When Bad Bunny hosted “Saturday Night Live” in October, he gave viewers some homework to prepare for his Super Bowl halftime show.
“If you didn’t understand what I just said, you have four months to learn,” he said during his opening monologue, just after giving a shoutout to “all the Latinos and Latinas in the entire world and here in the United States” in Spanish.
Whether or not non-Spanish speakers have heeded Bad Bunny’s advice, the Puerto Rican artist is still expected to get people dancing during Sunday’s show, which fans online have deemed “Benitobowl.”
When the superstar takes the field, he will become the first Spanish-language Latin solo artist to headline the Super Bowl halftime show. It’s a fitting milestone for the “DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS” singer, who made Grammys history earlier this month.
But for those who didn’t download Duolingo in time or are unfamiliar with how Bad Bunny became a global phenomenon, NBC News has an unofficial guide to the performer ahead of his big show.
From bagging groceries to breaking records
Bad Bunny, whose real name is Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio, broke into the music scene a decade ago while working as a bagger at a supermarket in his hometown of Vega Baja. That’s when his Latin urban music tracks on SoundCloud first began earning him millions of listeners.
He then went on to release a steady stream of popular singles and remixes, collaborating with established reggaeton singers and even world-renowned artists, including Marc Anthony, Jennifer López and Cardi B. He subsequently established himself as one of 2018’s 10 most streamed artists worldwide, even before dropping his first album, “X 100PRE,” on Christmas Eve.
Six studio albums and six Grammys later, Bad Bunny has become a central figure fueling the globalization of reggaeton, a Latin urban music genre with deep roots in Puerto Rico that was once considered clandestine. He is also the first reggaeton singer to headline a Super Bowl halftime show.
The artist’s list of record-breaking accomplishments include becoming the most streamed artist on Spotify globally from 2020 to 2022, and again in 2025, after staging a first-of-its-kind 31-show residency in Puerto Rico.
His 2020 album “El Último Tour Del Mundo” (“The Last Tour of the World”) became the first all-Spanish-language album to go No. 1 on the Billboard 200. He replicated that feat in 2022 and 2023 with his next two albums.
He also set the world record for the highest-grossing tour in a calendar year in 2022, and amassed $435.3 million with over 2.4 million tickets sold across 81 shows in his most recent concert tours.
“As Benito, he is a typical 31-year-old Puerto Rican who grew up experiencing the debt crisis, Hurricane Maria, participating in the protest of 2019 [and] watching public schools close on the island,” said Petra Rivera-Rideau, co-creator of the “Bad Bunny Syllabus” and co-author of “P FKN R: How Bad Bunny Became the Global Voice of Puerto Rican Resistance.”
“This environment shaped him and his music, as it did every Puerto Rican who grew up there,” she added. “He talks about these struggles, but he also leaves space for happiness, joy and community, which I think a lot of people want.”
Bad Bunny lyrics, translated
There are nine Spanish-language terms and phrases typically used by Bad Bunny that may be handy to know ahead of Sunday.
Acho, P.R. es otra cosa (AH-cho · PEH-ERRE · ehs · OH-trah · KOH-sah): “Bro, Puerto Rico is something else.” Bad Bunny popularized the phrase during his residency by having celebrities and VIP guests shout it at the crowd to rile them up.
Baile inolvidable (BYE-leh · een-ohl-bee-DAH-bleh): “Unforgettable dance.” This is the title of the dreamy salsa hit from his newest album and the song featured in the NFL trailer promoting his halftime performance. According to Billboard charts, this is Bad Bunny’s third-most streamed song.
Debí tirar más fotos (deh-BEE · tee-RAHR · MAHS · FOH-tohs): “I should have taken more photos.” In addition to being the title of his newest album, it’s the opening lyric of the chorus of the track “DtMF,” Bad Bunny’s top streaming song, according to Billboard charts, in large part thanks to a viral social media trend in which people create videos to the song that honor relatives and friends who have passed away.
Flamboyán (flam-boh-JAHN): “Royal poinciana tree.” Famous for its orange-red flowers that color Puerto Rico’s lush green landscape every summer, this tree was brought by Spanish colonizers from Madagascar in the late 1400s. Since then, Puerto Ricans have adopted it as a cultural emblem that reminds them of their homeland anywhere they go. The tree is showcased in the NFL trailer of the halftime show and was a scenography centerpiece for his residency in Puerto Rico.

