Taz Skylar turns One Piece promotion into a playlist and a rivalry
taz skylar sat beside Iñaki Godoy in a Netflix studio in Hollywood, California, and treated a simple question like a character test: what would Luffy and Sanji actually listen to? The answer, built song by song and tease by tease, became a small window into how the cast is selling the next chapter of One Piece—not only with big public appearances, but with details that make their characters feel lived-in.
Iñaki Godoy and Taz Skylar imagine Luffy and Sanji through Latine music
Godoy, a Mexican actor who plays Monkey D. Luffy, drew a boundary around his character’s taste first. Luffy, he said, would not listen to reggaeton or sad music. He pictured Luffy “vibing with mariachis, ” pulled toward instruments and sound, and turning away from ballads he described as too sad. In Godoy’s version of Luffy, the music is “uplifting” and built for partying—closer to what you might hear at weddings, with cumbias and the kind of tracks people dance to.
That framing immediately created room for interruption and contrast. Taz Skylar, the Spanish-British actor who plays Sanji, jumped in with his own suggestion for Luffy: Bad Bunny. Godoy didn’t follow him there. He pushed back with his own examples of wedding-style songs, keeping the focus on a Luffy who wants noise, movement, and celebration rather than melancholy.
When the conversation shifted to Sanji, Skylar answered with more certainty. He pointed to Cuban salsa musician Fresto and even put on “Me Hace Daño Verte” to demonstrate the “tropical vibe” he thinks Sanji would be into. It was a performance of taste as much as an answer—an actor using a specific track to outline a character’s rhythm.
Hollywood, Mexico City, and Japan put One Piece cast promotion on the move
The playlist talk was only one piece of a broader promotional push for the upcoming season of One Piece. Godoy and Skylar have been traveling and participating in events designed to extend the show beyond a standard interview chair. The context around their studio conversation in Hollywood included the sense that the cast is using both classic press junkets and “out-of-the-box activities” to keep attention on the series and their roles.
Godoy’s recent promotional stops were described with concrete milestones: last month he participated in Mexican lucha libre and spent a full day doing One Piece-themed activities with fans in Mexico City. Then, “last week (Mar. 6), ” Godoy and Skylar were in Japan as part of the 2026 World Baseball Classic, where Godoy pitched a ball as part of the series’ promotion with the rest of the cast members. The effect is a promotional map that jumps across countries and formats, from fan-focused events to a globally watched sports stage.
Still, the Hollywood studio interview suggested a different kind of work—slower, more interpretive. Instead of stunts or stadium moments, the actors used music choices to explain how they see Luffy and Sanji from their point of view. It was character-building in public, with the playlist acting as shorthand for mood, energy, and what each actor wants the audience to notice.
Taz Skylar and Mackenyu frame Zoro and Sanji with respect, bickering, and a dinosaur
Another recent conversation put Taz Skylar in a different pairing: alongside Mackenyu, who plays Zoro. The focus there wasn’t music, but the relationship that fans follow for its constant friction. Zoro and Sanji, as described in the discussion, do not often see eye to eye, and their dynamic involves steady bickering and insult-slinging. Yet the actors framed that conflict as something that can still carry kinship.
Mackenyu highlighted an action beat from season two with a straightforward claim: Zoro and Sanji take on “a gigantic dinosaur, ” and “We kill it together. ” The image lands because it is both specific and cooperative, the kind of plot moment that forces two rivals into the same fight. Skylar used that same tension to argue for something underneath the arguments. He said he sees “symbolism” in the way they bicker while still having “the utmost absolute respect for each other, ” and added that they “secretly do have love for each other, ” something he believes viewers can see in the show.
Emily Rudd, who plays Nami, also appeared in the conversation, offering a line that treated the idea like a visual challenge: “If you squint! If you squint, you can see it. ” Skylar insisted he sees it when he watches. In that exchange, the show’s rivalry becomes a shared language between cast and audience—built from on-screen conflict, but explained through the actors’ insistence that respect remains in the frame.
Back in Hollywood, the playlist exercise captured the same approach in a quieter form. taz skylar didn’t just name an artist; he used a song to model how Sanji moves through the world. As the cast keeps promoting One Piece in public, the details—wedding music for Luffy, salsa for Sanji, a dinosaur killed together for Zoro and Sanji—keep returning to the same promise: the characters are larger than the events surrounding them, and the next season is being sold one specific choice at a time.