Cardi B’s SNL performance explained: How bringing El Prodigio onstage changed everything
  • Celebrities
  • Entertainment
  • Royals
  • Beauty
  • Fashion
  • Lifestyle
  • Food
  • Americas
  • Latina Powerhouse
  • Photos
  • HOLA+
Cardi B’s SNL performance explained: How bringing El Prodigio onstage changed everything
  • Celebrities
  • Entertainment
  • Royals
  • Beauty
  • Fashion
  • Lifestyle
  • Food
  • Americas
  • Latina Powerhouse
  • Photos
  • HOLA+
Newsletter
Subscribe
DIGITAL MAGAZINE
  • USA
  • España
  • Americas
  • México
  • Home
  • Entertainment

Merengue Típico

Cardi B’s SNL performance explained: How bringing El Prodigio onstage changed everything


Cardi B turned her SNL set into a Dominican culture statement, blending merengue típico, fashion heritage, and El Prodigio into a bold, intentional moment


 Musical guest Cardi B performs "Bodega Baddie" on Saturday, January 31, 2026 -- (Photo by: Will Heath/NBC via Getty Images)© Will Heath/NBC via Getty Images
Shirley GomezSenior Writer
FEBRUARY 2, 2026 12:56 PM ESTFEB 2, 2026, 12:56 PM EST

When Cardi B stepped onto the Saturday Night Live stage on Saturday, January 31, the assignment could have been simple. Deliver two high-energy songs, remind viewers why you dominate pop culture, and exit to applause. Instead, during the show’s landmark 1,000th episode hosted by Alexander Skarsgård, Cardi treated the moment like a cultural declaration.

Cardi used one of American television’s biggest stages to center Dominican identity with precision, pride, and zero dilution. The result felt intentional enough that it demanded a closer look.

© Will Heath/NBC via Getty Images
Cardi B performs "Bodega Baddie" on Saturday night Live

Two songs, two moods, one message

Cardi’s musical guest slot focused on “ErrTime” and “Bodega Baddie,” but the second performance is the one people keep replaying. “Bodega Baddie” was not framed as a novelty or a playful genre experiment. It was presented as a fully realized fusion of Bronx attitude and Dominican tradition.

You may also like
  • Cardi B confirmed as SNL’s upcoming musical guest: When and where to watch her
  • Trevor Noah surprises Bad Bunny by singing one of his songs in Spanish with a live band [VIDEO]
  • Bad Bunny wins Album of the Year and more Latino moments and wins at the GRAMMYS

That framing matters. SNL performances often flatten cultural references for mass appeal. Cardi did the opposite. She layered meaning into the sound, the styling, and the collaborators, trusting the audience to meet her there.

The Dominican flag outfit was heritage, not a costume

For “Bodega Baddie,” Cardi appeared in a look inspired by Dominican national dress and the Dominican Republic flag colors. The design came from Candice Cuoco, who pulled from folkloric silhouettes associated with Dominican traditional wear, including the pollera shape.

This was not just symbolic color blocking for television. The structure of the outfit referenced movement, volume, and rhythm, which are central to folkloric fashion. On a live TV stage, that matters. 

The fabric moved with the music, reinforcing the cultural story rather than distracting from it. To a casual viewer, the look read bold and patriotic. To Dominicans watching closely, the references were unmistakable. That dual readability is what separates homage from surface-level styling.

“Bodega Baddie” runs on Perico Ripiao DNA

Musically, “Bodega Baddie” lands with impact because it pulls directly from Perico Ripiao, also known as merengue típico. This is one of the oldest living forms of merengue, traditionally driven by accordion, tambora drum, and güira.

© Will Heath/NBC via Getty Images
. She layered meaning into the sound, the styling, and the collaborators, trusting the audience to meet her there.

Perico Ripiao is not background music. It is celebratory, fast, and technically demanding. It is meant for dancing, for storytelling, and for showing musical skill. By embedding that sound into a modern rap performance, Cardi was connecting the cultural environments that shaped her life.

Many people took to social media to share how they just discovered that Cardi has Dominican heritage at home.

Why El Prodigio changed everything

The performance crossed from inspired to authoritative when El Prodigio and his band joined Cardi onstage. El Prodigio is a respected figure in merengue típico, known for technical mastery and deep cultural roots. Bringing him into the performance did something crucial. It grounded the sound in lived tradition.

Instead of sampling Dominican culture from a distance, Cardi shared the spotlight with someone who carries it professionally. That choice flipped the usual power dynamic. The tradition was present, visible, and leading the rhythm.

Fashion fans clocked the details. Music fans clocked the intent

Post-show reactions split along familiar lines, but they all landed on the same conclusion. Fashion watchers focused on the craftsmanship of the custom look and its Dominican references. Music fans focused on the Perico Ripiao structure and El Prodigio’s presence.

What did not happen is just as important. This was not framed as a vague Latin moment. It was read as specifically Dominican and specifically deliberate.

Cardi’s “Bodega Baddie” set stands out because it treated Dominican culture as the foundation.

Between the Dominican flag-inspired fashion, the merengue típico musical backbone, and the decision to feature El Prodigio on one of the most visible live TV stages in America, Cardi sent the clear message that cultural roots are not something to reference quietly once success is secured. 

© ¡HOLA! Reproduction of this article and its photographs in whole or in part is prohibited, even when citing their source.

Other Topics
  • Latin Music
  • Snl
  • Cardi B
It May Interest you
Mary of Denmark’s Baltic tour: Iconic blue looks, historic tiaras, and sustainable royal style
Sydney Sweeney queen of confidence strikes again in scorching lingerie looks
Grammys 2026 red carpet LIVE: Karol G, Justin and Hailey Bieber, Lady Gaga and more looks of the night
Grammys 2026: See complete list of winners
Karol G turns heads in sheer icy blue corset gown at the 2026 Grammy Awards
Grammys 2026 red carpet LIVE: The best and most iconic looks of the night
Who is Morten Borg? A look at the life of Princess Mette-Marit’s controversial Ex
Knox Jolie-Pitt shows off his edgy street style with dyed blonde hair and Cinnamoroll sweatshirt
READ MORE
Cardi B confirmed as SNL’s upcoming musical guest: When and where to watch herBy Shirley Gomez
Trevor Noah surprises Bad Bunny by singing one of his songs in Spanish with a live band [VIDEO]By Shirley Gomez
Paris Jackson reveals she’s a Christian Nodal fan, and it's is proof music has no bordersBy Shirley Gomez
Shakira and Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl Halftime moment: Watch their 2020 performanceBy Shirley Gomez
LATEST NEWS
Private jets, helicopters, and a countryside retreat: Kim Kardashian and Lewis Hamilton’s surprise romance
Carolina Llano on Min & Mon, the quirky fashion brand bringing color and Colombian magic to New York
Joe Jonas reveals which Latin American cuisine he prefers to eat while in Miami
Marius Borg, son of Crown Princess Mette-Marit, arrested again hours before trial
12 Dark Nail Ideas Beyond Black: From Navy Blue to Emerald Green
Grammys 2026 red carpet LIVE: Karol G, Justin and Hailey Bieber, Lady Gaga and more looks of the night
Jessica Alba's vegetable-filled pozole recipe divides the internet
Natalia Boneta
© 2000-2026, HOLA S.L.
  • ¡HOLA! Spain
  • ¡HOLA! Americas
  • HELLO! UK
  • HELLO! US
  • HELLO! Canada
  • Privacy Policy
  • Privacy Settings
  • Do not sell or share my data
  • Legal Notice
  • Cookies Policy
  • Compliant channel
  • Contact