Greeicy and Ryan Castro, two of the most popular figures in Colombian urban music, joined this week the unstoppable international wave from the Cuban ensemble by sharing their own reactions on TikTok to "Dichávate," the song that continues to captivate artists and athletes around the world.
It was yesterday when Greeicy shared a video on her TikTok account dancing to the rhythm of the Cuban hit. The description of the clip left no doubt about how she felt: "What a flavor that the cast has Mucha C A N D E L A." The video racked up 257,700 views and 39,200 likes in just a few hours, triggering an avalanche of enthusiastic comments, especially from Cuban followers.
"Thank you for dancing to our beautiful music," wrote one user. Another added, "You are beautiful and thank you for dancing to our music." A third comment summarized the general sentiment: "I didn't realize how much I needed to see my Goddess dancing to this song that I love so much."
A few days earlier, on the past Tuesday, Ryan Castro had posted his own video with "Dichávate" playing in the background, accompanied by just one phrase: "It's an addictiongggggggg." The result was explosive: 6,300,000 views, 929,700 likes, and 31,700 shares, making it one of the most impactful clips of the entire viral wave of distribution in 2026.
"Dichávate," released on December 24, 2025, by Ya Ice Dilan, Rey Tony, Helabusador, JipMusic Global, and DJ Honda, has surpassed 40 million views on YouTube and dominated TikTok since January of this year, becoming the main catalyst for the international craze surrounding the Cuban cast.
The list of figures who have succumbed to the genre continues to grow. Maluma surrendered to the genre last Tuesday with a video from a sauna and the text “Q hp vicio” superimposed, which garnered 311,000 views. Before him, Vinicius Jr. from Real Madrid shared the song on Instagram on May 21. Bad Gyal dances to it at her concert tours, generating over 80,000 reactions, and Alexander Delgado from Gente de Zona went viral for listening to it in January.
Cuban reparto is an urban subgenre that emerged between 2007 and 2010 in the working-class neighborhoods of Havana, influenced by reggaeton, timba, and rumba, and is experiencing its peak of international exposure in 2026.
Billboard included Bebeshito and Wampi among the 26 artists to watch in 2026, a recognition that reflects how the genre has transcended the island's borders to become part of the global music conversation.
"Now I love her even more," wrote a Cuban follower under Greeicy's video, adding three Cuban flags, encapsulating in a few words the pride that each new international star who surrenders to her music brings to the community.
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