Bad Bunny sure knows how to make his amphibian friend feel better. On Friday, the Puerto Rican star released the video for Debí Tirar Más Fotos track “Ketu TeCré,” which follows Concho during a night on the town.
The video opens with Concho, the frog character from Bad Bunny’s Number One album, getting ready to go out. He sprays cologne, poses in front of a mirror, then drives through Puerto Rican streets with his besties to the club. He texts Concha, his love interest, who says she’s going to sleep.
The video opens with Concho, the frog character from Bad Bunny’s Number One album, getting ready to go out. He sprays cologne, poses in front of a mirror, then drives through Puerto Rican streets with his besties to the club. He texts Concha, his love interest, who says she’s going to sleep.
- 5/17/2025
- by Tomás Mier
- Rollingstone.com
Bad Bunny simmers in scorching heartbreak on his latest video for “Bokete,” the ninth track from his sixth album, Debí Tirar Más Fotos, which dropped in January.
The video sees the global superstar talking, walking along the beach, dining, and dancing with himself as he sings about a lost love and regret. At one point, the Puerto Rican artist addresses the camera and declares in Spanish: “Time to move on, let it go, and forget, and later on, if we need to fall in love again, we’ll fall in love.
The video sees the global superstar talking, walking along the beach, dining, and dancing with himself as he sings about a lost love and regret. At one point, the Puerto Rican artist addresses the camera and declares in Spanish: “Time to move on, let it go, and forget, and later on, if we need to fall in love again, we’ll fall in love.
- 4/25/2025
- by Charisma Madarang
- Rollingstone.com
It’s been a busy week for Bad Bunny. On Sunday, the Latin star released his sixth album Debí Tirar Más Fotos to critical acclaim. Now, Bad Bunny has shared the music video for album highlight “Baile Inolvidable.”
In the video, Bad Bunny takes a salsa dancing lesson in a nod to the song’s salsa rhythms. The star is dressed down in a gray matching sweatsuit and sneakers as he struggles to keep up. But a mystery woman, presumably Bad Bunny’s lover, makes him a quick study. By the end of the video,...
In the video, Bad Bunny takes a salsa dancing lesson in a nod to the song’s salsa rhythms. The star is dressed down in a gray matching sweatsuit and sneakers as he struggles to keep up. But a mystery woman, presumably Bad Bunny’s lover, makes him a quick study. By the end of the video,...
- 1/9/2025
- by Maya Georgi
- Rollingstone.com
Snap a picture: Bad Bunny’s Debí Tirar Más Fotos is here! On Sunday, the Puerto Rican artist released his sixth studio album, which features RaiNao, Dei V, Omar Courtz, and Chuwi.
Along with the collaborations, the album includes solo tracks such as “Ketu Tecré,” “Turista,” EoO,” and album closer, “La Mudanza.” He also includes Pleneros de la Cresta on the track “Café Con Ron.”
“This project is dedicated to all the Puerto Ricans in the entire world,” reads a dedication on the album’s track list. The album artwork...
Along with the collaborations, the album includes solo tracks such as “Ketu Tecré,” “Turista,” EoO,” and album closer, “La Mudanza.” He also includes Pleneros de la Cresta on the track “Café Con Ron.”
“This project is dedicated to all the Puerto Ricans in the entire world,” reads a dedication on the album’s track list. The album artwork...
- 1/5/2025
- by Tomás Mier
- Rollingstone.com
Bad Bunny’s new album Debí Tirar Más Fotos is dedicated to “all the Puerto Ricans in the entire world.” On Friday, the reggaetón star unveiled the track list for his upcoming LP and an accompanying short film, highlighting the changing makeup of his native Puerto Rico.
The album artwork shows two empty plastic chairs in a muddy grass field in front of tropical trees and green bananas. And the track list, which features RaiNao, Dei V, and Chuwi, was revealed on a second Instagram slide with the album’s dedication.
The album artwork shows two empty plastic chairs in a muddy grass field in front of tropical trees and green bananas. And the track list, which features RaiNao, Dei V, and Chuwi, was revealed on a second Instagram slide with the album’s dedication.
- 1/3/2025
- by Tomás Mier
- Rollingstone.com
Exclusive: In anticipation of his new album that is set to drop Sunday, global music superstar Bad Bunny has dropped a new short film, DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOTos, that is linked to the record. Written and directed by Benito A. Martínez Ocasio (Bad Bunny) and Arí Maniel Cruz Suárez, the film stars the legendary Jacobo Morales — a beloved icon of Puerto Rican culture and one of the most influential filmmakers in the island’s history.
Watch the nearly 13-minute film below.
The story follows Morales’ character as he reflects on his life alongside his loyal companion, Concho, voiced by Kenneth Canales. Through a series of nostalgic photographs, he recalls a bygone Puerto Rico, a time when everything felt familiar. But things have changed. His neighbors are strangers, and his local bakery has a new owner. Despite struggling to recognize the country he once knew, the character clings to hope, cherishing...
Watch the nearly 13-minute film below.
The story follows Morales’ character as he reflects on his life alongside his loyal companion, Concho, voiced by Kenneth Canales. Through a series of nostalgic photographs, he recalls a bygone Puerto Rico, a time when everything felt familiar. But things have changed. His neighbors are strangers, and his local bakery has a new owner. Despite struggling to recognize the country he once knew, the character clings to hope, cherishing...
- 1/3/2025
- by Justin Kroll
- Deadline Film + TV
Bad Bunny is starting 2025 by simping over a past love. On Tuesday, the Puerto Rican star released the video for “Pitorro de Coco,” in which he sings about missing an ex-lover as a new year begins.
“Happy New Year, but it’s not so happy,” he sings on the jíbara-infused track. “You were kissed at 12 but not by me.”
The Bad Bunny and Robinson Floria-directed video sees the star sitting on a plastic chair and dressed in a strange outfit of a sky-blue suit, flip-flops, and a winter hat. He...
“Happy New Year, but it’s not so happy,” he sings on the jíbara-infused track. “You were kissed at 12 but not by me.”
The Bad Bunny and Robinson Floria-directed video sees the star sitting on a plastic chair and dressed in a strange outfit of a sky-blue suit, flip-flops, and a winter hat. He...
- 12/31/2024
- by Tomás Mier
- Rollingstone.com
Bad Bunny is back.
Benito A. Martínez Ocasio, the Puerto Rican singer-rapper who became a global superstar upon the release of his debut album in 2020, returns with a new album on Jan. 5, according to a post on his Instagram. Debí tirar más fotos (translation: I Should Have Taken More Photos) is the follow-up to his 2023 album, Nadie Sabe Lo Que Va a Pasar Mañana.
While dropping the news Thursday, Bad Bunny posted a teaser video for the upcoming album to his Instagram. The brief clip, directed by filmmaker Jacobo Morales, features Ocasio reminiscing over past moments with “Concho,” his friend. The album’s 17 tracks will include “Pitorro” and the previously released “El Clúb” Additionally, Bad Bunny recently released the single “Pitorro de Coco.”
View this post on Instagram
A post shared by Benito Antonio (@badbunnypr)
On Christmas, he teased the album is 17 bomba tracks — or “explosive hit songs.”
1. Bomba
2. Bomba...
Benito A. Martínez Ocasio, the Puerto Rican singer-rapper who became a global superstar upon the release of his debut album in 2020, returns with a new album on Jan. 5, according to a post on his Instagram. Debí tirar más fotos (translation: I Should Have Taken More Photos) is the follow-up to his 2023 album, Nadie Sabe Lo Que Va a Pasar Mañana.
While dropping the news Thursday, Bad Bunny posted a teaser video for the upcoming album to his Instagram. The brief clip, directed by filmmaker Jacobo Morales, features Ocasio reminiscing over past moments with “Concho,” his friend. The album’s 17 tracks will include “Pitorro” and the previously released “El Clúb” Additionally, Bad Bunny recently released the single “Pitorro de Coco.”
View this post on Instagram
A post shared by Benito Antonio (@badbunnypr)
On Christmas, he teased the album is 17 bomba tracks — or “explosive hit songs.”
1. Bomba
2. Bomba...
- 12/26/2024
- by Kevin Dolak
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
'PIToRRO De Coco' Lyrics & English Translation: Bad Bunny Announces New Album 'DeBÍ TiRAR MÁS FOTos'
Bad Bunny is back!
The 30-year-old superstar just announced a new album, DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOTos (“I should have taken more photos”), releasing on January 5, 2025.
The reveal comes with a teaser video featuring Jacobo Morales, one of the most influential film directors in Puerto Rico’s history, reflecting on his most cherished memories with his friend “Concho.”
In the teaser, the What Happened to Santiago director recalls believing that he needed to be living in the moment. Upon growing older, he admits it’s become harder to remember things, and he wishes he’d taken more photos and lived more deeply, thus providing context behind the album’s title.
In addition, Bad Bunny released a new song “PIToRRO De Coco,” produced by Mag, Tainy, and La Paciencia, and written by Bad Bunny himself. In a release, the song is described as capturing “the nostalgia often associated with the holiday season—whether it’s missing someone,...
The 30-year-old superstar just announced a new album, DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOTos (“I should have taken more photos”), releasing on January 5, 2025.
The reveal comes with a teaser video featuring Jacobo Morales, one of the most influential film directors in Puerto Rico’s history, reflecting on his most cherished memories with his friend “Concho.”
In the teaser, the What Happened to Santiago director recalls believing that he needed to be living in the moment. Upon growing older, he admits it’s become harder to remember things, and he wishes he’d taken more photos and lived more deeply, thus providing context behind the album’s title.
In addition, Bad Bunny released a new song “PIToRRO De Coco,” produced by Mag, Tainy, and La Paciencia, and written by Bad Bunny himself. In a release, the song is described as capturing “the nostalgia often associated with the holiday season—whether it’s missing someone,...
- 12/26/2024
- by Just Jared
- Just Jared
Bad Bunny is back! The Puerto Rican superstar has announced his forthcoming sixth studio album, Debí Tirar Más Fotos. The record is set for release on Jan. 5.
Bad Bunny made the announcement on Instagram with a short teaser that shows the Puerto Rican film director Jacobo Morales recounting his life travels, saying that Puerto Rico stood out among all the places he’d been and that he wished he’d taken more pictures. “I should have lived more, I should have loved more while I could,” he says. “While you’re alive,...
Bad Bunny made the announcement on Instagram with a short teaser that shows the Puerto Rican film director Jacobo Morales recounting his life travels, saying that Puerto Rico stood out among all the places he’d been and that he wished he’d taken more pictures. “I should have lived more, I should have loved more while I could,” he says. “While you’re alive,...
- 12/26/2024
- by Larisha Paul
- Rollingstone.com
The trinidad+tobago film festival (ttff) has unveiled its first selections for this year’s edition of the Festival with the announcement that ten classic Caribbean films will form part of the 2015 lineup.
These ten films will screen in a special sidebar to the main program in honor of the ttff’s tenth anniversary. The Festival takes place from September 15–29.
“Many people are unaware that there has been a Caribbean film industry for quite some time, or that almost every country in the region has produced feature films,” said Bruce Paddington, ttff Founder and Festival Director. “We are therefore very proud to present ten of the very best classic films from the Caribbean that will help one to appreciate and enjoy the rich diversity of the region.”
Comprising films from nine different countries, the sidebar ranges across the English, Spanish, French and Dutch-speaking sections of the region.
The lineup includes the Jamaican classic, "The Harder They Come," and "Bim," from T&T.
"Memories of Underdevelopment," the oldest film in the lineup, is from 1968, while the most recent, "Strawberry and Chocolate," was released in 1993. Both of those films hail from Cuba.
The full slate of films is as follows:
-"Memories of Underdevelopment" (Tomás Gutiérrez Alea, Cuba, 1968)
-"The Harder They Come (Perry Henzell," Jamaica, 1972)
-"Bim" (Hugh A. Robertson, Trinidad and Tobago, 1974)
-"One People" (Pim de la Parra, Suriname, 1976)
-"Man By the Shore" (Raoul Peck, Haiti, 1983)
-"Sugar Cane Alley" (Euzhan Palcy, Martinique, 1983)
-"One Way Ticket" (Agliberto Menéndez, Dominican Republic, 1988)
-"What Happened to Santiago" (Jacobo Morales, Puerto Rico, 1989)
-"Ava and Gabriel: A Love Story" (Felix de Rooy, Curaçao, 1990)
-"Strawberry and Chocolate" (Tomás Gutiérrez Alea and Juan Carlos Tabío, Cuba, 1993)
In addition to screening in honor of the Festival’s tenth anniversary, the classics also screen in recognition of the launch of the Caribbean Film Database, an online resource which, in the first instance, will present information on over 600 independent feature-length films made in and about the Caribbean. The database is co-financed by the Acp Cultures+ Program, funded by the European Union and implemented by the Acp Group of States.
The rest of the lineup for the ttff/15 will be unveiled over the upcoming months. For more information about the Festival, visit http://ttfilmfestival.com.
These ten films will screen in a special sidebar to the main program in honor of the ttff’s tenth anniversary. The Festival takes place from September 15–29.
“Many people are unaware that there has been a Caribbean film industry for quite some time, or that almost every country in the region has produced feature films,” said Bruce Paddington, ttff Founder and Festival Director. “We are therefore very proud to present ten of the very best classic films from the Caribbean that will help one to appreciate and enjoy the rich diversity of the region.”
Comprising films from nine different countries, the sidebar ranges across the English, Spanish, French and Dutch-speaking sections of the region.
The lineup includes the Jamaican classic, "The Harder They Come," and "Bim," from T&T.
"Memories of Underdevelopment," the oldest film in the lineup, is from 1968, while the most recent, "Strawberry and Chocolate," was released in 1993. Both of those films hail from Cuba.
The full slate of films is as follows:
-"Memories of Underdevelopment" (Tomás Gutiérrez Alea, Cuba, 1968)
-"The Harder They Come (Perry Henzell," Jamaica, 1972)
-"Bim" (Hugh A. Robertson, Trinidad and Tobago, 1974)
-"One People" (Pim de la Parra, Suriname, 1976)
-"Man By the Shore" (Raoul Peck, Haiti, 1983)
-"Sugar Cane Alley" (Euzhan Palcy, Martinique, 1983)
-"One Way Ticket" (Agliberto Menéndez, Dominican Republic, 1988)
-"What Happened to Santiago" (Jacobo Morales, Puerto Rico, 1989)
-"Ava and Gabriel: A Love Story" (Felix de Rooy, Curaçao, 1990)
-"Strawberry and Chocolate" (Tomás Gutiérrez Alea and Juan Carlos Tabío, Cuba, 1993)
In addition to screening in honor of the Festival’s tenth anniversary, the classics also screen in recognition of the launch of the Caribbean Film Database, an online resource which, in the first instance, will present information on over 600 independent feature-length films made in and about the Caribbean. The database is co-financed by the Acp Cultures+ Program, funded by the European Union and implemented by the Acp Group of States.
The rest of the lineup for the ttff/15 will be unveiled over the upcoming months. For more information about the Festival, visit http://ttfilmfestival.com.
- 7/11/2015
- by Sydney Levine
- Sydney's Buzz
Top brass at the 2015 trinidad+tobago film festival (ttff) said on Monday they have selected ten classic Caribbean films in the first programming wave of this year’s edition.
The films will screen in a sidebar at the ttff’s tenth anniversary outing, set to run from September 15–29.
“Many people are unaware that there has been a Caribbean film industry for quite some time, or that almost every country in the region has produced feature films,” said ttff founder and festival director Bruce Paddington.
“We are therefore very proud to present ten of the very best classic films from the Caribbean that will help one to appreciate and enjoy the rich diversity of the region.”
The sidebar covers multiple languages spoken across the region and features:
Memories Of Underdevelopment (Tomás Gutiérrez Alea, Cuba, 1968);
The Harder They Come (pictured, Perry Henzell, Jamaica, 1972);
Bim (Hugh A Robertson, Trinidad and Tobago, 1974);
One People (Pim de la Parra, Suriname, 1976);
Man...
The films will screen in a sidebar at the ttff’s tenth anniversary outing, set to run from September 15–29.
“Many people are unaware that there has been a Caribbean film industry for quite some time, or that almost every country in the region has produced feature films,” said ttff founder and festival director Bruce Paddington.
“We are therefore very proud to present ten of the very best classic films from the Caribbean that will help one to appreciate and enjoy the rich diversity of the region.”
The sidebar covers multiple languages spoken across the region and features:
Memories Of Underdevelopment (Tomás Gutiérrez Alea, Cuba, 1968);
The Harder They Come (pictured, Perry Henzell, Jamaica, 1972);
Bim (Hugh A Robertson, Trinidad and Tobago, 1974);
One People (Pim de la Parra, Suriname, 1976);
Man...
- 7/6/2015
- by jeremykay67@gmail.com (Jeremy Kay)
- ScreenDaily
Actor Suarez Passes Away
Actor Miguel Angel Suarez has died from esophageal cancer, at the age of 69.
The Puerto Rican star passed away at the Metropolitan Hospital in the San Juan suburb of Guaynabo, Puerto Rico on Wednesday, according to his filmmaker friend Jacobo Morales.
Suarez was a veteran of over 30 films, including 2000 movie Under Suspicion - which also featured Gene Hackman and Morgan Freeman. He also starred alongside Benicio Del Toro in 2008 hit Che.
Suarez is survived by his actress wife Amneris Morales and a daughter from a previous relationship.
The Puerto Rican star passed away at the Metropolitan Hospital in the San Juan suburb of Guaynabo, Puerto Rico on Wednesday, according to his filmmaker friend Jacobo Morales.
Suarez was a veteran of over 30 films, including 2000 movie Under Suspicion - which also featured Gene Hackman and Morgan Freeman. He also starred alongside Benicio Del Toro in 2008 hit Che.
Suarez is survived by his actress wife Amneris Morales and a daughter from a previous relationship.
- 4/2/2009
- WENN
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