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Betting on the Oscars or the Super Bowl halftime show would be banned under new prediction market bill

If two lawmakers on Capitol Hill get their way, making prediction market bets on the Oscars or the Super Bowl halftime show would be illegal.

“If you bet on who’s performing at the Super Bowl Halftime Show, and lose your money to someone who controlled the answer, you’re getting ripped off,” said Democratic Rep. Greg Casar of Texas.

“Wouldn’t the government protect consumers from markets that were transparently rigged?” said Democratic Sen. Chris Murphy of Connecticut. “The people who benefit in these markets are always the powerful.”

Murphy and Casar introduced a bill on Tuesday that would ban a slew of prediction markets currently offered by platforms like Kalshi and Polymarket.

Dubbed the Banning Event Trading on Sensitive Operations and Federal Functions (BETS OFF) Act, the bill would ban prediction market trading on the following:

  • terrorism, assassination, and war;
  • non-financial government actions in general;
  • events where individuals know or can control the outcome.

At a press conference on Tuesday, both Murphy and Casar largely focused on what they described as the perils of allowing prediction market trading on government actions, including the war in Iran.

“It is frankly stunning to people that it is legal, that it is allowed, for these prediction markets to allow for bets to be made on such consequential questions like war and peace,” Murphy said.

Yet trading on events like awards shows and other cultural events has only grown in popularity. According to Kalshi, traders bet more than $105 million on the Oscars this year, up from roughly $30 million last year.

Despite that growing popularity, both lawmakers told Business Insider that they weren’t concerned about ending up on the wrong side of public opinion, given their belief that those markets are susceptible to corruption and rigging.

“When people get on their phone and see these prediction markets, they expect that there are rules to make sure the game isn’t rigged against them,” Casar said. “I think that voters would clearly stand with us, saying we want to make sure that you aren’t betting on a rigged poker game.”

As prediction markets have come under greater scrutiny, Kalshi has emphasized that its rules forbid insider trading, and the company recently said it took action against a MrBeast video editor for insider trading.

Polymarket has generally taken a more lax approach, and because it’s an international platform that hasn’t yet fully rolled out its US markets, American regulations don’t always apply.

Murphy and Casar’s bill aims to change that, including by amending existing laws to block payments to offshore prediction market platforms and imposing criminal penalties on people who promote them domestically.

Here’s the full text of the “BETS OFF Act”:




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NBC’s Super Bowl ratings just miss record

  • Sunday’s Super Bowl was the second-most-watched after the 2025 game.
  • NBC’s broadcast, featuring a lopsided game and a Bad Bunny performance, was viewed by 124.9 million.
  • A new ratings calculation method introduced last year has helped boost ratings.

The Seattle Seahawks won Super Bowl 60 and so did NBC — but not by as much as they would have liked.

An average of 124.9 million people tuned in, per NBC Sports. NBC generated the second-most-watched Super Bowl — behind 2025’s game on FOX Sports — in its broadcast of the Big Game. It ended a two-year streak of record-breaking Super Bowl viewership.

Telemundo, however, delivered a record with the most-watched Super Bowl in US Spanish-language history with an average of 3.3 million viewers. That viewership peaked during Bad Bunny’s halftime show performance, with 4.9 million viewers.

Overall, viewership was an average of 128.2 million from 8:15 to 8:30 p.m. ET during Bad Bunny’s performance.

An all-time record 137.8 million viewers watched across NBC, Peacock, and Telemundo during the second quarter, according to NBC Sports.

A more detailed breakdown will be available from Nielsen later this week, NBC Sports said in its press release.

Many major sporting events — including last year’s Super Bowl — have seen their ratings increase since Nielsen changed its ratings calculation in late January 2025 to better account for out-of-home viewing, such as people watching at restaurants and bars.

The college football National Championship Game drew in just over 30 million people, up about 36% from last year’s mark of 22.1 million and close to the all-time record of 33.9 million in 2015.

Under Nielsen’s prior ratings methodology, this year’s college football championship would have generated just over 28 million viewers. That’s based on an ESPN spokesperson telling The Athletic that the game’s ratings would have risen 27% year over year under the old format. In other words, out-of-home viewing appeared to add 2 million viewers to the game’s total.

So while Nielsen’s revamped viewership calculations may have affected Sunday’s ratings, it might not have made a massive difference.




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Bad Bunny’s custom Zara Super Bowl shirt is popping up on resale sites and fetching high price tags

  • Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl shirt has led to lookalikes appearing on resale sites such as eBay and Vinted.
  • Some of the Zara-designed shirts are being listed for thousands of dollars.
  • The shirts were reportedly given to employees at Zara’s parent company and weren’t intended for sale.

Shirts inspired by Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl outfit are fetching high price tags on resale sites.

The Puerto Rican singer wore an ensemble designed by retail giant Zara during his Super Bowl LX performance on Sunday. In the days following the show, similar T-shirts have popped up on resale platforms such as eBay and Vinted.

They’ve appeared in listings that feature a thank-you card from Bad Bunny, whose name is Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio, and tags that state that the garment is not intended for sale.

A limited number of the tops were given to some employees at Zara’s parent company, Inditex, to commemorate the performance, multiple outlets reported. In the thank-you note, the pop star praised the time, talent, and heart that went into the project.

Zara and Inditex did not immediately respond to requests for comment by Business Insider.


Vinted listing

Sellers posted the T-shirts along with a thank-you card from Bad Bunny.

Vinted



As of Tuesday afternoon, the shirts were being listed for between 500 euros ($595) and thousands of dollars on eBay and Vinted, with at least one Vinted post asking for nearly $10,000.

Some of the cheaper options came without the thank-you note.

“This garment has been created as a special gift from Benito to Puerto Rico,” read the tag on one shirt, which was listed without the thank-you note.

The jersey features the name Ocasio across the back and the number 64, in honor of his late uncle, representatives for Bad Bunny told Complex.




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I was in the stands for Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime show. Here’s what it was like.

  • I was at Levi’s Stadium when Bad Bunny performed his historic Super Bowl halftime show.
  • We missed the surprise cameos from Pedro Pascal and Cardi B.
  • The crowd absolutely lost it when Lady Gaga appeared.

“Look for us on TV!” I told my parents before my fiancé and I headed to Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California, for our very first Super Bowl.

“Oh, we’re not going to watch the game,” they replied. “But can you text us before Bad Bunny comes on?”

This year’s Super Bowl halftime show might have been even more anticipated than the Big Game. And after a lackluster performance from the New England Patriots against the Seattle Seahawks, it was clear that the real star of Sunday was Bad Bunny.

Here’s what it was like to watch his halftime show from the Super Bowl stands.

Right after the first half came to an end, dozens of crew members rushed to prepare the field.

Staff members rolled out carts with the tufts of grass.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

We got a sneak peek at Bad Bunny’s set as we watched people wheel out carts with tall tufts of grass, a nod to the sugarcane fields of his native Puerto Rico.

Everyone in the stands laughed as we watched extras dressed as grass walk by.


Super Bowl halftime set up

Extras dressed as grass added to the scenery.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

I assumed the extras were going to dance, but they were actually added to accommodate rules for protecting the natural grass at Levi’s Stadium.

Bruce Rodgers, who has produced the Super Bowl halftime show for the past two decades with his company Tribe Inc., told Wired that the NFL limited how many carts could be wheeled out onto the football field. So the team decided to dress up performers to help re-create the lush greenery of Vega Baja, Bad Bunny’s hometown.

Andrew Athias, one of the extras, told Business Insider that the grass costume weighed 40 pounds. He flew to California from the East Coast and spent two weeks in rehearsals to be part of the field cast.

“I got paid $18.70 per hour for the gig, but I would’ve done it for free,” he said.

Once the stage was set, we realized our seats were the farthest away from the performance.


Super Bowl halftime set up

Most of the performance took place on one end of the football field.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

La Casita, a major stage piece from Bad Bunny’s “No Me Quiero Ir De Aquí” residency, arrived at the end zone for the Super Bowl halftime show — just not the one we were behind!

Still, the excitement was palpable as Bad Bunny kicked off his 15-minute performance with “Tití Me Preguntó.” One guy in front of me even started FaceTiming his friend, holding the phone so she could watch the entire show.

We caught parts of the halftime show with the help of one of the stadium’s jumbotrons…


Super Bowl halftime show

We watched a lot of Bad Bunny’s performance via a jumbotron.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

Bad Bunny walked through the tall grass, passing by various set pieces that paid homage to Puerto Rico — including stands selling Coco Frio and piraguas — at the start of his performance.

From the stands above, all we could see were the tops of the grass. However, a jumbotron directly across from our seats showed us what fans at home were seeing on their TV screens.

… but sometimes it only showed stock images.


Superbowl Halftime Show

One of the stock images on the jumbotron.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

Everyone around me was confused when the jumbotron in front of us kept cutting away from Bad Bunny to show random images, including some leaves and a cityscape.

People quickly realized that the screen behind us was still showing the halftime show, so we wondered if the stock images were due to a technical issue.

When I rewatched the show at home, I noticed our jumbotron was often visible on camera. I’m not an expert in production design, but I figure the decision might have been made to make it look less distracting in the telecast.

We completely missed the surprise cameos.


Cardi B and Jessica Alba during the Super Bowl halftime show

Multiple celebrities were dancing in Bad Bunny’s casita during the halftime show.

Christopher Polk/Billboard via Getty Images

I found out that stars including Cardi B, Alix Earle, Pedro Pascal, and Jessica Alba made a quick surprise cameo during the halftime show, thanks to excited texts from my friends who were watching from home.

But there was no missing Lady Gaga.


Bad Bunny and Lady Gaga perform at the 2026 Super Bowl.

Bad Bunny and Lady Gaga perform at the 2026 Super Bowl.

Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

Lady Gaga was also a total surprise for the fans in the stands, and I just about lost it when she appeared to sing a salsa version of “Die With a Smile.”

Alas, I have no pictures of this moment because I was too busy crying tears of joy.

The surprise halftime wedding went by in a flash.


A couple got married during Bad Bunny's halftime performance.

A couple got married during Bad Bunny’s halftime performance.

JOSH EDELSON / AFP via Getty Images

Watching the couple say “I do” from the stands was a quick but special part of the show, especially when it was later revealed via ESPN that the couple had originally invited Bad Bunny to their wedding — only for him to invite them to get married during his Super Bowl performance instead.

Bad Bunny and his dancers ran across the football field for the parade of the Americas.


Superbowl Halftime Show

We could spot all the flags from our seats in the stands.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

The show made its way over to our side of the football field as Bad Bunny’s backup dancers carried flags from countries in North and South America.

The show ended with fireworks and a powerful statement.


Superbowl Halftime Show

The grand finale of the Super Bowl halftime show.

Anneta Konstantinides/Business Insider

“The only thing more powerful than hate is love,” the sign read, evoking Bad Bunny’s statement during his Grammys acceptance speech the week prior.

The stadium erupted as Bad Bunny began singing “DTMF,” his message emblazoned for all to see — no matter where we were sitting.

As fireworks lit up California’s slowly darkening blue sky, I knew I had just watched something historic.

And yes, my parents loved it.




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SpaceX ran a Super Bowl ad — a first for Elon Musk’s business empire

  • SpaceX ran its first Super Bowl ad on Sunday, promoting its Starlink internet service.
  • It’s the first time any of Elon Musk’s companies have run an ad at the Super Bowl.
  • Tesla and SpaceX have avoided traditional advertising in the past, but that is beginning to change.

SpaceX has made its Super Bowl debut ahead of a potential record-breaking IPO.

The rocket company ran its first Super Bowl ad for its Starlink satellite internet on Sunday, the first time any of Elon Musk’s companies have run an ad at the showpiece event.

The 30-second spot features audio from a speech by legendary science-fiction author Arthur C. Clarke, set to footage of SpaceX’s Falcon 9 and Starship rocket boosters returning to Earth.

It shows Starlink operating in a series of remote locations and touts the satellite internet service’s mission of “fast, affordable internet, available everywhere.”

The ad marks a departure for Musk’s companies, which have in the past shunned advertising in favor of using the billionaire’s outspoken public persona for publicity.

Tesla reportedly laid off its entire marketing team during widespread workforce cuts in 2024, while SpaceX has typically relied on eye-catching rocket tests, such as its Starship booster catch, to boost its public profile.

Both companies have started running advertising in recent years across a number of platforms, including Musk’s X, and Starlink has previously featured in Super Bowl ads run by partners such as T-Mobile.

SpaceX running its own stand-alone Super Bowl ad is a significant development, with 30-second ad slots costing between $8 million and $10 million on average this year, per broadcaster NBCUniversal.

It comes as SpaceX gears up for a public offering later this year that could value the rocket company at as much as $1.5 trillion.

Last week, Musk announced that SpaceX would merge with his AI startup xAI, in a move the world’s richest man said would help launch a network of solar-powered orbital data centers to train powerful AI models.

SpaceX’s recent success has been driven in large part by Starlink, which uses a constellation of more than 9,000 low-orbit satellites to provide wireless internet. In December, the company said Starlink has 9 million customers and is active in 155 countries.




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Details you missed in Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl LX halftime show

  • On Sunday, Bad Bunny took the stage at Levi’s Stadium for the Super Bowl LX halftime show.
  • The show was full of nods to Puerto Rico and included subtle political and cultural statements.
  • Here are some details from Bad Bunny’s halftime performance that you might have missed.

Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl LX halftime show was more than a hit-filled performance — it was a carefully staged cultural statement.

Beyond the headline moments, the show was packed with intentional details, from visual symbolism to casting choices, that were easy to miss in real time.

We’ve rounded up the moments you might not have caught, and why they mattered.

Bad Bunny’s “Ocasio 64” jersey

Bad Bunny wore Zara for his Super Bowl halftime performance.

Bob Kupbens/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Bad Bunny — born Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio — wore a white Zara football jersey emblazoned with his last name, “Ocasio,” and the number “64.”

The number set off widespread online speculation about its meaning, with theories ranging from personal and musical references to Hurricane Maria, but no definitive explanation has been confirmed.

The cameos


Bad Bunny and Lady Gaga at the Super Bowl halftime show.

The halftime performance featured several celebrity cameos.

Christopher Polk/Billboard via Getty Images

Bad Bunny’s halftime show featured several celebrity cameos from the likes of Lady Gaga, Ricky Martin, Pedro Pascal, Cardi B, Karol G, Jessica Alba, and Young Miko.

Lady Gaga appeared in a blue dress and sang a salsa rendition of her chart-topping hit “Die With a Smile,” while fellow Puerto Rican native Ricky Martin took to the stage to perform Bad Bunny’s “Lo Que Pasó a Hawaii.”

Maria Antonia Cay, known as Toñita, also made a cameo, briefly appearing onstage to hand Bad Bunny a drink. She runs Caribbean Social Club in Williamsburg, one of the last Puerto Rican social clubs in New York City.

An actual wedding


A couple got married during Bad Bunny's halftime performance.

A couple got married during Bad Bunny’s halftime performance.

JOSH EDELSON / AFP via Getty Images

A couple featured in Bad Bunny’s performance actually got married during the set, league sources confirmed to ESPN.

The outlet said that the couple had originally invited Bad Bunny to their wedding. Instead, the singer invited them to get married during his show.

The power lines


Bad Bunny's halftime set featured electricity poles as stage props.

Bad Bunny’s halftime set featured electricity poles as stage props.

Kevin Sabitus/Getty Images

During his performance of “El Apagón,” a song whose title translates to “the power outage,” Bad Bunny leaned into the track’s themes about the frequent blackouts in Puerto Rico.

The stage featured his dancers dressed as jíbaros, or traditional Puerto Rican farmers, who began climbing utility poles that sparked and exploded.

The dancers dressed as plants


A dancer dressed as a plant for Bad Bunny's halftime show.

The halftime show featured dancers dressed as plants.

San Francisco Chronicle/Hearst Newspapers/San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images

Bad Bunny brought Puerto Rico to Levi’s Stadium by covering the stage in greenery inspired by Vega Baja, where he grew up.

In another stadium, that kind of lush landscape would typically be created by wheeling carts of plant props onto the field, Bruce Rodgers, whose company Tribe Inc. handled the show’s production design, told Wired.

But NFL rules limited how many carts could be used to protect Levi’s Stadium’s natural grass, so the team dressed performers as plants to get the same effect, Rodgers said

Boricua pride on display


Bad Bunny's halftime performance featured references to Puerto Rico, such as a piragua stand.

Bad Bunny’s halftime performance featured various references to Puerto Rico, including a piragua stand.

Patrick T. Fallon / AFP

Bad Bunny’s halftime performance featured several cultural symbols of Puerto Rico, including sugar cane fields, a piragua stand, and a casita.

The billboard message at the end of the performance


A billboard at the end of Bad Bunny's halftime performance.

The billboard at the end of Bad Bunny’s halftime performance was a reference to his Grammys speech.

JOSH EDELSON / AFP

As fireworks lit up the sky to mark the end of Bad Bunny’s halftime performance, a stadium screen displayed the message, “The only thing more powerful than hate is love.”

The quote echoed a line from the singer’s Grammy acceptance speech last week.

While accepting the award for best música urbana album, Bad Bunny called out ICE.

“We’re not savage,” he said. “We’re not animals. We’re not aliens. We are humans, and we are Americans.”

Later that night, Bad Bunny also made history as the first artist to win Album of the Year with an all-Spanish record.




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Aditi Bharade

I flew across the country to be dancing grass at Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime show

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Andrew Athias, 33, a Philadelphia-based digital marketer and content creator. It has been edited for length and clarity.

I was one of the 500 bunches of dancing grass at Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime show. I got paid $18.70 per hour for the gig, but I would’ve done it for free.

I’m a big Bad Bunny fan. I’ve been to three of his concerts since my girlfriend introduced me to him in 2021.

I found the grass gig through a company called Backlit, which handles finding extras for the halftime show. I found it last year when I saw Kendrick Lamar at the Super Bowl halftime show, but I forgot about it until Bad Bunny was announced as Super Bowl’s headliner in October, and I decided to apply.

I was one of the few crazy people to fly over from the East Coast to be part of the field cast. I flew out to San Francisco from Philadelphia in the middle of a snowstorm and have been out here for two weeks, rehearsing for the big day, and it has been worth it.

Job description: Be athletic

The requirements for the role were pretty basic. You had to be no taller than six feet, no shorter than five feet seven inches, and of an athletic build.

The listing said we had to be able to wear a 40-plus-pound costume and to be comfortable dancing in proximity with other performers for long periods. Other than that, we had to measure every part of our body from head to toe, elbow to floor, shoulder to clavicle, etc. Those were the only requirements.

They didn’t tell us we’d be wearing a grass costume and kept it super vague.

12-hour rehearsals with a 40-pound grass costume

My part was actually really easy. They just told me where to stand, and they said, “Don’t move. Stand here and be one with the grass.”

The suits were heavy and uncomfortable. Every now and again, you’ll have a blade of plastic grass going places where grass should not go. Fortunately, we were given some protective goggles.

There were definitely times when we were wearing the suits for about six or seven hours because they had to make alterations. There were about eight practices in total, with the last three lasting 12 hours each.

But the production crew did their best to make this suit as wearable as possible; they listened to every complaint and tried to fix it.

And getting to see behind the scenes of the production was a treat.

It was really cool to see Bad Bunny perform just a foot away. But because he was in LA for the Grammys during some of our rehearsals, the crew had a Bad Bunny stand-in they called “Good Rabbit.”

An electrifying atmosphere


Bad Bunny performs onstage during the Apple Music Super Bowl LX Halftime Show at Levi's Stadium on February 08, 2026 in Santa Clara, California.

Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime performance.

Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Roc Nation



One of the other things they asked for in the application was whether you had marching band experience or experience in the entertainment industry. I was in a collegiate a capella group, so I’m not scared of performing in front of big crowds.

But it’s definitely different when you have a stadium full of people vibing, moving, grooving to Bad Buddy’s music.

I spent about $2,600 on flights, hotels, and a rental car for the two weeks. I’m a content creator without a full time job now, so I didn’t have to take any paid time off for this.

The hardest part of the gig was keeping quiet

The hardest part of the whole thing wasn’t the long hours or the heavy costume, but rather keeping quiet about it. They made us sign an NDA to not talk about it or post anything on social media for two weeks.

So when I saw people posting about what his setlist was going to be, it was so hard to have so much knowledge and power and not be able to do anything with it.

I told only a very small handful of people that I was going to San Francisco and would be involved in the half-time show.

I didn’t tell them what I was dressed as. I didn’t tell them where to look for me on the field. All I said was, “You’re going to see me. You just didn’t know that you saw me.”




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Bad Bunny didn’t need to sing in English at the Super Bowl to make a statement about America

When Bad Bunny took the field at the 2026 Super Bowl for a historic, joyful halftime show, he wore a jersey with his Latino heritage stitched into its very fabric.

It’s an apt metaphor for his performance, which eschewed explicit anti-ICE statements (he covered that at the Grammys, anyway) in favor of celebration with a side of symbolism.

Nods to the Puerto Rican singer’s motherland were peppered throughout the set, which was designed to evoke the US territory’s signature aesthetics, from sugar cane fields to a storefront labeled “La Marqueta” (a slang term for market) and various vendors selling tacos and piraguas (shaved ice). While performing “El Apagón,” a song about the frequent blackouts and infrastructure issues affecting Puerto Ricans, Bad Bunny brought this symbolism to the forefront, waving the Puerto Rican flag.

He also proclaimed in English, “God bless America,” and brandished a football printed with the phrase “Together, We Are America.” He added in Spanish, “We’re still here.” (Puerto Rico is a US territory, and Puerto Ricans are American citizens.)

It was a stark and knowing contrast to the Latinophobia and anti-immigrant messaging hawked by the Trump administration. So much so that President Donald Trump complained online about Bad Bunny’s performance and his choice to sing primarily in Spanish.

“The Super Bowl Halftime Show is absolutely terrible, one of the worst, EVER! It makes no sense,” Trump wrote on Truth Social after Bad Bunny left the stage. “Nobody understands a word this guy is saying.”

For those who understand visual storytelling, however, Bad Bunny’s performance made perfect sense. He didn’t need to say “ICE out” or declare an explicit political opinion. In keeping with the recent tradition of Super Bowl halftime shows, Bad Bunny used iconography to take a stand instead.

Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl performance is part of a new halftime show tradition

Bad Bunny’s performance shares DNA with Beyoncé and Kendrick Lamar’s Super Bowl appearances, both of which used bold imagery to make strong statements.

Beyoncé’s surprise appearance at Coldplay’s 2016 Super Bowl halftime show became famous — and, to some, infamous — for the iconography present in her performance of her then-new single, “Formation.” In the midst of Trump’s first presidential campaign, Beyoncé and her backup dancers wore outfits that channeled the Black Panther Party, an organization formed amid the ’60s Civil Rights Movement that fought for Black liberation.


Beyoncé performs at the 2016 Super Bowl.

Beyoncé performs at the 2016 Super Bowl.

Robert Beck/Sports Illustrated via Getty Images



The song itself isn’t explicitly political. But as a celebration of identity and legacy that features lyrics about Beyoncé’s parents, her daughter, and her features (“I like my negro nose with Jackson 5 nostrils”), Beyoncé performing it — with visual references to the song’s themes in her and her dancers’ costumes, to boot — was innately political.

It’s not that Beyoncé is allergic to making explicit political statements: She famously performed in front of the word “Feminist” at the 2014 VMAs, and sang “Votin’ out 45, don’t get out of line” on her 2022 album “Renaissance,” referring to Trump as the 45th president. But when the NFL hosts musicians for the night, they’ve lately preferred make their statements symbolic rather than overt.

Last year, Kendrick Lamar followed suit during his own Super Bowl halftime show, outfitting himself and his dancers in red, white, and blue. Although Lamar kept the music focused on his own enemies and triumphs, he used audacious visual language to pose broader, poignantly relevant questions: Who’s allowed to claim patriotism? What does it mean to be an American, especially in times of oppression and conflict?

Bad Bunny’s performance raised similar questions, but offered simpler, more optimistic solutions. For the finale, he was surrounded by backup dancers, band members, and other performers holding flags from around the world; when he proclaimed “God bless America,” he listed out all the countries in both North and South America.

Bad Bunny is not a politician, nor can he single-handedly cure the world of hatred and division. Still, for a brief moment, on a small square of American turf, he chose to use the stage to show millions of people what that could look like.




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K-pop It Boy Joshua Hong continued his US charm offensive at the Super Bowl

  • Joshua Hong of Seventeen was spotted at the Super Bowl.
  • Last month, he became the first male K-pop star to walk the Golden Globes red carpet.
  • The LA-born singer is a member of Seventeen, one of the highest-earning K-pop bands in the market.

The Joshua Hong US charm offensive is just getting started.

“It’s my first time at the Super Bowl. So excited to be here,” Hong, a vocalist from the K-pop boy band Seventeen, said in a video released by the NFL. He also wished the players on both teams good luck.

Hong was one of the scores of celebrities, from Travis Scott to Jay-Z, who descended on San Francisco for the championship game between the New England Patriots and the Seattle Seahawks. He had teased fans that he would show up at the Super Bowl hours before game day kicked off in earnest, posting selfies of himself from the car on the way to the stadium.

In another video released on the NFL’s official X account, the Los Angeles-born singer walked onto the field in a preppy outfit, soaking up the game day vibes and snapping some photos.

Hong had been spotted in the front row of Thom Browne’s fashion show in San Francisco two days before the Super Bowl festivities. He’s working with the California-based United Talent Agency to secure acting gigs, continuing the band’s push to expand his career stateside.

His Super Bowl appearance comes weeks after he made K-pop history as the first male idol to walk the Golden Globes red carpet in January. Hong was spotted rubbing shoulders with the stars of the hit show “Heated Rivalry” backstage.

Seventeen is one of K-pop mega-agency Hybe’s biggest moneymakers. The 13-member boy band is in the middle of its world tour and heads to Southeast Asia next. Their label mates, BTS, will return after a prolonged hiatus on March 21 with the album “Arirang.”




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Some Kalshi transfers are delayed during the Super Bowl

  • Kalshi said it experienced delays in fund transfers due to a Super Bowl traffic surge.
  • Kalshi’s cofounder said on X that users’ “money is safe and on the way.”
  • Kalshi and Polymarket are benefiting from a sharp interest in prediction markets.

Kalshi said that some transfers on its prediction markets app are delayed because of the high volume of traffic during the Super Bowl.

“Some deposits are delayed because of the amount of traffic and deposits we’re getting,” Kalshi cofounder Luana Lopes Lara wrote on X on Sunday evening. “Your money is safe and on the way, it will just take longer to land.”

On X, some Kalshi users said that they felt relieved to receive an explanation for why their deposits did not go through. Others demanded a refund, saying they saw no point in placing bets if the money didn’t arrive until halftime.

The company saw a significant spike in platform volume on Sunday. In an X post, Kalshi said it saw over $325 million in volume less than an hour before the championship game started.

Kalshi, founded in 2018, lets users bet on the outcome of events such as elections, sports matches, and economic indicators. For the Super Bowl, people could bet on the outcome of the New England Patriots versus the Seattle Seahawks game, as well as on which commercials would run and which song Bad Bunny would play first during his halftime show.

The startup and its rival, Polymarket, are winners of a big surge in interest in prediction markets. In addition to scheduled events, users can now also bet on questions ranging from the popularity of Labubu dolls to Elon Musk’s net worth.




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