
I watched both shows.
Alernate Show Turning Point:
Kid Rock stripped it down—no dancers, no gimmicks. Just a man who’s clearly been through some stuff. When he cracked on “until you can’t” I felt it in my ribs. Not because I love him. Because I’ve heard that crack in my own voice at three a.m.
The other artists after him—voices like warm bread, no Auto-Tune, no fog machines—sang like they were praying with their eyes open. Budget low, but soul high.
Bad Bunny:
He didn’t preach. Didn’t curse.
He brought the island home.
Tití Me Preguntó – aunties everywhere nodded.
Yo Perreo Sola – every girl who’s ever said “I dance alone” raised a fist.
Voy a Llevarte Pa’ PR – Celebration of Puerto Rican pride
Die With a Smile – Gaga and him swaying like old friends at a wedding.
Baile Inolvidable – “I thought I’d grow old with you…”
Yeah. That one hurt.
Two shows.
One sold redemption.
The other sold roots.
Both reminded me:
You don’t have to like the messenger
to hear the message.
And maybe—
just maybe—
the same God who let Kid Rock crack
let Bad Bunny rhyme—
got His own message through anyway.
One: redemption.
One: culture.
Both straight from the same mouth.
Both straight from the same Source.
I wanna give props to both messages.
I’ll keep Bad Bunny at arm’s length. His direct disrespect of the things of God does that.
But I won’t keep quiet—
about how loud God can speak
through the mouths of the broken.
Imperfect people are used by God in mysterious ways.
Because Grace? Grace has got better taste in rhythm than any of us.
When we stop demanding people look like us—
talk like us—
pray like us—
and start noticing how God keeps slipping His voice into the cracks of broken people—
that’s when the walls fall.
Not because they repent on stage.
But because we stop needing them to.
We just start listening.
And listening?
That’s the first prayer
nobody has to say out loud.
K. Howard
