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Hood Politics with Prop

YA TU SABES WEPA! What Bad Bunny Really Means to the Culture feat. Becca Ramos

Hood Politics with Prop

Cool Zone Media and iHeartPodcasts

News, Politics, Society & Culture

4.8875 Ratings

🗓️ 11 February 2026

⏱️ 63 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

I had to call in our in-house boriqua Becca Ramos, host of the newly-launched podcast Welcome to El Barrio, to talk through the full effect of what Bad Bunny truly means to the culture and the impact of his generational Super Bowl halftime performance.

Follow Welcome to El Barrio:

https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/welcome-to-el-barrio/id1872298741

https://www.instagram.com/welcometoelbarrio/

Ya Tu Sabes Wepa theme song by Matt Osowski:

https://mattosowski.bandcamp.com/album/ya-tu-sebes-wepa

---

Follow Hood Politics:

https://www.instagram.com/hoodpoliticspod/

Follow Prop:

https://x.com/prophiphop

https://www.instagram.com/prophiphop/

https://www.tiktok.com/@prophiphop

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is an I-Heart podcast.

0:02.5

Guaranteed Human.

0:06.4

Coolzo Media.

0:09.3

All right.

0:10.0

Welcome to Los Politicos de Vario. All right.

0:22.2

You're doing good.

0:23.8

Love politics with prop.

0:25.8

Oh, that's like, no, I say I, I love Spanish.

0:28.5

Yeah, I was like, your Spanish is great.

0:30.7

It's just that, yeah, my Spanish is very Chicano, though.

0:34.1

It's Mexican, which is like I was going to actually open up with this because like I got to tell you, man, I know a few, I know a few borikas and I just be like, nigger, what did you just say right now? Like, and I speak Spanish. I'm like, y'all Spanish is wild, dude. I mean, I am. It's different. Very much in the Spanish category because because I did not I was not taught Spanish growing up

0:56.4

but it has been hard to learn programming in Spanish because it is specifically so different

1:02.1

than like any Spanish you're taught what most people are able to speak like I even remember

1:09.0

growing up hearing words and my mom is like oh no, no, that's how we say it. And I'm like, that is not, that is, where are the letters? Where's the R? You're not saying it. Y'all don't say no. Es is. Ain't know, S in a comment about me. Monday? Like, I'll be like, what? and y'all got arita and aura like backwards at least as far as

1:31.1

like I'm concerned like y'all be like arita but you don't mean right now no like I thought that

1:38.2

meant right now now granted probably the same situation obviously if you can tell uh I was not taught Spanish at home. I just, I'm from L.A., you know, and I grew up here. I grew up on a Latino side of town. And just the part of town I grew up in and just the, it just happened to be, you know, predominantly like Chicano, Mexican. So I just picked it up, you know, and, and then, you know, predominantly, like, Chicano Mexican.

2:02.8

So I just, I just picked it up, you know.

2:07.1

And, and then, you know, my wife, my wife is first gen.

2:08.2

She's from Southern Mexico.

2:09.2

She's from Acapulco.

2:13.2

And, like, so, yeah, and then, you know, you grow up here.

2:16.0

You, you know, you start, you start, you hit puberty.

...

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