Gabriela Berlingeri steps back into the spotlight after Grammys and Super Bowl buzz
Gabriela Berlingeri, the Puerto Rican jewelry designer long associated with global music star Bad Bunny, is back in the public conversation this week after a pair of high-visibility moments tied to the 2026 Grammys and the Super Bowl halftime show. The renewed attention has centered less on a confirmed relationship update and more on a familiar question: what role does Berlingeri play in Bad Bunny’s world now—and what has she built on her own?
The short answer is that Berlingeri has increasingly been treated as a brand-builder in her own right, even as public curiosity keeps circling back to her past with the artist.
Who Gabriela Berlingeri is
Berlingeri is a Puerto Rican creative best known for founding the accessories label Diciembre Veintinueve, a line that has grown from viral jewelry drops into a broader lifestyle footprint. Her work sits at the intersection of fashion and pop culture, with collections that lean on bold metals, beach-ready styling, and a mix of limited releases and signature staples.
Her public profile rose sharply during the years she was linked to Bad Bunny, but she has continued to develop her business identity with shoots, collaborations, and product expansion that keep her visible even when her personal life stays quiet.
The Grammys moment that reignited chatter
The latest wave of attention began after Bad Bunny’s major Grammys night on Sunday, Feb. 1, 2026 (ET). In the days that followed, Berlingeri shared supportive reactions on social media, which many fans read as a sign that the two remain close.
What’s not publicly confirmed is any romantic reconciliation. There has been no joint statement, no official confirmation from either side, and no clear on-the-record update about their relationship status. The public read has been driven by proximity to major career milestones and small, highly scrutinized gestures.
Super Bowl weekend and the “public” question
The conversation accelerated after the Super Bowl on Sunday, Feb. 8, 2026 (ET), when Berlingeri again appeared to show support around the halftime performance. That timing—one week after the Grammys—created a neat narrative arc that people online quickly labeled as a “going public” moment.
But the available details point to a softer reality: continued goodwill and public support, not necessarily a confirmed reunion. The bigger takeaway is how major events with massive audiences can instantly reframe a private connection, even when nothing concrete has changed.
What her brand is doing as attention rises
As Berlingeri trends, interest in her label has climbed alongside the celebrity coverage. Diciembre Veintinueve has been highlighted in recent fashion roundups as a Latina-owned brand to watch, and the business has signaled growth beyond jewelry—expanding into adjacent categories like swimwear and limited-edition drops.
That matters because it changes the center of gravity. For a long time, Berlingeri was framed mainly as a partner of someone famous. Now, she’s increasingly treated as a founder with a product story, a visual identity, and a loyal customer base—making the relationship speculation only one layer of her public presence.
A quick timeline of the week
| Date (ET) | Moment | Why it mattered |
|---|---|---|
| Feb. 1, 2026 | Grammys night | Major career milestone sparked renewed interest in his inner circle |
| Feb. 2–3, 2026 | Supportive social posts | Fans interpreted the messages as a signal of closeness |
| Feb. 8, 2026 | Super Bowl halftime | A second high-profile weekend amplified the chatter |
| Feb. 9–10, 2026 | Ongoing commentary | Attention shifted to what’s confirmed vs. what’s inferred |
What to watch next
If there’s a real update—professional or personal—it will likely show up in one of three ways: a clear public appearance together, a direct statement, or a credible, consistent pattern of shared events over time. Short of that, the story is likely to keep cycling through speculation whenever either one headlines a major stage.
For Berlingeri specifically, the more durable development is business momentum. When public curiosity spikes, brands often see measurable effects—search interest, product sell-through, and new audience reach. If her label continues expanding collections and collaborations in the coming months, the spotlight could translate into longer-term growth that stands apart from any relationship narrative.
Sources consulted: People, Glamour, Cosmopolitan, E! News