ReportWire

Tag: Taylor Swift popularity

  • I thought we’d reached peak Taylor Swift — I was wrong – National | Globalnews.ca

    I thought we’d reached peak Taylor Swift — I was wrong – National | Globalnews.ca

    In this space back in August, I wondered how much Taylor Swift mania the world could take.

    People were talking about selling kidneys in exchange for tickets to the Eras tour. The New York Times was projecting that this one road trip would end up contributing nearly US$5 billion to the American economy. She’s become so big that accepting an invitation to play the NFL halftime show would be a step down for her. Billy Joel marvelled, “The only thing I can compare it to is the phenomenon of Beatlemania (in the 60s).”

    The consensus seemed to be that Tay-Tay had reached the pinnacle of stardom and would soon level off at a nice cruising altitude for the rest of her career. There was no way that Taylormania could get any bigger, could it? I thought so. But I was wrong. Very, very wrong. Swift is a marketing and self-promotion miracle.

    Story continues below advertisement

    Let’s begin with her alleged relationship with Travis Kelce of the Kansas City Chiefs. For the moment, Tayvis (Tayce?) are among the world’s great power couples, up there with Barack and Michelle, George and Amal, and Jay-Z and Beyonce. Gossip pages are breathlessly reporting on the tiniest things (“Fans spot clue that Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce had secret makeout session on date night!”).

    Not only are the paps following their every move, and not only is Swift the topic of an infinite number of daytime and late-night TV talk shows, but even NFL pre-game and halftime segments have taken to offering Swift reports.

    If the Chiefs are playing, someone in the booth is assigned to the Tay Cam to capture her reactions in the luxury box. And naturally, she’s right down front with her famous friends (like Ryan Reynolds and Hugh Jackman) so the camera can capture everything. And she never, ever disappoints by cheering, dancing, and high-fiving for everyone to see.

    Swift has the league wrapped around her finger and the NFL loves it. Sales of Kelce jerseys are up 400 per cent. If she’s at a Chiefs game, viewership among teen girls spikes. A Sunday night game between Kansas City and the New York Jets attracted around 27 million viewers, the second-highest highest number since the Super Bowl. Of that number, at least two million were teen girls, which is 53 per cent higher than normal. Perfect, especially when you consider that her Eras concert film opened just a few days later, helping it to an opening weekend global gross of US$123.5 million. (She might actually have left money on the table because of the way she bypassed Hollywood and worked directly with AMC Theatres. But that’s another topic entirely.)

    Story continues below advertisement

    Talk about leveraging the NFL for your own purposes, huh? Remember when fans booed an ad for her concert film? No? It happened not even a month ago. Now the league can’t get enough of her.

    Meanwhile, Kelce is also benefiting from this relationship. Brands and PR companies have seized this opportunity with the gusto of an angry pitbull. That’s him in the Experian pre-roll ads that show up before YouTube videos. Why do I know that he’s a fan of Versace silk shirts? Because that nugget of information has shown up unbidden in my Instagram feed. His New Heights podcast has taken off. Kelce’s social media numbers are through the roof. Even handlebar moustaches — Kelce sports one — threaten to become a big deal this Movember.

    But back to Swift. As I wrote in that previous piece, she’s in the imperial phase of her career, a period when everything seems to be going right for her. The question is now “How long can this last?”

    Overexposure is a real risk. It eventually happens to everyone. There’s a real skill in determining when you’ve pushed things as far as you can with the public. And you need an insane amount of discipline to know when it’s time to go away for a while. U2 knew this at the end of the Lovetown tour in 1990 with Bono telling the audience during the last show, “It’s no big deal, it’s just – we have to go away and … and dream it all up again.”

    Story continues below advertisement

    Others were not so self-aware. Britney Spears coverage saturated pop culture before it turned on her. Green Day released far too much music in too short a time and became a little too commonplace. Miley Cyrus was in our face for a couple of years before the public moved on. Where’s Justin Bieber these days? Kanye and Kim got to be too much, especially after the divorce and Ye’s very visible mental descent. And name a boy band that didn’t overstay their welcome.

    Swift must understand this. But how will her future play out? The Eras tour will continue for another year. She released an album in 2019, two in both 2020 and 2021, and still has three more (Taylor’s Version) re-recordings to go. Part of being a fan is enjoying the anticipation of what’s coming next. But if you’re subjected to a firehose of presence and content, at what point do you decide that enough is enough? And if everyone is a fan, being a Swiftie is no longer exclusive and fun. At the same time, people who have been working hard to avoid her may become more vocal about how much they don’t like her.

    Story continues below advertisement

    Meanwhile, her fanbase is getting older every day. Most of them will continue to stick with her, but how many of those teen girls will age out of their Swiftie obsessions? If you’ve been at one of the Eras movie screenings, have you noticed how many in the audience are under 13? And what happens if — when — the Travis Kelce relationship goes south?

    Then again, Swift is smart. She might be able to continue this ride through other means. For example, what if she turns political and becomes a serious anti-Trump force in the 2024 election? Such a move for a Switzerland-like performer would be extremely risky and would definitely cost her fans. But might that direction be the next phase of her career and ascent to an even higher level of godlike status? Don’t count it out.

    The key for Swift’s continued ubiquity is timing. She needs to know when to hold ’em, know when to fold ’em, know when to walk away, and know when to run. The question is, does she?

    Then again, I and a lot of people underestimate the heights to which Taylormania could reach. It’s not over yet. Not by a long shot.

    Alan Cross is a broadcaster with Q107 and 102.1 the Edge and a commentator for Global News.

    Story continues below advertisement

    Subscribe to Alan’s Ongoing History of New Music Podcast now on Apple Podcast or Google Play

    &copy 2023 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

    Alan Cross

    Source link

  • How much Taylor Swift mania can we take? Just wait — there’s still a long way to go – National | Globalnews.ca

    How much Taylor Swift mania can we take? Just wait — there’s still a long way to go – National | Globalnews.ca

    Every generation or so, a major artist enters what’s called their imperial phase, a period of their career where they can’t seem to do anything wrong. Everything aligns perfectly and it seems that the universe now revolves around that act. Right now that artist is Taylor Swift.

    This kind of mania is not entirely new. We saw similar imperial phases with The Rolling Stones (1972, 1980, 1989), Led Zeppelin (1971-75), Elton John (1971-1975), Michael Jackson (1983-1992), Madonna (1986-1992), U2 (1987-1992 and also perhaps during the 360 Tour of 2009-11), and both Backstreet Boys and NSYNC (1996-2001). Billy Joel remarked, “The only thing I can compare it to is the phenomenon of Beatlemania [in the 60s].”

    The reasons for Swift’s turn at the very top of pop culture are complex. She’s a top-flight songwriter and performer. As the defacto CEO of her empire, she’s been brilliant, carefully crafting and protecting her image, overseeing all the marketing, planning the Eras Tour, and making some savvy business decisions when it comes to issuing new music, charitable initiatives, and dropping just the right amount of benevolence at exactly the right time. Taylor has set all kinds of chart records with her albums (more Number One albums in the Billboard Top 200 than any other woman, someone who’s had four albums in the Top 10 at the same time, etc.) It’s estimated that the nightly box office on this tour is as much as US$14 million.

    Story continues below advertisement

    According to the New York Times, the overall economic benefits to North America will be about US$4.6 billion: tickets, merch, airfare, hotel, parking, restaurants, drinks, even nail salons for fans who want to look sharp for the show. That’s about the same economic impact as the Olympic Games had on Beijing in 2008.

    It all makes for great media coverage that encompasses everything from woman power to the spin-off economic benefits being generated by this tour (hotels for Toronto are pretty much already sold out for her visit in November 2024). Here’s a quote from Dan Eastwood of online research company QuestionPro: “If Taylor Swift were an economy, she’d be bigger than 50 countries; if she was a corporation, her Net Promoter Score would make her the fourth most admired brand, and her loyalty numbers mimic those of subjects to a royal crown.”

    So yeah, she’s big. And popular. And powerful. But let’s break this down a bit.

    The current Tay-Tay mania can be partly attributed to the lack of a centre in popular culture. The internet has fractured everything, meaning that there’s very little we all know about and agree upon — at least compared to the old days. In the absence of any true competition, an event like Taylor Swift creates a gravity well on the order of a supermassive black hole, sucking everything in and demanding more and more attention. It’s like the Barbie movie: a global cultural juggernaut but less pink.

    Story continues below advertisement

    And because everyone seems to be talking about Taylor, fear of missing out becomes a real thing. Even casual fans- — and even non-fans — are caught up in the confusing excitement. “What’s going on here? What am I missing? Everyone else is getting involved, so shouldn’t I?” No one wants to be left out, hence the ever-growing interest and coverage. It’s like a hurricane caught over some freakishly hot Atlantic water. It just keeps getting bigger and bigger, obliterating everything in its path.

    Which brings me to this: Have you noticed how there’s been very little negative coverage of the Eras Tour? Yes, there have been stories about convoluted Ticketmaster ticket-purchasing procedures, servers melting down, fans who were sold “obstructed view/listen only” seats, hotels and parking lots charging usurious prices (it cost US$120 to park at a surface lot for the shows in Seattle), and minor logistical hiccups, but have you seen anyone anywhere in the media criticize Tay-Tay? Why not?

    Easy. No one wants to incur the wrath of Swifties, Taylor’s formidable and intensely loyal and often combative fanbase. Only the BTS Army and Beyoncé’s BeyHive come close in strength and numbers. And woe be to those who mess with Taylor because that brings millions of Swifties to the battlefield. Even the New York Times took note of this.

    If you’re publicly identified as an Enemy of Taylor — or even someone who just doesn’t pay Swift the proper respect — prepare for a social media attack of nuclear proportions up to and including doxing and death threats. One writer critical of the Eras Tour was sent anti-gay slurs and a campaign was launched to have that person fired from their job as a reporter. And has Taylor said anything about this stan behaviour? No. Yet there’s been little note made of that in the media. With no one saying anything bad — even if it may be deserved — it’s nothing but sunshine and chocolates and dancing unicorns.

    Story continues below advertisement

    Swift has also been able to both dodge criticism and go on the offensive when she’s felt wronged — very successfully, too. That includes everything from the issues surrounding the master tapes of her original albums to writing songs about bad real-life boyfriends. There are at least 31 of those. Nothing is ever her fault it seems. Her fans will back her up on that, too.

    Look, the Eras Tour is definitely special, the likes of which we won’t see for a long, long time. It delivers great value for fans: three hours, over 40 songs, and a ton of high-end production.

    By the time the 146 shows wrap up late next year — five continents, all stadium gigs, by the way; no mere arenas for Taylor — the total gross is projected to be beyond US$1.4 billion, eclipsing Elton John’s Farewell Yellow Brick Road Tour. That brought in US$939 million during its 328-show run that extended from the fall of 2018 to this past summer. The average box office gross was a mere US$2.85 million. When the lights finally go out after the sixth Rogers Centre show in Toronto in November 2024, the Eras Tour will likely have been seen by more than nine million people. That’ll handily beat Ed Sheeran’s Divide Tour, which played in front of 8.7 million people. But it took two years and 255 shows to accomplish that.

    Barring any illness, scandal, extinction-level asteroid strike, or mass coronal ejection that will wipe out the world’s electrical infrastructure, Taylor mania is going to be with us for at least another year. And if you’re in Toronto and you’re not going to any of the shows, I’d make plans to get out between Nov. 14 and Nov. 23, 2024. It’s going to be impossible.

    Story continues below advertisement

    Meanwhile, everyone will continue to want a piece of Tay-Tay. To commemorate the end of the U.S. leg of the tour, Starbucks created a 122-track playlist called “Starbucks Lovers” (note the reference to some misheard lyrics in the song Blank Space) that’s running in stores across the U.S.

    If that’s not enough, there are Swift-inspired coffee drinks that will probably push back the return of pumpkin spice latte by a few weeks. That won’t sit well with some people. They’d just better not complain because, you know, Swifties.

    &copy 2023 Corus Radio, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

    Alan Cross

    Source link