Santa Fe New Mexican

Halftime show draws praise, tears from Latinos across U.S.

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ALBUQUERQU­E — When the Super Bowl halftime show began, Yol-Itzma Aguirre and her relatives watched with anticipati­on. The El Paso family was curious how Colombian-born Shakira and New York-raised Jennifer Lopez, two of the world’s most popular Latina artists, would seize the stage.

The performanc­e Sunday was draped in Hollywood tropes of female sexuality. But it also contained subtle political messages about anxieties shared by many Latinos in the U.S. — children in cages, Puerto Rico in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria and the urge to be heard.

Aguirre, 39, had to watch the performanc­e again. “My sister was tearing up. We saw more things,” Aguirre said. “We stopped caring about the game.”

Across the U.S., Latinos took to social media to praise and dissect the show.

Shakira paid homage to her Colombian roots by performing the mapalé

— an Afro-Colombian style of dance from the country’s Caribbean coast. She also made a tongue-flicking cry called a zaghrouta, a way to express joy in Arab culture. Her father is of Lebanese descent.

During her performanc­e, Lopez

brought out a dual Puerto Rican-American flag while her daughter sang the lyrics to Bruce Springstee­n’s “Born in the U.S.A.” Her daughter and other children with American flags on their shirts had emerged from what appeared to be steel cages.

“Let’s get loud!” Lopez sang as her daughter sang the Springstee­n hook. Shakira hit some drums.

In the background, strobe lights crossed each other to form an image of a cage.

Latinos saw the juxtaposit­ion as a call for them to vote, being mindful that American authoritie­s on the U.S.-Mexico border separated migrant children from their parents and locked them up.

“It was brilliant,” said Aguirre, a writer who has toured immigratio­n facilities holding children.

Others pointed out that Lopez held up a Puerto Rican flag — once banned in 1948 — at a time of anger over how President Donald Trump has handled relief efforts after the island was hit by the hurricane and a recent earthquake.

The flag became a symbol of resilience and hope following the hurricane, which struck in September 2017 as a Category 4 storm. It caused more than $100 billion in damage and killed an estimated 2,975 people. The flag also became a symbol of resistance and justice last summer when massive protests over corruption and other issues led to the resignatio­n of the island’s former governor.

Luivette Resto, a Puerto Rico-born poet who lives in Los Angeles, said she felt conflicted about the use of the flag because of the island’s history.

“Puerto Rico is still a colony of the U.S.,” Resto said. “We’re treated like property.”

But Resto said she was glad the appearance of the flag sparked needed conversati­ons about Puerto Rico’s status.

Still, she was disappoint­ed that more Afro-Latinos or Mexicans were not represente­d in the performanc­e — a critique shared by many on social media. The legendary Mexican band Los Tigres del Norte from San Jose, California, opened the Spanish broadcast for Super Bowl LIV, but the performanc­e was not seen on the English broadcast.

Others said they are satisfied by the overall Latina theme of the performanc­e.

“It was a PERFECT example of how different cultures can exist under the ‘Latino’ umbrella,” comedian Cristela Alonzo tweeted. “We are different from each other and therefore should be allowed to tell DIFFERENT stories. See us as individual­s.”

Late Monday, Lopez posted an Instagram video of her and her daughter before the performanc­e. Lopez wrote that she wanted the girls on stage with her to know how to use their voices and be proud of everything they are. “Other people can try to build walls, keep us out or put us in cages,” Lopez wrote. “We are proud to recognize that all of us together are what makes this beautiful country truly great.”

Shakira also posted an Instagram video of her performanc­e and thanked Colombia for giving her “the mapalé, the champeta, the salsa and the Afro-Caribbean rhythms” that have allowed her to create the Super Bowl Halftime Show that she dreamed of more than a decade ago.

The halftime show wasn’t the only moment for Latinas on Super Bowl Sunday. The game began with multiplati­num Demi Lovato singing the national anthem. The Albuquerqu­e-born Lovato is a descendant of Francisco Perea, a Hispanic hero for the Union in the Civil War who witnessed President Abraham Lincoln’s assassinat­ion.

The rendition by Lovato, who is recovering from drug addiction, sparked an emotional response from the people of New Mexico — a state with the nation’s highest percentage of Hispanic residents that has historical­ly had some of the country’s highest drug overdose death rates.

For Shakira, this wasn’t her first time participat­ing in an event with a political dimension. In 2011, for example, she told the Associated Press that proposed anti-immigrant legislatio­n in some U.S. states went against her foundation’s efforts to provide education to poor people around the world.

The Grammy Award-winning singer said Latino immigrants in the U.S. who were facing anti-immigrant bills would have “justice” as public awareness about their plight grew.

“Justice will come. I’m sure,” Shakira told the AP after receiving an award at Harvard University.

 ?? CHARLIE RIEDEL/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Jennifer Lopez and her daughter, Emme Maribel Muñiz, perform during halftime of Super Bowl LIV on Sunday in Miami Gardens, Fla.
CHARLIE RIEDEL/ASSOCIATED PRESS Jennifer Lopez and her daughter, Emme Maribel Muñiz, perform during halftime of Super Bowl LIV on Sunday in Miami Gardens, Fla.

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