Bad Bunny Defies ICE From Super Bowl LX
Bad Bunny turns Super Bowl LX into a platform for a pro-immigrant message by performing his song “Nuevayol.”
Posted on 09/02/2026 at 20:37
Publicado el 09/02/2026 a las 20:37
- Bad Bunny supports immigrants
- Political message at the Super Bowl
- “Nuevayol” as a symbol
The Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara vibrated with the halftime show headlined by Bad Bunny.
The artist used the Super Bowl LX stage to highlight and defend the Latino community in the United States, according to CNN.
Bad Bunny Sends a Pro-Immigrant Message With “Nuevayol”
Bad Bunny sings NUEVAYoL at the Super Bowl pic.twitter.com/vqmrrpp502
— ceciarmy (@ceciarmy) February 9, 2026
His performance was widely interpreted as a political and cultural statement with a strong emphasis on the migrant experience.
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One week earlier, Bad Bunny had protested against actions by ICE during the Grammy Awards ceremony.
At the Super Bowl, the message appeared once again—this time before a global audience.
“Nuevayol,” Identity, and Migrant Pride at the Super Bowl LX

The halftime show included “Nuevayol,” a song closely associated with the celebration of Latino culture.
The track is considered a tribute to immigrants and to the Puerto Rican diaspora in New York.
The song’s title alludes to the phonetic Spanish pronunciation of “New York.”
That detail connects directly to the cultural identity of Puerto Rican communities in the United States.
Throughout the performance, the setlist maintained a tone loaded with migrant symbolism.
The choice of “Nuevayol” reinforced ideas of belonging and collective memory.
Direct References to ICE

Bad Bunny made an explicit reference to his previous protest at the Grammy Awards.
During that ceremony, the artist shouted the phrase “ICE out!” from the stage.
During the Super Bowl, that message reappeared superimposed on a prop television.
The image functioned as a visual reminder of his pro-immigrant stance.
The gesture linked both events into a single public narrative.
It also reinforced the continuity of his criticism of immigration policies.
The Video’s Background and the Impact of the Message
The music video for “Nuevayol” was released last summer, on July 4.
In the video, a radio voice can be heard imitating former president Donald Trump.
The voice offers an apology to immigrants and states that the country is nothing without them.
That segment was interpreted as a direct critique of dominant political rhetoric.
Bad Bunny himself has used high-profile stages to amplify this message.
At the Grammy Awards, he stated that immigrants are not savages or animals.
He said they are human—and also American.
That speech resonated strongly with Latino and progressive communities in the United States.
For many, Bad Bunny is more than a global music icon.
He is seen as a voice that makes immigrant experiences visible.
He also represents forms of cultural resistance in the face of fear and protest.
Super Bowl LX thus became a platform for that positioning.
The pro-immigrant message was fully embedded in the most-watched spectacle of the year.
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