadening the appeal for Latin music within the U.S.
In much of the Caribbean and Latin America, music is so much more foundational to culture than it is in the United States. You really have to embed yourself in the Texas dancehall scene, or Cajun and New Orleans jazz, or certain Native American populations to find such a seamless marriage of culture and sound compared to what happens in places like Puerto Rico, Columbia, or Brazil. Music is life to a lot of these populations, including very specific rhythms and dance traditions indigenous to specific regions.
That is one of the reasons the Grammys have an entire other awards show and apparatus that is charged with covering Latin Music specifically. It’s called the Latin Grammys. It’s held in an arena and is televised by Telemundo and all across the Latin world, getting ratings often commensurate with the Grammy Awards proper. This year, Bad Bunny’s Debí Tirar Más Fotos won for Album of the Year at the Latin Grammys, double dipping with the Recording Academy.
Why doesn’t hip-hop have its own Grammy Awards, or country, or rock, or American pop? It’s because they probably don’t justify the need, while Latin music does due to the diversity of sound, and the dedicated population of performers and fans. But let’s also stop acting like Latin music is being marginalized in American culture. Thanks to Bad Bunny, the Grammys, and the NFL, it’s arguably being over-represented while already being richly supported.
What does all of this mean for American music culture at large? That’s a good question. No doubt, politics can result in people adopting music they otherwise wouldn’t. When the [Dixie] Chicks were “cancelled” from country music in the early 2000s, you had the NPR crowd all of a sudden adopting their music when they otherwise would never listen to it. You saw some of this with the Beyoncé “country” album as well, Cowboy Carter.
But again, Debí Tirar Más Fotos is just going to be too inaccessible to US audiences to see White American housewives listening to it in rebellion. It’s fair to ask what Bad Bunny will perform during the Super Bowl halftime though. It might be more of the rootsy/traditional songs from Debí Tirar Más Fotos. But it could also be mostly his big crossover hits.
Bad Bunny isn’t Latin culture taking over American culture as some have feared. The American music consumer is too shallow for that to happen. That doesn’t mean there aren’t some dance clubs outside of Latin communities slipping Bad Bunny songs into the mix or something. But these are isolated instances.
Ultimately, the inclusion of Bad Bunny in the Super Bowl Halftime Show is the ultimate move of cynical American capitalism on the part of the NFL. It’s all about the potential revenue of extending the NFL’s footprint into Latin America as opposed to attempting to take over American culture with Latin music. Bad Bunny is simply the vessel for all of this. Listening through Debí Tirar Más Fotos, that’s what you conclude.
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February 6, 2026 @ 12:36 pm
Well, that was something different from you.
Good job.
The superbowl will be watch whoever is playing. This is a NFL corporate decision to expand its audience.They can afford to do this. The NFL’s value is immense, with its 32 teams collectively worth hundreds of billions.
Do I think there are better choices, sure, but WTF am I?
Everything needs to be made into a stance these days. Stoopid. It’s music.
A lot of people in the world are fans of Bunny..
February 6, 2026 @ 12:37 pm
You are braver than me. Ain’t gonna
February 6, 2026 @ 12:40 pm
Thanks for your take Trigger. I appreciate this, although I think it is no longer necessary to beat the dead horse of the half time show “controversy”
I hope many folk are pleasantly surprised by Bad Bunny. I haven’t listened to the new album, but look forward to checking it out after reading Trigger’s take.
Have a joyful weekend.
“This is not a sellout record. It’s a record that captures an artist entrenching himself back into his native roots. This would be the country music equivalent of an artist like Taylor Swift making a record with strong traditional country elements, soliciting Asleep At The Wheel to guest on a track, and kind of out of the blue, and kind of at the height of her career. It’s probably fair to say that Bad Bunny took some risks making this project. It’s also probably fair to say those risks were rewarded.
….
Bad Bunny isn’t Latin culture taking over American culture as some have feared. The American music consumer is too shallow for that to happen [i.e. WE ARE THE SELLOUTS ;p ]. That doesn’t mean there aren’t some dance clubs outside of Latin communities slipping Bad Bunny songs into the mix or something. But these are isolated instances.”
– from Trigger’s original article
February 6, 2026 @ 12:59 pm
I won’t watch this for a pretty simple reason: to me, the NFL has always been a uniquely American institution. It grew out of specific regional cultures, traditions, rivalries, and even weather, and that’s a big part of what made it compelling. The league now seems singularly focused on expanding the brand globally, and in the process it’s sanding off the edges that once made it feel distinct.
The product already feels watered down compared to what it used to be. Rule changes, constant interruptions, and an ever-present layer of social messaging have shifted the focus away from the game itself. Adding an aggressive push toward international audiences only makes it feel more generic—less rooted, less authentic, and frankly more boring. It starts to feel like just another entertainment product designed to offend no one and appeal vaguely to everyone.
On top of that, the league increasingly promotes players and personalities that I don’t particularly want my children idolizing or emulating. Whether it’s behavior off the field, attitudes, or the values being projected, there’s a growing disconnect between what’s being celebrated and what I want sports to represent in my household.
Taken together, it all adds up to something that’s pretty unwatchable for me. What was once a tough, regional, culturally specific league now feels like a corporate global brand first and a football league second—and that’s not something I’m interested in investing my time in anymore.
February 6, 2026 @ 1:17 pm
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NNOdFJAG3pE
February 6, 2026 @ 4:05 pm
Uniquely American Institution indeed…
Fear and Loathing at the Super Bowl
Grim notes of a failed fan… Mano a mano with the Oakland Raiders… Down and out in Houston… Is pro football over the hump? A vague and vengeful screed on Texas, Jesus and the political realities of the NFL…
By Hunter S. Thompson
February 28, 1974
Rolling Stone
“Pro football in American is over the hump. Ten years ago it was a very hip and private kind of vice to be into. I remember going to my first 49er game in 1965 with 15 beers in a plastic cooler and a Dr. Grabow pipe full of bad hash. The 49ers were still playing in Kezar stadium then, an old grey hulk at the western end of Haight Street in Golden Gate Park. There were never any sellouts, but the 30,000 or so regulars were extremely heavy drinkers, and at least 10,000 of them were out there for no other reason except to get involved in serious violence. …By half time the place was a drunken madhouse, and anybody who couldn’t get it on anywhere else could always go underneath the stands and try to get into the long trough of a “Men’s Room” through the “Out” door; there were always a few mean drunks lurking around to punch anybody who tried that … and by the end of the third quarter of any game, regardless of the score, there were always two or three huge brawls that would require the cops to clear out whole sections of the grandstand.
But all that changed when the 49ers moved out to Candlestick Park. The prices doubled and a whole new crowd took the seats. It was the same kind of crowd I saw, last season, in the four games I went to at the Oakland Coliseum: a sort of half-rich mob of nervous doctors, lawyers and bank officers who would sit through a whole game without ever making a sound — not even when some freak with a head full of acid spilled a whole beer down the neck of their grey-plastic ski jackets. Toward the end of the season, when the Raiders were battling every week for a spot in the playoffs, some of the players got so pissed off at the stuporous nature of their “fans” that they began making public appeals for “cheering” and “noise.”
February 6, 2026 @ 1:33 pm
Based on this comment I would conclude we disagree about most important things in the world. But also you’re certainly correct that the nfl is a corporate inauthentic thing watering down the product in pursuit of the maximum dollar. I mean that’s capitalism that’s America but sure that’s what they’re doing. Btw this also includes any messages you think the nfl is promoting you disagree with. Michael Jordan said republicans buy shoes too but conservatives today seem to not recognize democrats watch sports too. The nfl wants to sell as much things as they can to as many people as tb ehh can. They do not have any authentic beliefs whether it’s their fake support for the military with their camo hats or their fake support for social justice. It’s money all the way down.
But you have articulated why me and a lot of people have gotten into soccer. It’s a sport that feels more real and feels like an antidote to the fake corporate bullshit that owns everything in America
February 6, 2026 @ 6:47 pm
That’s the way most pro sports are going. Think baseball and basketball, not to mention tennis and golf. Soccer always was international but now it is even more so.
February 6, 2026 @ 1:04 pm
This is Trigger’s mission. To listen to bad music so we don’t have to.
February 6, 2026 @ 2:09 pm
Yep
February 6, 2026 @ 1:15 pm
“Hey man them ain’t high heeled sneakers
And they sure don’t look like cowboy boots
And that ain’t rock and roll you’re playin’
And it sure ain’t country or rhythm and blues
You’re singin’ a song about makin’ love to your drummer
Well gay guitar-pickers don’t turn me on
And we don’t all get into Donna Summer
Do you happen to know any old Hank Williams songs?”
February 6, 2026 @ 1:16 pm
I had never heard ”BAILE INoLIDABLE” before but it’s not a bad track and there are diminished chords in the piano break.
I looked at the Wikipedia page for the Superbowl performers from the 90’s thru today and it appears like there are 10 yr trends with their picks. The 90’s had a bunch of pop, soul and R&B artists. I never remembered the Blues Brothers/James Brown/ZZ Top performance in 97’….it’s funny enough to watch James Brown try to lip sync (It’s on Youtube of course) The 2000’s was mainly classic rock (and Kid Rock in part in 2004 lol) It’s all marketing to what’s currently hot (there was a Blues Brothers sequel that flopped in the late 90’s) and about getting younger men to sports gamble now.
February 6, 2026 @ 1:39 pm
The 2000s was backlash to the Janet Jackson wardrobe malfunction. Years of old men wearing everyone was confident wouldn’t get naked.
February 6, 2026 @ 2:38 pm
That backlash made more sense – even though it’s obvious that whole thing was planned and Janet Jackson was probably wearing a nipple pastie. In the early 00’s nipples were not allowed on terrestrial TV. Nudity was still rare unless you paid for those extra channels on cable and satellite television. It was pre-high speed internet and nudity was harder to come by – I know I looked for it as a 15 yr old.
February 6, 2026 @ 2:07 pm
I have to wonder if some of the hand-wringing about Bad Bunny is that folks have become semi-addicted to algorithms catering directly to their tastes.
I’m not Bad Bunny fan. Ain’t my kind of music and I have no interest in the halftime show as a result. But outside of the (obvious) political gamesmanship with some of the complaints, I do wonder if a lot of it is that so much of our entertainment has become customized and therefore if something is outside of that customization we hate it?
Like, Tidal serves me customized recommendations based on what I listen to. YouTube serves me customized recommendations based on what I watch. Same for Netflix. Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and Reddit all serve you algorithmically based content based on your interests (and illicit various emotions).
I don’t know, just a crazy thought bouncing around my brain with all of this. Obviously what the NFL is doing is deeply cynical, but this is nothing new from them. Was Kendrick Lamar *really* aimed at the NFL demo? Or did we care less because the NFL was more subtle about their goals than they were this year with Bad Bunny?
February 6, 2026 @ 2:15 pm
I mean the halftime shows entire premise is being entertainment for the people who watch one football game a year. It’s always been for not the core demo. The game is for the football fans
But yeah I do think people are “uncomfortable” with hearing someone speak Spanish to a degree comparable to an anxiety disorder
February 6, 2026 @ 2:33 pm
I think it has to do with people thinking that what is in their internet algorithm is reflective of the world outside. (That same algorithm that will use your keystrokes searching for new boots and then force ads for boots onto Instagram and Facebook and onto ads on Youtube and Chrome. True story) I don’t know what the conservations were around Super Bowl performers in the 90’s but there were many black performers and racism and race relations were worse in the 90’s but black family sitcoms were popular. Idk. I think fake outrage around Bad Bunny is in part because the Hispanic and Latin influence in American music is comparatively less than black and white influence and some conservatives view Bad Bunny’s inclusion as an indirect action to force illegal immigration and white displacement. I don’t agree with those ideas and I find it funny that TPUSA is holding their own little Super Bowl show when they don’t breach edgy Right-Wing talking points like White displacement and it’s the Zionist lobby in US politics (which TPUSA has accepted hundreds of millions of dollars from) which has been pushing open borders and migration. TPUSA isn’t even completing the sentence of why they think Bad Bunny singing in Spanish is anti-American or whatever – they are just making a money grab. Hell you have leaked audio that was recently released of Erika Kirk gleefully telling her staff about merch sales 11 days after Charlie Kirk was shot. TPUSA is going after the dumbest common denominator on the right side of the political spectrum for money and neither TPUSA or the people watching can or will articulate the “why” that makes a coherent argument – right or wrong. In this case wrong.
February 6, 2026 @ 1:23 pm
Orale pues, vato.
February 6, 2026 @ 1:24 pm
I listened. Some of the music is decent if you like the Latin thing. i just can’t stand his whiny voice. Granted, it’s better than his mush mouth hip hop voice. But, it isn’t good.
February 6, 2026 @ 2:10 pm
“Ultimately, the inclusion of Bad Bunny in the Super Bowl Halftime Show is the ultimate move of cynical American capitalism on the part of the NFL.”
That is an utterly ridiculous idea. The halftime performers before this include… Kendrick Lamar, Usher, Rihanna, Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg, The Weeknd, Shakira. Do you think they were chosen for their deep connection to the culture of football?
I don’t recall a lot of complaints about Rihanna being from a Caribbean island that’s not part of the United States, but now it’s “cynical” and “corporate” (yeah, it’s a business) just because the artist, like 50 million Americans, speaks Spanish?
February 6, 2026 @ 2:31 pm
Look, I understand this issue is emotional for a lot of people. I also understand that since it brushes up against politics, it also enters into the domain of the irrational. But I really think we should all be able to see universally that the NFL and Jay Z’s Roc Nation made the decision to book Bad Bunny to expand the FNL’s footprint in Latin America since it’s clearly part of other initiatives by the NFL to expand internationally.
Kendrick Lamar, Usher, Rihanna, Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg, The Weeknd, and Shakira all most definitely fit more into the football demographic than Bad Buddy does. That’s one of the reasons I wanted to listen to this album and put it into context. All those artists—including Shakira—make music that is directly targeted at American audiences. With his last album Bad Bunny intentionally pulled his emphasis AWAY from the American audience, and orientated it more towards Puerto Rico and Latin America. Honestly, this music isn’t even in the same universe of accessibility with all those previous artists.
Let’s also not lose focus on the greater context, which is the NFL partnered with Jay Z in 2019 to try to improve relation with the Black community after the Colin Kaepernick situation. Jay Z has since pushed performers that more broadly appeal to Black America. That is fine, but we should all recognize that’s how those bookings came about, just like all the classic rock bookings that happened after the Janet Jackson boob incident.
February 6, 2026 @ 5:52 pm
If we were talking about the Thanksgiving Day games or something, I would buy the argument that the NFL should cater to their “core football demographic”. But this is the Super Bowl. It’s an almost Global event at this point and even if that is going too far, this game certainly draws in “casuals” like no other.
If we want to be upset about the NFL expanding, fine. Complain about how the NFL asks taxpayers to subsidize new stadiums, then has those teams play 1 less home game so they can go over to Europe or South America.
But this Bad Bunny at Halftime angle is just weird to me. Dude is uber popular with young people and that is exactly who these half time shows have catered to since the post-Jackson nipple kerfuffle led to a bunch of classic Rock bands playing.
February 6, 2026 @ 6:34 pm
Mike W.,
I’m not taking a position on whether the NFL should appeal to their core demographic with the Halftime Show or not. I am simply saying that they didn’t with this pick. And frankly, I don’t think that can be argued, especially after I listened to this album. This is not a Latin crossover album, it’s not a Latin pop album, it’s not a hip-hop album rapped in Spanish. It is an album meant to appeal in a dedicated manner to listeners in Puerto Rico and Latin America. That is the opinion I attempted to assert through this article.
“Dude is uber popular with young people and that is exactly who these half time shows have catered to”
Sure, he’s uber popular with young people … in Latin America, not the United States. And it’s because of this that you’re seeing the backlash.
And again, I am just trying to explain the contours of this issue. From the very beginning up until now I’ve been saying I don’t disagree with the Bad Bunny pick itself.
February 6, 2026 @ 10:17 pm
Puerto Rico is an American audience.
February 6, 2026 @ 2:45 pm
You know which performer perfectly represented football and rural America? The Who (2010) lololol
February 6, 2026 @ 5:09 pm
Chungus, you nailed it and then some; this is just racist bullock from people who can’t stand to hear anything different.
February 6, 2026 @ 2:15 pm
None of what you said suggests he should have been chosen by the NFL to do the show. His music is esoteric , out there, involved, and inaccessible. So why choose him? As you said the whole goal is for the nfl to expand to Latin America audience not for Americans to become bigger bad bunny fans.
That essentially legitimizes the entire conservative critique from day 1. This is a deeply anti American move by the nfl and its done so consciously and deliberately. Goddell has repeatedly stood by bad bunny despite obvious pr disasters that would have given the nfl legit good cause to drop bad bunny and get someone new. And then the question is how forgiving would the nfl be for a country artist or a rock star, a white musician who said the stuff he did? If brian Kelley was chosen for the show and he said this is going to be show for people who speak English only! Would nfl and goddell be standing behind him? If Brian deliberately antagonized libs during press for the show and said “I’m playing my maga song and anyone who doesn’t support the president can fuck off”? Would they still be standing by him?
To me it’s virtue signaling and woke politics writ large and I’m happy conservatives are saying no this time.
Bad bunny’s music promotes poison, filth and evil. He is a degen freak and he hates America, her citizens and the government. He is promoting crimes via his antagonizing of ice and he is shoving lgbtq ideology on a populace who doesn’t give a shit about any of that trash.
February 6, 2026 @ 2:38 pm
Aldean Stan,
You’re letting your mask droop here, and starting to give into your anger again.
I’m not here to say that Bad Bunny is a good pick by the NFL, or that people should like his music. I will say that just as we have seen with Alex Pretti and others, people are really getting hyperbolic with the character assassinations of this guy in an effort to win arguments online as opposed to presenting rational points and counterpoints. People could go through the behavior and lyrics of Kid Rock’s career and find all kinds of filth to then use to undermine his character, and people are. Kid Rock is way more a political activist and political actor than Bad Bunny is. I’m not saying you can’t find things to disagree with in his past. But the idea that his whole career is about pushing an anti-American queer agenda is just not accurate. Yes, he’s against ICE, as are 2/3rds of Americans now.
February 6, 2026 @ 3:26 pm
Trigger,
I completely disagree. I never claimed overt republican artists like my namesake or John rich aren’t pushing their own agenda but it’s funny how you refuse to call out left wing artists for being political and pushed back on that. Have you seen the lyrics for bad bunny’s song on the album you listened to, it’s a single by the way, where he’s pro immigration and the video mocks trump, not covertly but overtly as in he and his buddies are sitting around a boom box and a badly imitated trump says stuff. Or in the video where he paints the Statue of Liberty Puerto Rican colors? Nah, I’m not down with that shit, trigger. Sorry, dude.
You also didn’t answer my question, if taken your pick, someone like trace adkins got the gig, and said “libs are trash, learn English or get the Fuck out” how quickly you think their would be riots outside the stadium and he’d be dropped . Milliseconds.
In the past? He said this album cycle, as in the last year. For the album you just commented on, learn English in 4 months or don’t listen, slammed ice and trump, and is overtly anti American.
February 6, 2026 @ 3:46 pm
” but it’s funny how you refuse to call out left wing artists for being political and pushed back on that.”
Dude, ask Jason Isbell and Margo Price what they think about that statement. Whenever politics is involved, people become 50% blind because it’s the domain of the irrational.
We’re not having a discussion here where you crash out and start talking about ICE and Trump and whatever. That’s just not going to happen here, so save your breath and time.
February 6, 2026 @ 7:22 pm
Trigger,
50% blind? Try 90% blind and 80% deaf. Jason’s music is amazing, he’s more left than I am. I’m too liberal for conservative friends and too conservative for my liberal friends.
I appreciate your thoughts on the Bunny man’s album, not my kind music but certainly not trash.
I’m interested in the controversy for personal reasons. I’m an old bald white guy with 4 grandchildren, 2 of whom happen to be Mexican American. They are being raised bilingual and over the last 5 years we have been exposed to Mexican culture and our traditions have changed. Now the 2 Gringo grandkids want piñata’s on their birthdays and I love it! (I will learn the words to that song if it kills me). I think other old bald white guys are scared of their culture changing because they don’t feel connected to the change like I do.
Half of my descendants are brown, 2/3 of my kids aren’t having children. Latinos have bigger families and guilty white liberals are having no children and shunning marriage all together. Our current division in America is a symptom of the fear of change. The next generation of my family already looks different. Many people are not ok with our country looking and sounding different, I’m all for it. I have a 5 yo granddaughter that likes Americana, Classic Rock, Solid Country and Latin Pop.
Who knows what the hell we’ll end up with if she makes music. I don’t care about the Bunny but good for him, he should do his thing. The NFL is just a giant corporate whore that will do whatever is necessary to grow their pile of money. It seems to me that the current choice of halftime entertainment hurts no one and only angers the ignorant and fearful.
Thanks for giving a crap Trigger. I always appreciate your take (even when you’re wrong)
PS as I close this Snoop Dog is taking over the Olympic opening ceremony, clutch your pearls
February 6, 2026 @ 3:54 pm
It’s not anti-American. It’s about expanding the NFL brand, and selling even bigger viewership numbers to advertisers.
90% of Kid Rock fans are already watching the Super Bowl. You book the “All-American Halftime Show” and everyone that would tune in to that is already watching the Superbowl. If Brian Kelley or Brantley Gilbert or Kid Rock could deliver an untapped market that wasn’t already watching and buying jerseys, Roger Goodell would absolutely stand behind them no matter what they said. Shoot, Roger Goodell would book the Ayatollah, Genghis Kahn, and the Hell University Marching Band if they could deliver millions of new viewers.
It’s not American or anti-American. It’s money.
And for what it’s worth, all the whining and handwringing and freaking out is just making it bigger.
February 6, 2026 @ 4:00 pm
“It’s not American or anti-American. It’s money.”
Yup. Political ideologues always try to assign ulterior purposes to their enemies. Often their accusations are confessions. Meanwhile, what really drives these corporations? The bottom line. It’s all about money, all the time.
February 6, 2026 @ 4:57 pm
Hey Trigger,
If you’re conceding here that “it’s all about the money, all the time,” then how does that fit with your claim in the article that this specific decision by the NFL is the “ultimate move of cynical American capitalism.” If it’s always about the money, and I agree that it is, then why use the superlative to describe this specific money-driven decision compared to others? Unless I’m reading this comment wrong, it seems to be incompatible with your claim in the article. I agree with you here, but not in the article; this is run of the mill cynical American capitalism.
February 6, 2026 @ 6:27 pm
Pat C.,
I read your comment three times, and I still don’t understand what is being argued here.
I believe that the NFL and Roc Nation booked Bad Bunny as a business decision to increase revenue by expanding their footprint to Latin America. That is what I said in the article. That is what I said in my comment. Those are my words, and I don’t know how they could be minced otherwise.
February 6, 2026 @ 6:44 pm
Hey Trigger,
I’m not trying to “mince” your words. I’m trying to point out and ask about what seem to be two contradictory points you’re making. In the article you called the decision to have Bad Bunny do the halftime show “the ultimate move of cynical American capitalism on the part of the NFL.” In your comment that I replied to, you said, “it’s all about money, all the time.”
What I’m pointing out is that these seem to be contradictory. If it’s “the ultimate cynical move,” then by definition it’s more cynical than other business decisions. If it’s “all about money, all the time,” then the decision to have Bad Bunny do the halftime show is a business decision like any other. I was trying to understand which of those two you think it is, because I don’t think it can be both at the same time.
Does that make sense? I may be misunderstanding what you were saying in the comment, but the way I read it, it seemed like you were claiming something different than what you argued in the article.
February 6, 2026 @ 3:14 pm
I think you might could benefit from spending less time on the internet.
February 6, 2026 @ 2:26 pm
Curvy latinas on Insta use Bunny for backing tracks on their posts so he’s ok with me.
February 6, 2026 @ 2:56 pm
This was an interesting read and I appreciate the analysis on a content level w/r/t his music being inaccessible to a wider American audience. But does the data back that up? It seems like he sells/streams a lot of music in this country, does the market data kept on music sales contain enough demographic info to know the depth of his reach?
February 6, 2026 @ 3:41 pm
Years ago we had much more accessible public data on demographics, regions, etc. Now it’s all locked down and you have to pay for it, and it’s copyrighted so it’s basically for industry use only. This is all part of the expanding tech dystopia. A lot of people have been citing stats to back up the Bad Bunny booking, but that stuff is such dirty data since he’s so popular in Latin America.
I don’t dispute the popularity of Bad Bunny worldwide. But I’m telling you, White and Black America outside of Latin culture is not listening to an album like this, and won’t just because he’s featured on the Super Bowl. At least, that’s my analysis after thoroughly listening through this album. It’s just not that kind of album. There have been dozens of Latin stars that have tried to break through to popular American culture—Ricky Martin, Selena, Pitbull, Shakira, etc. That’s not what’s going on here. The intent here is to move away from popular American cultural dominance.
February 6, 2026 @ 10:15 pm
I know some of it is in English but K Pop seems like an interesting analog here. Culturally, linguistically, and geographically it’s much further away than reggaeton. It’s uncomfortable to think that we might not enjoy the cultural hegemony that we once did. The irony here of course is that Bad Bunny is American.
I love Latin music and hip hop but never cared for reggaeton, but will give this album a listen.
February 6, 2026 @ 10:36 pm
The thing about K Pop is it’s pop, and it works in very universal Americanized music modes that often are targeted towards an American audience. Some of Bad Bunny’s previous music did this as well. This new album doesn’t do that. It’s very very Latin, and intentionally so. The K Pop version of this would be a K Pop artist/band mixing in heavy influences from traditional Korean music.
February 6, 2026 @ 3:17 pm
The problem isn’t that the NFL is hosting a halftime show that maybe appeals to the housewives that don’t like football, or the music of a market they want to get into. The problem is that they did all that AND they chose someone who has been very politically polarizing thus ensuring that it would make at least half the country (the half that make up their primary demographic, no less) very mad . Like boycott mad. It’s like they actively try to scare their audience away. The NFL could’ve chosen a middle of the road type to appeal to the masses, but they chose controversy and alienation instead of mass appeal and that’s the problem. Maybe they wanted the emotion to get people talking but the NFL has not traditionally had a problem of keeping in the zeitgeist.
February 6, 2026 @ 3:42 pm
This! Trigger seemed to go into this “review” wanting to excuse and love the music. Dudes entire reason for this site is shitting on mainstream country factory line music, yet writes a glowing and apologetic article about one of the most commercial artists living today? Smells like an agenda to me. He never criticized the nfl or bad bunny for being political, yet spills reels of ink about Aaron lewis, Morgan Wallen, John rich, aldean or any other conservative artist who did what Kyle seemed to fall in love with on the album. When Aaron lewis attack’s blm rioters and terrorists or aldean calls out woke culture or Morgan gives the finger to snl, its framed by Kyle as divisive, as gross or being political. Read this article above by Kyle. The issue is framed as it’s music too intellectual for us trailer trash racists. It’s too esoteric. Too different. Yet he doesn’t criticize the blatant political messaging dripping from bad bunny’s music and art. You read the lyrics, trigger or just shake your tail feathers and write the article? Sounds like the latter.
He didn’t criticize the nfl or bad bunny at all. The divisiveness isn’t from TPUSA or Kid Rock, they would have attended a country music artist who did the super bowl. We all would have. instead the nfl, goddell, and bad bunny continually raised the ante by deliberately antagonizing half the country.
February 6, 2026 @ 3:58 pm
Dude, I listened to the album because I wanted context on what we were all talking about. What I discovered is that everyone shrieking about the existential threat to democracy the popularity of Bad Bunny symbolizes needs to just take a chill pill. Bad Bunny has a right to criticize the government just like we all do. But average Joe six pack isn’t even going to interface with this music because it’s in a language they don’t understand, set to music that won’t appeal to them.
As I said in the article, this is not a review. I went into listening to this album expecting to be repulsed from the way people react to Bad Bunny. I’m way more repulsed by the music of Sam Hunt and Florida Georgia Line. And I’m not here to criticize Bad Bunny because I’m not qualified to. And I did criticize the NFL by calling them cynical capitalists for book Bad Bunny.
This is a country music website. Stop trying to use it as a venue for your political rage.
February 6, 2026 @ 3:51 pm
I think it’s fair to say that irrespective of anything else, the NFL made a miscalculation here. Though there are a lot of folks who want to hand wave away the alternative halftime show and say everybody loves Bad Bunny because look at the numbers, it’s been a massive distraction for the NFL, and it’s not where the attention should be.
February 6, 2026 @ 3:40 pm
Not coming here to argue, just leaving my personal opinion on the album;
I consider myself to have a VERY diverse palette of musical interests. Bluegrass, country, jam, folk, rock, punk, metal, jazz, electronic, hip-hop, etc. That being said, when my sister-in-law said “you should check it out, it’s way different than the rest of his stuff,” I gave it a listen with an open mind…
I didn’t listen to a full track and only listen to the beginning of 5. Just not my kind of music, and frankly one of the only kinds of music I’m not interested in.
I think Trig made a pretty fair assessment when stating it’s much to esoteric for the general (American) public.
February 6, 2026 @ 3:56 pm
@chris–This is an echo chamber here. You don’t see the forest for the trees. (How’s that for mixed metaphors.)
Anyway, there’s no “half the country” that’s very mad or boycott mad because there isn’t even half of the country that’s paying attention to or cares about this.
I think there are more people who are flabbergated that the current White House occupant just sent out video yesterday depicting the Obamas as apes.
February 6, 2026 @ 4:02 pm
I disagree Luckyoldsun. This topic has been at the top of the zeitgeist for days, and will only get more heated as Sunday approaches. Whenever you see folks show up with the “who cares?” comments, that’s when you know public interest is at a peak.
February 6, 2026 @ 5:34 pm
It’s time to make the shift . Goddell wants to double down on bad bunny and the insanity. I say bring it. The people of this country, the millions who voted for trump, the people who love country music, folks who don’t want to be disrespected by Stephen Colbert and others. Bring it on, you want to find is, we’ll be at the TPUSA halftime show on Sunday.
February 6, 2026 @ 6:20 pm
Will Kid Rock sing his song about underage girls? That is what gets me. Kid Rock as some standard of American values. Maybe Ted Nugent will stop by and they can duet on his jailbait song.
February 6, 2026 @ 5:43 pm
“This would be the country music equivalent of an artist like Taylor Swift making a record with strong traditional country elements, soliciting Asleep At The Wheel to guest on a track, and kind of out of the blue, and kind of at the height of her career.”
Is this wishful reviewing by any chance? 🙂
February 6, 2026 @ 6:05 pm
Bad Bunny is merely the latest iteration of Buena Vista Social Club, which was just communist apologia.
Latin America is largely communist. Hence the Spanish language is implicitly communist.
Bad Bunny is a communist. Jay Z is a communist. NFL is communist.
The democrat party is communist.
Show us your vaccination papers, comrade.
February 6, 2026 @ 6:47 pm
Puerto Rico is a United States territory. Puerto Rico is a United States territory. Puerto Rico is a United States territory.
“the Spanish language is implicitly communist.”
Augusto Pinochet and Javier Milei would like a word with you.
Papers please? You mean like ICE agents are doing to American citizens on the streets of Minnesota?
February 6, 2026 @ 7:03 pm
No, I disagree. Bad bunny is unamerican and a communist. Communism is by its dictionary definition unamerica
As far as the Minnesota stuff, I support everything those officers did. All of it. Don’t want to be asked for papers? Don’t enter the country illegally and go find a port of entry to enter legally! FAFO
February 6, 2026 @ 7:17 pm
Latin America = Latifundia system = Roman Slave Plantation = Communism
Democrats = Slavers
USA labor unions = slavers
Roman Catholics = Slavers
Kyle = Communist
February 6, 2026 @ 6:16 pm
Thanks for doing this! I never heard of Bad Bunny before the Super Bowl announcement. I don’t get the backlash. Not everything needs to be catered to me and I honestly feel the NFL and the Super Bowl has moved past an American event (I volunteered to work Sunday night).
But, I do like being exposed to new things. I used to love the Grammy’s in the 90’s because it exposed me to new artists I never heard of – Arrested Development, Lauryn Hill, Bonnie Raitt …
I’ll give this a listen tomorrow morning while shoveling snow.
February 6, 2026 @ 6:34 pm
Meh, they could have just hired Slayer and been done with it. Everyone loves Slayer.
February 6, 2026 @ 6:41 pm
Ambassador Bad Bunny is here to pass American football from the USA to the outer regions of the North American Union. It has become all too civilized for the good ole USA. Bring back the gladiators — not the American pituitary retard ones of whom Bill Hicks spoke –I mean the Roman ones. Are we not ready for that? Or, might we be ready for something even more spirited?
I predict in a decade or less, United States of Americans will be entertained by Big Bunny being fed to lions, while the rest of the NAU is halftiming to the Bjork of Greenland.
February 6, 2026 @ 6:50 pm
Just wanted to participate in another thread that has nothing to with saving country music before it gets locked.
February 6, 2026 @ 7:04 pm
I was born and currently live (but not raised in) Suwannee County, FL. I was raised/lived in Ocoee, FL from 1982-1996/1998-2012, which is a part of the Orlando Metro area. When growing up my mother listened to Country/50s-60s Rock/Gospel. My father primarily listened to Jazz/60s-70s Rock. I moved more to my mother’s side ’cause my father didn’t care anything about me. I didn’t hear contemporary music (punk/rap/modern rock/metal etc.,) until 1994. I love real punk (British Oi!), Country (Tracy Lawrence is my favorite Country artist), 90s Rap, and Folk. I’ve rated all of Bad Bunny’s music at musicbrainz, and these are the songs of his I like: “RLNDT”, “La Cancíon”, “Más de Una Cita”, “Maldita Pobreza”, “Haciendo Que Me Amas”, “Yo no soy celoso”, “Nadie Sabe”, “Si veo a tu mamá”, and “Una vez”. I gave the album mentioned in the article 3/5. His earlier work seemed better to me.
The NFL is trying to expand their broadcasts to South America. Bad Bunny is huge in South America. Also, I hate Football; both versions. Never seen a football game in my life. I’m a baseball fan.
February 6, 2026 @ 7:10 pm
Kyle is a woke loser!
February 6, 2026 @ 7:26 pm
The number one most streamed song in the USA right now is from Bad Bunny. The number four? Bad Bunny? The number six? You guessed it.
You claim that the album is “too involved and ethnic for the at-large American appetite to ever even consider adopting wholesale.” Forget “consider”. The at-large American appetite already HAS adopted it.
February 6, 2026 @ 8:11 pm
That’s because he just won the Grammy for Album of the Year, and everyone is streaming Bad Bunny’s music because he’s stirring massive controversy due to the upcoming Super Bowl performance, including traditional country music critics.
This is also why I continue to try and tell people that yes, the Grammys matter. If you win, you’re going to see a massive boost in sales, streams, and attention.
My assertion that you’re not going to have 17-year-old girls or 15-year-old boys or even 47-year-old housewives obsessing over traditional salsa songs in the long term stands. And I really don’t think that’s that controversial of an opinion.
February 6, 2026 @ 10:11 pm
https://www.billboard.com/charts/billboard-global-200/
February 6, 2026 @ 10:33 pm
Even though this chart says it’s from February 7th (which is tomorrow), this is last week’s chart. So my guess is when it’s updated on Sunday or Monday of next week (or maybe Tuesday online), my guess is we’ll see Bad Bunny tracks at or near thew top.
The problem here is that everyone is pulling data from different sources, everyone wants to use the data that substantiates their claims, and that data is often dirty. The simple fact is most Black and White Americans are not listening to Bad Bunny. His popularity stems from the Latin world and Spanish speakers. That’s not a criticism, that’s simply an observation. And honestly, I don’t even know why this is a point of debate.
February 6, 2026 @ 7:52 pm
You have an OK descent, half-measures take here, kudos for giving the album a listen. A couple of things, first a little disappointed there was no mention of Mele Hawai’i in your section on world music. I’m talking about this section (“You really have to embed yourself in the Texas dancehall scene, or Cajun and New Orleans jazz, or certain Native American populations to find such a seamless marriage of culture and sound compared to what happens in places like Puerto Rico, Columbia, or Brazil.”)
Our musical tradition spans centuries and is a unique blend of indigenous language, chants, and rhythms, with more western stringed instruments like the steel-string guitar, and OUR invention, the lap steel guitar which was borrowed into country music. It could have fit in well here.
I also think your piece ignores the history of global music in the American milieu, much of which has influenced country music up to today. Whether that is African spirituals, Scottish folk tunes, Dixie jazz via Caribbean rhythms, or as I mentioned the Hawaiian steel string guitar, country music hasn’t been generated in a vacuum. This was a great opportunity for you as a music journalist to expand your understanding and fold in this through line rather than fight it and dismiss it, “Bad Bunny isn’t Latin culture taking over American culture as some have feared. The American music consumer is too shallow for that to happen. That doesn’t mean there aren’t some dance clubs outside of Latin communities slipping Bad Bunny songs into the mix or something. But these are isolated instances.”
Bad Bunny is the manifestation of a long history of America’s role as a global melting pot of cultures, and I expect the Super Bowl show to be a beautiful showcase of the identity that makes us uniquely American.
Aloha
February 6, 2026 @ 8:07 pm
Hey Dagan,
Didn’t mean to be exclusionary of Hawaiian music in that portion of the article. Later in the article I talked about it’s importance to country music via the steel guitar. My broader point is that music tends to mean more to to the cultures of other countries than it does to the United States, in part due to the melting pot aspect of our music and culture. But there are some exceptions. There is actually a song on the album called “LE QUE LE PASO A HAWAii.”
February 6, 2026 @ 8:18 pm
Also, as far as the global influence on country music, I agree this makes for an interesting topic, and I have covered it often. In fact, here is an article I wrote about the influence of Hawaii on country and Asian contributors.
https://savingcountrymusic.com/damn-right-theres-asian-americans-making-country-music/
But this was just not the place to go into some deep dissertation on that here. I wanted to focus on this particular album, and try to give people some context of what was being argued over.
February 6, 2026 @ 8:24 pm
Bad bunny sucks
February 6, 2026 @ 8:28 pm
You keep spamming my comments section, I am going to blacklist all emails/URLs assigned to your account, and then block you at the root. I have been extremely accommodating to you being allowed to leave your opinion here. But you are out of line. Final warning.
February 6, 2026 @ 8:31 pm
Via Baseball!
February 6, 2026 @ 10:10 pm
I recently watched Bad Bunny on carpool karaoke and a few clips from his WWE wrestling and SNL skits to see what he’s all about. He’s quite funny.
February 6, 2026 @ 10:37 pm
Mostly Latin Americans—Spanish speakers, Spanish-comprehending folks—but especially Puerto Ricans (yes, American citizens with Social Security numbers), will appreciate, understand, and truly get what this project is about. Why? Because they’ll identify with it. They’ll feel represented.
At its core, this project is a tribute to roots—to home, to the island, to friends, culture, and traditions. Traditions like the so-called “English-only NFL”… which, by the way, is broadcast across Latin America in Spanish, with Spanish-speaking commentators and announcers.
The uncomfortable reality is that a loud segment of American cultural discourse often views Latin America—and Puerto Rico specifically—as a third-world place, a vacation destination, and Puerto Ricans as “less than” Americans unless they’ve been heavily filtered or sanitized for mainstream consumption. (This same dynamic applies to Hawaii and its people as well.)
Puerto Ricans are American when it’s convenient—taxes, military service, tourism—but suddenly “other” when culture isn’t packaged for outside comfort or approval.
I’ve read the comments, and I genuinely appreciate people who approach music simply as music—something we can all connect through, enjoy, and identify with. I also agree with Trigger: this album goes far beyond diaspora politics or even the Super Bowl itself. But for some, feelings are hurt because the content doesn’t align with what their algorithms usually serve them.
Don’t like it? Don’t watch it. Don’t listen. Don’t support it.
Like Trigger, many people chose to give the art a fair chance. They attempted to understand who this project was actually made for. They opened themselves to a perspective that runs counter to their expectations. And in doing so, people around the world understood the messages, connected with the emotions, or simply enjoyed it for their own reasons. As a result, many Americans—and others globally—have picked up a new language, unlocking entire cultures to explore: new music, food, flavors, and destinations.
Let’s be honest: some politically rigid, culturally insular circles struggle with anything that challenges familiarity or tradition. There’s little curiosity for what exists beyond their borders—cultural or otherwise. That’s not new. It’s understandable. It’s common. And, frankly, it’s limiting.
Not unlike many country songs—which, for the record, I’ve come to enjoy and appreciate myself.
But consider this, if you’ve made it this far.
“Ben”, made an album expressing love and devotion to what he holds dear: family, friends, culture, and home. He also uses it to push back against figures and forces that threaten those things.
In “Baile Inolvidable” (“Unforgettable Dance”), he says:
“No, I can’t forget you, I can’t erase you.
You taught me how to love, you taught me how to dance.”
That’s a country song at its core.
In “DTMF” (“STMF” / “Should’ve Taken More Pictures”), he says:
“I should’ve taken more pictures when I had you.
I should’ve given you more hugs and kisses when I had the chance.
I hope my people never move away,
and if I get drunk, I hope someone helps me.”
That’s an old-school country bar hit if I’ve ever heard one.
You already understand these themes. You hear them all the time—in countless other songs. You just don’t always recognize them when they’re expressed through different accents, languages, or cultural frames.
We’re talking about:
Small towns.
Fear of losing home.
Family loyalty.
Resentment toward distant elites.
Nostalgia for “how things used to be.”
Different language. Different packaging. Same emotions.
It’s all perspective and optics. Context and framing.
In the case of the Super Bowl: representation for some, and resistance—or dismissal—from others. Not because it’s inherently “wrong” or “bad,” but because engaging with it would require curiosity. And for some, that curiosity would destabilize long-held assumptions.
Music has always connected human beings—in any language, with any instrument, from any city or country.
We’re all fed algorithm-curated, consumer-specific content. That convenience narrows discovery. Choosing to explore new music isn’t the same as being force-fed a trend. And encountering a song in another language can either open a door—or be ignored entirely.
So go—try discovering a new perspective.
Just remember: discomfort doesn’t invalidate representation, especially when that representation was never meant to be tailored for your consumption in the first place.
Thank you Trigger for this article.
-Axkarisqui