#BadBunny makes #Grammys history – phanh

 Bad Bunny’s Grammy Sweep: A Historic Triumph That Silences Super Bowl Haters

In a glittering dawn of validation for Latin music’s global takeover, Bad Bunny—born Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio—shattered Grammy records on November 7, 2025, becoming the first Spanish-language artist to snag nominations in Album of the Year, Record of the Year, and Song of the Year in the same cycle. His sixth studio album, *Debí Tirar Más Fotos* (“I Should Have Taken More Photos”), released January 5 via Rimas Entertainment, clinched six nods total, including Best Música Urbana Album, Best Global Music Performance for “EoO,” and the inaugural Best Album Cover. The title track alone propelled the sweep, earning three of the “big three” categories—a feat that cements Bad Bunny’s evolution from reggaeton rebel to cultural colossus. Three years after *Un Verano Sin Ti* became the first all-Spanish album nominated for Album of the Year (2022), this milestone isn’t just personal; it’s a seismic shift, proving Spanish-language music isn’t a niche—it’s the narrative. As the 68th Grammys loom on February 1, 2026, in Los Angeles, Bad Bunny’s haul—tied with Kendrick Lamar and Leon Thomas at six—positions him as a frontrunner, with odds favoring a win that could make *Debí Tirar Más Fotos* the first Spanish album to claim the top prize.

The album itself is a masterstroke of introspection and innovation, a 17-track tapestry blending trap’s grit with plena’s rhythmic pulse and bomba’s ancestral fire—Puerto Rican roots reimagined for a fractured world. “DtMF,” the title track, pulses with raw vulnerability: Over a minimalist beat laced with steel drums and synth sighs, Bad Bunny laments lost snapshots of youth, fame’s fleeting glare, and love’s cruel edits. “Debería haber guardado más recuerdos / Antes de que el tiempo los borrara” (“I should have kept more memories / Before time erased them”), he croons, his baritone cracking like old film reels. Producers Scotty Dittrich, Hydra Hitz, and Tyler Spry layered it with global nods—Afrobeat echoes in the bridge, a nod to his *Nadie Sabe Lo Que Va a Pasar Mañana* nom last year—earning engineering kudos for Josh Gudwin and Roberto Rosado. Critics rave: *Rolling Stone* called it “a Polaroid of pain, sharp and sepia-toned,” while *Pitchfork* hailed its “quiet revolution—Bad Bunny whispering where he once roared.” At the Latin Grammys on November 13, he leads with 12 nods, including Album, Record, and Song of the Year, underscoring a year where urbano isn’t urban—it’s universal.

Bad Bunny macht sich über Kritik an Super-Bowl-Auftritt lustig | FAZ

This triumph lands like a velvet-gloved haymaker to the chorus of critics who’ve dogged Bad Bunny since the NFL’s September 29 bombshell: His solo headline for Super Bowl LX on February 8, 2026, at Levi’s Stadium—the first all-Spanish set on football’s grandest stage. Announced by Apple Music, Roc Nation, and the league, it was a nod to Latino fandom’s boom—Bad Bunny’s 80 million monthly Spotify listeners dwarfing most headliners past. But backlash erupted like a fumbled snap: MAGA mouthpieces decried him as “un-American,” ignoring his U.S. citizenship via Puerto Rico. President Trump, in a Newsmax rant, confessed he’d “never heard of him” and slammed the pick as “ridiculous.” House Speaker Mike Johnson echoed: “A terrible decision—Lee Greenwood would draw broader appeal,” while Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem vowed ICE “all over that place” to snag “illegals,” tying into Bad Bunny’s tour skip of the mainland over deportation fears. Petitions surged past 100,000 signatures demanding a swap for “family-friendly” acts; Turning Point USA fired back with their “All-American Halftime Show,” a faith-fueled counter-event promising “anything in English” to reclaim patriotism.

The vitriol peaked with FCC complaints—over 200, echoing the 100+ lodged against Kendrick Lamar’s 2025 set for “not enough white people onstage.” Bad Bunny, no stranger to pushback, clapped back on *SNL*: “Learn Spanish in four months—or miss the fiesta.” His residency in Puerto Rico, wrapping September 20, boosted the island’s GDP by $400 million, a sly flex against the noise. NFL CMO Tim Ellis shrugged it off: “Not everyone has to like everything—Bad Bunny is f—ing awesome.” Commissioner Roger Goodell doubled down October 22: “We’re confident it’ll be great—no reconsideration.”

Bad Bunny Skipped the U.S. on Tour Over ICE Concerns

Now, the Grammys nod is the ultimate rebuttal—a direct slap to the naysayers who branded his halftime gig a “political stunt” unfit for “law-abiding Americans.” Shakira, his 2020 Super Bowl co-star, beamed: “Proud he represents how universal Spanish music has become.” With 48% public approval per Deloitte polls—strongest among Gen Z and Latinos—Bad Bunny’s ascent mirrors the Recording Academy’s diversification: Nearly a third of 2025’s new members are Hispanic/Latino, up from prior years. His three prior wins (two for Best Música Urbana Album, one Latin Pop) and 10 noms pale against this sweep, but victory could etch him eternal.

As Santa Clara gears up—petitions now dueling at 180,000 signatures, one shielding fans from ICE raids—the irony sings. Bad Bunny, the “Trump hater” who skipped U.S. tours fearing raids, will command 100 million viewers in Spanish, unapologetic. *Debí Tirar Más Fotos* isn’t just an album; it’s a manifesto—snapping the moment before erasure, demanding space in the frame. Critics who cried “un-American” now face a truth: His beats aren’t invading; they’re inheriting. On Grammy night, if he claims gold, it’ll echo louder than any halftime hook: The biggest stage? It’s his. And the detractors? They’ll be watching—reluctantly, rapturously—from the shadows.

 

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