October 9, 2025

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Since the NFL announced on Sept. 28 that Bad Bunny will be the Super Bowl halftime show performer, the Latin superstar has been a lightning rod for some on the right. President Donald Trump called the move “ridiculous” and “crazy.” Speaker of the House Mike Johnson called it a “terrible decision.” Should the league try to tamp down the growing controversy?

—Michael McCarthy, Eric Fisher, and Ryan Glasspiegel

How NFL Can Get Its Arms Around Bad Bunny Situation

Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

The NFL has a Bad Bunny problem. 

The league needs to get its arms around this growing controversy before the country’s most-watched TV show—the Super Bowl—becomes a political football in the culture wars. 

Less than two weeks after the Latin superstar was announced as halftime headliner for Super Bowl LX, President Donald Trump sounded off, blasting the choice as “ridiculous” and “crazy.”

On Tuesday, Republican Speaker of the House Mike Johnson called it a “terrible decision,” suggesting Bad Bunny should be replaced by 82-year-old Lee Greenwood, the country singer best known for the Ronald Reagan–era patriotic ballad, “God Bless the USA.” 

The three-time Grammy-winning Bad Bunny backed Democratic candidate Kamala Harris for president in 2024. He’s made no secret of his opposition to Trump’s strict immigration policies. The rapper toured outside the continental U.S., in part, because he feared Latino fans would be arrested by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Instead, he performed a 31-show residency in Puerto Rico, a U.S. territory.

The NFL has been courting Latino fans for years, with Mexico a key pillar in its global strategy. But whether the NFL and Bad Bunny like it, ICE agents will be “all over” Levi’s Stadium for the Big Game on Feb. 8, according to Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem. She didn’t mince words, either, about the NFL’s choice of halftime entertainment: “Well, they suck and we’ll win.”

During Tuesday’s Game 3 of MLB’s Blue Jays–Yankees, Bad Bunny raised eyebrows by remaining seated during the traditional 7th inning singing of “God Bless America” at Yankee Stadium. Shades of the kickoff of Colin Kaepernick’s national anthem protest in 2016, when he stayed seated during “The Star-Spangled Banner” before an NFL preseason game. 

The Super Bowl is the country’s most-watched TV show every year. Fox’s telecast of Super Bowl LIX averaged a record 127.7 million viewers. Since the halftime show attracts casual viewers not interested in football, its numbers are even higher. This year’s show with Kendrick Lamar averaged a record 133.5 million viewers, according to Roc Nation.

With Trump back in the Oval Office, his supporters are spoiling for a fight. Some conservative activists see the NFL’s selection of Bad Bunny as a deliberate provocation of Trump and the MAGA movement. The Shield doesn’t want Trump on its back as he was during much of his first term. That could endanger the league’s proposed $2 billion deal to swap NFL Network, the RedZone trademark, and the league’s fantasy football business for a 10% equity stake in Walt Disney’s ESPN. As well as the Commanders’ proposed $3.8 billion stadium in Washington, D.C.

Others see the choice as a smart marketing move by the NFL, Jay-Z’s Roc Nation, and Apple Music to attract younger viewers and widen the league’s fan base. After all, Bad Bunny has exploded into the most-streamed male performer in the world, notes Jesus Mesa of Newsweek. As a resident of Puerto Rico, he’s also an American citizen. 

Besides, Bad Bunny already performed on the 2020 halftime show, with Jennifer Lopez and Shakira. This week, Lopez stood up for Bad Bunny on NBC’s Today show, saying she doesn’t understand the backlash. “He’s one of the top artists in the world right now, probably the top,” she noted.

Still, the NFL finds itself navigating the trickiest political situation since Kaepernick nearly a decade ago. In the wake of those national anthem protests, the league’s viewership dropped 8% in 2016 and 10% in 2017. At the quarter pole of the 2025 season, the league is off to a record-setting TV clip this year. Does it want to risk that momentum? With ICE protests in the news daily, and a defiant Bad Bunny, the league may face a hard choice.

Does it dump Bad Bunny for a performer more acceptable to conservative critics? Or does the league stand by a superstar who sings mostly in Spanish? 

The NFL has been slow to read the room. But the current political winds in Washington are blowing from MAGA’s direction. There’s even talk of an alternative halftime show to compete with Bad Bunny. Here are three moves the NFL can try to mitigate the controversy:

Drop him: The NFL can lean on Roc Nation to dump the rapper for a performer with more red-state appeal like Kid Rock or Creed. However, that might endanger the NFL’s seven-year partnership with Jay-Z that basically gives him production control over the halftime show. But the Super Bowl is the NFL marquee event. In the end, the league has to do what’s best from a TV, image, and business standpoint. If a performer is turning the NFL’s high holy day into a political lightning rod, then they’ve got to go. No performer is bigger than the Super Bowl’s, period. On his eponymous SiriusXM radio show, Stephen A. Smith said Bad Bunny would pave the way for Taylor Swift to perform at the 2027 Super Bowl—which will be televised naturally by his own ABC/ESPN.

Keep Bad Bunny, but add MAGA-friendly performers: My FOS colleague Eric Fisher pointed out the league can always add other performers at halftime or to sing the national anthem. The more I think about it, the more that seems like a split-the-baby solution that would mollify critics. There are always multiple performers at the Super Bowl. What about balancing Bad Bunny with a Trump-loving singer for the U.S. national anthem? Would Jay-Z and Roc Nation go along with it?

Stay low: That’s been the league’s approach since the announcement was made Sept. 28. The good thing is Trump and Johnson admit they never heard of Bad Bunny until asked about him by the media. Trump, in fact, seemed more annoyed by the league’s new kickoff rules than the choice of a halftime singer. So how much do they really care? They’re being egged on by conservative pundits looking to score points against a “woke” NFL. 

There have been plenty of other edgy, politicized performers, including Lamar this year. Somehow the country survived. News cycles don’t last long. The NFL can gamble that the story will die out and attention will go elsewhere.  

But don’t bet on it. As evidenced by his cheeky Saturday Night Live appearance, Bad Bunny is an opinionated talent who’s not backing down. As he quipped on SNL, if his critics don’t understand his native language, “they have four months to learn.” So he’ll probably continue to give his critics ammo. But if and when Bad Bunny gets his moment on Super Bowl Sunday, Lopez thinks viewers will be pleasantly surprised. 

“I think he’s about to blow everybody’s mind. It’s an introduction to some people,” said J.Lo. 

The NFL declined to comment on Bad Bunny.

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NFL Viewership Reaches Highest Level Since 2010, Up 8% from 2024

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The NFL is approaching the middle chunk of the 2025 regular season with even more momentum in its viewership.

The league concluded Week 5 with an average per-game viewership of 18.58 million, the highest level at this point of the season since 2010, and the second-largest such mark on record. The current figure is also up 8% from the comparable average last year and up 9% from 2023. 

In recent years, October has often been a softer part of the schedule for NFL viewership, as the league faces greater competition from Major League Baseball playoffs and the start of new seasons for the National Hockey League and National Basketball Association. Even as MLB is posting its own robust gains this postseason, the most recent set of NFL games contained a series of notable achievements. Among them:

  • CBS garnered its best Week 5 singleheader viewership since it regained NFL rights in 1998, averaging 19.6 million viewers for an early-afternoon window led by coverage of the Broncos-Eagles game.
  • Fox averaged 20.3 million viewers for its America’s Game of the Week broadcast of Commanders-Chargers, helping fuel a 3% increase so far this season in that key late-afternoon Sunday slot. 
  • ESPN averaged 22.3 million for the Monday Night Football matchup between the Chiefs and Jaguars, by far the most-watched Week 5 MNF contest since it began airing those games in 2006. The Chiefs-Jaguars broadcast also ranks as the No. 10 most-watched NFL game of the season.

The top overall game of the season remains the Week 2 clash between the Eagles and Chiefs that averaged 33.8 million viewers and was a rematch of Super Bowl LIX in February.

Some of the NFL audience increases are due to Nielsen’s new Big Data + Panel methodology, which brings in tens of millions of additional data points from set-top boxes and smart TVs and is designed to present a fuller picture of viewer behaviors. That process has also been a boon for college football. 

The NFL, however, has strengthened its hold across not only sports but all of U.S. culture, as the league has now claimed the top 25 spots across American television since the start of the current broadcast season. The league, meanwhile, continues to segment its schedule effectively to create more stand-alone windows for individual games.

Fox’s Mark Schlereth to Replace Mark Sanchez This Sunday

YouTube / NFL on Fox

Mark Schlereth will replace Mark Sanchez on Fox Sports’s NFL game coverage this week as the network wrestles with the fallout from the ex-Jets QB’s stabbing and arrest in Indianapolis.

Schlereth, a three-time Super Bowl champion with Denver and Washington, will replace Sanchez as the game analyst on Fox’s telecast of Seahawks-Jaguars at 1 p.m. ET on Sunday. 

The 59-year-old color commentator will work alongside play-by-play announcer Chris Myers and sideline reporter Sarah Kustok, according to a post on X/Twitter listing the network’s NFL broadcast teams for this weekend. Schlereth started calling NFL games for Fox during the 2017–18 season.  

Sanchez, 38, was arrested in an Indianapolis hospital following his violent altercation with 69-year-old truck driver Perry Tole in the wee hours of Saturday morning. Sanchez was in town to call the Oct. 5 Raiders-Colts game with Myers. Fox replaced him in the broadcast booth with Brady Quinn.

Sanchez is facing a felony charge of battery and misdemeanor charges of battery with injury, unlawful entry of a motor vehicle, and public intoxication. Tole has filed a lawsuit in state court against both Sanchez and Fox.

For now, at least, Fox is making a week-to-week decision for Sanchez’s replacement as his situation plays out. Besides having its studio hosts briefly address the incident on-air, Fox has declined further comment on Sanchez and the lawsuit.

Around the Dial

in for forward LeBron James (23) during the fourth quarter against the New York Knicks at Madison Square Garden.

Brad Penner-Imagn Images

  • LeBron James memorably confronted ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith for his commentary about his son Bronny. So no surprise: Smith was not a fan of James’s “Second Decision” commercial for Hennessy. Despite drawing 10 million viewers in 2010, James was hammered for his long, drawn-out special with Jim Gray when he announced he was jumping to the Heat from the Cavaliers, noted Smith. Why bring up that bad memory? “If you make a bad movie, typically you don’t have a sequel. If you look at ‘The Decision,’ and the manner in which that was handled, and the way it served to alienate folks back at that time, you would think that he wouldn’t want to remind people of that, considering the heat he took from that. Unfortunately, he was tone-deaf,” he said on Wednesday’s First Take.
  • Art imitates life and vice versa. Hollywood star Glen Powell appeared on Episode 7 of Eli Manning’s ESPN+ show, Eli’s Places. It was the younger Manning going undercover as walk-on QB “Chad Powers” at Penn State on Eli’s Places that inspired Powell’s new Chad Powers comedy series on Hulu. As a big Texas fan, Powell had always wanted to do a sports-driven show. In the new episode of Omaha Productions’ Eli’s Places, Powell shares his love of University of Texas football with Manning.
  • Versant announced Kate Scott will be the lead play-by-play announcer on USA Network’s WNBA package. 
  • NBC Sports says Kenny Albert will serve as the network’s hockey play-by-play announcer at the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics in 2026. Albert will call both men’s and women’s games, with men’s game analyst Eddie Olczyk, women’s game analyst AJ Mleczko, “Inside the Glass” reporters Brian Boucher and Jen Botterill, and reporter Kathryn Tappen.
  • Ion is set to televise Athlos NYC, the women’s track and field event, on Oct. 10. The telecast will mark the start of a multiyear partnership between Scripps Sports and Athlos, which was founded by Alexis Ohanian. The event is also streaming on YouTube, X, and ESPN+.
  • Legendary sports-talk host Mike Francesa, now a podcaster for BetRivers, underwent emergency gallbladder surgery Wednesday. “Thankfully, everything went perfectly,” BetRivers wrote on X/Twitter.

One Big Fig

Dana Evans

Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images

1.9 million

That was the record average viewership for ABC/ESPN’s coverage of Game 1 of the 2025 WNBA Finals between the Aces and Mercury. It was the league’s best opening viewership for the championship series since its inception in 1997.

Editors’ Picks

Fox Picks Up Media Rights to 2026 World Baseball Classic

by Eric Fisher
The network will repeat its role in the international baseball tournament.

NFL and College Football TV Ratings Continue to Surge, Especially for CBS

by David Rumsey
The network’s singleheader coverage Sunday drew huge viewership.

Question of the Day

Was Bad Bunny a good pick by the NFL to perform at the Super Bowl halftime show?

 YES   NO 

Tuesday’s result: 37% of respondents think Paul Finebaum will still be with ESPN next football season.

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Written by Michael McCarthy, Eric Fisher, Ryan Glasspiegel
Edited by Lisa Scherzer, Catherine Chen, Matthew Tabeek

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