The NFL has released the full recording of Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl LX halftime show, making the complete performance available online following Sunday’s game. The official upload to YouTube provides viewers with the entire 13-minute set, which featured the Puerto Rican artist performing a medley of his hits alongside surprise appearances by Lady Gaga and Ricky Martin.
The production, filmed on the field at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, incorporated elaborate staging and dance routines. It concluded with a moment where stadium lights spelled out “VOTE” on the field—a clear civic engagement message that has been a recurring theme in recent halftime productions. The show’s roster of guest stars and its political undertone quickly became major topics of discussion across social media platforms.
Public reaction has been largely favorable, with praise directed at the high-energy performance, the star power of the collaborations, and the show’s production scale. However, the most prominent critical response came from former President Donald Trump, who used his Truth Social platform to criticize the performance and its political message, framing it within a broader critique of contemporary culture.
The immediate online posting of the halftime show is standard practice for the league, allowing the global television audience and subsequent online viewers to access the spectacle in full. Super Bowl halftime shows are major cultural events, often generating more viewership than the game itself and serving as significant promotional platforms for headline artists.
This year’s performance underscores the growing trend of the halftime show as a space for not only musical entertainment but also for subtle or overt social and political commentary. The swift release of the full video ensures the performance remains a topic of media and public discourse beyond game day, continuing the NFL’s strategy of maximizing the event’s digital footprint and cultural impact in the days following the championship.
