Tag: Bad Bunny
Ed Column
by Sarah McCall ’26 on February 12, 2026
Opinion
Happy February, Friars, and congratulations to the Patriots for losing the Super Bowl! I really enjoy watching the Super Bowl every year because it offers a high-intensity game (usually), an intricate musical performance, and interesting commercials. I also enjoy the Super Bowl because it brings people together. Friends and family gather in living rooms, bars, and basements all around the country for four hours, watching two of the best teams in the National Football League, making friendly bets ranging from who the Super Bowl winner will be to what color the Gatorade poured on the head coach will be. The Super Bowl brings out genuine and authentic community.
The Olympics bring out this community as well. People come together with intense pride and spirit for their country, watching the best athletes compete in the widest array of sporting events. Especially in a time where everything is divided, an authentic feeling of community is found less and less often. Both the Super Bowl and Winter Olympics happened this past weekend. In theory, it was a wonderful opportunity to feel pride for our country and its athletes. However, the tradition of community surrounding these two events has been overshadowed by the unrest happening in the United States. The selection of Bad Bunny as the halftime performer led to a counter-performance organized by Turning Point USA. A once unifying performance became divisive, limiting the positive impact of the Super Bowl on our community.
Additionally, Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agents were sent to Milan along with Team USA. Tension has grown exponentially in the U.S. surrounding ICE’s presence in cities domestically. Therefore, sending these agents abroad has only heightened this tension. It also makes it impossible for many Americans to enjoy the Olympics.
While I do find issue with blind pride in anything, including the U.S., I also find it dangerous to be extremely dismissive of America and American identity. There are countless aspects of American politics and culture that I find to be harmful. That does not mean that I do not find pride in living in America. The best way to appreciate this country, or any community you are in, is to recognize the flaws and determine how to remedy them. Under normal conditions, I appreciate this aspect of the Olympics and the Super Bowl. I can spend most of the year focused on what needs to change to make this country better, but while I am rooting for Team USA or the Philadelphia Eagles, I am able to be proud of the country I live in. That is the balance that I want again. The divisive and polarizing world we live in now is not a suitable environment for positive change. I am scared for the future, but I hope we will continue to find things that unite us over party lines, even if those things change.
Bad Bunny’s Halftime Performance: Reactions from the PC Community
by Shannon Kelly ’26 on February 12, 2026
News
On Sunday, Feb. 8, Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio, colloquially known as Bad Bunny, performed during halftime of the 60th Super Bowl at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, CA. He made history as the first Latin artist to headline the consistently most watched event on television each year in the United States. His performance included guests such as Ricky Martin, Cardi B, Karol G, Jessica Alba, Pedro Pascal, Lady Gaga, and others. For Americans, the Super Bowl halftime show emblematizes the vast social and cultural identities that exist within our country. It is currently estimated that 135 million people watched the halftime performance on Sunday, which was described as a “cultural game changer” in which Bad Bunny “delivered an interactive celebration of Latino culture at one of the most contentious times for the community in the United States.”
The show has garnered praise, controversy, and tension, including on our own campus. Many individuals on this campus utilized YikYak, an anonymous application that allows you to communicate with others in your respective communities, to resort to racist speech and ideology when discussing the halftime performance. For example, many people posted about not understanding the music due to Bad Bunny solely singing in Spanish, wrongly assuming Bad Bunny is an immigrant despite being from Puerto Rico (a U.S. territory), and many made comments sexualizing the dancers. Comments that were made by Providence College students in a group chat include a sarcastic, “I loved all the English” and, “I don’t speak Spanish. I’m not American enough.” Other comments that were made on YikYak include, “Get ICE up and moving around,” “Love me the all inclusive DEI Halftime Show,” and, “English please damn.” This demonstrates the tendency to interpret a performance solely through one’s own cultural identity and a lack of desire to understand both cultural and linguistic experiences that differ from your own. The possibility of YikYak being banned on PC’s wifi is currently being talked about in the Faculty Senate.
Bad Bunny’s performance highlighted many parts of the Puerto Rican experience in terms of politics, sociality, history, and culture. He even said that he sought to “bring what people can always expect from me and a lot of my culture.” Specific examples include demonstrating Puerto Rico’s agricultural roots in the sugarcane fields, casitas where people live, individuals playing dominoes, and a general focus on Puerto Rican resilience, especially in recognition of their colonialist past, which includes involvement from the U.S. After Bad Bunny won his Grammy for Album of the Year, Ricky Martin addressedBad Bunny, saying he had “won without changing the color of your voice. You won without erasing your roots. You won by staying true to Puerto Rico.” Additionally, Bad Bunny’s performance occurred just months after President Donald Trump signed an executive order that declared English as the national language, despite an estimated 42–45 million people speaking Spanish at home in America and a wide array of languages being spoken throughout the U.S.
The President made statements about Bad Bunny’s performance on Truth Social, calling it a “slap in the face to our country,” “an affront to the Greatness of America,” and emphasizing that it “doesn’t represent our standards of Success, Creativity, or Excellence.” Turning Point USA hosted their own “All American Halftime Show,” which was presented as an alternative to watching Bad Bunny. Their halftime show was explained to be “an opportunity for all Americans to enjoy a halftime show with no agenda other than to celebrate faith, family, and freedom.” It is estimated that around six million people watched it, although the official total is under speculation.
An anonymous PC student advised “everyone to rewatch the performance and really sit down with yourself” in order to “empathize that we are not against each other but against the system that is bringing us down.” Bad Bunny powerfully ended his performance by saying, “God Bless America” and listing countries from South America, Central America, North America, and the Caribbean. Behind him stood a billboard that read, “The only thing more powerful than hate is love,” which is a necessary reminder both on this campus and in our world as a whole.
