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In this solo episode, I reflect on Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime performance as more than a cultural moment—it becomes a doorway into memory, migration, colonial history, and the psychology of diaspora.
Born in Puerto Rico to a Puerto Rican mother and an American father, I weave my own family story into a broader reflection on what it means to live between worlds, shaped by love, economic precarity, mental health struggle, and displacement. Drawing on a formative course I took on Puerto Rican history, I explore the unfinished colonial relationship between Puerto Rico and the United States and how colonialism doesn’t just extract resources—it fractures continuity and reorganizes psychic life.
I also spend time with one of Bad Bunny’s most powerful songs, Lo Que Le Pasó a Hawái, reading it through the lens of diaspora psychology: anticipatory grief, forced migration, split belonging, and the quiet violence of watching home become uninhabitable while still loving it deeply.
At the center of the episode is a concept that has stayed with me for years: sacred hospitality. I argue that Puerto Rican love—expressed through exuberant joy, warmth, rhythm, and generosity—is not naïve optimism but an ethical and spiritual response to colonial harm. Joy, here, becomes resistance. Hospitality becomes strength.
In a moment when fear and hatred feel increasingly normalized, this episode is an invitation to remember that the United States is irreducibly complex—and that the only thing stronger than hate is love, lived as sacred hospitality.
By Quique Autrey5
1515 ratings
In this solo episode, I reflect on Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime performance as more than a cultural moment—it becomes a doorway into memory, migration, colonial history, and the psychology of diaspora.
Born in Puerto Rico to a Puerto Rican mother and an American father, I weave my own family story into a broader reflection on what it means to live between worlds, shaped by love, economic precarity, mental health struggle, and displacement. Drawing on a formative course I took on Puerto Rican history, I explore the unfinished colonial relationship between Puerto Rico and the United States and how colonialism doesn’t just extract resources—it fractures continuity and reorganizes psychic life.
I also spend time with one of Bad Bunny’s most powerful songs, Lo Que Le Pasó a Hawái, reading it through the lens of diaspora psychology: anticipatory grief, forced migration, split belonging, and the quiet violence of watching home become uninhabitable while still loving it deeply.
At the center of the episode is a concept that has stayed with me for years: sacred hospitality. I argue that Puerto Rican love—expressed through exuberant joy, warmth, rhythm, and generosity—is not naïve optimism but an ethical and spiritual response to colonial harm. Joy, here, becomes resistance. Hospitality becomes strength.
In a moment when fear and hatred feel increasingly normalized, this episode is an invitation to remember that the United States is irreducibly complex—and that the only thing stronger than hate is love, lived as sacred hospitality.

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