FOTOS: Bad Bunny, Ricky Martin, Lady Gaga y más del halftime show

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CNN Español

“Lo único más poderoso que el odio es el amor”. Con este mensaje proyectado en pantallas gigantes, Bad Bunny paralizó el Super Bowl LX en una presentación histórica que transformó el campo de juego en un manifiesto de cultura, política y orgullo latino. Hablando completamente en español, Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio saludó a California reafirmando sus raíces y su ascenso imparable: “Si hoy estoy aquí es porque nunca dejaron de creer en mí”.

El espectáculo fue un despliegue de simbolismos y colaboraciones inesperadas. Desde una línea eléctrica donde interpretó “El Apagón”, recordando la crisis energética de Puerto Rico, hasta momentos de alta intensidad pop como la aparición de Lady Gaga, quien sorprendió al cantar “Die With a Smile” acompañada por una banda de salsa antes de bailar junto al boricua.

Ricky Martin fue otro de sus invitados, alzar la voz contra el desplazamiento de comunidades y un repertorio que incluyó himnos como “Yo Perreo Sola” y “Nuevayol”. El show no fue solo música: fue una poderosa defensa de los derechos de las mujeres, un tributo a los inmigrantes y una celebración de la unidad familiar bajo el lema “God Bless America”.

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Hong Kong’s Jimmy Lai sentenced to 20 years in prison after landmark national security trial

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By Chris Lau, CNN

(CNN) — Former Hong Kong media tycoon Jimmy Lai has been sentenced to 20 years in prison, ending a years-long legal battle that has come to define Beijing’s transformational crackdown on the once-freewheeling financial hub.

The 78-year-old self-made billionaire was among the highest-profile government critics charged since Beijing imposed a sweeping national security law on the semi-autonomous southern city in 2020.

The lengthy sentence – Lai will not be eligible for parole until he is in his late 90s – will likely galvanize international calls for the media mogul’s release in the landmark trial closely watched by Western world leaders, including US President Donald Trump, who previously vowed to “get him out.”

Trump is expected to travel to China in the coming months to meet his counterpart Xi Jinping and many of Lai’s supporters will be lobbying him to raise the jailed media mogul’s case.

Lai’s outspokenness over the Hong Kong’s shrinking freedoms – including to top US officials – and his role as the founder of now-defunct Apple Daily, a fiercely pro-democracy tabloid newspaper, had long made him a thorn in Beijing’s side.

He was found guilty of two national security charges and a sedition charge in December following a years-long court battle.

Lai, looking visibly slim in a white jacket, smiled slightly upon hearing the sentence Monday. Before the court session began, he had put his hands together to greet those sitting in the court gallery and turned to see six former Apple Daily colleagues who were also awaiting sentencing.

Those colleagues were jailed too, receiving sentences ranging from 6 years, 9 months to 10 years behind bars. Apple Daily and its affiliated companies were fined 6 million Hong Kong Dollars ($767,000).

Both Beijing and Hong Kong’s government have repeatedly rejected international criticism of Lai’s prosecution and dismissed accusations that his jailing was politically motivated or an assault on press freedom.

Beijing’s national security law has transformed Hong Kong, with authorities jailing dozens of dissidents; forcing civil society groups and outspoken media outlets to disband; and neutering the city’s once-raucous political scene.

City and national authorities say their restrictions have “restored stability” following mass anti-government protests in 2019 that turned violent at times.

Supporters had been lining up for days outside the West Kowloon court since last week hoping to catch the last glimpse of Lai.

“He is the flag of Hong Kong,” Chan Chun-yee, 75, who arrived outside the court on Thursday, told CNN. “I don’t agree with everything he did but I aligned with his spirit and the things he pursued, such as freedom, democracy and justice.”

Another supporter, who asked only to be identified as Andy, said: “Lai and his colleagues deserve a Nobel Peace Prize.”

Police ramped up security outside the court complex, setting up cordon lines and searching those lining up. Judges also warned the public not to disturb the court proceeding or face expulsion.

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CNN’s Samra Zulfaqar contributed reporting

The post Hong Kong’s Jimmy Lai sentenced to 20 years in prison after landmark national security

Filmmaker Seminars Hosted in a New Music Academy of the West location

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SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) - There's a new location for this year's Santa Barbara International Film festival, where film fans can enjoy free seminars.

Recently the Music Academy of the West expanded its reach from its well established Montecito performance and teaching studios and it now has a building in downtown.
It's at 901 State Street on the corner of Canon Perdido Street.
Renovations will begin soon, but for this year's film festival it is open for filmmaker discussions.
One of those attending Summerland resident Teri Guillies said it helps her learn how the movies were made and even go deeper into some topics. It is similar to her book reading clubs, with talks afterwards.

"You know, this person brings different people, brings different things to the story. So just like during this, it brought so many different, things to their story," she said after one of the session. During that hour-long event she also asked a question to the panel.

The filmmaker seminars are free.
They take place every day at 11 a.m.
Some of the topics include sound as the main character, documentary activism, crafting the screenplay and Chicano movement in the arts.

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¿Cuánto dinero ganan los artistas como Bad Bunny por actuar en el Halftime Show del Super Bowl 2026?

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Por Gonzalo Jiménez, CNN en Español

Quizás sorprenda, pero los artistas que amenizan el espectáculo de medio tiempo del Super Bowl, como es el caso de Bad Bunny este domingo, no reciben pago de la NFL por su show.

El criterio es que amenizar el Halftime Show, un espectáculo que suele contar con una audiencia televisiva de 100 millones de espectadores, es de por sí uno de los escenarios más prestigiosos y cotizados en el mundo. Es un evento al que solo pocos artistas invitan.

Por supuesto, producir un espectáculo de medio tiempo en el Super Bowl es costoso. Los artistas seleccionados pagan estos costes de su bolsillo. Por ejemplo, según la revista W, el cantante The Weeknd gastó US$ 7 millones para crear su ambicioso espectáculo del Super Bowl de 2021, para el que se creó un laberinto de espejos y participó casi un centenar de bailarines vestidos igual que el cantante.

La NFL solo paga a los músicos y bailarines los salarios mínimos establecidos por los sindicatos del sector del entretenimiento, que suele rondar los US$ 1.000 diarios.

Hay corporaciones que patrocinan el espectáculo de medio tiempo y asumen buena parte de los costos del espectáculo. En el caso del Super Bowl LX, el Halftime Show es patrocinado por Apple Music.

Otra razón por la que los artistas no reciben pago por su participación en el espectáculo de medio tiempo es que la exposición en este evento global suele disparar las ventas de la música del cantante o grupo. Según la revista Billboard, tras aparecer en el Super Bowl de 2019, las ventas de la música de la banda Maroon 5 se incrementó en 434 %; lo mismo pasó con los álbumes de Justin Timberlake, cuya venta aumentó un 534 % luego de cantar en el Super Bowl de 2018, también según Billboard.

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Green Day pulls its political punches in Super Bowl performance

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By Kyle Feldscher, Alli Rosenbloom, Maureen Chowdhury, CNN

Santa Clara, California (CNN) — The 1994 version of Billie Joe Armstrong would never.

On Sunday, Green Day opened up Super Bowl LX at Levi Stadium with a performance of several songs — but missing were the most political lyrics from some of the tracks.

The band started off with a nod toward nostalgic earworm “Good Riddance (Time Of Your Life)” before launching into “Holiday,” one of the most political songs in the band’s repertoire. The first two verses of the song were sung with the usual lyrics, but when the band approached the controversial bridge of the song — which begins with the line “Sieg Heil to the President Gasman,” a dig at former President George W. Bush, who was president when the song was released in 2004 — the band just skipped it and wrapped up the song.

They later launched into “American Idiot,” the title track of the same album on which “Holiday” featured. In recent years during live performances, Armstrong has changed part of the opening lyrics to the second verse to “I’m not part of a MAGA agenda.”

But this time, the band went into an instrumental portion and guitar solo after finishing the first chorus and omitted that verse of the song completely. Former Super Bowl MVPs joined the band on stage and stood as Armstrong and his band finished up their set. They also sang “Boulevard of Broken Dreams from the “American Idiot” album.

It’s a long way from their performance on Friday at a Spotify and Fanduel event in San Francisco, when Armstong encouraged Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents to “quit their sh***y jobs” and belted out all those political lyrics that were missing during Sunday’s performance.

Other than the fact that these songs, with the exception of “Good Riddance,” are from their most politically-charged album, 2004’s “American Idiot,” the performance made much less of a statement than many had anticipated.

The release of “American Idiot” was a roar of anger at Bush’s America and, at the time, cemented the band as one of the leading political voices in popular music at the time.

As time has gone by and politics in America have evolved, Armstrong, drummer Tre Cool and bassist Mike Dirnt haven’t mellowed. The band have regularly criticized the Trump administration while on their recent Saviors Tour before their Super Bowl performance.

The legendary punk rock band formed in California’s East Bay and was a seminal part of the early 1990s Bay Area music scene before going on to massive mainstream success. They have released 14 studio albums since the early ’90s, with their most recent offering, “Saviors,” released in 2024.

“Saviors” was a return to Green Day’s politically-leaning ethos, something Armstrong said they intentionally waited to do.

He told 102.1 the Edge that with “political songs, it takes a lot of heart to do that, and I think if you keep doing it for the sake of doing it just because you’re angry, then you take the heart out of it. Then it just becomes part of what everyone is complaining about.”

This time, he continued, with “Saviors,” “we brought it out, and we felt like it was the perfect time for it.”

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