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Edition of 06:00 CETThursday, July 9, 2026
311 outlets · 17 languages432 briefings today
Media & EntertainmentThursday, July 2, 2026

A blacked-out SUV in Mexico City and a billion streams: two Latin music milestones

Luis Miguel’s 1987 single enters Spotify’s Billions Club as Shakira and Burna Boy’s World Cup anthem tops global charts, while the Mexican singer’s discreet reappearance quiets health rumours.

A blacked-out SUV with no licence plates pulled up in the centre of Mexico City, its tinted windows revealing nothing of the passenger inside. According to the Mexican reporter Ernesto Buitrón, the vehicle belonged to Luis Miguel, who had arrived the night before on a private jet whose flight plan was restricted, then transferred by helicopter to a luxury hotel on Paseo de la Reforma. He was accompanied by his partner, Paloma Cuevas, and a single security detail. The purpose of the visit, Buitrón’s sources said, was to film a commercial. The scene, captured in a grainy video and relayed across entertainment programmes, was the first public sighting of the singer since a wave of reports claimed he had undergone heart surgery in New York.

Within days of that fleeting appearance, the 56-year-old artist’s 1987 single “Ahora te puedes marchar” crossed one billion streams on Spotify, entering the platform’s Billions Club. It is the first song from his catalogue to reach the threshold, nearly four decades after its release on the album Soy como quiero ser. Warner Music México noted that his entire catalogue now accumulates billions of streams, a figure that places him among the most listened-to Spanish-language artists globally. The milestone arrived amid a vacuum of official information: since the close of his 2023–2024 tour, no new dates have been announced, and his team has not commented on the hospitalisation reports that circulated in Spanish and US media from May 2026. In Mexico City, entertainment journalists offered contradictory versions—some insisting he was recovering from a “delicate intervention” under the supervision of cardiologist Valentín Fuster, others claiming he was never hospitalised and was simply working in the country.

While Luis Miguel’s streaming record was being tallied, a different kind of milestone was unfolding on the same platform. The official 2026 FIFA World Cup anthem, “Dai Dai”, performed by Shakira and the Nigerian Afrobeats star Burna Boy, rose to number one on the Billboard Global 200 and, by Tuesday, topped Spotify’s global chart. It is the first World Cup song to lead that Billboard list, which has existed only since 2020. The track also propelled Burna Boy to a new peak: he became the African artist with the highest monthly listeners in Spotify history, surpassing the South African singer Tyla’s previous record of 46.58 million. Viewed from Lagos, the achievement reflects years of sustained commercial momentum for African music, with Burna Boy’s extensive catalogue and international collaborations driving numbers that industry observers expect to climb further as the tournament approaches.

Taken together, the two events sketch a portrait of a global streaming landscape in which Latin and African repertoires are not merely present but dominant. In Mexico, a 1987 cover of Dusty Springfield’s “I Only Want To Be With You” finds a second life among listeners who were not born when it was first released. In stadiums and on playlists, a Colombian-Nigerian duet becomes the sonic signature of a World Cup. The image that lingers is not the blacked-out SUV or the chart position, but the quiet persistence of a song that, after thirty-nine years, still has something to say to a billion listeners.

Divergence — who tells it how
0%Low
2 blocs · positions from 0.00 to 0.00
CriticalFavorable
LATAFR
Divergence between press blocs
Latin American press0.00neutral
Sub-Saharan African press0.00neutral
Latin American press0.00
Voice

Latin America celebrates Luis Miguel's commercial success and turns the night helicopter into a spectacular event, without judging the rumors.

Mechanismspettacolarizzazione

Impressive numbers (a billion streams) are used to create an aura of success, while the helicopter is presented as a picturesque detail, diverting attention from negative rumors.

Omission

Rumors of scandal or personal problems that could tarnish the singer's image are omitted.

SkepticismDetachment
Sub-Saharan African press0.00
Voice

Sub-Saharan Africa ignores the story, focusing on political and sports news deemed more relevant to its audience.

Mechanismomissione selettiva

The lack of coverage is justified by low regional relevance, but effectively excludes a globally interesting story.

Omission

No information about Luis Miguel is reported, neither the streaming numbers nor the helicopter episode.

Detachment

Broaden your view

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Upd. 11:17 AM3 languages · 6 outlets
PreviousMedia & EntertainmentNext
6 outlets|3 languages|3 min read
Thursday, July 2, 2026

A blacked-out SUV in Mexico City and a billion streams: two Latin music milestones

Luis Miguel’s 1987 single enters Spotify’s Billions Club as Shakira and Burna Boy’s World Cup anthem tops global charts, while the Mexican singer’s discreet reappearance quiets health rumours.

A blacked-out SUV with no licence plates pulled up in the centre of Mexico City, its tinted windows revealing nothing of the passenger inside. According to the Mexican reporter Ernesto Buitrón, the vehicle belonged to Luis Miguel, who had arrived the night before on a private jet whose flight plan was restricted, then transferred by helicopter to a luxury hotel on Paseo de la Reforma. He was accompanied by his partner, Paloma Cuevas, and a single security detail. The purpose of the visit, Buitrón’s sources said, was to film a commercial. The scene, captured in a grainy video and relayed across entertainment programmes, was the first public sighting of the singer since a wave of reports claimed he had undergone heart surgery in New York.

Within days of that fleeting appearance, the 56-year-old artist’s 1987 single “Ahora te puedes marchar” crossed one billion streams on Spotify, entering the platform’s Billions Club. It is the first song from his catalogue to reach the threshold, nearly four decades after its release on the album Soy como quiero ser. Warner Music México noted that his entire catalogue now accumulates billions of streams, a figure that places him among the most listened-to Spanish-language artists globally. The milestone arrived amid a vacuum of official information: since the close of his 2023–2024 tour, no new dates have been announced, and his team has not commented on the hospitalisation reports that circulated in Spanish and US media from May 2026. In Mexico City, entertainment journalists offered contradictory versions—some insisting he was recovering from a “delicate intervention” under the supervision of cardiologist Valentín Fuster, others claiming he was never hospitalised and was simply working in the country.

While Luis Miguel’s streaming record was being tallied, a different kind of milestone was unfolding on the same platform. The official 2026 FIFA World Cup anthem, “Dai Dai”, performed by Shakira and the Nigerian Afrobeats star Burna Boy, rose to number one on the Billboard Global 200 and, by Tuesday, topped Spotify’s global chart. It is the first World Cup song to lead that Billboard list, which has existed only since 2020. The track also propelled Burna Boy to a new peak: he became the African artist with the highest monthly listeners in Spotify history, surpassing the South African singer Tyla’s previous record of 46.58 million. Viewed from Lagos, the achievement reflects years of sustained commercial momentum for African music, with Burna Boy’s extensive catalogue and international collaborations driving numbers that industry observers expect to climb further as the tournament approaches.

Taken together, the two events sketch a portrait of a global streaming landscape in which Latin and African repertoires are not merely present but dominant. In Mexico, a 1987 cover of Dusty Springfield’s “I Only Want To Be With You” finds a second life among listeners who were not born when it was first released. In stadiums and on playlists, a Colombian-Nigerian duet becomes the sonic signature of a World Cup. The image that lingers is not the blacked-out SUV or the chart position, but the quiet persistence of a song that, after thirty-nine years, still has something to say to a billion listeners.

Divergence — who tells it how
0%Low
2 blocs · positions from 0.00 to 0.00
CriticalFavorable
LATAFR
Divergence between press blocs
Latin American press0.00neutral
Sub-Saharan African press0.00neutral
Latin American press0.00
Voice

Latin America celebrates Luis Miguel's commercial success and turns the night helicopter into a spectacular event, without judging the rumors.

Mechanismspettacolarizzazione

Impressive numbers (a billion streams) are used to create an aura of success, while the helicopter is presented as a picturesque detail, diverting attention from negative rumors.

Omission

Rumors of scandal or personal problems that could tarnish the singer's image are omitted.

SkepticismDetachment
Sub-Saharan African press0.00
Voice

Sub-Saharan Africa ignores the story, focusing on political and sports news deemed more relevant to its audience.

Mechanismomissione selettiva

The lack of coverage is justified by low regional relevance, but effectively excludes a globally interesting story.

Omission

No information about Luis Miguel is reported, neither the streaming numbers nor the helicopter episode.

Detachment

This story appeared in

6 outlets · 3 languages

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