Bad Bunny has listened to the people and has opened the doors of La Casita de su Debí Tira Más Fotos Tour to audience profiles and bodies more diverse than those seen during his first two concerts in Madrid, at least according to the first videos that have begun to circulate on networks and that show people of all kinds leaving the first rows to be placed under the porch of the famous pink house, typically Puerto Rican, that presides over the center of the stage.
Criticism of Bad Bunny’s La Casita denounced the apparent exclusivity of the space for influencers with considerable economic capital, despite the fact that La Casita, symbolically, represents Puerto Rican daily life and the idea of community and belonging in the face of inequality and gentrification. That is to say, it had meaning for all audiences, but it seemed that it was accessible only to the luckiest.
One person had even taken the opportunity to denounce the housing problem by posting an ad in Idealista with an image of Bad Bunny’s house to point out who can afford to buy a home today – the influencers who have usually been invited – and who cannot.
Another video on X shows more people from the audience being placed in the little house. “It seems that the criticism about the fan selection process for La Casita has had an effect,” writes Juan La Mattina. “It’s what it should have been from the beginning, that any fan had the opportunity to be there. Rectifying is wise.”
@shirley_smafj_ After so much criticism, well…#parati #smafj #badbunny #concert #madrid ♬ VeLDÁ – Bad Bunny & Omar Courtz & Dei V

