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Good Morning X 🚨 Lawsuits are being filed on Bad Bunny for violating (FCC) rules for abusive l...

By @Chicago1Ray πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ
Posted February 10, 2026

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About the Creator

@Chicago1Ray is a conservative commentator on X who frequently posts alarmist content targeting celebrities and cultural events from a right-wing perspective. Their style emphasizes patriotic rhetoric, calls to action against perceived moral declines, and tags officials like FCC Chairman Brendan Carr to amplify outrage. Credibility is low, as posts often exaggerate or misrepresent facts, such as claiming lawsuits and FCC violations without evidence.[1][2]

What's This About?

The post alleges lawsuits against Bad Bunny for FCC violations due to abusive language in his Super Bowl LX halftime show and urges followers to demand fines or bans from FCC Chairman Brendan Carr. In reality, no such FCC-related lawsuits exist; Rep. Randy Fine issued baseless threats against NBC, NFL, and Bad Bunny over censored lyrics that were not aired, as NBC and Telemundo used clean backing tracks.[1][2] Key themes include cultural backlash against Spanish-language performances, immigration rhetoric, and conservative complaints about indecency, contrasting Bad Bunny's message of Latino unity and belonging in America.[5]

πŸ”₯Why It's Trending

This content is trending post-Super Bowl LX on February 8, 2026, amid polarized reactions to Bad Bunny's performance, with conservatives like Randy Fine decrying explicit lyrics despite censorship.[1][2] Timing aligns with Rep. Fine's social media threats and calls for FCC action, fueling debates on broadcast standards and cultural representation during a politically charged election cycle.[5] Relevance spikes due to high viewership (135 million) and comparisons to alternative shows like Kid Rock's.[2][4]

πŸ’‘Fun Facts

  • 1Bad Bunny's Super Bowl show was fully censored; no profane lyrics aired on NBC or Telemundo, undermining FCC complaint claims.[1]
  • 2FCC lacks authority to fine the NFL or performers directly and has limited power over networks due to past Supreme Court rulings on fleeting indecency.[1]
  • 3A separate $16M lawsuit against Bad Bunny for unauthorized voice use in songs was filed days before the Super Bowl, unrelated to FCC or the show.[3]
  • 4Bad Bunny's performance featured Puerto Rican plena musicians and a 'Together, we are America' football, promoting immigrant unity amid backlash.[5]
  • 5President Trump called it one of the worst halftime shows, while others praised its cultural significance.[2]

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Lawsuits are being filed on Bad Bunny for violating (FCC) rules for abusive l...