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Someone Edited Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl Halftime Show Without The Backing Track, And The Result Has The Entire Internet In Stitches [VIDEO]

This article was originally published on Total Pro Sports.

Bad Bunny during the Super Bowl halftime show.
Bad Bunny during the Super Bowl halftime show. (Photo via Twitter)

It has been days since Bad Bunny hit the stage inside Levi’s Stadium. The conversation around him has not died down. For the millions who tuned in to watch Turning Point’s Halftime show, they still have much to say about the one they didn’t watch.

By Wednesday, the conversation still hadn’t died down, since viewer numbers were officially being released. Instead of speaking on that, his overall performance became a topic of discussion because it was entirely in Spanish.

Somebody decided to see how Bad Bunny sounded without his tracks behind him. The results were noteworthy.

“Holy sh-t! Bad Bunny without the backing track. 😂☠️😂,” one post with 3 million interactions wrote.

“I still can’t figure out how this guy is a singer, he sounds like a drunken tone deaf sailor. What am I missing?” one person said.

“This feels like a comedy skit making fun of singers 😭😭,” a second person wrote.

“Mumbling has somehow become the new singing…It doesn’t seem to require any talent or technical skill anymore. It feels like anyone can make it big these days if they just happen to get lucky. Era of mediocrity,” a third person said of Bad Bunny.

“Anyone who says he’s a good singer is insane. Not even a good rapper. Just awful,” one final person commented.

Bad Bunny Still Brings In The Viewers

Bad Bunny performs the halftime show in Super Bowl LX
Bad Bunny performs the halftime show in Super Bowl LX (Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images)

Sunday night’s Super Bowl and Bad Bunny fell short of setting records for most-watched, but he still made history.

The Seattle Seahawks’ 29-13 victory over the New England Patriots averaged 124.9 million viewers, per ESPN. That fell short of the 127.7 million U.S. viewers who tuned in last year when the Eagles defeated the Chiefs. However, Super Bowl 60 is the most-watched program in NBC history.

Bad Bunny’s halftime show averaged 128.2 million viewers. That now puts him fourth-most-watched in halftime, behind Kendrick Lamar (133.5 million, 2025), Michael Jackson (133.4 million, 1993), and Usher (129.3 million, 2024). Telemundo’s telecast of Super Bowl LX peaked with an average of 4.8 million viewers. He also broke the record for the most-watched Super Bowl halftime show on YouTube in 24 hours.

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