In an Interview with Greg Kelly Reports the US President Says he Doesn’t Know Bad Bunny and Calls it a Ridiculous Show

Several conservative voices have criticized and even called for a boycott of February’s Super Bowl, which will be held in Santa Clara, California. The Greg Kelly Reports program interviewer is pictured below.

US President Donald Trump has claimed not to know Puerto Rican reggaeton singer Bad Bunny following the controversy over conservative groups’ rejection of him hosting the Super Bowl halftime show. “I’ve never heard of him. I don’t know who he is, I don’t know why they’re doing it, it’s crazy. And then they blame it on a promoter they hired to curate the entertainment. I find it absolutely ridiculous,” the Republican leader said in an interview with the Greg Kelly Reports program.  Over the weekend, Benito Antonio Martínez, better known in the artistic world as Bad Bunny , responded with satire in his monologue on Saturday Night Live (SNL) to the controversy among conservative factions over whether he will be in charge of livening up the halftime show of the Super Bowl, the biggest sporting event in the United States. 

Bad Bunny pictured above was the guest star on the popular SNL show and took advantage of his monologue, mostly in English, to sarcastically assure that his participation in the Super Bowl “has made everyone happy, including Fox News,” which has joined the conservative voices criticizing the Puerto Rican’s selection, a critic of President Donald Trump’s anti-immigration policies.  The Puerto Rican artist, who recalled that he has been having very intense months due to the concerts of his residency in Puerto Rico, said in Spanish for the American public that the fact that he will be headlining the Super Bowl halftime concert “more than an achievement of mine, it is an achievement of all (Latinos), demonstrating that our mark and our contribution to this country can never be erased or removed.”  “If you didn’t understand what I just said, you have four months to learn (Spanish),” added the artist, who starred in several sketches, including an adaptation of the famous Mexican children’s series “El Chavo del Ocho.”