The New York Times reports: “League executives may be nervous about the Latin superstar’s outspoken stance on immigration, but their priority is attracting popular halftime performers.”
The N.F.L.’s decision to book Bad Bunny for the 2026 Super Bowl halftime show is a sophisticated exercise in elite coordination. This is not a “music” decision, but a strategic move by the “legal-managerial cartel” to maintain its reputation and global status. Contrary to the New York Times propaganda, it has nothing to do with booking a popular show. Rather, it is another opportunity for the NFL to appeal to elites by extending a middle finger to its fans.
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1. The Ritual of Purification (Jeffrey Alexander)
Jeffrey Alexander’s cultural sociology explains that institutions maintain their “pure” status through visible rituals. The N.F.L. faced a massive pollution of its brand starting in 2016 with the Kaepernick protests. To the elite alliance, the league appeared “impure” and “exclusionary,” leading to a celebrity boycott of the halftime show.
To summarize Jeffrey Alexander’s model, you can follow these five steps:
First, identify the shift from the profane to the sacred. Most news events begin as “just politics,” where people view the actors as simply pursuing their own goals and interests. A crisis only begins when the narrative shifts to “normative violation,” where the actions are framed as a threat to the fundamental customs and morals of the society.
Second, look for the “pollution” of the center. An event becomes a crisis when a significant portion of the population views it as “polluting” the core institutions of society. The event is no longer seen as a peripheral mistake by a few individuals but as a stain on the “center” itself, such as the Presidency or the rule of law.
Third, watch for the “generalization of consciousness.” This occurs when people stop talking about specific policy disagreements and start talking about universal values like truth, justice, and the “American way.” This generalization allows diverse groups with different interests to join a single, massive coalition against the “polluter.”
Fourth, identify the “ritual of purification.” This is often a televised or highly public event, like the Senate Watergate hearings, that functions as a “liminal” experience. These rituals bracket the complicated history and messy motives of everyday life to create a simplified drama of good versus evil. They provide a “sacred space” where defectors can switch sides under the guise of moral duty rather than political opportunism.
Fifth, analyze the symbolic classification. Notice how the actors are sorted into a binary system of pure and impure. The “good” side is associated with universalism, rationality, and office obligations, while the “bad” side is associated with particularism, irrationality, and personal loyalty.
The 2019 partnership with Jay-Z and Roc Nation was a ritual of purification. By bringing in a high-status “priest” of Black culture, the N.F.L. performed a generalization of consciousness that reclassified the league as “inclusive.” Booking Bad Bunny in 2026 is the latest stage of this ritual. Even if his politics are “impure” to the traditional base, his presence on the stage sacralizes the N.F.L. as a global, humanitarian institution. The halftime show is no longer a profane concert; it is a sacred demonstration of the league’s alignment with “universal” progressive values.
2. Alliance Theory and the Focal Point of Credibility (David Pinsof)
Alliance Theory suggests that shared, visible signals act as focal points for elite synchronization. The N.F.L. owners—many of whom are personally conservative—are not booking Bad Bunny because they like his music. They are booking him to coordinate with a new set of allies: global advertisers, the Latino market, and the professional elite.
In the “everything is bullshit” framework, the narrative that this is about “uniting people” is the adaptive deception. The concrete interest is reputation insurance. By outsourcing the halftime show to Roc Nation, the N.F.L. leadership creates a “defensive shield.” If Bad Bunny says something “ICE out” or “anti-Trump,” the league can claim “structural hesitation”—they aren’t the ones who picked him, Jay-Z was. This allows the N.F.L. to reap the rewards of Bad Bunny’s status while deterring direct attacks from the “All-American” alternative alliance led by Turning Point USA and Kid Rock.
3. Expertise and the Authoritative Closure of Roc Nation (Stephen Turner)
Stephen Turner’s analysis of expertise explains how a specialized class creates liberal property to bypass democratic or “base” fan legitimacy. Jay-Z and Roc Nation act as the high priests of the halftime show, providing the authoritative closure that governs who is “qualified” to represent the nation.
Roger Goodell’s admission—”I’m not going to challenge him”—is a formal surrender to this expertise. The “liberal property” here is the specialized knowledge of global youth culture and social justice branding. This expertise creates a closure that silences the profane “base” fan; if a fan objects to Bad Bunny, the expert class dismisses the objection as “outdated” or “xenophobic.” The league’s leadership relies on this authoritative closure to navigate a “moral landscape” they do not understand, ensuring their institutional status remains intact.
4. The “Everything is Bullshit” Framework and Global Expansion
Finally, Pinsof’s framework reveals the structural transition of the N.F.L. brand. The league is trading its “particularist” American base for a “universalist” global alliance.
Market Expansion: The “bullshit” of “inspiring change” masks the profane reality of the N.F.L.’s aggressive expansion into Latin America and Europe. Bad Bunny is a hard signal to the 20% of the U.S. population that is Latino and the millions of fans in Mexico and Brazil that the N.F.L. is “their” league.
The Paradox of Choice: The league chooses Bad Bunny because he is controversial to the base. This high-cost signal proves to the global elite alliance that the N.F.L. is no longer a “good old boys” club, but a sophisticated, “enlightened” corporation.
The N.F.L. is banking on a future that looks like Bad Bunny, even if it has to alienate the fans who look like Kid Rock to get there.
ChatGPT says: The N.F.L. booked Bad Bunny because the league’s revenue-critical coalition changed after 2018. The anthem protests exposed a fracture between three groups the league depends on.
Owners and legacy fans
Corporate sponsors and media partners
Young, urban, global consumers
After Kaepernick, the league learned that siding openly with the first group risked losing the other two, which are growing and internationally scalable. The Jay-Z Roc Nation deal was not about justice. It was an alliance repair mechanism.
Bad Bunny signals alignment with
Latino audiences
Global streaming culture
Urban youth prestige networks
Entertainment elites who now gatekeep halftime talent
Owners may dislike his immigration views, but they tolerate them because he brings the coalition the league needs to survive long term. The base can be annoyed. The coalition cannot fracture again.
Jeffrey Alexander’s Sacralization Model
The Super Bowl halftime show is no longer entertainment. It is a national ritual of moral repair.
2018 transformed the league from profane business into polluted institution. Kneeling was framed as a violation of sacred national symbols. The league panicked.
Roc Nation became the priesthood.
The halftime show became purification.
Artists became symbolic mediators.
Bad Bunny’s selection is part of ritualized inclusion. His presence says America is plural, global, hybrid, multilingual. Immigration politics are bracketed and sublimated into spectacle. The league is not endorsing his views. It is absorbing them into ritual consensus.
That’s why executives look nervous but proceed anyway. Rituals override individual discomfort.
Pinsof’s “Everything Is Bullshit” Signaling Logic
This is not about music quality or political courage. It is about signaling non-hostility to dominant cultural arbiters.
Booking Bad Bunny signals
We are not MAGA-coded
We are safe for advertisers
We are aligned with culture, not politics
We will not repeat the Kaepernick rupture
The league is not pro-immigration. It is pro-status insulation. Challenging Bad Bunny would send the wrong signal to artists, agencies, sponsors, and media elites who now treat inclusion as a moral baseline.
Goodell’s quote admits this outright. He does not choose the music. He chooses not to fight the people who choose the music.
Stephen Turner on Expertise and Authority
Control has shifted from owners to credentialed intermediaries.
Roc Nation
Brand consultants
Diversity advisors
Streaming metrics
Global audience analysts
These actors possess expertise legitimacy. They define what counts as “smart,” “safe,” and “modern.” Owners defer because challenging experts risks being labeled ignorant, reactionary, or bad for business.
Bad Bunny is expert-validated. He dominates charts. He travels globally. He tests well with advertisers. That ends the discussion.
Owners may privately hate it. Institutionally, they are powerless.
Bottom line
Bad Bunny was booked because
The league fears coalition collapse more than fan backlash
The halftime show now functions as moral ritual
Elite signaling matters more than sincerity
Expert authority has displaced owner taste
This is not courage.
It is risk management dressed up as culture.
