In a hilarious and aptly scathing takedown, Late Show host Stephen Colbert poked fun at Kid Rock's forthcoming "All-American Halftime Show," dubbed an alternative to the NFL-sanctioned halftime spectacle featuring Bad Bunny. The event is part of Turning Point USA's attempt to counter-program the official Bad Bunny Super Bowl LX halftime show.
Colbert's jokes started with a mock fake lineup for the Rock-topped show, which read like a questionable dream team of country singers Brantley Gilbert, Lee Brance, and Gabby Barrett, alongside some laughably fabricated names like Billy Gidly, Baby Biblo, and Tandy Breitbart. The host mercilessly mocked the lineup as an awkward gathering that seemed to be cobbled together from a who's who of has-beens.
Colbert also skewered the legitimacy of the event, questioning whether anyone would tune in to this non-ticketed show streamed on far-right outlets like DW+, Real America’s Voice, and Rumble. His remarks at the expense of Kid Rock's forthcoming performance were sharp enough to get a few giggles from late-night television aficionados.
In essence, Colbert aimed his barbs not only at Kid Rock's lineup but also at the broader Right-wing media landscape that has had its "undergarments in a twist" over Bad Bunny's decision to perform without playing venues where they worry about potential ICE raids on fans of the singer.
The late-night host contrasted this event with Bad Bunny, who recently topped Billboard charts and won the title of Greatest Pop Star of 2025 for his chart-topping hits. Meanwhile, Kid Rock has never achieved such levels of mainstream success.
In a scathing critique of Kid Rock's upcoming show and its Right-wing undertones, Colbert also poked fun at its posters with an all-caps font reminiscent of angry father at Disney World. "A terrible bunny" as headlining act is indeed one to mock - something the host masterfully did during his take-down.
It should be noted that both hosts had a point in their critiques. On numbers, Bad Bunny dwarfs Kid Rock's success with millions more monthly Spotify listeners and thousands of times more followers on social media platforms.
Colbert's jokes started with a mock fake lineup for the Rock-topped show, which read like a questionable dream team of country singers Brantley Gilbert, Lee Brance, and Gabby Barrett, alongside some laughably fabricated names like Billy Gidly, Baby Biblo, and Tandy Breitbart. The host mercilessly mocked the lineup as an awkward gathering that seemed to be cobbled together from a who's who of has-beens.
Colbert also skewered the legitimacy of the event, questioning whether anyone would tune in to this non-ticketed show streamed on far-right outlets like DW+, Real America’s Voice, and Rumble. His remarks at the expense of Kid Rock's forthcoming performance were sharp enough to get a few giggles from late-night television aficionados.
In essence, Colbert aimed his barbs not only at Kid Rock's lineup but also at the broader Right-wing media landscape that has had its "undergarments in a twist" over Bad Bunny's decision to perform without playing venues where they worry about potential ICE raids on fans of the singer.
The late-night host contrasted this event with Bad Bunny, who recently topped Billboard charts and won the title of Greatest Pop Star of 2025 for his chart-topping hits. Meanwhile, Kid Rock has never achieved such levels of mainstream success.
In a scathing critique of Kid Rock's upcoming show and its Right-wing undertones, Colbert also poked fun at its posters with an all-caps font reminiscent of angry father at Disney World. "A terrible bunny" as headlining act is indeed one to mock - something the host masterfully did during his take-down.
It should be noted that both hosts had a point in their critiques. On numbers, Bad Bunny dwarfs Kid Rock's success with millions more monthly Spotify listeners and thousands of times more followers on social media platforms.