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Rezar y perrear es lo mismo, ¡por el amor de Dios!

13 June 2026 at 04:30

Una amiga me lo advirtió antes de ir. “Las que vais a ver a Bad Bunny me parecéis las mismas que las que van a rezar al Papa, no me interesa nada ni lo uno ni lo otro”. A mí no me pareció que fuera lo mismo rezar que cantar cosas como “Si tu novio no te mama el culo, pa eso que no mame”, pero mi amiga tenía razón en algo fundamental. En la práctica, no hay tanta diferencia entre perrear y rezar en 2026. Y no es que lo diga ella (o yo), es que el papa León XIV se reunió con Bad Bunny en su apretada agenda madrileña en un guiño de complicidad cristiana y, por si quedaban dudas, Benito bendijo al Pontífice durante el concierto. Hacia la mitad apareció el sapo Concho, mascota animada de la gira, en las pantallas gigantes y dijo: “Acho, un fuerte aplauso para el Papa que ha llevado esperanza y unión a tantas personas en el mundo”.

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© Mariano Regidor ( GETTY IMAGES )

Bad Bunny en el concierto en el Estadio Metropolitano el pasado 30 de mayo en Madrid.

A sex ritual on stage and smoke bombs in the stands: 50 years of The Rolling Stones’ first concert in Spain

12 June 2026 at 14:11

They are still the representatives of the other God on Earth. Half a century ago, Their Satanic Majesties visited Spain for the first time. A decade after The Beatles’ concerts in a country still under Franco, The Rolling Stones played at Barcelona’s Plaza de Toros Monumental. These were different worlds. The posh audience that showed up for the four young men who sang in suits had been replaced by a more apathetic, pot-smoking youth, as an amateur recording shows. On June 11, 1976, the Spanish Transition was undergoing a critical moment: Franco had died in November, King Juan Carlos I had returned from a consequential trip to the United States, and Carlos Arias Navarro was languishing as prime minister. The concert captured something of the zeitgeist, a decadent glamour in a country that until then had been excluded from the major global tour circuit.

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© Francesc Fàbregas

The Rolling Stones at their first concert in Spain, held in the Barcelona bullring on June 11, 1976.

Cocaine, bikers and aliens: The film that saved David Bowie at his lowest point

7 June 2026 at 05:00

In the early days of 1975, David Bowie was a broken toy. Holed up in his grotesque Los Angeles mansion, the British musician spent his days reading obscure essays on Nazi esotericism, watching television sprawled across a wide Victorian four‑poster, and performing black‑magic rituals inspired by his new hero, the crackpot charlatan Aleister Crowley.

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© Movie Poster Image Art (Getty Images)

One of the posters used to promote 'The Man Who Fell to Earth' (1976).
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