Shakira’s Copacabana show pumps $160m into Rio

Shakira’s free Copacabana concert delivered a $160 million economic boost to Rio, officials say.

Shakira’s Copacabana takeover on May 2 delivered a $160 million (£117m) windfall for Rio as two million people turned out for the free beach show.

Riotur and the Municipal Secretariat of Economic Development reported significant increases across hospitality, food services, transport and retail, supported by a large‑scale city operation covering security, logistics and public services.

In an open letter, Shakira explained the personal circumstances that shaped the show, saying it was rooted in the moment her life “collapsed all at once” and she had to rebuild from the ground up.

She wrote that she spent months questioning why she should return to the stage — and why Rio — before realising the answer lay in waking up to a life she no longer recognised.

She described continuing to work and parent through the upheaval, saying responsibilities “don’t pause for women, even when everything else does.”

Shakira wrote: “From that morning until today, I’ve had to entirely reinvent myself.

“As a mother, as a provider, as an artist, as a woman.

“And from that learning process, sometimes messy, sometimes illuminated by a kind of clarity only pain can bring, this tour was born: Las mujeres ya no lloran (Women No Longer Cry.)

“It’s not a cry for revenge, nor a flag of victimhood. It’s exactly the opposite.

“It’s the quiet realization that crying is no longer enough, that there are children to raise, bills to pay, lives to push forward.

“And that it can be done, and it can be done with dignity.”

She said she began seeing her own experiences reflected in fans who shared their stories after shows.

Shakira wrote: “As I travelled the world with this tour, I started to see my own face reflected in many others.

“Women who waited for me after shows to tell me, in two minutes and with shining eyes, their own version of the same story.

“Women who were alone but not defeated.

“And I understood that what I thought was a deeply personal experience was actually the shared biography of an entire generation of Latinas.

“Because the Latina woman has changed.”

She said the connection deepened when she learned that 20 million single mothers in Brazil are raising families largely on their own, prompting the realisation: “wow, I’m one of them.”

Shakira described Rio as a place where nature and culture emphasise what matters — the ocean, the moon, the music — and said Copacabana feels like an “altar” in a world dominated by screens and conflict.

She ended her letter by inviting fans to meet her “where the human tide blends with the tide of the sea”.

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