Bad Bunny has made a few different kinds of comments about the Super Bowl over the past few months, and they’ve all blended hype, pride, and some light trolling of his critics.

The core thing he said

When people online (especially some conservative and MAGA commentators) got mad that he was picked for the 2026 Super Bowl halftime show, he used his “Saturday Night Live” monologue to clap back in a playful way:

  • He said he was very excited to perform the Super Bowl halftime show and joked that “everyone is excited about it — even Fox News,” before SNL cut to a fake montage of Fox hosts praising him.
  • Speaking in Spanish, he framed the show as a win for Latinos and Latinas in the U.S., saying it wasn’t just his personal achievement but a shared victory and that their contributions and legacy in the country “can’t be erased”.
  • Then he delivered the line that went viral: if people didn’t understand what he said in Spanish, they had “four months to learn” — essentially challenging his critics to learn Spanish before the Super Bowl.

That “you have four months to learn Spanish” line is what most forums and social posts are quoting when they ask “what did Bad Bunny say about the Super Bowl?”.

What he said around the game itself

As the game got closer and at press events, the tone shifted a bit from trolling to inclusion and celebration:

  • In press settings he joked that people don’t actually have to learn Spanish; they “just have to dance and have fun,” backing off the line in a light, teasing way rather than doubling down aggressively.
  • He emphasized that the show would be about joy and connection, not drama, and that fans should focus on the music and performance.

During the actual halftime show, his statements were mostly symbolic and short:

  • He highlighted Puerto Rico, becoming the first Spanish‑speaking solo artist to headline the Super Bowl halftime show, and used imagery and staging to center Latin culture and identity.
  • At one point he said “God bless America” and held up a football with the phrase “Together, We Are America,” then added in Spanish “We’re still here,” a subtle message about Puerto Ricans and Latinos being part of the U.S. fabric.

How that turned into online drama

A lot of the drama hasn’t been about long speeches from him, but about how people reacted to a couple of short lines:

  • The “learn Spanish in four months” joke got spun into headlines claiming he was “demanding” Americans learn a foreign language, even though it was delivered as a cheeky punchline in a comedy monologue.
  • After the performance, Donald Trump complained online that the show was “terrible” and that “nobody understands a word this guy is saying,” which fed another round of culture‑war discourse about language, immigration, and “who the Super Bowl is for”.

Commentators have pointed out that, instead of issuing long political rants, he mostly let the visuals, Spanish‑language songs, and subtle messages (like “Together, We Are America” and “We’re still here”) speak for themselves, which is why different sides read the show so differently.

Quick forum-style recap

If you just want the quick version people are repeating on forums and group chats:

  • He said he’s “very excited” to do the Super Bowl and joked that even Fox News is excited.
  • He called the show a victory for Latinos and Latinas in the U.S. and said their legacy “can’t be erased”.
  • He told anyone who didn’t understand his Spanish that they had four months to learn — the line that went viral.
  • Later he softened it into a “just dance and have fun” message and focused on joy and connection.
  • During the show he said “God bless America,” held a “Together, We Are America” football, and added “We’re still here” in Spanish, which many saw as a quiet political and cultural statement.

TL;DR: When people ask “what did Bad Bunny say about the Super Bowl,” they’re mostly talking about his SNL monologue where he celebrated getting the halftime show, framed it as a win for Latinos, and teased critics by saying that if they didn’t understand his Spanish, they had four months to learn it — then later turned the whole thing into a message about dancing, joy, and being “still here” on the Super Bowl stage.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.