Which Artists Could Join Bad Bunny in the Super Bowl LX Halftime Show?
Bad Bunny will headline the Super Bowl LX halftime show and, just like in a final, every decision matters. Billboard has already released its predictions on the guests who could join him on the most-watched stage on the planet.
Bad Bunny, ready for the biggest stage in sports
The Super Bowl doesn’t just crown the NFL champion, it also defines who dominates global entertainment. On February 8, as the New England Patriots and the Seattle Seahawks battle for the trophy, Bad Bunny will take on the challenge of leading the halftime show, a platform that functions like a true world final for any artist.
As in any major game, the question isn’t only whether he’ll deliver, but how he’ll do it. And in this case, the main debate revolves around one key unknown: who will the Puerto Rican artist invite to join him on stage?
Editors from Billboard Latin and Billboard Español have already started making their predictions, anticipating a show that promises to blend identity, strategy, and spectacle, elements deeply familiar in elite-level sports.
Old-school stars as the backbone of the show
Every championship team relies on experienced leaders. For Ingrid Fajardo of Billboard Latin, those names come straight from classic reggaeton. Artists like Jowell & Randy and De La Ghetto represent the old guard that laid the foundations of the urban movement and connect directly with Bad Bunny’s Puerto Rican roots.
Genre pioneers and the legacy factor
Another angle focuses on legacy. Jessica Roiz of Billboard points to names such as Chencho Corleone, Arcángel, and Daddy Yankee, artists who not only collaborated with Bad Bunny, but also paved the way for his music to dominate the global market today.
Inviting them would be like fielding club legends in a decisive final. It’s not just about adding star power, but about telling a story: that of urban music evolving from the margins to the center of the most-watched spectacle on the planet.
New talent, global guests, and the surprise move
But every final needs an unexpected twist. Isabela Raygoza of Billboard Español predicts a bold mix: emerging Puerto Rican talents like RaiNao and Chuwi, combined with global icons such as Shakira or Jennifer Lopez, who previously shared the Super Bowl stage with Bad Bunny in 2020.
And if we’re talking about a true shock factor, the journalist Sigal Ratner-Arias puts Drake on the table, a high-impact move that could rock the stadium like a last-minute goal.
There’s also a tactical element that could return: the iconic “casita”, a visual symbol of Bad Bunny’s identity and a statement as powerful as any championship celebration.
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