Close Menu
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Videos
  • Interviews
  • Trending
  • Lifestyle
  • Neon Music Lists & Rankings
  • Sunday Watch
  • Neon Opinions & Columns
  • Meme Watch
  • Submit Music
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube Spotify
Neon MusicNeon Music
Subscribe
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Videos
  • Interviews
  • Trending
  • Lifestyle
Neon MusicNeon Music

Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl Setlist Isn’t About Nostalgia

By Alex HarrisFebruary 4, 2026

The streaming numbers since Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl announcement tell you everything about where his audience’s head is at, and it’s not where you’d expect.

When the NFL confirmed him for February 8, the usual thing happened: classic tracks got a boost. 

Tití Me Preguntó added 99 million streams. Safaera picked up another 42 million. 

Standard nostalgia behaviour when someone’s about to do thirteen minutes in front of 70,000 people at Levi’s Stadium.

But the real story sits at the top of the data. Eight of the ten most-streamed Bad Bunny tracks since September are from Debí Tirar Más Fotos.

DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS - Album by Bad Bunny

The album that just won Album of the Year at the 2026 Grammys. The one that’s barely six months old.

EoO jumped 31% in streams, gaining 192 million plays in five months. BAILE INoLVIDABLE surged by 260 million. NUEVAYoL added another 202 million. 

These aren’t legacy tracks being rediscovered. They’re current favourites being rehearsed for a moment fans already believe is coming.

According to Playfame’s analysis of Spotify data, fans aren’t using the Super Bowl to revisit Bad Bunny’s career. They’re using it to validate where he is right now.

That changes the math for what a halftime show is supposed to do. Usually you lean on the hits everyone knows, give the casual viewer something to recognise, keep the energy broad and accessible. 

But when your audience is streaming the new material harder than the classics, you’re not dealing with nostalgia. 

You’re dealing with people who’ve already decided what they want to see, and it’s not a greatest hits medley.

The songs getting the biggest streaming bumps aren’t just high-energy reggaeton bangers either. BOKeTE, one of the quieter, more introspective tracks, jumped 27%. 

Fans are anticipating moments that feel vulnerable, not just explosive. That’s unusual for a stadium show, especially one with this much cultural weight attached to it.

Because the cultural weight is significant. Bad Bunny headlines alone. First Spanish-language artist to do it. 

The NFL isn’t testing the waters here, they’re acknowledging a shift that already happened. 

US searches for “learn Spanish quickly” reportedly jumped 8,300% after the announcement. Travel interest in Santa Clara spiked 500%. 

The performance hasn’t even happened yet and it’s already functioning as a cultural checkpoint.

What makes it interesting is how little precedent there is for this version of the halftime show. 

You don’t have a clear template for what happens when the artist’s current work matters more to the audience than their legacy does. 

Most Super Bowl acts are heritage plays, icons performing the songs that made them icons. Bad Bunny’s performing songs that won him a Grammy three weeks ago.

That could go one of two ways. Either the format bends around him and the show becomes a statement about Latin music’s dominance in global pop, or the spectacle smooths out his edges and we get a safer version designed for maximum palatability. 

The streaming data suggests fans expect tension, not compromise. They’re preparing for the version of Bad Bunny that speaks, dresses, and performs exactly how he wants, and they’re streaming the songs that represent that version.

If the setlist mirrors what fans are actually listening to, Sunday’s halftime won’t look like most halftime shows. 

It’ll look like Bad Bunny decided what mattered and built the thirteen minutes around that. Whether that’s what the NFL expects is another question entirely.

You might also like:

  • Bad Bunny ‘DtMF’ (2025): How a Song About Photos Became a Cultural Touchstone 
  • Bad Bunny BOKeTE Lyrics: Love, Loss, and the Potholes No One Talks About
  • Spotify Wrapped 2025: Artists’ Guide to Understanding the Data 
  • Bad Bunny ‘El Clúb Lyrics Meaning & Song Breakdown
  • UK Spotify Charts January 2026: Album Streaming Returns
  • From TikTok Tease to Top Charts: The Journey of Where She Goes by Bad Bunny
  •  
Previous ArticleThe Halftime Show Is Now Pop Culture’s Loudest Stage
Next Article Hannah Rand’s abandonment issues: fear as self-defence

RELATED

AI Music Is Flooding Streaming — But Who’s Actually Responsible?

February 22, 2026By Alex Harris

The Drag Path: How a Song That Doesn’t Exist Became the Most Honest Thing Tyler Joseph Has Ever Written

February 18, 2026By Alex Harris

Universal Just Bought the Infrastructure Independent Artists Depend On

February 18, 2026By Alex Harris
MOST POPULAR

Streaming Payouts 2025: Which Platform Pays Artists the Most?

By Alex Harris

Lana Del Rey “White Feather Hawk Tail Deer Hunter” Review: The Strangest Love Song She’s Ever Made

By Marcus Adetola

Sing-Along Classics: 50 Songs Everyone Knows by Heart

By Alex Harris

Sam Fender & Olivia Dean’s Rein Me In Lyrics Meaning Unpacked: Harmonies of Regret and Release

By Alex Harris
Neon Music

Music, pop culture & lifestyle stories that matter

MORE FROM NEON MUSIC
  • Neon Music Lists & Rankings
  • Sunday Watch
  • Neon Opinions & Columns
  • Meme Watch
GET INFORMED
  • About Neon Music
  • Contact Us
  • Write For Neon Music
  • Submit Music
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
© 2025 Neon Music (www.neonmusic.co.uk) All rights reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.