From a Michael Jackson-inspired opening to DeLorean-coded visuals, surprise guests and a closing stretch that brought the show full circle, Fuerza Regida launched their first-ever U.S. stadium trek with a performance built on memory, ambition and sheer force.
When Jesús Ortiz Paz (JOP) and crew opened their This Is Our Dream Stadium Tour at San Diego’s Petco Park on Thursday night (June 18), the San Bernardino band unveiled the most fully realized live production of their career on the biggest domestic stage they’ve played to date. Over the last several years, the group has pushed corridos into a more elastic, more commercially dominant and more visually ambitious space. In front of approximately 44,000 fans, that evolution came into focus in a show designed as much to trace their rise as to celebrate it.
Framed by a Back to the Future-inspired concept, the production moved through the group’s past, present and future with a black pickup-truck take on the DeLorean, archival footage, family skits, fashion-forward flourishes, local symbolism and well-placed guest appearances — transforming a catalog-driven concert into something closer to a live origin story. It also left room for plenty of swagger, mischief and the unapologetic attitude that runs through Fuerza Regida’s music.
That sense of narrative gave the night much of its shape. The set moved from early breakout records like “Radicamos en South Central” and “Sigo Chambeando” through the songs that expanded the band’s reach, including “CH y La Pizza,” “Bebe Dame,” “TQM,” “Harley Quinn” and “Qué Onda,” before arriving at newer material from their No. 2 Billboard 200-charting 111XPANTIA (2025) and a preview of the unreleased “67.”
Even before the first note, Petco Park was already buzzing with hometown and cross-border energy, as fans in Mexican jerseys, black leather, cowboy hats and vaquera-style fringe packed the venue to see the SoCal hometown heroes open their tour after watching Mexico defeat South Korea 1-0 in a World Cup match shown inside the Padres’ ballpark.
By night’s end, JOP, Samuel Jaimez, Khrystian Ramos, José García and Moisés López had delivered a show that felt expansive without losing its grit — a stadium-scale performance rooted in memory, movement and the unruly energy that got them there in the first place.
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Michael Jackson’s Spirit Hovered Over the Opening
Image Credit: Courtesy of Street Mob Records For the first major reveal of Fuerza Regida’s stadium era, JOP reached for one of the most iconic pop reference points imaginable: Michael Jackson. At the start of the two-and-a-half-hour show, he appeared high above near the Petco signage before springing up onstage moments later, triggering the kind of prolonged scream that only a genuinely effective opening can earn.
Wearing a white glove, dark sunglasses, a military-style jacket and the signature curl, he nodded to the visual language of the King of Pop’s Dangerous World Tour (1992-1993) opening with enough precision to make the homage unmistakable. It was a bold swing, but it landed — not as cosplay, but as a theatrical flex from a frontman who understood exactly how large the moment needed to feel.
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The 2018 Bedroom Scene Turned “Radicamos en South Central” Into an Origin Story

Image Credit: Courtesy of Street Mob Records One of the night’s most memorable sequences came when the show traveled back to 2018. After a collage of archival-style footage from the band’s earlier days, a family skit played in which JOP’s mother called out to “Jessy,” telling him to hurry before his food got cold.
Then JOP appeared in a set that looked like a bedroom — bed, lamp, animal-print blanket, acoustic guitar in hand — and launched into “Radicamos en South Central,” their breakout hit from that year. When the rest of the band joined him, the moment landed as funny, affectionate and surprisingly affecting, transforming one of the group’s earliest calling cards into a miniature origin story staged in real time.
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The Chronological Setlist Let You Watch the Band Evolve in Real Time

Image Credit: Courtesy of Street Mob Records One of the smartest things about the show was how clearly it mapped Fuerza Regida’s evolution. Moving year by year, the set let the audience hear and see how the group grew from early corridos grit into a more expansive act capable of absorbing cumbia, reggaetón, EDM flourishes and full-scale theatrical production without losing its identity.
There were nods to the group’s pre-fame grind, flashes of pandemic-era imagery and a 2022 section that recreated the freeway performances and stunts that became part of Fuerza Regida’s lore before detonating into “CH y La Pizza.” Songs like “Me Acostumbré a lo Bueno” hit especially hard in that context, because they didn’t just sound big — they showed the band’s evolution in motion.
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Calle 24, Marshmello, Chuyín & Rey Mysterio Hit at the Right Time

Image Credit: Courtesy of Street Mob Records The band didn’t treat opening night like a parade of random cameos. Instead, the guests were folded into the show with enough precision that each one amplified a different part of the band’s identity. Calle 24’s Diego Millán delivered the night’s most emotionally resonant appearance, joining the group for “Qué Está Pasando” after JOP stopped to tell him: “Quiero que sepas que eres parte del éxito de Fuerza Regida y quiero que todo el mundo lo sepa” (“I want you to know that you’re part of Fuerza Regida’s success, and I want everyone to know it”). The moment read like a public salute to one of the songwriters and creatives who has helped shape the band’s orbit and the Street Mob crew.
Later, Marshmello’s arrival for “Harley Quinn” pushed the production outward, underscoring how naturally Fuerza Regida now moves between corridos and festival-sized crossover moments. Chuyín’s late-set appearance, by contrast, brought the energy back toward the group’s rougher, streetwise core, especially with Moisés López stepping into a vocal spotlight of his own. And Rey Mysterio, the WWE Hall of Famer from nearby Chula Vista, gave the crowd one of its loudest non-musical eruptions of the night, injecting the show with a burst of local pride and full-on spectacle.
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The Band Turned the Runway Into a Fashion Show

Image Credit: Courtesy of Street Mob Records Beyond the music, the group understood that a stadium show of this scale needed visual drama. Midway through the night, the production shifted into an onstage runway sequence, with models striding down a literal catwalk as high-tech visuals flashed behind them, pushing the concert briefly into fashion-show territory. It was one of the clearest examples of how seriously Fuerza Regida approached the theatrical side of its stadium debut.
The frontman moved through the night with the ease of someone using the stage as a catwalk himself, switching from the military-style MJ-coded opening look into other statement pieces, including a bulletproof vest, wide-legged pants marked with script-like detailing and an olive-green Who Decides War x ADD hooded down bomber — one of several items he later tossed into the crowd, turning wardrobe into another way of connecting with fans.
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The Ending Looked Forward Even as It Returned to the Source

Image Credit: Courtesy of Street Mob Records For all the time-travel framing and backward glances, the show’s final stretch wasn’t really about nostalgia. By the time Fuerza Regida moved into the 111XPANTIA material, the visuals had transformed into something more symbolic and forward-facing: Aztec dancers in feathered headdresses, the album’s all-seeing eye blown up across the screens, and imagery that suggested expansion rather than simple retrospection. The production was no longer just recounting where the band had been; it was sketching the scale of where it believes it can still go.
That made the closing turn especially effective. As Chalino Sánchez’s “Pilares de Cristal” played before the band reappeared for the final song, the production made its lineage explicit. When the pickup-truck DeLorean returned, JOP emerged in a look that nodded to the classic corridos tradition, and the band circled back to “Marlboro Rojo” — the same song that opened the night — the gesture brought the entire show full circle. Even after moving through cumbia tejana, reggaetón, EDM touches and pop-sized staging, Fuerza Regida made clear that it still knows exactly what its foundation is. The future-facing part of the show worked because it never pretended the band had outgrown corridos — only that it had found bigger ways to carry them forward.

























