LDT. Bad Bunny Asks Fans to Stop Throwing Flags on Stage — “I Won’t Choose Between My People” 🚩🤯
At first, it looked like every other Bad Bunny stadium night.
Beats pounding, lights cutting through smoke, thousands of phones in the air — and a sea of flags: Puerto Rico, Mexico, Dominican Republic, Colombia, U.S. stars and stripes, rainbow flags, regional banners from across Latin America.
But midway through the show, during what’s usually one of the most emotional moments, something shifted.
Fans began hurling flags onto the stage, each one hoping theirs would be the one he picked up, kissed, and wrapped around his shoulders for the cameras.

Instead, Bad Bunny did something nobody expected.
He stopped the music.
Motioned to the band.
Bent down to pick up a pile of flags at his feet… and handed them carefully to a stage tech.
Then he walked back to the mic and said:
“Escuchen. Listen. I love all of these. But I’m not going to choose between my people. No más banderas en el escenario, por favor.”
(No more flags on the stage, please.)
The stadium fell from roar to stunned silence.
“I’m Not a Referee for Your Flags”
What followed was part speech, part heart-to-heart.
Bad Bunny looked out at the crowd — still waving flags in the stands — and spoke in a mix of Spanish and English.
“I know you want to see your flag up here,” he said. “I know it feels good when I wear it, kiss it, take a photo. Pero miren alrededor. Look around. There are too many flags to choose just one.”
He pointed to the upper levels.
“We’ve got Boricuas, Mexicans, Dominicans, Colombianos, people from the U.S., from Central America, South America, the islands, everywhere.
If I pick up one, someone else feels invisible. That’s not why I’m here.”
Then he dropped the line that would become the headline:
“I won’t choose between my people. I’m not a referee for your flags. I’m here so we can sing together.”
He asked fans not to throw flags onto the stage anymore, saying he didn’t want anyone to feel like their country or heritage “lost” just because another flag got held up.
“Wave them, love them, be proud,” he added. “But don’t turn this into a competition. This stage is for everybody.”
The crowd cheered — loud, but a little unsure of itself.
Then the beat came back in, and the show rolled on.
But the conversation had just begun.
#NoFlagWars vs #LetHimHoldIt
Clips of the moment flooded social media before the concert even ended.
One fan’s close-up video of him saying “I won’t choose between my people” hit millions of views in hours, with subtitles added in multiple languages.
Two main reactions formed online:
1. Supporters: “He’s Right — It Was Turning Into a Contest”
Many fans — especially those who’ve seen him multiple times — admitted the flag moment had gotten out of control.
- “I’ve literally seen people wrestling in the pit over whose flag gets to the front,” one user posted.
- “It stopped being about pride and started being about clout,” another wrote.
They launched the hashtag #NoFlagWars, praising him for protecting the energy of the show:
“He’s not rejecting us. He’s refusing to rank us.”
“We are all his people, not contestants on a reality show.”
Some shared photos of crowds from above, pointing out how beautiful the mix of colors looked together without needing one banner on his shoulders to “win.”
2. Critics: “Flags Are Love, Not War”
Others took it personally.
For many fans, seeing their flag in Bad Bunny’s hands has been more than a moment of hype — it’s felt like recognition, especially for diasporas who don’t often see their identities centered on massive global stages.
- “My parents cried when he held up our flag on the livestream last tour,” one user wrote.
- “It wasn’t a competition, it was love.”
Under the hashtag #LetHimHoldIt, some argued that he was reading too much into the gesture, and that the occasional drama in the crowd shouldn’t ruin a tradition for everyone.
Pride, Diaspora, and One Overloaded Stage
Commentators jumped in quickly, pointing out that the issue wasn’t really about fabric — it was about belonging.
For years, Bad Bunny has been a walking symbol of:
- Puerto Rican pride
- Latinidad beyond one nationality
- The complicated identity of people who live between islands, continents, and languages
His shows have become a place where fans bring every part of themselves — including literal flags — to say, “We’re here too.”
But as one cultural critic put it:
“The problem isn’t that fans bring flags. It’s that the moment he touches one, it’s treated like a scoreboard for whose identity is ‘center stage’ that night.”
In that light, his request makes more sense:
He’s not trying to erase pride.
He’s trying to avoid becoming the judge of whose pride wins.
Safety and Respect: The Practical Side
Beyond symbolism, there’s also a blunt practical reason: safety.
Stage crews have long complained — quietly — about fans throwing objects:
- Flags can tangle in lights, cameras, or instruments.
- Poles and sticks can be dangerous if they land wrong.
- Even “soft” items become hazards when hurled by thousands of people trying to be seen.
One tour staffer (speaking anonymously in this fictional scenario) said:
“We’ve had flags nearly wrap around cameras, trip dancers, even skim his face. It’s not just cute, it’s risky. Him saying something was overdue.”
By framing his request as a unity message instead of a scolding, Bad Bunny turned what could’ve been a dry rules announcement into a deeper conversation — and avoided blaming any one country’s fans.
Will Other Artists Follow?
After the clip went viral, fans began tagging other touring stars, asking if they’d adopt a similar approach.
Some artists already ban all thrown objects after high-profile incidents of performers getting hit on stage. Bad Bunny’s twist is different: he’s specifically calling out flag competitions while still encouraging people to wave them proudly from the crowd.
Music writers speculate we might see more:
- Artists asking fans to keep flags in the air, not on the stage.
- Moments where performers acknowledge all represented countries at once, rather than picking one.
- Visuals on screens that cycle through flags to avoid the feeling of “if you didn’t get yours onstage, you didn’t count.”
As one columnist wrote:
“We’ve gone from one flag behind a rock band to a thousand flags chasing a reggaeton star. The culture changed, and now the etiquette needs to catch up.”
A Stage Too Small for How Big the Crowd Is
At the heart of this fictional story is a simple truth:
Bad Bunny’s audience has grown bigger than any one flag can hold.
He’s still proudly Puerto Rican.
He still shouts out his island in nearly every show.
But his reach now stretches across borders, languages, and passports — and that creates new tensions.
When he said, “I won’t choose between my people,” he was really saying:
“The stage is too small to fit how big you all are.
So I’m not going to pretend one banner can represent it.”
Whether fans agree with his new request or not, one thing is clear:
The era of Latin superstars quietly accepting whatever symbolism gets thrown at them is over.
They’re drawing lines — not against pride, but against being turned into referees for it.
And the next time a fan winds up to toss a flag toward the stage, they’ll have to decide:
Do I want my country to be seen up there for one second…
or celebrated down here with everyone else for the whole night?
