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Vanessa Hernández, known as his artistic name Nezza, sang a Spanish interpretation of the National Hymn of the United States In the Dodger Stadium on Saturday night, and she said the team wanted to do not.
Now, the singer says that since then she has received death threats for her performance.
Nezza, with a Dominican Republic shirt while acting, published a video about Tiktok from a team employee who said: “Today we are going to do the song in English.”
Nezza decided to sing the Spanish version anyway, saying in a posterior Tiktok video that was in response to the presence of immigration and customs control (ICE) of the United States in Los Angeles that has led to protests and disturbances in the city.
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Nezza said he has received death threats since his Spanish interpretation of the national anthem. (Getty images/imagn)
She said the reaction she has received has been harmful.
“That is just the Internet. That will come with something like that. Anything that involves politics will include a death threat here and there,” Nezza told TMZ Sports.
“The main thing I have seen is that it is disrespectful. I do not think it is disrespectful, because the lyrics are still the same exact lyrics as the English version. If both songs became a music video, it would be the exact music video.
“I am a proud American. I was born here, raised here, my dreams come true here in Los Angeles, I think being a proud American and who still wants better for your country can still be the same truth, and I think people are forgetting that.”

Nezza attends a projection of creators in support of “IF” in the London West Hollywood in Beverly Hills on May 9, 2024 in West Hollywood, California. (Jesse Grant/Getty images for Paramount Pictures)
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Nezza said he also received the support of celebrities in the Latin community, which “exceeds” hate.
“It has really been sweet to see the people who idolize being on the right side of the story …”, he said. “I already knew in my heart that what I did was correct, but this only confirms it triple.”
In the aforementioned Tiktok, Nezza said that “he felt he needed to” sing the Spanish version, but now “he does not feel welcome” in the Dodger Stadium.
Other professional sports teams based in Los Angeles have adopted a position, including the Angely City FC of the NWSL, which gave fans “Immigrant City Football Club” t -shirts in their game on Saturday. The players were also heating with the shirts before their match to show support to those who protested.

A general view of the Plaza del Jardín before the MLB game between the Dodgers of Los Angeles and Los Bravos de Atlanta at the Dodger Stadium on May 5, 2024. (Kiyoshi Mio-USA Today Sports)
The Spanish interpretation of the Spanish anthem of Nezza arrived on the day of numerous protests of “no kings”, which were against the military parade in Washington, DC, which coincided with the president Donald TrumpBirthday, throughout the country.
Trump’s birthday was also the celebration of the 250th birthday of the United States army.