Close Menu
  • Home
  • News
  • Lifestyle
  • Law
  • Business
  • Education

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

What's Hot

This Alabama Grower Took Hemp All the Way to the Cannabis Cup

November 5, 2025

ExpoCannabis Brasil 2025: Latin America’s Largest Cannabis Fair Returns to São Paulo, With Added B2B Event

November 4, 2025

As Synthetic ‘Kush’ Ravages Sierra Leone, Its UN Ambassador Says Legalization Isn’t on the Table—Yet

November 4, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Thursday, November 6
  • Home
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn VKontakte
Smoke Professional
  • Home
  • News

    More Than 1,000 Arrested in Sweep of U.K. Weed Grows

    July 8, 2023

    Scotland Calls On UK To End ‘Failed’ Drug War With Decriminalization And Harm Reduction Approach

    July 8, 2023

    Germany’s draft law for first phase of cannabis reform

    July 8, 2023

    High Times Cannabis Cup Illinois: People’s Choice Edition 2023 Kicks Off

    July 8, 2023

    Pennsylvania Committee Advances Expansion to State Medical Cannabis Program

    July 7, 2023
  • Lifestyle

    Narco-Terror or Political Theater? Inside the U.S. War on Boats off Venezuela and Colombia

    November 4, 2025

    Lebanon Bets on Cannabis: Can Weed Save a Broken Economy?

    November 3, 2025

    One Device, Every Extract: The Modular Vape Platform Looking To Change the Game

    October 31, 2025

    The Legal Weed Meltdown Ontario Doesn’t Want You to See

    October 30, 2025

    Where’s the Money, Man? Inside Cannabis’ Long Wait for Capital to Return

    October 29, 2025
  • Law

    Oklahoma Campaign to Legalize Adult-Use Cannabis Will Begin Collecting Signatures Next Month 

    July 29, 2025

    Republican Lawmakers Kill Cannabis Legalization Provisions in Wisconsin Gov’s Budget Proposal

    June 16, 2025

    Pennsylvania Senate Committee Rejects Adult-Use Legalization Bill

    June 15, 2025

    Results from Swiss Cannabis Pilot Program Suggest Legalization Reduces Problematic Cannabis Use

    June 14, 2025

    Study: Cannabis Use Among Older Adults Higher Than Ever

    June 13, 2025
  • Business

    As Synthetic ‘Kush’ Ravages Sierra Leone, Its UN Ambassador Says Legalization Isn’t on the Table—Yet

    November 4, 2025

    Paul Thomas Anderson Taps Real Weed Nuns for DiCaprio Crime Epic: Sisters of the Valley Speak Out

    November 4, 2025

    High Times Centerfold Photographer Lelen Ruete Turns the Magazine’s Imagery into a Living Experience

    November 4, 2025

    You’re the Judge: High Times Cannabis Cup Judge Kits Drop in New York Nov. 7

    November 3, 2025

    How I Got You Your Ounce: Inside New York’s Apartment-Dealer Era

    November 3, 2025
  • Education

    This Alabama Grower Took Hemp All the Way to the Cannabis Cup

    November 5, 2025

    ExpoCannabis Brasil 2025: Latin America’s Largest Cannabis Fair Returns to São Paulo, With Added B2B Event

    November 4, 2025

    Watch: Dave East on Why He Doesn’t Share Blunts, Kush Only, Karma 4, Snoop & Wiz

    November 3, 2025

    The Torch Keeps Burning: Glassblowers in Appalachia after Hurricane Helene

    November 1, 2025

    The Science of Flavor with Rove – Cannabis & Tech Today

    October 30, 2025
Smoke Professional
You are at:Home»Business»Bad Bunny, Weed, the Super Bowl and the Evolution of American Identity
Business

Bad Bunny, Weed, the Super Bowl and the Evolution of American Identity

adminBy adminOctober 29, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Bad Bunny, Weed, the Super Bowl and the Evolution of American Identity
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Every year, the Super Bowl tries to show us what we think we look like. Flags, fireworks, familiar faces. But this year, America looks different. Bad Bunny is headlining the Super Bowl halftime show. A Puerto Rican artist, singing in Spanish, with a catalog that smells like krippy kush and coastal heat. When the country tunes in, it won’t just be watching a performance. It will be staring at its own reflection.

For decades, the Super Bowl has been the nation’s most carefully curated moment of self-image: unity, patriotism, spectacle. Yet here comes Benito Martínez Ocasio, global reggaetón icon and the most-streamed artist on earth, a man who once rapped “marihuana y bebida, gozándose la vida como es [marijuana and alcohol, enjoying life as it is],” at the center of the screen. The question isn’t whether America is ready for him. It’s whether America has already become him.

The Smoke and the Silence

Bad Bunny’s catalog is steeped in cannabis culture. Krippy Kush made the slang global. Hoy Cobré featured Snoop Dogg, a joint between generations. Yonaguni ends with “y un blunt.” And Callaíta, his billion-view anthem, turns marihuana y bebida into a mantra of pleasure and autonomy.

But there’s also that old interview clip where he admits he quit smoking years ago. “I like to be clear-minded,” he says. “It didn’t work for me anymore.” It’s honest, almost tender. He separates the plant from the posture. Weed served its season. Then he moved on.

That contradiction (songs that smoke, an artist who doesn’t) isn’t hypocrisy. It’s maturity. Weed was a language he helped normalize. Now he lives the meaning beyond the ritual. In a country still learning to separate culture from criminalization, that’s progress in itself.

America in Transition

Three overlapping revolutions define this moment.

Cannabis. The Pew Research Center reports that almost nine in ten Americans support legalization for medical or recreational use. Weed is no longer rebellion; it’s regular.

Spanish. With more than 50 million Spanish speakers, the United States ranks among the largest Spanish-speaking nations on Earth. Spanish is no longer the outsider language; it’s part of the country’s rhythm.

Puerto Rico. Nearly half of mainland Americans still don’t know Puerto Ricans are U.S. citizens, according to a Morning Consult poll. Yet here is a Puerto Rican artist redefining the national soundtrack. When Jennifer Lopez unfurled the island’s flag during her 2020 halftime show, it was controversial. In 2026, it will be the centerpiece.

This is the new America: weed-friendly, bilingual, Caribbean at its roots. For many, that feels liberating. For others, terrifying.

The Rhetoric of Resistance

Every social leap meets its echo of fear. The economist Albert O. Hirschman described it decades ago in The Rhetoric of Reaction: opponents of progress argue that reform will backfire (perversity), accomplish nothing (futility), or destroy what already works (jeopardy).

When Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene called Bad Bunny’s upcoming show “perverse” and demanded English be made official, she was unknowingly quoting Hirschman’s playbook. The claim that Spanish lyrics or cannabis culture threaten America misunderstands what America is: a nation that only exists because of change.

History proves that each wave of newcomers, each taboo normalized, enriches rather than erases. As Stanford’s Ran Abramitzky writes, immigrants “come to resemble natives, and new generations form distinct identities as Americans.” The same could be said of every idea once foreign to the mainstream, from jazz to feminism to legalization.

Academia Meets Reggaetón

Bad Bunny isn’t just pop. He’s syllabus. At Yale University and Loyola Marymount, professors teach his work as a prism for Puerto Rican identity, colonialism, and gender. He paints his nails, blurs masculine codes, and puts queer representation in reggaetón videos once defined by machismo.

When a comedian called Puerto Rico “a floating island of garbage,” he released a music video captioned “garbage,” showing the island’s beauty.

When ICE raids hit the island, he posted videos calling them “mierda.” In another, he spliced a Trump-like voice saying, “This country is nothing without the immigrants.”

He’s more than an artist. He’s a philosopher with a beat.

The Super Bowl as a Mirror

The Super Bowl is the last monoculture left: 110 million people watching the same image at the same time. In 2026, that image will be a Spanish-speaking Puerto Rican, sober but surrounded by songs that celebrate weed, center female pleasure, and reject colonial shame.

Critics will call it political. It is. But politics here means presence. The NFL itself is shifting: it funds cannabinoid research, loosens THC restrictions, quietly acknowledges the hypocrisy of punishing players for what the public now buys legally.

When Callaíta thunders through that stadium, the lyrics won’t just fill the air. They’ll rewrite the definition of “All-American.”

Evolution Over Nostalgia

Real progress demands education and courage, the will to evolve beyond inherited ideas. It’s a lesson that belongs above every border crossing, every capitol, every studio mic.

Change unsettles, yes. It also strengthens. Weed reform has already reduced arrests and opened research. Spanish-language media has deepened American art. Puerto Rican visibility has corrected a century of silence.

This isn’t decay; it’s adaptation. America’s constant act of becoming. As Hirschman warned, the pessimists always say evolution will ruin us. They have always been wrong.

So when Benito steps onto that field, clear-minded, bilingual, unbothered, remember: he’s not the outsider invading America’s stage. He’s the proof of what America has become.

He may no longer light up, but his culture does. And this time, the whole country is breathing it in.

Photo: Shutterstock

Source link

American bad Bowl Bunny Evolution Identity Super Weed
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleWhere’s the Money, Man? Inside Cannabis’ Long Wait for Capital to Return
Next Article Colombia Approves Sale of Medical Cannabis Flower: Small Growers Get First Dibs
admin
  • Website

Related Posts

As Synthetic ‘Kush’ Ravages Sierra Leone, Its UN Ambassador Says Legalization Isn’t on the Table—Yet

November 4, 2025

Paul Thomas Anderson Taps Real Weed Nuns for DiCaprio Crime Epic: Sisters of the Valley Speak Out

November 4, 2025

High Times Centerfold Photographer Lelen Ruete Turns the Magazine’s Imagery into a Living Experience

November 4, 2025
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Our Picks

This Alabama Grower Took Hemp All the Way to the Cannabis Cup

November 5, 2025

ExpoCannabis Brasil 2025: Latin America’s Largest Cannabis Fair Returns to São Paulo, With Added B2B Event

November 4, 2025

As Synthetic ‘Kush’ Ravages Sierra Leone, Its UN Ambassador Says Legalization Isn’t on the Table—Yet

November 4, 2025

Paul Thomas Anderson Taps Real Weed Nuns for DiCaprio Crime Epic: Sisters of the Valley Speak Out

November 4, 2025
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Don't Miss
Education

This Alabama Grower Took Hemp All the Way to the Cannabis Cup

By adminNovember 5, 20250

When Kyle Copac lights up, he’s not just smoking; he’s reflecting on decades of cannabis…

ExpoCannabis Brasil 2025: Latin America’s Largest Cannabis Fair Returns to São Paulo, With Added B2B Event

November 4, 2025

As Synthetic ‘Kush’ Ravages Sierra Leone, Its UN Ambassador Says Legalization Isn’t on the Table—Yet

November 4, 2025

Paul Thomas Anderson Taps Real Weed Nuns for DiCaprio Crime Epic: Sisters of the Valley Speak Out

November 4, 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from Smoke Unlimited about Weed & CBD vaping.

From Our Partners
About Us
About Us

Get all the current news stories, latest trends and legislation regarding cannabidiol, products, usages and its benefits. So don’t miss out any buzz and stay tuned! We offer a minute to minute updates regarding Marijuana industry.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
Our Picks

This Alabama Grower Took Hemp All the Way to the Cannabis Cup

November 5, 2025

ExpoCannabis Brasil 2025: Latin America’s Largest Cannabis Fair Returns to São Paulo, With Added B2B Event

November 4, 2025

As Synthetic ‘Kush’ Ravages Sierra Leone, Its UN Ambassador Says Legalization Isn’t on the Table—Yet

November 4, 2025
Sponsors
Copyright © 2025. SmokeProfessional
  • Home
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

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