Bad Bunny walked onto the Super Bowl 60 halftime stage at Levi’s Stadium wearing an all-white custom football jersey with “Ocasio” and the number 64 on the back, turning what could have been a simple wardrobe choice into a layered personal statement.
Here’s the breakdown of every detail behind the outfit that dominated social media during the Seahawks-Patriots Super Bowl.
Why Bad Bunny Wore ‘Ocasio 64’ on His Super Bowl 60 Jersey
The name on the back is his own. Bad Bunny’s real name is Benito Antonio Martinez Ocasio. Putting “Ocasio” across the shoulders of a football jersey was the 31-year-old essentially giving himself a roster spot on the biggest stage in American sports.
The number 64 carries deeper meaning. The leading theory among fans points to his mother, Lysaurie Ocasio, who was born in 1964. If accurate, Bad Bunny used the most-watched broadcast of the year to honor the woman who raised him in Vega Baja, Puerto Rico.

Bad Bunny hasn’t publicly confirmed the connection, but given how intentional every element of his performance was, the number wasn’t random.
The Custom Jacquemus Design and the Full Performance Look
The jersey wasn’t a standard Nike or off-the-rack piece. French fashion house Jacquemus designed the custom look, which Harper’s Bazaar described as a boxy, football jersey-inspired sweatshirt layered over a collared top with matching chinos, a tie, moto-inspired gloves, and sneakers. Stylists Storm Pablo and Marvin Douglas Linares put together the full fit.
The all-white color scheme made the jersey hard to read on camera at first, which only fueled real-time speculation on social media. But that monochrome choice was deliberate, creating a clean silhouette that stood out against the colorful set pieces as Bad Bunny opened with “Titi Me Pregunto” while walking through a staged sugar cane field carrying a football.
Cardi B, Pedro pascal, Jessica Alba dances on stage during Bad Bunny’s #SuperBowl Halftime performance in La Casitapic.twitter.com/te5T1g03mn
— BOUNCE (@bouncenetworks) February 9, 2026
Bad Bunny accessorized with a Puerto Rican flag during the performance, and his dancers wore traditional Puerto Rican clothing, including Pava hats. The entire visual package leaned hard into cultural pride.
He closed the halftime show by holding a football up to the camera with the message, “Together, we are America” written on it, capping a performance that featured guest appearances from Lady Gaga and Ricky Martin.
MORE: NFL Players, Analysts React to Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl Halftime Performance: ‘This Is So Sick’
“What I’m feeling goes beyond myself,” Bad Bunny said in a statement before the game. “It’s for those who came before me and ran countless yards so I could come in and score a touchdown… this is for my people, my culture, and our history.”
The jersey will likely become one of the most iconic halftime show wardrobe moments in Super Bowl history. Coming off his 2026 Grammy album of the year win, Bad Bunny used every element of his outfit to tell a story that was simultaneously personal, cultural, and designed for the football stage he was standing on.

