
At the World Cup, a Kiss from Her Son—and a Spanish Surprise from Shakira
A brief, misidentified moment of affection at an Argentina match turned into the announcement of a Spanish-language version of 'Dai Dai', set to debut during Colombia’s next fixture.
The television cameras found Shakira in the stands at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, during Argentina’s group-stage meeting with Austria. For a few seconds, the broadcast lingered on the Colombian singer, and then a man leaned in to kiss her. The image, brief and blurry, ignited a flurry of speculation about a new romance or a rekindled old flame. Within minutes, the mystery dissolved: the figure pressing close to her face was not a partner but her 13-year-old son, Milan, who had simply chosen a public moment to show affection. The misread embrace, far from a tabloid scoop, became an accidental portrait of a mother sharing a World Cup match with her children.
Shakira was there, she later explained, to watch Lionel Messi—a player she described with visible admiration as, at nearly 40, the greatest goal-scorer in the tournament’s history. But her presence also served a professional purpose. In a video released shortly afterward, she announced that the official World Cup song, 'Dai Dai', originally recorded in English with Nigerian star Burna Boy, would receive a Spanish-language version. The new edition, she said, would be unveiled during Colombia’s match against the Democratic Republic of Congo on Tuesday evening at the Estadio Akron in Guadalajara, timed to coincide with the 8 p.m. kick-off in central Mexico. 'It’s the big surprise I had for you,' she told fans, her smile carrying the same blend of personal warmth and promotional instinct that has long defined her relationship with the tournament.
That relationship now spans three editions of the World Cup. In 2010, 'Waka Waka (This Time for Africa)' became one of the most listened-to songs in the competition’s history; in 2014, 'La La La' extended the streak. 'Dai Dai' updates the formula for a 48-team tournament staged across three host nations. The track fuses Latin and African rhythms, and its official video places Shakira amid children and young people wearing kits inspired by various participating sides—a visual argument for the multicultural character the FIFA production seeks to project. Billboard magazine has already ranked it as the best World Cup song, a judgement that, while subjective, reflects the weight of expectation that now accompanies each Shakira release tied to the sport.
Audience response, measured in streaming figures and chart positions, suggests the song is cutting across generations and geographies. In the United Kingdom, 'Dai Dai' entered the Official Streaming chart at No. 44 this week, while 'Waka Waka'—a track older than Milan himself—made its own debut on the same tally at No. 59, propelled by the tournament’s return. The new single has also climbed to No. 28 on the UK’s Official Singles chart and broken into the top ten on both the downloads and sales rankings. For Shakira, 2026 has already yielded three streaming hits in that market, including a song for the animated film Zootopia, marking her most concentrated run of chart success in years. The Spanish version, aimed squarely at a Latin American listenership that has long sustained her career, is likely to amplify those numbers further.
As the Spanish verses of 'Dai Dai' prepare to fill a stadium in Guadalajara, the brief, misread kiss in Arlington already feels like a footnote. What lingers instead is the image of a singer who has turned the World Cup into a recurring stage, this time with her sons beside her, and a song that, in its journey from English to Spanish, mirrors the tournament’s own multilingual sprawl.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 1 languages
The story clarifies that Shakira attended the match with her son Milan, not a romantic interest, debunking rumors. She announced the Spanish version of 'Dai Dai' to premiere during Colombia's game, reinforcing her Latin American roots and connection to the World Cup.
Shakira continues her World Cup music dominance, releasing a Spanish version of 'Dai Dai' with Burna Boy, capitalizing on the 2026 tournament's global reach. Her appearance with son Milan underscores her enduring star power and commercial savvy.
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