ICE, Zach Bryan and Bad News
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Perhaps Kendrick Lamar was speaking to the present and the future when he said during his Super Bowl halftime performance months back that “the revolution ‘bout to be televised.” The announcement Sunday that superstar Puerto Rican rapper and singer Bad Bunny will headline the next Super Bowl halftime show marks the second time in a row that the National Football League has co-signed an artist who is deemed “controversial” by some of the league’s supporters.
Bad Bunny is everywhere these days -- from being named Super Bowl LX headliner to turning up on "Saturday Night Live" this past weekend for the comedy series' season premiere, to turning up at Yankee Stadium for a heated postseason battle.
House Speaker Mike Johnson says it is 'a terrible decision' to book Bad Bunny for the Super Bowl, saying Lee Greenwood would have been a better pick.
Senator Thom Tillis warned he is concerned about future Democratic administrations sending troops into Republican states.
A clip posted by Major League Baseball then cut to Bad Bunny holding the ball, raising it above his head, and smiling.
Did Coca-Cola CEO James Quincey or various other people issue an ultimatum to the NFL about ending sponsorship of the Super Bowl if singer Bad Bunny was allowed to perform at the halftime show? No, that's not true: A
Bad Bunny’s all-Spanish Super Bowl performance sparks outrage from the right, reflecting a growing cultural divide.
Legacy Motor Club — Good news: John Hunter Nemechek placed ninth in last year’s playoff race at Las Vegas. … Erik Jones qualified fifth at Las Vegas in March. Bad news: Nemechek has finished outside the top 25 in each of the last three races. … Jones has two top-10 finishes in his last 20 starts on 1.5-mile tracks.