Picture the classic 3 a.m. scenario: your phone buzzing, the nightclub lights fading, and courage pouring straight from the bottom of a bottle. In “Borracho” (Spanish for drunk), Puerto Rican star Jay Wheeler joins Mexico’s Reik and Dominican singer Chris Lebrón to confess every raw feeling that sobriety usually keeps hidden. Tipsy honesty becomes the song’s driving force as the narrator dials his ex, admitting he’s “the biggest jerk” and owning up to the loneliness that hit harder than any shot of tequila. With the alcohol soaring “like an airplane,” he finds himself crashing into memories, begging her to use this moment to ask anything because, for once, his ego is silent and he cannot lie.
Behind the catchy reggaeton-pop groove lies a vulnerable plea for a second chance. Each verse circles the same pattern: more shots, another call, the hope that she’ll pick up on camera so he can see if she still wears his shirt. He’s terrified that when the buzz fades, so will his bravery, leaving him unable to reclaim “his other half.” “Borracho” captures that universal mix of regret, boldness, and late-night desperation, turning a hazy hang-over confession into a relatable anthem for anyone who has ever reached for their phone after one too many.