MIAMI - When Mexican singer-songwriter Gloria Trevi is told that Puerto Rican urban artist Bad Bunny might have similarities to her, her reaction is not surprising.“There are several people who have told me that.I have never wanted to say it, because I am 'shy' in those things”, she said with an air of humility in an interview with TELEMUNDO Digital.The truth is that 30 years before “Conejo Malo” caught the attention of the planet with its style that defies the conventional and lyrics that some consider vulgar, La Trevi was already doing its thing.At the beginning of the 1990s, Gloria de los Ángeles Treviño Ruiz from Monterrey challenged the conservative society of the time with an irreverent staging, crazy clothing and compositions that explored without censorship issues such as sexual liberation, abortion, pregnancies unwanted, AIDS, suicide or government corruption.Songs from her discography such as “Virgen de las virgenes”, “Hold on”, “A la madre”, “Pregnant girl”, “I feel so alone”, “Your guardian angel”, “My dolls cry”, “Dr.Psychiatrist”, “The sad dogs” or “Laughter” are evidence of the legacy of rebellion that La Trevi left at the beginning of it.“There are things that I keep saying and that are very strong, nothing more than now I have the power to say them and they cannot be scandalized,” said the artist who is touring the United States with her “Isla Divina” concert tour, laughing.That is why Gloria Trevi defends Bad Bunny tooth and nail.“When someone comes and tells me a negative comment about his lyrics, which are strong or daring, I feel more on his side, I start defending him, because it seems wonderful to me that he is breaking schemes, that he is calling things by his name," he explained."And although sometimes things can be very strong, if people like it, I think that it has to be respected," she said.“I love when people express themselves,” she concluded.