Thursday, May 28, 2026
29.1 C
New Delhi

Influencer Amanda Vance claims losing 1K followers on Instagram after skipping Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl show

Influencer claims losing 1K followers in 2 minutes on Instagram after skipping Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl show

Sports betting influencer Amanda Vance claimed she lost more than 1,000 Instagram followers within minutes after posting a video of herself at Super Bowl 2026 in Santa Clara, California, appearing to ignore Bad Bunny’s halftime performance.Amanda, who has over 538,000 followers on Instagram and more than 72,000 on X, shared a clip from the stands at Levi’s Stadium showing herself dancing with wired headphones on while watching Turning Point USA’s alternative halftime programme on her phone. She later posted on X: “Lost 1k followers in 2 minutes on Instagram because i didn’t watch bad bunny’s halftime performance @amandacaseyvance on Instagram if the majority wants to follow me BTW.”

The conservative organisation’s parallel halftime event was headlined by Kid Rock and featured country artists Brantley Gilbert, Gabby Barrett and Lee Brice.In her Instagram caption, Vance wrote: “Watching the American halftime show instead of BAD bunny during the Super Bowl,” adding, “I chose America and songs I know.”Her post drew swift backlash. Television personality and influencer Kat Dunn responded in the comments: “Puerto Rico is in America by the way.” Dunn later said she had unfollowed Vance, calling the move “performative” in a post on X. “Hi I’m one of the people who unfollowed you tonight and personally it was because i thought it was performative as f–k for you to set up a phone to record yourself ‘not watching’ a halftime performance (that you were literally at) and now I have your band of idiots sending ME (a white American lol) threats of deportation?? so like what are we even doing here,” Dunn wrote, sharing a screenshot of alleged abusive direct messages. One message read: “I hope ICE deports you.”The controversy unfolded as Bad Bunny’s halftime performance itself sparked political and cultural debate.

Bad Bunny dominates Super Bowl stage with historic all-Spanish set

The 31-year-old Puerto Rican star, Spotify’s most-streamed artist of 2025, became the first musician to perform entirely in Spanish at a Super Bowl halftime show. His 14-minute set celebrated Puerto Rican culture with nods to the island’s cuisine, fashion and artistic heritage.The performance featured appearances by Lady Gaga and Ricky Martin, with cameos from Pedro Pascal, Cardi B, Karol G and Jessica Alba. Bad Bunny delivered a 13-minute musical showcase highlighting his roots and a broader message of unity across the Americas.He spoke in English just once during the show, looking directly into the camera to say, “God Bless America.” The performance concluded with him holding a football emblazoned with the message: “Together, we are America.”Bad Bunny, a six-time Grammy winner, has previously spoken out against US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), which has made him a polarising figure among some conservative commentators.

Trump, Jake Paul among critics of halftime performance

US President Donald Trump criticised the halftime show in a post on Truth Social, calling it “absolutely terrible, one of the worst, EVER!” He further described the set as “an affront to the Greatness of America,” adding that “nobody understands a word this guy is saying.” Trump did not attend this year’s Super Bowl.Boxer and social media personality Jake Paul also voiced criticism online, echoing complaints from some viewers who took issue with the Spanish-language performance and Bad Bunny’s political stances.Supporters, however, praised the show for its cultural significance and inclusive messaging, arguing that it reflected the diversity of American audiences and the growing global influence of Latin music. Go to Source

Hot this week

Quote of the day by Canadian-American psychologist Albert Bandura: “Where everyone is responsible, no one is really responsible”

Albert Bandura (Image: Wikipedia) Some quotes remain relevant because human nature rarely changes as much as people think it does. Societies evolve. Technology changes rapidly. Entire industries disappear and new ones emerge. Read More

Oldest evidence of human cremation discovered: Burned 100,000-year-old Homo sapiens bones found in Ethiopia’s Afar Rift

ZME Science In a remote stretch of Ethiopia’s Afar Rift, something quietly unsettling has begun to emerge from the ground. Read More

The blood running through your veins has a 700-million-year-old story, and scientists just worked out how it begins

Image: AI Generated Every drop of blood in your body is doing something ancient. Read More

Meet Parveen Shaikh and Barkha Subba: The Indian conservationists who won the ‘Green Oscars’ for saving endangered species

Image(s): WFN Indian conservationists Parveen Shaikh and Barkha Subba have won the prestigious Whitley Awards 2026, widely known as the ‘Green Oscars’, for their efforts to protect endangered species and fragile ecosystems in India. Read More

US to set up Ebola quarantine facility in Kenya for exposed American citizens

The facility, approved by the Kenyan government, will initially include a 50-bed unit and specialised biocontainment wards as the Bundibugyo strain outbreak spreads across parts of Africa. Read More

Topics

Quote of the day by Canadian-American psychologist Albert Bandura: “Where everyone is responsible, no one is really responsible”

Albert Bandura (Image: Wikipedia) Some quotes remain relevant because human nature rarely changes as much as people think it does. Societies evolve. Technology changes rapidly. Entire industries disappear and new ones emerge. Read More

Oldest evidence of human cremation discovered: Burned 100,000-year-old Homo sapiens bones found in Ethiopia’s Afar Rift

ZME Science In a remote stretch of Ethiopia’s Afar Rift, something quietly unsettling has begun to emerge from the ground. Read More

Meet Parveen Shaikh and Barkha Subba: The Indian conservationists who won the ‘Green Oscars’ for saving endangered species

Image(s): WFN Indian conservationists Parveen Shaikh and Barkha Subba have won the prestigious Whitley Awards 2026, widely known as the ‘Green Oscars’, for their efforts to protect endangered species and fragile ecosystems in India. Read More

US to set up Ebola quarantine facility in Kenya for exposed American citizens

The facility, approved by the Kenyan government, will initially include a 50-bed unit and specialised biocontainment wards as the Bundibugyo strain outbreak spreads across parts of Africa. Read More

Adivasis demand halt to tiger safari push, evictions in south India forests

Representative image TOI correspondent from London: Save tiger. Sell forest. Scrap people. Stop. Read More

Lack of access to water, shelter at Delhi govt hospitals amid heatwave: Report

New Delhi, May 28 (PTI): A field audit conducted by an NGO has flagged gaps in heatwave relief measures for homeless people and patient attendants outside government hospitals in Delhi, with many reporting lack of access to water, shelter and medica Read More

New Punjab BJP chief Kewal Dhillon says party will form govt in state in 2027

Chandigarh, May 28 (PTI): BJP on Thursday appointed Kewal Singh Dhillon as the party’s Punjab unit chief and shortly after the announcement he claimed the saffron party will form the government in the state after the 2027 Assembly polls. Read More

Related Articles