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Bad Bunny poses for Harper's Bazaar fashion magazine and the outfits he wears will blow your mind!

The author of the album "A Summer Without You" posed with the latest in men's fashion, which today, it seems, includes skirts and dresses. Here are the images!

August 17, 2022 8:42am

Updated: August 17, 2022 10:40am

Bad Bunny became the first Latino and solo male to make the cover of Harper’s Bazaar for women, and is once again demonstrating that when it comes to clothes, stereotypes and "assigned genders" mean nothing to him.

The Puerto Rican singer just posed for Harper's Bazaar fashion magazine in outfits that prompted some to mock him while others applauded the artist.

According to the post shared by the high fashion magazine on its official Instagram account, "the Puerto Rican superstar is the most streamed artist in the world and has achieved his meteoric success by staying true to his sound, his style, and the social causes that move him."

For the cover, Bad Bunny posed in a Louis Vuitton men's couture jacket, shirt, and skirt and Tiffany & Co. earrings and necklace.

Once again, the author of the album "Un verano sin ti" emphasized that men can also wear skirts and dresses.

Bad Bunny confessed to Harper's Bazaar: "Maybe at the beginning of my career, I tried to pretend I was someone I'm not, but I learned that's the way artists lose themselves."

In another interview with GQ magazine last May, Bad Bunny acknowledged that he finds it difficult to assign a gender to clothes and made it clear that he does not share the stereotypes of Latin culture, which he characterized as machista.

About his daring and taste for fashion, which some call eccentricities, Bad Bunny pointed out that "to a certain extent, fame and where I give me the confidence to do all these things."

The Puerto Rican assured that he is taking advantage of this moment in his life "where I can do whatever I want and wear whatever I want so that I can live life more authentically. I'm not doing it to make myself more famous or to get attention or to disrespect anyone".

Bad Bunny affirmed that although "people on the outside may think that I have a strategy or that I use this to get attention, but in reality, I just know who I am."

The interpreter of "Moscow Mule" is amidst a streak of musical successes, but he recently ventured into the world of gastronomy by opening his first restaurant in Miami.