Bad Bunny Closes NFL Halftime Show With ‘God Bless America’ Then Proceeds To List Hispanic Countries With Their Flags Flying
Lady Gaga and Ricky Martin joining Bad Bunny on the Super Bowl halftime stage was never going to be interpreted as just another celebrity collaboration.
The performance was framed, from the outset, as a celebration of Latino heritage, delivered largely in Spanish and built around cultural symbolism rather than the usual pop spectacle. In a vacuum, that might have been unremarkable. But Bad Bunny’s recent and very public criticism of ICE had already turned his appearance into a political flashpoint long before the lights came up.
Bad Bunny closing out his Super Bowl Halftime performance 🗣️
“God Bless America: Chile, Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay, Bolivia, Perú, Ecuador, Brasil, Colombia, […] United States, Canadá, and my motherland, mi barrio, Puerto Rico, seguimo aquí.” pic.twitter.com/cThVRa7u6F
— Modern Notoriety (@ModernNotoriety) February 9, 2026
The NFL insisted the show would not be political, yet the cultural and political context was impossible to separate from the performance itself. Language, symbolism, and timing all mattered.
Performing primarily in Spanish on the most-watched television event in the country is not a neutral choice, particularly at a moment when immigration enforcement and national identity dominate political debate. That does not automatically make it partisan propaganda, but it does ensure the message will be interpreted through a political lens.
The NFL having a Super Bowl Halftime Show where their performer sings ENTIRELY in Spanish & waves other nation’s flags, is 💯% a political statement.
Bad Bunny will go down as the worst halftime show in the history of the league.
America deserved better for its 250th birthday. pic.twitter.com/Glu9BLT5Tp
— Jon Root (@JonnyRoot_) February 9, 2026
Midway through the performance, Bad Bunny briefly shifted into English to say, “God bless America,” before naming countries across the Americas as a parade of flags followed behind him. The gesture was broad and inclusive, but also deliberately hemispheric, redefining “America” not as a single nation but as a shared regional identity. The spiked football he held at the end, emblazoned with the words “Together, We Are America,” reinforced that framing in unmistakable terms.
The closing line, delivered in Spanish — “We’re still here” — was the most pointed moment of the performance. Standing alone, it is an affirmation of presence and endurance.
Placed within the broader context of immigration debates and Bad Bunny’s own criticism of ICE, it carried an additional layer of meaning that many viewers were quick to pick up on. For supporters, it read as a statement of cultural resilience. For critics, it felt like a political message smuggled into an event the league insists is apolitical.
