For one night, London was the centre of the Latin pop universe. Bad Bunny’s concert at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium was not just a show but a cultural landmark. The Puerto Rican superstar transformed the venue into a pulsating club, with 60,000 fans singing every word in Spanish.
This was history: the first time a Latin artist headlined a UK stadium. The crowd, a vivid mosaic of Latin American flags and British teenagers, reflected a shift in Britain’s cultural landscape. It was a testament to how music transcends borders and how London, ever the global city, embraces new traditions.
The human cost? None, but the cultural shift is profound. Latin music is no longer a niche; it is mainstream.
For those of us watching from the sidelines, it felt like the future had arrived, and it was dancing to reggaeton.








