PJ Sin Suela, a practicing physician, activist and rapper, uses his lyrics to dissect Puerto Rico’s sociopolitical wounds.
Esteemed Puerto Rican film director and actor, Jacobo Morales features in the video as an elder Bad Bunny who is looking back ...
The sweet six-minute clip begins with Puerto Rican filmmaker Jacobo Morales, the protagonist on Benito's Debí short film, who ...
The musician, whose real name is Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio, was born and raised less than an hour from San Juan in the ...
Debí Tirar Más Fotos, the title of Bad Bunny’s new album released earlier this week, roughly translates to I Should Have Taken More Photos. Naturally, in the spirit of that sentiment, the video for ...
Music star Bad Bunny has admitted to feeling like a "rookie" as an artist.
A Celebration of Everyday Life: Many fans believe that "DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS"—translated as "I Should've Taken More Pictures" ...
No matter how famous he gets, the focus of Bad Bunny's music always comes back to his home of Puerto Rico. And his new record is being called his most Puerto Rican and most political album yet.
In an interview with Zane Lowe for Apple Music 1, Bad Bunny, now 30, recalled feeling depressed when he turned 20 and discussed how he still feels like a "rookie" 10 years into his career.
In an in-depth interview with Apple Music, Bad Bunny shares his pride in Puerto Rico’s resilience and enduring cultural identity.
The rapper and singer celebrates his homeland on a new album, offering an adventurous survey of the island’s musical styles.
On the ideological centerpiece of DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS, the Puerto Rican rapper reckons with what happens after the vacation ends and the tourists go home.