In baking 30℃ heat, a sea of shiny, sweaty eggheads descended on London’s Hyde Park, armed with aviator sunglasses, stick-on goatees and one common goal: to make history as the largest gathering of people wearing bald caps.
The latex-covered domes of over 22,000 fans glinted in the sun at Pitbull’s British Summer Time (BST) headline performance on Friday (10 July), setting the Guinness World Record for the most people in bald caps gathered in one venue.
The Pitbull bald cap phenomenon began last year, when thousands of the Cuban American rapper’s fans – known as Bald-es – turned up to his concerts wearing his signature look: a white shirt, black tie and of course, a bald cap.
After an eight-month campaign by content creator Jack Remmington and BBC Radio 1’s Greg James, exactly 22,141 turned up in bald caps for Pitbull – best known for his tracks “Hotel Room Service”, “I Know You Want Me” and his rousing catchphrase “dale!” (which translates to “let’s go!”).

“Who would have ever thought a first-generation Cuban would be able to be in London record-breaking and record-making one for the Guinness Book of World Records,” the award-winning rapper said after being awarded the certificate.
“We did it Bald-es, we did it Bald-es,” he added.
When Pitbull, also known as Mr Worldwide, Mr 305 and his actual name Armando Christian Perez, was announced to headline BST in October last year, Remmington and James set the record-setting plan in motion – urging ticketholders to get their costumes ready.
“I put out a little video saying, ‘Do you know what we would be really good at as Brits? Putting on bald caps and breaking a world record,’” Remington said on stage. “I didn’t think anything of it but then Guinness World Records got in touch and said, ‘You might be onto something there.’ Then Greg got in touch and said, ‘I’ve got Pitbull’s number – shall we see if he’d be up for it?’”
Taking place at 5pm on Friday, the record attempt officially began with Pitbull’s baldies being ushered into the stage area to be counted by a team of trained volunteers, overseen by Guinness Book of World Records’ Will Munford.
Not just any bald cap would do, either, as the rules included that hair needed to be tucked under the front and top, caps had to stay on for a full minute, and naturally bald men did not qualify.
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“You do need a bald cap on your head for this to count,” Greg James told a literal Bald-e from the stage just minutes from the counting. “I know you’re bald, I know you’ve been through a lot but this won’t count.”
Fans came from far and wide to see the “Give Me Everything” singer – including Midlands-based mother and daughter Vanessa, 48, and Phoebe, 21. “We’ve been bald all day – we came on the train bald,” Vanessa told The Independent. “We put them on at nine o’clock. We had a bit of a problem gluing them on.”
“Pitbull is my favourite artist,” Phoebe said. “He just brings happiness, fun and a good party. He’s iconic.”

One the youngest record setters in the crowd was eight-month old Thomas, whose Pitbull-loving parents Austin, 32, and Stania, 30, bought tickets while he was in utero.
“When he arrived, we were like, ‘His first concert can definitely be Pitbull,” Stania said. “To tell him that at eight months, he’s already got a world record will be quite cool. He’s been weirdly fine with the bald cap but he’s getting sweaty now so we’ll take it off as soon as the attempt is done.”
Taking to the stage after performances by Tinie Tempah and Kesha – who both made a return to the venue for the first time in 15 years – Pitbull kicked off his electric set with “Don’t Stop the Party” to an even bigger crowd of nearly 70,000 fans, making it the highest attended BST gig on record.

“Let me tell you something Hyde Park, I’m just taking it all in,” the grinning rapper told his screaming fans. “It’s hard for me to say I’m speechless and all I can think of right now is knowing what my family went through in order for me to be free – an immigrant family from Cuba.
“To be on a stage like this representing all the Bald-es around the world, this is priceless. There’s no way I can say thank you.”
He went on to thank James, Remmington and Munford for their record-setting efforts, adding: “It goes to show you: if you believe it, you dream it, you can achieve it. We motherf***ing did it.”
A staple of the 2010s pop scene, Miami-born Pitbull regularly topped the charts with his energetic, endlessly positive records – spouting inspirational lyrics like, “every day above ground is a great day, remember that” and “live life, don’t let life live you”.

For many fans, it’s the rapper’s motivational attitude and feel-good aura that brought them to Hyde Park.
“Pitbull brings the energy and vibe that we’re really desperate for in 2026,” London-based Hugh, 29, told The Independent. “He’s a positivity that you can’t really find in other places so being part of that is quite powerful.
“I am also losing my hair and this is a test drive for going bald,” he added.
While for 27-year-old university friends Ellen, Chloe, Sophia and Charlotte, attending Pitbull was about reclaiming the clubbing experience they lost during the Covid pandemic, having graduated in 2020.

“When we were at uni, all of our getting ready playlists were at least half Pitbull,” Charlotte said. “We had these big plans for our third term where we were going to go out every night and dance – but then we were in our houses.
“Pitbull is happy, silly fun. Everybody’s having a good time. We’ve all come here with the same purpose. Dale!”





