Bailar

Bad Bunny

Puerto Rican reggaeton and Latin trap artist (born 1994)

Performers5 min read28 citations

Bad Bunny, the stage name of Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio, is a Puerto Rican rapper, singer-songwriter, and record producer whose rise reordered the commercial reach of Spanish-language popular music across the late 2010s and early 2020s.[1] Frequently described as a foremost figure of Latin trap, he is generally credited with carrying Spanish-language rap into the global mainstream without abandoning the language to do so.[2] His career unfolds within the wider history of reggaeton, a genre that by the 2010s had migrated from a regional Caribbean current into a fixture of charts throughout Latin America and the diaspora in the United States.[3] Cultural critics situate that ascent within a broader pattern in which Anglophone stars such as Drake, Cardi B, and Nicki Minaj began recording with reggaetoneros including J Balvin, Ozuna, and Bad Bunny himself.[4]

Born on March 10, 1994, in Bayamón and raised in the Almirante Sur sector of Vega Baja, Martínez grew up in a working household—his father a truck driver, his mother a schoolteacher—where everyday listening ran from salsa and merengue to pop ballads.[5] His earliest musical recollection was a childhood Christmas gift: a record by Vico C, the Puerto Rican rapper regarded as a reggaetón pioneer, given to him at the age of five.[6] As an adolescent he gravitated toward radio voices such as Daddy Yankee and the salsa singer Héctor Lavoe, an inheritance that fused urban and traditional Caribbean strands.[7] That lineage runs back to Daddy Yankee, the artist often credited with coining the term "reggaeton" in 1991 to name the sound then emerging in Puerto Rico.[8] The performer's own alias arose from an episode in childhood when he was made to wear a rabbit costume; he later judged that the name would, in his words, "market well".[9]

Reggaeton's appeal, scholars argue, rests on a hybrid identity that gathers neo-African, Caribbean, and Latino traditions, pairing rap- and dancehall-derived vocals with the steady percussive figure known as dembow.[10] That rhythmic core descends from Jamaican dancehall: a 1990 collaboration between the producers Steely & Clevie and the deejay Shabba Ranks on "Dem Bow" lent the pattern its name, building on the duo's earlier "Fish Market" recording.[11] The Spanish-language form of the music, court filings note, took shape in countries such as Panama and Puerto Rico as local artists adapted that Jamaican template.[12] Litigation has since tested who owns the foundation, as a consolidated copyright suit named dozens of reggaeton performers, Bad Bunny among them, over the genre's now-ubiquitous drum pattern.[13] His attorneys countered that a rhythm by itself is not protectable under United States copyright law and that he had sampled none of the contested recordings.[14]

Bad Bunny's commercial breakthrough came in 2016, when the single "Diles" drew industry attention and led to a contract with the label Hear This Music.[15] A run of crossover features followed, including the United States number-one "I Like It" alongside Cardi B and J Balvin, and the top-five "Mía" with Drake, both of which placed Spanish verses at the center of English-dominated radio.[16] Such collaborations exemplified the wider phenomenon that researchers describe, in which reggaeton became embedded in the North American pop mainstream rather than remaining a niche import.[17]

His album sequence charts an unusually rapid consolidation of influence. The 2018 debut X 100pre later appeared on Rolling Stone's ranking of the greatest albums ever made, while the 2020 release YHLQMDLG became that year's most-streamed album worldwide on Spotify, with all eleven of its tracks entering the Billboard Hot 100 simultaneously.[18] Later in 2020, El Último Tour Del Mundo became the first wholly Spanish-language album to reach number one on the Billboard 200, and its single "Dakiti" led the global chart.[19] The 2022 record Un Verano Sin Ti ranked as the year's most successful album worldwide by the IFPI's tally, and in 2023 he issued Nadie Sabe Lo Que Va a Pasar Mañana.[20] The 2025 album Debí Tirar Más Fotos went further still, becoming the first Spanish-language record to take the Grammy for Album of the Year.[21]

Bad Bunny's prominence has made him a recurring object of academic study, particularly around gender. One discourse analysis frames his persona through Rosalind Gill's notion of a postfeminist sensibility, finding music that simultaneously subverts gender norms, unsettles hegemonic masculinity, and depicts women as sexually autonomous subjects, even while it reiterates older machista values.[22] Other linguists, examining the collaboration "No Me Conoce" with J Balvin and Jhay Cortez, place his output within longstanding debates over reggaeton's representation of women and its disputed effects on young listeners.[23] His cultural weight is such that universities have built courses around him; in October 2023 he discussed one such class, alongside the album Nadie Sabe Lo Que Va a Pasar Mañana, during a late-night television appearance.[24]

Beyond recording, Bad Bunny has cultivated a varied public career that sets him apart from many genre peers. He has performed in professional wrestling, making his in-ring debut for WWE at WrestleMania in 2021 and later appearing at marquee events, and he has taken film roles in productions such as Bullet Train and Cassandro.[25] In February 2026 he headlined the Super Bowl LX halftime show, an engagement met with both acclaim and political controversy.[26] His accolades—among them multiple Grammy and Latin Grammy Awards and repeated recognition as Spotify's most-streamed artist of the year—mark a commercial standing[27] that successors such as Rauw Alejandro, identified by critics as a rising star of the genre's new generation, have since sought to approach.[28]

References

  1. 1.Bad BunnyWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia, Lead
  2. 2.Bad BunnyWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia, Lead
  3. 3.Reggaeton and Female NarrativesMelanie P. Pangol, The Cupola: Scholarship at Gettysburg College (Gettysburg College), 2018, Abstract
  4. 4.Reggaeton and Female NarrativesMelanie P. Pangol, The Cupola: Scholarship at Gettysburg College (Gettysburg College), 2018, Abstract
  5. 5.Bad BunnyWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia, Early life
  6. 6.Bad BunnyWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia, Early life
  7. 7.Bad BunnyWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia, Early life
  8. 8.Daddy YankeeWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia, Lead
  9. 9.Bad BunnyWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia, Early life
  10. 10.Reggaeton and Female NarrativesMelanie P. Pangol, The Cupola: Scholarship at Gettysburg College (Gettysburg College), 2018, Abstract
  11. 11.Browne vs. Donalds Second Amended Complaint2023, Complaint summary
  12. 12.Browne vs. Donalds Second Amended Complaint2023, Complaint summary
  13. 13.Browne vs. Donalds Second Amended Complaint2023, Complaint summary
  14. 14.Browne vs. Donalds Second Amended Complaint2023, Complaint summary
  15. 15.Bad BunnyWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia, Lead
  16. 16.Bad BunnyWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia, Lead
  17. 17.Reggaeton and Female NarrativesMelanie P. Pangol, The Cupola: Scholarship at Gettysburg College (Gettysburg College), 2018, Abstract
  18. 18.Bad BunnyWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia, Lead
  19. 19.Bad BunnyWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia, Lead
  20. 20.Bad BunnyWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia, Lead
  21. 21.Bad BunnyWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia, Lead
  22. 22.Subversión, postfeminismo y masculinidad en la música de Bad BunnySilvia Díaz‐Fernández, Investigaciones Feministas, 2021, Abstract
  23. 23.A Multimodal Discourse Analysis of the Most Viewed Reggaeton Video on Youtube by the LIV Super Bowl Halftime ShowG Moreno Lopez, Open Journal for Studies in Arts, 2020, Abstract
  24. 24.“Esta es mi tierra/Esta soy yo”: Teaching US colonialism and Puerto Rican resistance through Bad BunnyVanessa Díaz, Latino Studies, 2024, Opening
  25. 25.Bad BunnyWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia, Lead
  26. 26.Bad BunnyWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia, Lead
  27. 27.Bad BunnyWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia, Lead
  28. 28.Rauw AlejandroWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia, Lead

How to cite this article

Choose a style and copy the citation.

APA

Bailar Editorial Team. (2026). Bad Bunny. Bailar Biblioteca. Retrieved June 20, 2026, from https://bailar.site/biblioteca/encyclopedia/reggaeton/performers/bad-bunny

MLA

Bailar Editorial Team. “Bad Bunny.” Bailar Biblioteca, 2026, bailar.site/biblioteca/encyclopedia/reggaeton/performers/bad-bunny. Accessed 20 June 2026.

Chicago

Bailar Editorial Team. “Bad Bunny.” Bailar Biblioteca. Accessed June 20, 2026. https://bailar.site/biblioteca/encyclopedia/reggaeton/performers/bad-bunny.

BibTeX

@misc{bailar-reggaeton-bad-bunny, author = {{Bailar Editorial Team}}, title = {{Bad Bunny}}, year = {2026}, howpublished = {Bailar Biblioteca}, url = {https://bailar.site/biblioteca/encyclopedia/reggaeton/performers/bad-bunny}, note = {Accessed: 2026-06-20} }

Editor-in-Chief: Paul Thomas Plawin

How we research & review these articles