Green Day tells ICE agents to quit their jobs ahead of Super Bowl show

TheSuper Bowl halftime showmay shape up to be a bigger talker than the game itself - at least if a loud corner of the internet gets its wish.

USA TODAY

While much of the debate (and excitement) centers on the selection ofPuerto Rican artist Bad Bunnyas the headliner, punk rock fans are eager to see how and whatopening band Green Daywill do with its moment in the national limelight.

Fans got their first taste of what's to come ahead of Sunday. Playing at a pregame party in San Francisco on Feb. 6,Green Day's frontman Billy Joe Armstrongused the moment to give some pointed career advice to the Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers expected at the game. "To all the ICE agents out there, wherever you are, quit your [expletive] job. Quit that [expletive] job you have."

<p style=Bad Bunny has touched down in the Bay Area ahead of his highly anticipated, and contested, Apple Music Super Bowl LX Halftime Show on Sunday, Feb. 8, in Santa Clara, California.

The Puerto Rican superstar appeared at the Apple Music press conference with hosts Zane Lowe and Ebro Darden to chat all about what fans can expect from his solo halftime show debut (he previously hit the stage with Jennifer Lopez and Shakira in 2020).

"I feel more excited about all of the people than thinking about me," he said onstage, visibly nervous, and taking it all in. "My family and all my friends."

Scroll through for more photos of star sightings this Super Bowl weekend.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=From left: Charlie Puth, Coco Jones, and Brandi Carlile attend the Super Bowl LX Pregame & Apple Music Super Bowl LX Halftime Show press conference at Moscone Center West on Feb. 5, 2026, in San Francisco.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Octavia Spencer visits SiriusXM on Radio Row at Super Bowl LX on Feb. 4, 2026, in San Francisco, California.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=WWE Champion CM Punk

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Caroline Fenton on the SiriusXM radio set at the Super Bowl LX media center in San Francisco on Feb. 4, 2026.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Guillermo Rodriguez attends Opening Night for Super Bowl LX at San Jose Convention Center on Feb. 2, 2026. <p style=Too Short and E-40 during the Bay Area host committee press conference at the Super Bowl LX media center at the Moscone Center on Feb. 2, 2026.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Tom Brady attends Madden Bowl at Super Bowl LX on Feb. 6, 2026 in San Francisco. Alix Earle attends Madden Bowl at Super Bowl LX on Feb. 6, 2026 in San Francisco. Ciara attends Madden Bowl at Super Bowl LX on Feb. 6, 2026 in San Francisco. Teyana Taylor attends Madden Bowl at Super Bowl LX on Feb. 6, 2026 in San Francisco. Megan Moroney attends Madden Bowl at Super Bowl LX on Feb. 6, 2026 in San Francisco. (L-R) Jessica Betts and Niecy Nash-Betts attend as Tequila Don Julio 1942 Gets Guests Ready Pa'l Show at a Private Celebration during Super Bowl Weekend on Feb. 6, 2026, in San Francisco. (L-R) MJ Acosta-Ruiz, Brie Bella, Boston Rob and Nikke Bella pose for a photo at SiriusXM on Radio Row at Super Bowl LX on Feb. 6, 2026, in San Francisco. <p style=Coco Jones

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Brandi Carlile

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" />

Bad Bunny, Alix Earle, more stars flock to Bay Area for Super Bowl 60

Bad Bunnyhas touched down in the Bay Area ahead of his highly anticipated, and contested, Apple Music Super Bowl LX Halftime Show on Sunday, Feb. 8, in Santa Clara, California.The Puerto Rican superstar appeared at the Apple Music press conference with hosts Zane Lowe and Ebro Darden to chat all about what fans can expect from his solo halftime show debut (he previously hit the stage with Jennifer Lopez and Shakira in 2020)."I feel more excited about all of the people than thinking about me," he said onstage, visibly nervous, and taking it all in. "My family and all my friends."Scroll through for more photos of star sightings this Super Bowl weekend.

Formed in California in 1987, Green Day - consisting of frontman Armstrong, bassist Mike Dirnt and drummer Tré Cool - has been putting out albums for decades and is often credited with reinvigorating the punk rock genre in the U.S. mainstream in the 1990s and 2000s.

Why are fans expecting something explosive? The trio isn't exactly known for being quiet about the political climate of the day - they are a punk band that has been performing since pre-9/11, after all.

Armstrong, historically, does not shy away from an FCC fine or contentious topic. In fact, his most recent public criticisms of the Trump administration's immigration enforcement actions will beless than a month oldat the time of the big game.

Green Day members Billie Joe Armstrong (C), Mike Dirnt (R), and Tre Cool (L) pose on their newly unveiled star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame during a ceremony in Hollywood, California, on May 1, 2025.

From offending an entire city so badly thatlocal stations boycotted their musicto dropping so many expletives on live radio that even shock jock Howard Stern clutched his pearls, Green Day has been nothing if not consistent in its nearly two decades as a band. Here's a look back at some of its most controversial and memorable performances.

2001 Howard Stern performance

Billie Joe Armstrong performs with his band "Green Day" on opening night of their latest tour in Dallas, Texas on January 11, 2001.

In an early show of peak Green Day rebellion, the band performed a now-legendary act of defiance during a 2001 Howard Stern performance.

According to a 2020 retelling by Stern, the show's producers spoke with Green Day's label ahead of their appearance to confirm which songs the band planned to perform. Because Stern's show aired on public radio at the time, the conversation may have addressed using profanities on-air. The band misunderstood this as an attempt to dictate what they were able to play, said Stern, and in a protest of censorship, proceeded todeliver one of its most expletive-filled performancesto date. ("Platypus (I Hate You)," if you were wondering).

"Actually, that song was kind of a '(expletive) you' to the FCC and everything else in censorship," Stern said. "You know, Green Day takes that (as) seriously as I do too." Even so, the band didn't return to the show for another 15 years after its stunt.

The entire 'American Idiot' album that dropped in 2004

Billie Joe Armstrong of the band "Green Day" introduces his musical "American Idiot" at the American Theatre Wing's 64th annual Tony Awards ceremony in New York June 13, 2010.

"American Idiot" includes hits like the titular "American Idiot," "Holiday," "Jesus of Suburbia," and "Favorite Son" with pointed and vocal criticisms of the Bush administration, American military action in Iraq and mainstream early aughts American culture as a whole.

When it dropped in 2004, "American Idiot" was a conversation piece, both as a chart topper and a scathing rebuke of the White House administration's political ideology. Alongside artists like The Chicks (formerly The Dixie Chicks) and P!nk, Green Day became known as one of the era's biggest Bush critics.

The album later became a full-fledged Broadway musical.

2016 American Music Awards

Musician Billie Joe Armstrong of Green Day performs onstage during the 2016 American Music Awards at Microsoft Theater on November 20, 2016, in Los Angeles, California.

Less than two weeks afterDonald Trumpwas elected to his first term, Green Day led a chant of "No Trump, no KKK, no fascist USA"at the 2016 American Music Awards. The refrain has endured and been repeated at many of the band's subsequent performances.

Armstrong made his view of Trump clear before the election, comparing the then-presidential candidate to Hitler in an August 2016 interview with the magazineKerrang.

"He just said, 'You have no options and I'm the only one, and I'm going to take care of it myself.' I mean, that's Hitler, man," he said, referring to Trump's speech accepting the Republican nomination. "I don't even know how else to explain it," he continued. "I wish I were over exaggerating. And sometimes maybe I do over exaggerate with Bush. But with Trump, I just can't wait 'til he's gone."

"Troubled Times," 2017

After the infamous "Unite the Right" rally in August 2017, known best for images of white supremacists carrying tiki torches, Green Day dropped a music video for the song "Troubled Times," which included clips from the rally and references to Trump.

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Heposted to Facebookat the time, "I feel like what happened in Charlottesville goes beyond the point of anger. It makes me sad and desperate. shocked. I (expletive) hate racism more than anything."

iHeartRadio Music Festival 2019

Green Day performs during the iHeartRadio Music Festival at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. September 20, 2019.

While it's unclear if it's the first time the band opted for what would become a very familiar lyric change, Green Day's performance at the2019 iHeartRadio Music Festivalmarked one of the earlier times that Armstrong swapped the lyrics in the song "American Idiot."

Instead of the original "I'm not a part of a redneck agenda," which at the time it was written referred to the Bush administration, Armstrong sang "I'm not a part of a MAGA agenda." The swap has since become fairly standard in the band's performances.

Renouncing US citizenship after Dobbs 2022

Billie Joe Armstrong of US rock band Green Day performs during the Formula One United States Grand Prix weekend, at the Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas, on October 21, 2022.

Armstrong expressed disgust at the overturning of Roe v. Wade during a London show in June 2022, telling the audience he wanted to renouncehis U.S. citizenship.

"(Expletive) America, I'm renouncing my citizenship. I'm coming here," he said. "There's just too much stupid in the world to go back to that miserable excuse for a country," Armstrong added. "Oh, I'm not kidding. You're going to get a lot of me in the coming days."

Armstrong still appears to live in the U.S. as of 2026, so it seems the statement may have been more symbolic than literal.

'Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve' 2023

Billie Joe Armstrong of Green Day performs onstage during Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve with Ryan Seacrest 2020 Hollywood Party on November 23, 2019, in Los Angeles, California

While the lyric swap to "I'm not part of a MAGA agenda" became something of a mainstay for the band during Trump's first presidency, Armstrong broadcast the refrain to perhaps the largest audience yetduring "Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve" in the final hours of 2023.

Trump was beginning his campaign for re-election at the time and Green Day had just returned from a hiatus. Trump-aligned figures, including Elon Musk and Lara Trump, criticized the move on social media.

In later renditions of songs from "American Idiot," Armstrong swapped in more names from Trump's orbit, including inserting"I'm not a part of the Elon agenda"into the titular song during a South African concert andinvoking Stephen Miller in "Holiday"alongside lyrics describing government-sanctioned violence.

Months before that, in August 2023, the band alsoreleased a limited-time shirtwith a picture of Trump's mugshot with the phrase "nimrod" printed across the front, a reference to its 1997 album by the same name. The money raised from the T-shirt sales was donated to charities helping the victims of the Maui wildfires. The sales purchased 50,000 meals for the Greater Good Music wildfire relief,according to the charity.

Coachella 2025

Billie Joe Armstrong arrives on stage for Green Day's headlining set on the Coachella stage at the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in Indio, Calif., Saturday, April 12, 2025.

If you haven't caught on by now, Green Day likes to keep hits from its original protest album "American Idiot" fresh by switching lyrics up here and there.

Armstrong did just that at the 2025 Coachella festivalwhen he tweaked the lyrics to the song "Jesus of Suburbia," singing, "Runnin' away from pain, like the kids from Palestine / Tales from another broken home." The original lyrics were "Runnin' away from pain when you've been victimized."

While the reference to the war in Gaza caused the biggest stir, the band took several other creative liberties during their Coachella run, such as swapping the phrase "Am I (stupid) or am I just overjoyed?" also from"Jesus of Suburbia"to "Am I (stupid) or am I just JD Vance?" and the ever-popular "I'm not part of the MAGA agenda."

Armstrong later added, "Don't let these political bastards get you down. We don't stand for fascism."

2026 iHeartRadio ALTer EGO

Tré Cool and Billie Joe Armstrong of Green Day perform onstage at the 2026 iHeartRadio ALTer EGO presented by Capital One at The Kia Forum on January 17, 2026 in Inglewood, California.

Green Day apparently isn't shy when performing at iHeartRadio events. The band took the opportunity to criticize the current administrationas recently as Jan. 17,when they performed a fiery finale at the 2026 iHeartRadio ALTer EGO concert.

"Hey, everybody, please look out for your neighbors. Make sure you take care of each other. Make sure you love one another, protect each other," Armstrong said between the final verses of the finale song "Time of Your Life."

Contributor: USA TODAY's Terry Moseley

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Green Day's controversial history: What to expect at Super Bowl

Green Day tells ICE agents to quit their jobs ahead of Super Bowl show

TheSuper Bowl halftime showmay shape up to be a bigger talker than the game itself - at least if a loud corner of the in...
Cardi B praises Bad Bunny's upcoming Super Bowl halftime moment, opens up about tour and new music

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — As Bad Bunny prepares to headline theSuper Bowl halftime show,Cardi B says she's proud to see him step onto the world's biggest stage, praising his cultural impact andwillingness to speak outduring heightened immigration arrests.

"I'm proud of everything that he's been standing up for against ICE and everything,"Cardi Btold The Associated Press ahead of her performance at Michael Rubin's star-studdedFanatics Super Bowl Partyon Saturday, which featured performances by SZA, Don Toliver and Travis Scott.

The Grammy winner spoke with admiration and unity about Bad Bunny, who appeared with J Balvin on her chart-topping hit, "I Like It." The collaboration helped propel Latin music further into the global mainstream.

Bad Bunnyis set to take the Super Bowl stage on Sunday, one week after winning album of the year at the 2026 Grammys for"Debí Tirar Más Fotos."It is thefirst time an all-Spanish-language albumhas taken home the top prize.

At the Grammys, the Puerto Rican superstar said "ICE out" while accepting an award, criticizing President Donald Trump's administration for its dramatic expansion of immigration arrests.

"It just feels like everything is aligned right now," said Cardi B, who is of Afro-Caribbean descent with roots in Trinidad and the Dominican Republic. "It just shows how Hispanics, Latinos. ... We standing. They standing. We all standing."

With Super Bowl buzz swirling around "I Like It" and the possibility of surprise guests, Cardi B was asked what it would mean to share the stage with Bad Bunny on such a massive platform.

"That'd be exciting," she said.

As Bad Bunny readies for his halftime moment, Cardi B is preparing for the launch of her highly anticipated tour, which opens Feb. 11 in Palm Desert, California. The run marks her first headlining arena tour and her first tour in six years.

The tour arrives on the heels of her sophomore album,"Am I the Drama,"just four months after the birth of her first child with New England Patriots wide receiverStefon Diggs, her fourth child overall.

Her preparation has centered on long rehearsal days that double as physical training, building momentum and confidence ahead of life on the road, Cardi B said.

"The rehearsing is my workout," she said. "I'm just doing my job."

With her recent project connecting strongly with fans and plans to work on her new album while on tour, Cardi B said the momentum has sharpened her excitement for returning to the stage.

"I feel really confident," she said. "Knowing the fans are going to be there and know the music. It's exciting."

Cardi B praises Bad Bunny's upcoming Super Bowl halftime moment, opens up about tour and new music

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — As Bad Bunny prepares to headline theSuper Bowl halftime show,Cardi B says she's proud to see h...

The2026 Winter Olympicsofficially began on February 6 at Milan's San Siro stadium, but instead of uniting viewers in celebration,Mariah Carey's opening ceremonyperformance quickly divided the internet.

Invited as one of the headline performers for the Milan-Cortina Games, Carey sang the Italian classic,Nel blu, dipinto di blu,better known asVolare,before transitioning into her own song,Nothing Is Impossible.

While some viewers praised the ambition, otherscriticizedthe performance, questioning her song choice and why an American singer was chosen to open Italy's biggest global moment.

"Absolutelyunbelievablethat Italy chose an American to open. So bizarre," wrote one netizen.

Mariah Carey took the 2026 Winter Olympics stage in Milan with an Italian classic that immediately divided viewers

Image credits:Elsa/Getty Images

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Careyappeared early in the ceremony, standing alone beneath a spotlight as she deliveredVolareentirely in Italian.

In a conversation withVogue,thesingershared, "It's one of the largest and most anticipated global events, and being part of a moment that brings the world together like that is a great honor."

She further explained thatVolarehas long been a favorite song of hers.

Image credits:Sarah Stier/Getty Images

"Rearranging it and learning to sing it in Italian was definitely a challenge, but it felt important to honor the host country in a meaningful way," she said.

"I also chose my song 'Nothing Is Impossible' because its message is hopeful and uplifting, which felt perfectly aligned with the spirit of theOlympic Gamesand what they represent."

However, the restrained staging and slow tempo caught many viewersoff guard.

Social media quickly filled with confusion and sarcasm.

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"I think I've never seen anything funnier," one person wrote, while another bluntly commented, "It's not Christmas yet," referencing Carey's long-standingassociationwith the holiday season.

Others questioned her emotional engagement, with one viewer adding, "She stood there looking afraid while she was lip-syncing."

At the same time, fans pushed back hard against thecriticism.

"She's American and a world star, not Italian," one supporter wrote.

"She got invited and performed a classic song from your country, in your language, in front of millions ofpeople. People don't realize how difficult that is."

Beyond her performance, the 56-year-old's diamond look also became the night's most-talked-about visual moment

Image credits:Xavier Laine/Getty Images

Carey stepped onto theOlympic stagewearing more than 300 carats of diamonds valued at roughly $15 million.

She paired the jewelry with a custom winter-white bustier gown by Roberto Cavalli designer Fausto Puglisi. The ensemble featured a feathered stole draped over her shoulders as emerald-cut diamond jewelry caught the stadium lights.

Her jewelry alone became the focal point of her appearance as the massive necklace pendant weighed over 20 carats, while her bracelet and drop earrings added tens of carats more.

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However, her statuesquefashion momentwas largely criticized by netizens who felt the styling worked against her.

"Pretty embarrassing to be honest—was she stuffed on a pole so she couldn't move?" one critic wrote, suggesting the rigid look made the performance feel distant.

Another added, "Your hair was sprayed stiff, you lip-synced most of it; not your best performance."

Carey'sVolareperformance sparked debate over cultural respect, authenticity, and lip-sync accusations

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Carey's decision to performVolarebecame the most polarizing element of the opening night.

Written and first performed by Domenico Modugno in 1958, the song is one of Italy's most treasured musical exports, famously winning two Grammy Awards and topping charts worldwide.

Some viewers felt Carey's rendition lacked warmth. "Playback and very bad interpretation of one of the most famous Italian songs. Shame," one person wrote.

Image credits:Sarah Stier/Getty Images

Yet defenders argued that the scrutiny ignored the scale of the challenge.

"What's funny about it?" one user asked. "Every singer usually has a teleprompter, especially when singing in a different language they don't speak." Another added,

"Performing in Italian, on Italian soil, at the Olympics—only the Queen could pull this off," added a third. "The Winter Olympics just got its golden moment!"

Besides Carey, the Winter Olympics inauguration night also featured performances from Italian artists

Image credits:Xavier Laine/Getty Images

Credo di non aver mai visto niente di più divertente sto morendopic.twitter.com/wz6pdC3BMz

— Nicolò (@sononicolo_)February 6, 2026

As the ceremony progressed, Italian artists Andrea Bocelli and Laura Pausini took the stage and were met with noticeably warmer responses.

Bocelli's performance ofNessun Dormaduring the lighting of the Olympic flame emerged as one of the ceremony's most widely praised moments.

"Greatest song ever. Andrea is the best voice for that song. Awesome," wrote one user.

The Milan-Cortina Games are set to continue through February 22. You can watch the Games and Paralympics onNBCandPeacock.

"Playback and very bad interpretation of one of the most famous Italian song," wrote one netizen

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“Embarrasing”: Viewers React After Mariah Carey Performs Italian Song At Winter Olympics

The2026 Winter Olympicsofficially began on February 6 at Milan's San Siro stadium, but instead of uniting viewers in...
Washington Post publisher Will Lewis announces departure, following mass layoffs

By Jasper Ward

WASHINGTON, Feb 7 (Reuters) - Washington Post publisher and CEO Will Lewis is leaving the newspaper, it announced on Saturday after carrying out widespread layoffs this week.

"During my tenure, difficult decisions have been taken in ​order to ensure the sustainable future of The Post so it can for many years ahead publish high-quality ‌nonpartisan news to millions of customers each day," Lewis wrote in a message to staff that was shared online by the newspaper's White House bureau chief, Matt ‌Viser.

Lewis, a former Dow Jones chief executive and publisher of the Wall Street Journal, was appointed to the role at the Washington Post in 2023 as the newspaper was suffering steep financial losses. He took over from Fred Ryan, who had served as publisher and CEO for nearly a decade.

Jeff D'Onofrio, chief financial officer of the newspaper owned byJeff Bezos, will serve as acting publisher and ⁠CEO, the Post said. He joined the ‌newspaper last June after serving in various roles at Google and Yahoo, among other companies.

"Customer data will drive our decisions, sharpening our edge in delivering what is most valuable to our audiences," D'Onofrio ‍wrote on Saturday in an email to Post staffers.

Unions representing Post employees said Lewis' departure was necessary.

"Will Lewis's exit is long overdue," The Washington Post Guild said in a statement. "His legacy will be the attempted destruction of a great American journalism institution. But it's not too late to ​save the Post. Jeff Bezos must immediately rescind these layoffs or sell the paper to someone willing to invest in ‌its future."

Bezos, who bought the newspaper in 2013, characterized the leadership change as an "extraordinary opportunity" for the newspaper.

"The Post has an essential journalistic mission and an extraordinary opportunity," Bezos said, according to the Post. "Each and every day our readers give us a roadmap to success."

The departure of Lewis came days after the Post cut about one-third of its employees in a move that affected all departments at the newspaper. He was criticized for his absence during the layoffs on Wednesday, which the newspaper's former executive editor, Marty Baron, ⁠described as "among the darkest days" in the newspaper's history.

During his time at ​the Post, Lewis oversaw waves of staff reductions and had to deal with ​the loss of hundreds of thousands of subscribers after the newspaper stopped endorsing U.S. presidential candidates and shifted its opinion section's emphasis to a libertarian bent.

Lewis' Post tenure was rocky even before the subscriber losses.

After ‍a 2024 disagreement with then-executive ⁠editor Sally Buzbee led to her departure, Lewis faced a newsroom outcry over his attempt to hire British journalist and former colleague Robert Winnett, who was linked to a phone-hacking controversy that also involved Lewis. Meanwhile, Lewis' most ballyhooed initiative, ⁠a so-called third newsroom, never came to fruition.

Former Wall Street Journal editor Matt Murray eventually was named the permanent replacement for Buzbee, who is now ‌Reuters' news editor for the United States and Canada.

(Reporting by Jasper Ward in Washington and Helen Coster in ‌New York; Edting by Sergio Non, Rod Nickel and Andrea Ricci )

Washington Post publisher Will Lewis announces departure, following mass layoffs

By Jasper Ward WASHINGTON, Feb 7 (Reuters) - Washington Post publisher and CEO Will Lewis is leaving the newsp...
Bradley Steven Perry and Natasha Bure Bradley Steven Perry/Instagram

Bradley Steven Perry/Instagram

NEED TO KNOW

  • Natasha Bure opened up about married life with husband Bradley Steven Perry while chatting exclusively with PEOPLE at the 33rd Annual Movieguide Awards Gala on Feb. 6

  • She said it "feels like one big sleepover"

  • Natasha and Bradley tied the knot in Malibu, Calif., in September 2025

Natasha Bure Perryis loving her married era.

Nearly five months aftertying the knotwith husbandBradley Steven Perry, Natasha shared an update on married life while chatting exclusively with PEOPLE at the 33rd Annual Movieguide Awards Gala in Los Angeles on Friday, Feb. 6.

The 27-year-old daughter ofFull HousestarCandace Cameron Buresaid this chapter with Bradley has been "the best."

"I married the love of my life, my best friend," she told PEOPLE. "So every day feels like one big sleepover that I'm obsessed with. So it's been great."

Bradley Steven Perry and Natasha Bure Perry Natasha Perry/Instagram

Natasha Perry/Instagram

Natasha also revealed that the couple hopes to do some traveling in the near future — including taking a belated honeymoon.

"We really want to go to Japan, and Bradley's never been to Italy. So we really want to go over to Europe and travel as much as we can," she shared. "We didn't take a honeymoon right after our wedding, so hopefully in the summer we'll be able to do something fun."

Natasha and Bradley, an actor known for his role inGood Luck Charlie, said "I do" in front of 150 loved ones at Calamigos Ranch in Malibu, California, on Sept. 14, 2025. The couple told PEOPLE at the time that it was "almost impossible to put into words" what their wedding experience felt like.

"It's surreal and overwhelming in all the best ways. There is nothing better than marrying your best friend," they said. "This day is also so much more than just a celebration of our love; it's a reminder of how blessed we are to be surrounded by the most incredible family and friends — people who have cheered us on, shaped us, and stood by us."

Bradley Steven Perry, Natasha Bure Perry and Candace Cameron Bure Anthony Avellano/Deadline via Getty

Anthony Avellano/Deadline via Getty

At the time, Natasha also shared her reflections on what marriage means to her, telling PEOPLE, "I'm choosing Bradley every single day — in the fun and exciting times, and also the quiet or harder moments. We're building a life together, side by side."

Never miss a story — sign up for PEOPLE'sfree daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

She added, "We both have so many dreams and aspirations that we get to conquer as one now. Bradley is my best friend, and I'm so lucky to get a partner for life through it all."

Candace Camerone Bure and Natasha Bure Perry at the 33rd Annual Movieguide Awards Gala on Feb. 6, 2026 Michael Tullberg/Getty

Michael Tullberg/Getty

In a particularly sentimental wedding detail, Candace, 49, served as her daughter's "something blue" on the big day. The actress wore a strapless blue gown with a rose detail on the bodice for the occasion.

"She means the absolute world to me, so having her honored in that way felt so right," Natasha said of her mom.

During a joint interview withEntertainment Tonightin November, the mother-daughter duo reminisced about the wedding. Candace described the special day as "incredible."

"She was a beautiful bride," she added of Natasha, "and her husband is a wonderful, beautiful person, and so I think the day was exactly what they were hoping it would be. And that's all a mom wants."

"[There were] a lot of tears," Natasha chimed in. "Specifically, right before I walked down the aisle — I think I just had so much bottled up, and right before I went on, I was just sobbing. Lots of tears."The 33rd Annual Movieguide Awards will air on Great American Family on March 5 at 8 p.m. ET.

Read the original article onPeople

Natasha Bure Says Married Life with Husband Bradley Steven Perry 'Feels Like One Big Sleepover' (Exclusive)

Bradley Steven Perry/Instagram NEED TO KNOW Natasha Bure opened up about married life with husband Bradley Steven Perry while chatting e...

 

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