The Super Bowl was not a one-night event within the Ecos Sports Park in San Juan, but rather an event that had a cause. Among ...
Rivera Cosme is no stranger to Bad Bunny’s music. She previously interpreted for the singer during his 2022 tour, “El Último Tour Del Mundo,” and a 31-show residency in San Juan last year, which drew ...
Bad Bunny's Super Bowl halftime show sign language interpreter Celimar Rivera Cosme is making history for being the first ...
Celimar Rivera Cosme will be the first Puerto Rican Sign Language (LSPR) interpreter in Super Bowl halftime show history. Bad Bunny's Super Bowl halftime show performance will be the first in the big ...
Puerto Rican Sign Language is not the same as American Sign Language. Celimar Rivera Cosme will uniquely capture the rapper’s ...
For the first time, Puerto Rican Sign Language will be in the spotlight on one of the country’s biggest stages.
American English relies heavily on slang that rarely appears in textbooks or classrooms. These everyday expressions are used constantly in casual conversations, workplaces, and social settings.
On last night’s Saturday Night Live, we learned that time stops for nothing—not people and not language. Marcello Hernández, the cast member perhaps most likely to become SNL’s next breakout star, ...
Need a fast pass to Gen Alpha slang? No cap, this will help you keep up. So I called on a true expert: Arieh Smith, the linguistics-loving YouTuber whose viral video of a speech delivered almost ...
Parents across the country are hearing a new phrase pop up in everyday conversations with their kids: “crashing out.” The phrase has popped up everywhere in 2025, from school hallways to group chats.
Slang's role is shifting as digital culture spreads and dilutes new expressions quickly. Social media and AI have made slang more mainstream, reducing its power to signal belonging. Inventing personal ...