📸: Apple Music


At an Apple Music press conference ahead of the Apple Music Super Bowl LX Halftime Show, Bad Bunny described the upcoming performance as an extension of gratitude, culture, and joy rather than a career milestone. Speaking candidly about exhaustion, pride, and staying present, he positioned the halftime show as “a huge party” rooted in Puerto Rican identity, one meant for the world to dance, not overthink.

Key Highlights
- Event: Apple Music Super Bowl LX Halftime Show
- Artist: Bad Bunny
- Date: Sunday, 8 February 2026 (Monday, 9 February at 1 AM CAT)
- Venue: Levi’s Stadium, Santa Clara, California
- Partners: Apple Music, NFL, Roc Nation
- Trailer Location: Puerto Rico


How Bad Bunny Took Over the Super Bowl
When Bad Bunny was announced as the Super Bowl LX Halftime Show performer, it didn’t feel like a normal Super Bowl rollout. There was no big American makeover. No sudden English-only messaging. No attempt to explain who he is to people who “don’t get it.” Instead, the world was invited into his culture. Here’s how it unfolded and why this rollout felt different.
The Teaser
Build Anticipation Before Saying The Name

The first teasers didn’t mention Bad Bunny. Apple Music and the NFL posted mysterious visuals during Sunday Night Football (emojis, hints, and “tune in” messages). It felt playful, modern, and very online. That alone told younger fans: this isn’t going to be a typical halftime show. When his name finally dropped, it didn’t feel random. It felt earned.
The Announcement
Make It About Culture, Not Flexing
When Bad Bunny was officially announced, the message wasn’t necessarily about “look how big this is for his career,” it was about “he’s bringing Puerto Rico to the world’s biggest stage.” Interviews followed including reflections on getting the call to headline the Apple Music Halftime Show from Jay-Z. From the start, the tone was clear: this wasn’t about proving anything, it was about sharing something.
The Showcase
Let New And Current Fans Catch Up
Over the following months, Apple Music steadily deepened the story:
- The Story of Bad Bunny in 20 Songs
- Mood-based playlists (emotion over hits)
- Spanish-first, often untranslated captions
- A trailer shot in Puerto Rico
- NFL players dancing, chanting lyrics, and leaning into his culture
- Super Bowl-themed DJ mixes for fans
Instead of changing Bad Bunny for the Super Bowl audience, the rollout trusted people to lean in. If you didn’t understand every word yet? That was okay. You were still invited to feel it.
The Reminder
Tapping Into Another Cultural Moment
A week before the Super Bowl, Bad Bunny won big at the Grammys. Instead of going quiet ahead of halftime, Apple Music leaned into the moment:
- Celebrated the wins
- Connected his album era directly to the upcoming show
- Reinforced that this moment didn’t come out of nowhere
Suddenly, the music, the awards, and the halftime show felt like one long run, each feeding the next.
The Press Conference
“I Just Want People To Have Fun” Bad Bunny
Speaking during Apple Music’s Super Bowl Halftime Show press conference, Bad Bunny acknowledged the intensity of the moment while resisting the idea of it as a personal victory lap. With an active tour, recent Grammy success, and global attention converging at once, he described the experience as something he is still processing, approaching it deliberately, one day at a time.
Rather than focusing on scale or expectation, Bad Bunny emphasised routine and restraint as his preparation method, centring calm, physical wellbeing, and avoiding overthinking. For him, the halftime show is an extension of what he already does: performing music he loves with people he trusts.
That perspective also shaped how he spoke about the meaning of the stage itself. The excitement, he explained, comes less from personal achievement and more from what the moment represents for his family, friends, Puerto Rico, and the broader communities that have supported him from the start.
Culture First, Always
Bad Bunny also reflected on how his recent body of work, created with the intention of reconnecting with his roots, unexpectedly opened doors to global recognition. The Super Bowl, in his view, is not a departure from that journey, but a continuation of it: taking cultural identity to a global stage without reshaping it for approval.
When asked what audiences should expect from the performance, he avoided specifics and spoilers, instead returning to a familiar theme across his career: accessibility through feeling rather than explanation.
“people only have to worry about dance. I know that I told them that they had 4 months to learn Spanish.They don’t even have to learn Spanish… just learn to dance.”
The emphasis, he made clear, is on movement, enjoyment, and shared experience, allowing the music to communicate without instruction. As Super Bowl LX approaches, Bad Bunny is framing the Apple Music Halftime Show as a moment of collective release, one led by culture, rhythm, and the simple act of dancing together.
The “Benito Bowl” Show
Follow @applemusic for the latest updates.

This rollout offers a clear lesson for the next wave of African global icons. If Tyla, for example, were to step onto a stage of this magnitude, the takeaway is simple: don’t become “American Pop Star Tyla.” Lean harder into South Africa. Into Amapiano. Into local visual codes. Let the world’s biggest platforms do the adapting. Because the future of global culture doesn’t belong to those who translate best. It belongs to those who arrive fully formed.
Uhhhh anyways… I can’t wait for A-POP 🥳





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