Bad Bunny Fan Goes Viral for 'Bad Boney' Halloween Display Featuring 12Foot Skeleton in Underwear (Exclusive) Natalia SenanayakeOctober 29, 2025 at 7:30 AM 0 Kimmy Nguyen;Mario Sorrenti A Bad Bunny fan's elaborate skeleton display, dubbed "Bad Boney," has gone viral on social media The setup reflect...
- - Bad Bunny Fan Goes Viral for 'Bad Boney' Halloween Display Featuring 12-Foot Skeleton in Underwear (Exclusive)
Natalia SenanayakeOctober 29, 2025 at 7:30 AM
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Kimmy Nguyen;Mario Sorrenti
A Bad Bunny fan's elaborate skeleton display, dubbed "Bad Boney," has gone viral on social media
The setup reflects some of the Puerto Rican superstar's most iconic moments — from his Calvin Klein underwear ad to his Super Bowl halftime show announcement
PEOPLE spoke to Kimmy Nguyen all about her Halloween decorations this year and the hard work that went into creating them
A Bad Bunny superfan is going all out this Halloween to spotlight her favorite artist!
Kimmy Nguyen, a devoted fan of the Puerto Rican superstar, unveiled her intricate skeleton display on Instagram earlier this month, attracting hundreds of raving comments from like-minded admirers. The installation, dubbed "Bad Boney," features a number of skeletons that nod to some of Bad Bunny's most iconic moments from 2025.
Nguyen tells PEOPLE she's been brainstorming the idea since April, after she executed a Taylor Swift skeleton display last Halloween. As she runs a balloon decoration business called Weightless Innovations in addition to her full-time corporate job, she wanted to use her design skills to bring Bad Bunny to life at her Boston home this year.
"I wanted to do decorations dedicated to Benito," she says, referring to the artist's real name, Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio. "But I really specifically wanted to honor the latest album DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS because it's been on such heavy rotation for me since its [January] release."
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With the help of her dad and brother, she recreated a number of milestones Bad Bunny achieved this year through her skeletons, including his 2026 Super Bowl halftime show announcement, his highly-watched "Baile Inolvidable" music video, his Saturday Night Live performance in May and his appearance in Happy Gilmore 2 alongside Adam Sandler.
And for the grandest of them all, she dressed her 12-foot skeleton up in white a pair of white boxer briefs to reflect Bad Bunny's viral Calvin Klein campaign that dropped in March. That's her favorite skeleton in the entire display, she notes, as "he's just so handsome."
While curating the theme for each skeleton, Nguyen said one important thought she kept in mind was not only to honor Bad Bunny through the display, but to honor Puerto Rico as well, as she notes, "I myself am not even a little bit Latina."
"I've been discussing with my friends and my co-workers since at least April, about how I could respectfully represent an album that is so clearly a love letter to Puerto Rico without appropriating the culture," she tells PEOPLE.
Kimmy Nguyen
To do this, she included some "subtle nods to Puerto Rico" throughout the installation. This includes using light blue when painting her pumpkins, as that reflects the color of the original Puerto Rican flag before it changed in 1952.
"And then you'll see in the Super Bowl skeleton's hands, he's holding a football in one hand, and in the other hand, he's holding plantains," Nguyen adds, referring to the fruit that's used to make popular Puerto Rican dishes like mofongo and tostones.
Kimmy Nguyen; Apple Music/NFL/Roc Nation
Multiple skeletons are also wearing a woven straw hat, which is the traditional Puerto Rican pava that Bad Bunny has worn many times this past year, including throughout his historic residency in Puerto Rico this summer.
Nguyen notes all these little details were ways for her "to represent Puerto Rico and the album without doing the obvious thing of just putting a giant Puerto Rican flag on my house."
Kimmy Nguyen;Bad Bunny/Youtube
Of course, that much attention to detail requires a strenuous setup, with Nguyen noting that she and her dad were up until 4 A.M. installing all the skeletons.
She admits to having a bit of "anxiety" about her theme this year, as she was questioning if people who weren't fans of Bad Bunny would recognize what the decorations were trying to depict. However, she ended up getting a "sign" that she made the right choice.
Kimmy Nguyen
"It was the same night that Bad Bunny got announced as the Super Bowl performer," she recalls of the Sept. 28 news. "I felt like, when I put up all my skeletons that night, it was a sign from the world or from God that I had made the right choice."
Nguyen says she's only gotten "positive responses" to her skeleton display so far, adding, "I think the response from Puerto Ricans especially has been so kind and sweet, and so funny and welcoming, so I really appreciate that."
Kimmy Nguyen;Bad Bunny/Youtube
As for her Halloween plans this year, Nguyen says they're planning for 500 people to stop by her home. (She had 250 people visit last year for her Taylor Swift display.)
"Especially because on Halloween night, we give out full-size candy bars and juice, and then we have some other Benito-related surprises that are only going to happen on Halloween night that I'm going to start teasing," she adds.
Nguyen adds that she and her dad are currently building a replica of "La Casita" — the famous house that has served as a symbol of the album and Bad Bunny's summer residency — for trick-or-treaters to take photos at while visiting the display, in addition to the other surprises she has up her sleeve for Halloween night.
She's also added another skeleton that sings like Bad Bunny so guests can feel like they're at his concert if they missed out on his residency.
Kimmy Nguyen;Will Heath/NBC/Getty
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Nguyen says she hopes the display brings attention to a fundraiser she's involved in called Skeletons for St. Jude, which is raising money to fight against pediatric cancer.
"Anyone who stops by, there's going to be a QR code that people can scan to donate money," she says. "So if people are enjoying the display and want to help out, they can feel free to donate there."
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