Skip to content
Search

The FCC Got Over 2,000 Complaints About Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl Show and… ‘Scream 7’?

The Puerto Rican superstar garnered the most pearl-clutching from aggrieved viewers, but a trailer for the horror flick apparently upset a lot of young children

The FCC Got Over 2,000 Complaints About Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl Show and… ‘Scream 7’?

Bad Bunny and his fellow super Bowl menace, Ghostface from the 'Scream' films.

Carlos Avila Gonzalez/San Francisco Chronicle/Getty Images; Jessica Miglio/Paramount Pictures

When the FCC released its annual cache of Super Bowl complaints earlier this month, it was, unsurprisingly, filled largely with reactions to Bad Bunny’s halftime performance. The agency tasked with policing broadcast standards received over 2,000 complaints this year, many of the featuring the outlandish pearl-clutching we’ve come to expect from halftime show grievances.

Words like “vulgar,” “disgusting,” and “indecent” popped up hundreds of times in reference to some of the dancers’ moves (fun fact: at least three people spelled “twerking” as “twirking”), as well as Bad Bunny’s lyrics. Many who complained about the latter did have the decency to acknowledge they spoke no Spanish, but that didn’t stop them from insisting they were still appalled after looking up Bad Bunny’s translated lyrics online. (As if he didn’t obviously perform censored versions on live national television.)


Of course, this year, too, there were more than a few straight-up racist complaints, like the submitter of this grim-as-hell ticket: “There are illegals on my TV screen. I don’t understand Spanish, but I think I heard inappropriate language.” (Despite complaints from members of Congress and President Donald Trump, the FCC never found any potential violations worth investigating.)

But before people even had a chance to get up in arms about Bad Bunny, the Super Bowl broadcast offered up something else just as disturbing. No, it wasn’t the incredibly boring game between the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks. It was the Scream 7 trailer.

The clip for the latest film in the horror franchise aired early in the broadcast, right after the performance of the National Anthem. As such, many parents were left with petrified children during what many assumed was a “family-friendly event.”

“My children are now scared and huddling on my lap because we couldn’t turn the channel fast enough,” one person wrote. “[P]eacock has dropped a nightmare bomb in our house by airing trailers for ‘Scream 7’ during family prime time viewing hours,” said another.

“The violent and frightening imagery was completely unexpected and inappropriate for a program widely understood to be a family-oriented event with many young children watching,” complained a third, who, we guess, was nevertheless alright with their children watching grown men slam into each other with body-destroying, brain-degrading force.

One person even complained about the Scream 7 trailer — “which normalizes psychopathic evil, the likes of which parents strive to protect their children from” — in the same breath as… a commercial for the inclusion of flag football in the 2028 Summer Olympics. The spot showed Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts “lighting a football on fire,” then tossing it into the Olympic torch atop the L.A. Memorial Coliseum.

“A dangerous idea that children are sure to emulate,” the complainer wrote.

More Stories

Taylor Swift’s ‘The Life of a Showgirl’ Trademark War: Lawyers Clash Over ‘Reverse Confusion’

Taylor Swift attends the Grammy Awards on Feb. 2, 2025.

Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images/The Recording Academy

Taylor Swift’s ‘The Life of a Showgirl’ Trademark War: Lawyers Clash Over ‘Reverse Confusion’

Taylor Swift’s trademark war with real-life Las Vegas “showgirl” Maren Wade kicked into high gear Wednesday, with the superstar’s lawyer arguing in court that Wade’s request for an immediate ban on album-related merch sales would trample Swift’s right to free speech.

At the hearing in downtown Los Angeles, Swift’s lawyer said Wade’s request for an immediate ban on sales of candles, tumblers, brushes, and other merchandise bearing the album title defied “common sense.” He said Swift’s album, The Life of a Showgirl, did not infringe on Wade’s “Confessions of a Showgirl” trademark because it was “absolutely undisputed” that the album is an expressive work entitled to legal protections.

Keep ReadingShow less
Kanye Label Boss Sues to Unmask Anonymous Figure Behind ‘Defamatory’ Websites

Larry Jackson attends the Apple Music 10th anniversary celebration on June 30, 2025.

Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Apple Music

Kanye Label Boss Sues to Unmask Anonymous Figure Behind ‘Defamatory’ Websites

Music executive Larry Jackson is suing to identify the anonymous person or people behind what he describes as a “coordinated, malicious, and ongoing campaign” targeting him, his independent label Gamma, and the label’s artists. He says the “reputational warfare” started after an article cast him as one of the masterminds of Kanye West’s “risky comeback.”

In the 12-page complaint, filed in New York and obtained by Rolling Stone, Jackson says that shortly after Bloomberg published its story on April 23, an unidentified figure launched the websites “larryjacksonexposed.com” and “gammaexposed.com.” The sites published “false, misleading, and defamatory statements” about Jackson and his business, the complaint says, including an allegation that he used “bot-generated purchases” to artificially inflate sales figures for Bully, the latest album by West, now known as Ye.

Keep ReadingShow less
The Beaches Go Viral (Again) After Landing a Song in the Sweetest ‘Off Campus’ Scene
Meg Moon*

The Beaches Go Viral (Again) After Landing a Song in the Sweetest ‘Off Campus’ Scene

Two episodes into Off Campus, the Prime Video hockey-romance drama that’s become a gargantuan streaming hit, lead characters Hannah and Garrett are hanging out, looking at a laptop. The two of them have been deep into a fake-dating plot: Hannah has promised to tutor Garrett, a star hockey player, and in exchange, he’ll pretend to be her boyfriend to make her crush jealous. But at this point in the series, they’re starting to get closer — and Hannah, a music student, wants to show Garrett a band she absolutely loves. “Wait, have you heard of the Beaches?” she asks. “Their Coachella set will change your life.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Taylor Swift Sends Ultimate Gift to Young Fan After Wholesome Paper Airplane Video Goes Viral

Taylor Swift performs at Wembley Stadium on Aug. 15, 2024.

Kate Green/Getty Images

Taylor Swift Sends Ultimate Gift to Young Fan After Wholesome Paper Airplane Video Goes Viral

A wholesome moment between neighbors captured on video went viral and caught the attention of nearly 4 million viewers, including Taylor Swift.

Last month, an 8-year-old Swiftie named Madeline took notice of her next door neighbor Ethan Hayes, who spends his afternoons singing and playing his guitar. The moment was captured on video, which went viral on TikTok. Madeline’s mom, Natalie Hulec, told People that her daughter was too shy to ask Hayes directly for a special request, so instead devised a different way to reach him. With the help of her parents, she asked him to play a tune from Swift’s catalog via paper airplane, sent it over the fence, and got him to sing “Love Story.”

Keep ReadingShow less
John McClain, Co-Executor of Michael Jackson Estate, Dead at 71

John McClain.

Lester Cohen/Getty Images

John McClain, Co-Executor of Michael Jackson Estate, Dead at 71

John McClain, a co-executor of Michael Jackson‘s estate, died in Los Angeles on Tuesday. He was 71. Diana Baron, a representative of the estate, confirmed McClain’s death. The cause was complications from a fall.

After an illustrious career behind the scenes of the music industry, McClain became close to the Jackson family in the early Eighties, setting up Janet for superstardom. Michael Jackson named McClain as his estate executors, alongside lawyer John Branca, in his will. McClain was instrumental in guiding Jackson’s posthumous resurgence, including the release of two albums of archival material, two Cirque du Soleil shows, the Broadway hit MJ: The Musical, various films and documentaries, and the recently released hit movie, Michael. Forbes has reported that Jackson’s estate has earned more than $3 billion since the singer’s 2009 death.

Keep ReadingShow less