Bad Bunny Unleashes Direct Shot At ICE & Donald Trump During Grammy Awards, With Super Bowl Halftime Performance Just One Week Away [VIDEO]
This article was originally published on Total Pro Sports.

Bad Bunny took a shot at ICE (the United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement) during his Grammy Awards acceptance speech on Sunday evening.
At Sunday’s ceremony, Bad Bunny won the Grammy Award for Best Música Urbana Album. This was his third time winning the award, with the 31-year-old also winning it in 2022 and 2023.
During his acceptance speech, the Super Bowl 60 halftime show performer called out ICE amid nationwide protests against the law enforcement agency.
“Before I say thanks to God, I’m going to say, ICE out!” the legendary rapper stated.
🚨#BREAKING: The crowd erupts as Bad Bunny set to perform at the Super Bowl 60 receives a standing ovation at the GRAMMYs after opening his speech with a bold message: “Before I thank God, I’m going to say ICE out pic.twitter.com/kfaNeNt5QX
— R A W S A L E R T S (@rawsalerts) February 2, 2026
His message came hours after Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson’s daughter, Simone Garcia Johnson, also called out ICE and President Donald Trump in an X/Twitter post after her departure from the WWE.
Last week, ICE also announced that it would deploy some of its agents at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan, Italy.
Bad Bunny Is Headlining The Super Bowl 60 Halftime Show

In September, the NFL announced that Bad Bunny would headline the Super Bowl 60 halftime show at Levi’s Stadium (home of the NFL’s San Francisco 49ers). Green Day has also been announced as another performer.
On Friday, ESPN’s Kalyn Kahler reported that some NFL owners were concerned about the league’s decision to pick the Grammy Award-winning musician. One of them even feared that the decision would affect the league’s equity deal with ESPN.
But Commissioner Roger Goodell has stood firm on keeping Bad Bunny. Don’t forget, there was plenty of backlash when they picked Kendrick Lamar as the Super Bowl 59 halftime show performer. And his program was the most-watched Super Bowl halftime show in history at 133.5 million viewers.
