Trump reacts to Bad Bunny
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Perhaps Kendrick Lamar was speaking to the present and the future when he said during his Super Bowl halftime performance months back that “the revolution ‘bout to be televised.”
Did a variety of celebrities, from Fifty Cent to the White House press secretary, respond with public comments after Bad Bunny joked on Saturday Night Live that Americans had four months to learn Spanish before his Super Bowl halftime appearance?
Bad Bunny’s all-Spanish Super Bowl performance sparks outrage from the right, reflecting a growing cultural divide.
The Super Bowl halftime conversation turned political after the NFL announced Bad Bunny as the Super Bowl LX halftime performer last week. Reports surfaced with speculation that Taylor Swift had been in talks with the league before ultimately passing on the offer.
Did Coca-Cola CEO James Quincey or various other people issue an ultimatum to the NFL about ending sponsorship of the Super Bowl if singer Bad Bunny was allowed to perform at the halftime show? No, that's not true: A
Conservative commentator and MAGA loyalist Benny Johnson said on X: "Country superstar Zach Bryan takes aim at ICE, claiming the country is fading in a snippet from his upcoming song 'Bad News.'"
Sen Bernie Moreno (R-Ohio) on Tuesday described the choice to have Bad Bunny perform during the NFL’s upcoming Super Bowl LX halftime show as political. “Why else would you pick, you know, some second-rate musician to play in our greatest sporting event?
The Miami Dolphins' run defense has been really bad this season. Signed, Captain Obvious. But just how bad has it been? There's still a long way to go in the 20