ReportWire

Tag: The Tortured Poets Department

  • Taylor Swift Drops 12th Album The Life of a Showgirl

    [ad_1]

    In her 12th album, Taylor Swift reconnects with Max Martin and Shellback to sing about love, and fame

    Taylor Swift accepts the Album Of The Year award for “Midnights” onstage during the 66th GRAMMY Awards at Crypto.com Arena on February 04
    Credit: (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images for The Recording Academy)

    Taylor Swift has officially entered her next era. As of 12 am EST this morning, Taylor Swift’s new album “The Life of a Showgirl” has officially dropped. With 12 songs and no bonus tracks as explicitly announced on her fiancé’s podcast, “New Heights”, this makes it Swift’s shortest album. The album cover and setlist were revealed on the show as well as posted to her Instagram on August 12. The cover art is a reference to Ophelia’s fate in Shakespeare’s Hamlet, with Swift posing in the water similar to paintings depicting Ophelia’s drowning. “The Life of a Showgirl” was inspired by her finishing every night of the Era’s Tour in a bathtub, she explained it “isn’t really about what happened to me on stage, it’s about what I was going through offstage”. This album marks the return of the producing duo Max Martin and Shellback who Swift has previously worked with on 1989 and Reputation along with some of the songs off her Red album. 

    Songs on the album range from celebration and joy to melancholy, reflective and angry. Notable songs from the album include, Father Figure which interpolates George Micheal’s song of the same title, and is seemingly about Swift’s relationship with Scott Borchetta, an executive for Big Machine Records who signed her to his record label in 2004 and worked with her on her first six albums after which he sold her masters, launching Swift’s release of her Taylor’s Version albums. Earlier this year, Swift was able to buy back her masters, which she explained the importance of in a letter to her fans on her website. Whereas Michael’s original song is about protection, Swift flips the script between Borchetta’s and her own point of view to explain the father figure as a betrayer. 

    In “Actually Romantic”, Swift seems to be throwing shade at Charli XCX who was an opener for Swift’s Reputation tour but has since shaded Swift mentioning in her song Sympathy is a Knife, “Don’t wanna see her backstage at my boyfriend’s show/Fingers crossed behind my back/ I hope they break up quick” which many took to be in reference to Swift’s short lived relationship with Matty Healy who is in the same band as Charli’s husband. Swift’s Spotify canvas for this song features her holding an apple, which is the title of one of Charli XCX’s biggest songs off her Brat album. The promo for the Brat album included a picture of an amputated hand wearing friendship bracelets, which is a sign to many in the music universe of Swift fans due to their big use in the fandom, causing further speculation about the song’s subject. However, the song pokes fun at the feud, referring to it as a one-sided obsession that is actually romantic. 

    Another interesting song on the album is “CANCELLED,” which paints the narrative that Swift doesn’t care about the scandals her friends face, as she has also faced her fair share of hate, likely referring to the drama revolving around her and Kanye West in 2016, and will support them as they did her. Blake Lively seems the most likely subject of the song, as she is a close personal friend of Swift’s and has been around since 2016. Lively is currently involved in a lawsuit with co-star Justin Baldoni regarding workplace sexual harassment.

    However, Lively is not the only friend facing backlash, as Swift herself faced backlash when she was seen hanging out with Brittany Mahomes, the wife of Patrick Mahomes and quarterback for Travis Kelce’s team, the Kansas City Chiefs. The concern revolves around Swift’s political beliefs, which are strongly Democratic, which most of her fans take after, and who find an issue with the fact that she seems to be close with Brittany Mahomes, who is a Republican. Brittany Mahomes is not well-liked by NFL fans for her online comments on gameplay and poor behavior regarding an incident where she sprayed champagne on opposing teams’ fans during a cold winter game. 

    “Eldest Daughter” is a piano ballad that holds the fifth track spot on her album which has historically been reserved for some of Swift’s most gutwrenching songs such as “loml” from TTPD, “You’re On Your Own, Kid” off Midnights, Red’s “All Too Well”, and “The Archer” on Lover. This track is not as lyrically powerful as the others but talks about the pressures of public fame and being an eldest daughter to be perfect. 

    With Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce’s recent engagement it makes sense that most the songs are about their relationship like “Opalite” which is Kelce’s birthstone, “Wi$h Li$t” which talks about her want to start a family, “The Fate of Ophelia” where she writes that she was saved from the fate of Ophelia seemingly by her relationship with Travis Kelce. “Honey” and “Wood” are about how her relationship with Kelce has changed her view of the world, in that he has redefined words that people tended to use to talk down to Swift such as “honey” and “sweetheart” and that she is no longer worried about relationships failing to the point that she doesn’t even bother participating in superstitions such as knocking on wood because she knows the relationship will survive. 

    The ‘Life of a Showgirl” and “Elizabeth Taylor” explore her relationship with fame and how she looks to others to give her advice with the struggles. “Life of a Showgirl” features Sabrina Carpenter who opened 25 shows for Swift’s Eras Tour, and had her own album release earlier this year. They are close friends as she has gone to some of Kelce’s games with Swift, and is seen as Swift’s protege by some. The song itself starts with Swift trying to get advice from a prior showgirl and the candid response she receives about the negative sides of the business, as Swift knows these struggles first hand, she then hands the baton off to Sabrina Carpenter as the next showgirl, or big star. The end of the song has a snippet from the Eras Tour of Swift asking the fans to thank the band, the dancers and Carpenter, then expressing her love to the crowd, a message meant to include everyone listening to the album and her music. 

    Spotify announced earlier this week that “The Life of a Showgirl” was the most pre-saved album in the platform’s history with 5.5 million saves, which is no surprise as Swift’s last album, “The Tortured Poet’s Department,” sold 2.61 million units, with 1.9 million of those being physical sales. She similarly announced no less than 8 vinyl variants of the album as well as CDs and a cassette, featuring different covers with outfits designed by Bob Mackie, a fashion designer, who also dressed Elton John and Cher.

    Keeping with her last several album rollouts, she released “The Life of a Showgirl” cardigans that kept with the color scheme of the album in a glittery burnt orange. Swift’s promotion of the album extends to the event, “The Life of a Showgirl Experience” put on by Spotify in New York, as well as the announcement of “The Official Release Party of a Showgirl” which is a movie being shown in theaters from October 3-5 featuring the music video and behind the scenes footage from “The Fate of Ophelia”, Swift’s explanations of what inspired the music, and new lyric videos from the album, and is expected to have a big box office. Only time will tell how successful this album is; however, it has been positively received thus far, now we must wait for the award shows. 

    [ad_2]

    Taylor Ford

    Source link

  • Taylor Swift Increasingly Loses Touch with “The Commoner” on The Life of a Showgirl

    [ad_1]

    Although Taylor Swift has been famous for most of her life, one of the biggest keys to her success has always been “relatability.” Or at least the illusion of it. This has been done, more often than not, with lovelorn lyrics about being some “dowdy” girl who can’t ever quite get the guy/find love (most famously on “You Belong With Me”). With her twelfth album, The Life of a Showgirl, Swift loses some of that already dwindling “everywoman” cachet for the sake of a concept that’s centered on, essentially, living in a gilded cage. But it isn’t just the “poor me, I’m so rich” aura that makes The Life of a Showgirl frequently eye-rolling, it’s also the bathetic displays toward, unmistakably, Travis Kelce—whose podcast, New Heights, she appeared on to announce the album in the first place. Never mind that said podcast is aimed at discussing sports, not pop music.

    And yet, such “flouting of the rules” has been going on a lot during the “crossover potential” of Taylor and Travis’ (or “Traylor,” if you must) relationship. One that has even prompted the commissioner of the NFL, Roger Goodell, to gush about how she’s responsible for bringing in a younger audience to the games/generally drumming up interest in the sport ever since she started dating the Kansas City Chiefs quarterback.

    The very quarterback she does her best to wield within a Shakespearean context with The Life of a Showgirl’s first track, “The Fate of Ophelia,” with an effect that could very well have Shakespeare turning in his grave as Swift rewrites, you guessed it, the fate of Ophelia, by making it a “happy ending” for the erstwhile suicidal wreck. And who else should save her but the Hamlet stand-in of the song, “Prince” Travis? A man that Swift has the gall to sing of, “Late one night, you dug me out of my grave and/Saved my heart from the fate of Ophelia/Keep it one hundrеd on the land, the sea, thе sky/Pledge allegiance to your hands, your team, your vibes/Don’t care where the hell you been, ‘cause now you’re mine.”

    Cornball songwriting aside, “The Fate of Ophelia” is an insult to hallowed literature itself in that Swift would dare to touch Shakespearean scripture for the sake “Hollywoodizing” the ending—this further manifest in the lyrics, “No longer drowning and deceived/All because you came for me.” Mixing metaphors a bit, Taylor also talks of being rescued from a tower (hardly the first time she’s used that image in a song, with The Tortured Poets Department also mentioning it on “The Albatross” and “Cassandra”), in addition to the water in which Ophelia drowned. So clearly, she’s confusing Big O with Rapunzel, but no matter, Swift simply has a penchant for referencing other famous women.

    As she does on the second track, “Elizabeth Taylor.” And no, it’s not the first time Swift has mentioned this “fellow Taylor” in a song. She also name-checked the icon during 2017’s “…Ready For It?” (“He can be my jailer, Burton to this Taylor”), co-produced by Max Martin, Shellback and Ali Payami. It’s the former two that Swift reteams with for the entirety of The Life of a Showgirl, further distinguishing it from Reputation, which incorporated other producers apart from Martin and Shellback into the mix, including Jack Antonoff. The reteaming of Swift with just Martin and Shellback is, in fact, a primary gimmick of this album, and perhaps a subtle way to make amends for never getting around to Reputation (Taylor’s Version) after engaging fans in one of the biggest trolls in recent music history.

    Perhaps one of the peak examples on the record of “losing touch” with “the commoner,” Swift does her best to embody Elizabeth T. when she sings, “That view of Portofino was on my mind when you called me at the Plaza Athénée [said in a very non-French way]/Ooh, oftentimes it doesn’t feel so glamorous to be me/All the right guys/Promised they’d stay/Under bright lights/They withered away/But you bloom.” For a start, most of the football fans on “Team Travis” in this relationship would have no idea what the fuck she’s talking about, their limited sense of geography extending, at best, to what lies just beyond Kansas. What’s more, most Midwesterners are well over the constant favoritism given to New York and Los Angeles, yet Swift appears to have her own limited sense of geography when she says, “Be my NY whеn Hollywood hates me.” This statement feeling less like a nod to E. Taylor and more like one to Marilyn Monroe, who famously fled Hollywood for New York after getting into a contract dispute with Darryl F. Zanuck, the head of 20th Century Fox, at the end of 1954. No matter, Swift, like Lindsay Lohan before her, can be attracted to both legends’ stories—their tragic tales and love lives, intermixed with glitz and glamor.

    And, as if to highlight the cliches of “how lonely it is at the top,” Swift adds, “Hey, what could you possibly get for the girl who has everything and nothing all at once?” In many regards, this track is a “sequel,” of sorts,” to the question posed on 2019’s “The Archer”: “Who could ever leave me, darling?/But who could stay?” The answer, for the moment, is Kelce, who at least knows something about the pressure behind a sentiment like, “You’re only as hot as your last hit, baby.” If that’s the case, Swift might be in trouble with a song like “Opalite,” which trots out the same old color-related tropes she’s already overused in the past (though probably not nearly as much as Lana Del Rey mentions “blue”). In this case, the “onyx night” represents the darkness before the arrival of Kelce into her life, who provides the “opalite sky” in the wake of “the lightning strikes”—presumably a metaphor for Swift’s previous botched relationships and media scrutiny.

    Commencing the song with the verse, “I had a bad habit/Of missing lovers past/My brother used to call it/‘Eating out of the trash,’ it’s never gonna last/I thought my house was haunted/I used to live with ghosts/And all the perfect couples/Said, ‘When you know, you know and when you don’t, you don’t,’” it’s evident Swift is alluding to Jack Antonoff, Margaret Qualley and Lana Del Rey. The latter of whom wrote a song about Antonoff and Qualley’s relationship called, what else, “Margaret,” during which she sings, “When you know, you know” of the kind of true love that Antonoff found with Qualley. Later in the song, however, she does Swift one better by saying, “‘Cause when you know, you know/And when you’re old, you’re old/Like Hollywood and me.” Swift, of course, isn’t quite ready to refer to herself in such a way. For being an “aging showgirl,” as The Last Showgirl recently reminded, doesn’t generally bode well for one’s career.

    Even though Swift has made amply certain that she has plenty of other parachutes, as it were, should she need a graceful “out” from pop stardom. For she has her hands in numerous pies (many of which people probably won’t know about for years), as she’s keen to circuitously boast about via the mafioso theme of “Father Figure,” which dares to sample from George Michael, a big risk for anyone, but especially Swift. This because, when compared to the great pop musicians that came before her, particularly in the 80s, the ways in which Swift falls short become even more glaringly obvious. In other words, she has never “ate” the way that, say, Madonna, Prince, George Michael, Grace Jones or David Bowie have.

    Regardless, Swift does what she can with the interpolation of Michael’s 1987 hit (and, let’s just say that it works better than the interpolation of Right Said Fred’s “I’m Too Sexy” on “Look What You Made Me Do”), wielding it to throw shade at all of the male executives who thought they could manipulate and control her over the years. Indeed, in a sense, it acts as The Life of a Showgirl’s “The Man,” with Swift getting into the persona of a big dick-swinging executive (or mafia boss) herself, with many speculating that Scott Borchetta is the source of inspiration. After all, he signed her as his first artist on his then new label, Big Machine Records, when she was just fourteen years old. So it is that Swift sardonically flexes, as though channeling Borchetta, “When I found you, you were young, wayward, lost in the cold/Pulled up to you in the Jag, turned your rags into gold/The winding road leads to the chateau/‘You remind me of a younger me’/I saw potential.”

    The chorus then goes for the jugular with, “I’ll be your father figure/I drink that brown liquor/I can make deals with the devil because my dick’s bigger/This love is pure profit/Just step into my office.” The mafia motif is also peppered in throughout (as if The Godfather needs any more play in terms of fortifying a grotesque Italian stereotype), with Swift asserting, “Leave it with me/I protect the family” and “I got the place surrounded/You’ll be sleeping with the fishes before you know you’re drowning.” Elsewhere, another light Del Rey nod is made with, “Mistake my kindness for weakness and find your card canceled” (on 2019’s “Mariners Apartment Complex,” Del Rey sings, “They mistook my kindness for weakness”). As for another “unintentional” nod, it bears noting that Michael’s “Father Figure” has been having a moment this past year, with Harris Dickinson as Samuel offering a kinky dance in a hotel room to said track in Babygirl while Nicole Kidman as Romy watches before joining in (side note: Swift was sure to mention that she wrote this song before this movie came out).

    A title like “Father Figure” leads naturally into “Eldest Daughter” (which, yes, Swift is, with only one younger brother, Austin). A track that, incidentally, has a lot in common with Lorde’s “Favourite Daughter” from Virgin. Except that, unlike the catchiness of “Favourite Daughter,” which is something of a millennial anthem in terms of how said generation was conditioned to always achieve and strive for more, “Eldest Daughter” is a cheesy ballad that few Gen Z listeners could handle. After all, Swift is a millennial through and through (in case “as the 50 Cent song played…” didn’t also give it away on “Ruin the Friendship”) in part because of being fearless when it comes to being cringe. So it is that she addresses the current chicness of being callous and aloof in the first verse, “Everybody’s so punk on the internet/Everyone’s unbothered ‘til they’re not/Every joke’s just trolling and memes/Sad as it seems, apathy is hot/Everybody’s cutthroat in the comments/Every single hot take is cold as ice.” Apart from referencing some of her lyrics in “You Need to Calm Down” (e.g., “You are somebody that I don’t know/But you’re taking shots at me like it’s Patrón/And I’m just like, ‘Damn, it’s seven a.m.’/Say it in the street, that’s a knockout/But you say it in a tweet, that’s a copout”), the “hot take” line also seems to allude to that time she felt obliged to tell Damon Albarn off.

    The incident occurred in early 2022, when a written interview between The Los Angeles Times and Albarn went as follows:

    LAT: “She may not be to your taste, but Taylor Swift is an excellent songwriter.

    DA: “She doesn’t write her own songs.”

    LAT: “Of course she does. Co-writes some of them.”

    DA: “That doesn’t count. I know what co-writing is. Co-writing is very different to writing. I’m not hating on anybody, I’m just saying there’s a big difference between a songwriter and a songwriter who co-writes. Doesn’t mean that the outcome can’t be really great.”

    Swift was very quick to respond via Twitter, slamming Albarn about his “hot take” with the reply: “I was such a big fan of yours until I saw this. I write ALL of my own songs. Your hot take is completely false and SO damaging. You don’t have to like my songs but it’s really fucked up to try and discredit my writing. WOW.” But, to be fair, Albarn isn’t wrong. Swift does co-write most of her songs, with The Life of a Showgirl being no exception in that Martin and Shellback are her fellow collaborators. But it’s apparent that she is in total control of all themes, as unrelatable as they are. Granted, Swift pulls what Olivia Rodrigo and Addison Rae did with “vampire” and “Fame Is a Gun” respectively in that she insists everyone can relate to having a “public life” now thanks to the advent of the online persona. This being her inspiration behind “Eldest Daughter,” of which she commented,

    “[It’s] about kind of the roles that we play in our public life, because nowadays everyone has a public life. You have a life that you portray to other people or what you portray on social media, and then you have the you that everyone gets to know who has earned the right to be closest to you. And it’s really hard to be sincere publicly because that’s not really what our culture rewards. People reward you for being like tough and unbothered and like too busy to care. And you may be that about some things, but everyone has things that matter to them and people that matter to them.”

    For Swift, it’s always been apparent that being “the best” is what matters to her. This in addition to finding and securing her Prince Charming. It’s a variation on the latter theme that occurs in “Ruin the Friendship.” Yet another track that proves she’s sort of scraping the bottom of the barrel for “relatable material” in that she once again feels obliged to speak as though she’s still in high school. To be sure, Swift appears mentally stuck in that “era” in many ways, often writing from the perspective of an ostracized and/or lovestruck teenager (as she also does on TTPD’s “So High School”). And while that might have been her “core audience” once upon a time, many have been forced to leave such “childish things” behind.

    Nonetheless, Swift takes listeners back to a moment in time when she was friends with someone in high school (reportedly Jeff Lang, a man that died in his early twenties) who she had more than “just friendly” feelings for. Filled with regret over having never made a move, especially since that person later died (“When I left school, I lost track of you/Abigail called me with the bad news/Goodbye, and we’ll never know why”—apart from the “why” being, you know, drugs), Swift advocates for “ruining the friendship.” Or, more to the point, ruining a male/female friendship by breaking the “cardinal rule” and turning it romantic. For, as Vickie Miner (Janeane Garofalo) from Reality Bites once said, “Sex is the quickest way to ruin a friendship.” Looking back on her cautiousness now, however, Swift would have been only too willing to ruin it. Though probably not with sex. In fact, she is more inclined to mention a “kiss.” That’s the “sex act” she’s most willing to get on board with as she sings, “My advice is to always ruin the friendship/Better that than regret it for all time/Should’ve kissed you anyway.” Perhaps Joey Potter and Pacey Witter would tend to agree. Though Dawson Leery, not so much.

    Apart from discussing being “the best,” finding “Prince Charming” and dissecting “love lost,” Swift’s indisputable other favorite songwriting topic is her haters. Of which, of course, she has many. Though not nearly as many as she does lovers—that is, of her work. Even so, for Swift, it’s as Gaga (loosely quoting Madonna with, “If there are a hundred people in a room and ninety-nine say they liked it, I only remember the one person who didn’t”) once said: “There can be a hundred people in a room and ninety-nine don’t believe in you, but all it takes is one and it just changes your whole life.” For Swift, that person who “changes her whole life” by not believing in her is usually her hater (hear also: “Bad Blood,” one of her biggest hits inspired by none other than erstwhile “enemy” Katy Perry). If the “Easter eggs” of “Actually Romantic” are anything to go by, the latest hater that Swift is “taking down by taking to task” is Charli XCX. The shade is in the song title alone, which features “romantic” in it the way Charli’s “Everything is romantic” does. One of the many beloved songs that appeared on Brat last year. Along with “Sympathy is a knife,” which was speculated to be about Swift when Charli mentioned, among other things, “Don’t wanna see her backstage at my boyfriend’s show/Fingers crossed behind my back, I hope they break up quick.”

    If Charli was, in fact, referring to Swift, she definitely got her wish about Matty Healy and Swift breaking up quick. As for the boyfriend Charli refers to, George Daniel, he’s since become her husband. A fellow “365 party girl,” though probably not nearly at Charli’s level. Something Swift shades when she opens the track with, “I heard you call me ‘Boring Barbie’ when the coke’s got you brave/High-fived my ex [Matty Healy] and then you said you’re glad he ghosted me/Wrote me a song [“Everything is romantic”] sayin’ it makes you sick to see my face/Some people might be offended.” Swift, though, not so much. Or so she claims in the chorus, “But it’s actually sweet/All the time you’ve spent on me/It’s honestly wild/All the effort you’ve put in/It’s actually romantic/I really gotta hand it to you/No man has ever loved me like you do.” In effect, Swift speaks on the fine line between love and hate, and how Charli (or any other chanteuse, really) might technically be showing her the former by fixating on her so much. So it is that Swift keeps ribbing, “Hadn’t thought of you in a long time [this channeling Lover’s “I Forgot That You Existed”]/But you keep sending me funny valentines [the song, one supposes?]/And I know you think it comes off vicious/But it’s precious, adorable/Like a toy chihuahua barking at me from a tiny purse/That’s how much it hurts.”

    Of course, Swift is lying to herself when she says it doesn’t hurt, otherwise she wouldn’t have written a song about it, digging the (unsympathetic) knife in as much as she can with other lyrics like, “How many times has your boyfriend said/‘Why are we always talkin’ ‘bout her?’” And yes, XCX does mention talking about “her” in “Sympathy is a knife” when she says, “George says I’m just paranoid/Says he just don’t see it, he’s so naïve.”

    What George—and just about everyone else—might see, however, is that The Life of a Showgirl is less about a girl who “puts on a show” and more about a girl who is obsessed with her boyfriend in the same way that she has been with every boyfriend before (as each album has evidenced). And when that meme of one of Taylor and Travis’ first dates came out with the caption, “Taylor taking her new album for a walk,” it was entirely accurate. For while the intent behind it was to emphasize that Swift always explores her breakups on her records (with Red and TTPD being a primary example), it turns out that the meme was right in a different way, because Kelce is the crux of her new album far more than being a performer is.

    “Wi$h Li$t” (which bears a similarity to Midnights’ “Glitch” in terms of Swift’s intonation and the sound of the track itself) is just such a beacon of that. During it, Swift details the different kinds of wishes that people have for themselves, many of them materially-oriented (e.g., “They want that yacht life, under chopper blades/They want those bright lights and Balenci shades/And a fat ass with a baby face [this somehow sounding like a jibe being made at one of Swift’s longtime nemeses, Kim Kardashian]).” Swift, on the other hand, claims, “I just want you/Have a couple kids, got the whole block lookin’ like you/We tell the world to leave us the fuck alone, and they do, wow/Got me dreamin’ ‘bout a driveway with a basketball hoop/Boss up, settle down, got a wish list.” A wish list, evidently, that not only one-ups Swift’s usual cringe factor, but also proves XCX “or whoever” right in calling her Boring Barbie.

    Try as she might to mitigate that nickname with the song that follows, “Wood.” An innuendo-laden ditty that makes all previous songs on The Life of a Showgirl come across as far less uncomfortable. And it’s not just because this marks the first time that Swift tries her hand at something like being “raunchy” (“Girls, I don’t need to catch the bouquet/To know a hard rock is on the way”), but because, well, she’s quite bad at it. Though, at the very least, she spared listeners from not being euphemistic (“The curse on me was broken by your magic wand”—oof). Because to hear her try her hand at something as sexually explicit as “WAP” would be so much worse.

    Nay, it might even get her “CANCELLED!” (spelled the British way, perhaps a residual side effect of being with Alwyn). A phenomenon that Swift insists she’s no stranger to, telling Time in 2023 that she was “canceled within an inch of my life and sanity” because of the “fully manufactured frame job, in an illegally recorded phone call, which Kim Kardashian edited and then put out to say to everyone that I was a liar.” Histrionic recounting aside, Swift was so affected by the backlash of that leaked phone call she didn’t bother releasing an album in 2016, let alone commenting on the election that year, even when her input would have been potentially invaluable, what with her influence on mass culture, right down to voting predilections. And, although she was never really at risk of “being put out to pasture” because of the incident, Swift commented that the experience made her have a new empathy for others who went through the same thing after her. As she stated via Amazon Track by Track, “I don’t naturally just cast people aside just because other people decide they don’t like them. I make my own decisions about people based on how they treat me within my life and their actions. And so, this is a song about all those themes.” Of course, such a comment leads one to wonder what her “hot take” on Woody Allen might be (especially since her bestie, Selena Gomez, once worked with him on the atrocious A Rainy Day in New York). And if there are others who have been “canceled” that she might side with sans publicly having the courage to say so.

    For the time being, however, she’ll have to leave listeners guessing on which canceled celebrities she’s still friends with (certainly not Blake Lively) by way of the generic chorus, “Good thing I like my friends cancelled/I like ‘em cloaked in Gucci [so much designer brand name-checking on this record] and in scandal/Like my whiskey sour/And poison thorny flowers/Welcome to my underworld [yes, it feels very deliberately Reputation]/It’ll break your heart/At least you know exactly who your friends are/They’re the ones with matching scars.”

    As are those who have been called “terms of endearment” in a condescending manner before. In this regard, “Honey,” the second to last song on the record (and not to be confused with Mariah’s iconic single of the same name), is probably the most “relatable” song on The Life of a Showgirl. Mainly because Swift, once again, taps into her rage against the patriarchy by recalling the times when people would call her “honey” or “sweetheart” in a derogatory sort of way. But, ever since she met her “Prince Charming,” the word has taken on a more positive connotation, prompting her to urge, “You can call me ‘honey’ if you want/Because I’m the one you want/I’m the one you want/You give it different meaning/‘Cause you mean it when you talk/Sweetie, it’s yours, kicking in doors, take it to the floor, gimme more/Buy the paint in the color of your eyes/And graffiti my whole damn life.”

    Unfortunately, that’s not even as saccharine as it gets on “Honey,” with Swift also singing, “Honey, I’m home, we could play house/We can bed down, pick me up, who’s the baddest in the land? What’s the plan?/You could be my forever-night stand/Honey.” This bearing certain correlations to Swift’s well-documented “nesting phase” on “Lover,” during which she also saw fit to make listeners nearly retch with the lines, “We could leave the Christmas lights up ‘til January/And this is our place, we make the rules [a.k.a. “playing house”],” along with, “All’s well that ends well to end up with you/Swear to be overdramatic and true to my lover.” These lyrics now no longer applying to Joe Alwyn, but to Kelce. Easily repurposed “in a pinch.” Not just in general, but when such sentiments are refunneled into other songs with similar “gushings” aimed at Kelce, with this particular one serving as something like the “Sweet Nothing” (one of many Midnights tracks directed at Alwyn) of the album.

    And for the grand, “show-stopping” finale, Swift pivots away from romantic love in favor of the love she has for performance (though, needless to say, her expression of this love comes nowhere near what JADE achieves on “Angel of My Dreams”—and, honestly, to gain insight into the life of a real-ass showgirl, it’s That’s Showbiz Baby for the win). Thus, she concludes with the eponymous “The Life of a Showgirl” featuring Sabrina Carpenter. And yes, tapping Carpenter to collaborate has a “full-circle” meaning in that Carpenter was one of the opening acts during The Eras Tour. In the time since, obviously, Carpenter has blown up to a level that might very nearly match Swift’s in due time—in fact, she now almost has as many albums, with Man’s Best Friend marking her seventh one (and arguably more listenable as “pop perfection” than The Life of a Showgirl).

    While the album is primarily a love letter to Kelce (whereas TTPD was a vinegar valentine to Matty Healy), there’s a telling line in “The Life of a Showgirl” wherein Swift declares herself to be “married to the hustle” (even if through a “character”). All while warning others aspiring to the life of a showgirl, through the lens of this famous broad named “Kitty,” “Hеy, thank you for the lovely bouquet/You’re sweeter than a peach/But you don’t know the life of a showgirl, babe/And you’re never, ever gonna/Wait, the more you play, the more that you pay/You’re softer than a kitten, so/You don’t know the life of a showgirl, babe/And you’re never gonna wanna.” But naturally, in both Swift and Carpenter’s case, they definitely wanna. And probably will “till the end of time” (as a more reluctant showgirl, Lana Del Rey, would put it). But while Carpenter is in an “era” that allows for more creative inspiration to flow, Swift seems to be indicating that her own “muse” is in the midst of some kind of “last gasp.” At least when it comes to being relatable to anyone other than tradwives.

    To that end, like the also Max Martin-infused Reputation before it, The Life of a Showgirl arrives at a time when things have never been more politically fraught. And yet, Swift has chosen to release one of her “fluffiest” records yet. For never has “glitz and glam” been more of an “in poor taste” sell than it is now (which is why Doja Cat had to feign going back to the 80s with Vie in order to do it). Further indicating that Swift seems to be more out of touch with reality/the common person than ever before.

    At the bare minimum, though, she seems to understand that she needed to keep this record breezy (read: short). Way more pared down than The Tortured Poets Department. This perhaps being a testament both to the critical feedback she encountered about that album’s length and the fact that, ultimately, she knows that froth isn’t something that can be explored too in-depth without really annoying people. And yes, if The Life of a Showgirl, as “superfluous” as it is, is an indication of where Swift is at now, it doesn’t bode well for where she’s going to be “artistically” once she’s actually married. If she gets divorced, however, well, that’s another story…

    [ad_2]

    Genna Rivieccio

    Source link

  • Did Taylor and Travis Break Up?

    Did Taylor and Travis Break Up?

    [ad_1]

    Rumors began to swirl online yesterday that the American Royal Couple, Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift, were heading for Splitsville.


    It began with a Reddit post with an alleged contract, providing an exact date when Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift would break up. This fueled even more gossip that the iconic couple — who have made debuts together on-stage at Swift’s Era’s Tourwere a so-called PR relationship.

    Online forum and social media users began to speculate whether or not Swift and Kelce’s relationship has merely been a ploy for popularity — or not. However, Travis Kelce shut down those rumors immediately by having his PR firm, Full Stop, call lawyers to confirm these documents are falsified and they will be taking action.

    image C/O Daily Mail

    It’s a sigh of relief for many as The Tortured Poet’s Department singer and the Kansas City Chiefs tight end haven’t called it quits. But it’s also an important sign not to believe everything you see on a Reddit thread…and luckily, this couple will never go out of style.

    A spokesman from Full Scope told The Daily Mail that the document is “entirely false and fabricated and were not created, issued or authorized by this agency.”

    ‘We have engaged our legal team to initiate proceedings against the individuals or entities responsible for the unlawful and injurious forgery of documents,’ Full Scope added.

    It’s been a busy week for Travis Kelce, who spent the summer following Taylor on tour, as he prepares for the start of NFL season on Thursday. He also just revealed the trailer for Ryan Murphy’s latest show, Grotesquerie,starring Kelce and Niecy Nash. While the trailer is sure to turn heads, we can’t help but still fear for his acting abilitiesor lack thereof!

    Regardless, we can all relax now knowing Taylor and Travis are still going strong. And I will wait patiently for the engagement rumors to ensue.

    [ad_2]

    Jai Phillips

    Source link

  • The Bieber Baby Is Here — And So Is the Celebrity Baby Name Industrial Complex

    The Bieber Baby Is Here — And So Is the Celebrity Baby Name Industrial Complex

    [ad_1]

    America’s Royal Baby is here! No, Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift haven’t suddenly unveiled a secret pregnancy — our girl has been busy with the Eras Tour and trying to keep The Tortured Poets Department at number one. America’s other royal family, Justin Bieber and Hailey Bieber, have welcomed a new addition to their family: a baby boy.


    On Friday, August 23rd, Justin announced their new arrival via
    the Instagram post of a lifetime: “WELCOME HOME / JACK BLUES BIEBER 🐻,” he posted alongside an image of their newborn’s foot cozied up in a blanket with Hailey’s beautifully manicured fingers. Like, I’m not crying, you’re crying.

    Now I’m just waiting for Hailey’s post. While she was literally giving birth, her Instagram stories were full of promo posts for her brand
    Rhode Skin. Some people may call that a social media manager, I call it girlbossing.

    Her pregnancy announcement post definitely had me in tears. We all remember where we were when we heard the news about Hailey Bieber’s pregnancy. I was browsing sunscreen in a beauty store (which feels appropriate) when my friend rushed up to me, waving her phone in my face. “Hailey is pregnant,” she announced as she showed me the now-infamous video.

    The vintage-style video showed Bieber’s bump in a sheer white lace dress. At first, I thought it was footage from a music video. It turns out that their lives are just naturally cinematic. The footage was from their vow renewals which took place in Hawaii, where they celebrated six years of marriage.

    Why did Justin Bieber name his son Jack?

    You may have noticed that, like father like son, Justin and the baby have the same initials: JB. The name Jack Blues Bieber follows the tradition of Justin’s father’s side of the family, where many of the kids are given J names. Justin’s dad’s name is Jeremy, and his half-siblings are named Jaxon and Jazmyn.

    Jack is also Justin’s dad’s middle name. Hailey is no stranger to family names, as her middle name, “Rhode,” is a family name — as well as the name of her eponymous skincare brand. It’s only a matter of time before baby Jack has one of those
    initial necklaces.

    While Jack is a normal,
    regular person’s name, the baby’s middle name shows that even the Biebers have given in to the celebrity-name industrial complex. It used to be rare for celebrities to give their children unique (read: borderline obnoxious) names like Gwyneth Paltrow’s daughter, Apple (sooooo brat). Heck, when the Kardashian-Wests came up with North and Beyoncé announced her daughter Blue Ivy, it was still big news.

    But now, every baby announcement comes with the follow-up question: what weird name will the happy couple bestow upon their offspring? Instead of looking at baby name books, celebrity parents seem to open the dictionary and point to the first name they find. Young parents like Nara Smith are infamous for this. The model and token
    trad wife have children named (wait for it) Rumble Honey, Slim Easy, and Whimsy Lou.

    Next to names like “Stormiiiiii,” Jack Blues is pretty normal. But it’s a sign that celeb names will always be celeb names. While the Biebers have fallen prey to the celebrity-name industrial complex, the fact they waited six years since their internet-breaking wedding in 2018 isn’t the norm.

    How Hailey resisted the Hollywood Mom Machine — until now

    In Hollywood years, six years is a long time to wait before having your first child. But in the real world — where the cost of living crisis makes me wonder how
    anyone can afford children — having children at 27 years old, if anything, is quite young.

    Seemingly all of their famous peers have children. Most of the nepo baby gang now have children of their own. And the
    mothers are mothering. Kylie Jenner has two children — Stormi Webster, her 6-year-old daughter, and Aire Webster, her 2-year-old son— with rapper Travis Scott. Sofia Richie just celebrated her own 26th birthday alongside her daughter Eloise’s three-month birthday. Other peers like Keke Palmer, Gigi Hadid, and more have also become moms.

    But Bieber wanted to wait. For a while, she just wanted to live in her bliss. She was a 21-year-old married to the biggest pop star in the world. Of course, she wanted time to enjoy it. Then, like the rest of us, she got a job. Except hers was as the founder of
    Rhode Skin. She spent the past few years proving it was more than just another celebrity brand. With its innovative, editor-approved products and its constantly selling out stock, Rhode is a success in every way.

    So now, they have everything.

    When asked about when they were planning to become parents, the Biebers have always said they wanted to wait. I’ll never forget when Justin went on
    Ellen in 2020, and she, as was her style, aggressively asked him what the “hold up” was with having kids.

    But with the finesse he’s known for, he sidestepped the question with the most romantic answer: “I am going to have as many as Hailey wishes to push out. I’d love to have myself a little tribe. But, yeah, it’s her body and whatever she wants to do.” Pro-choice king.

    But now it’s finally the right time. In a July interview with
    W Magazine, she shared some of her pregnancy anxieties — especially as someone who has struggled with ovarian cysts. “You see so many stories — traumatic birth stories, traumatic experiences—and I know that that’s very real,” she said. But in the end, she’s excited about her pregnancy — too excited to hide it from the world. “I probably could have hid it until the end,” she said. She even hid it for six months behind her signature oversized clothing — her jacket at Coachella makes a lot of sense now. “But I didn’t enjoy the stress of not being able to enjoy my pregnancy outwardly. I felt like I was hiding this big secret, and it didn’t feel good. I wanted the freedom to go out and live my life.”

    Well, now the Biebers’ lives have changed forever. Many of us “One Less Lonely Girl” hopefuls might have dreamed of the day Justin became a father with us at his side. But if it’s not me, I’m glad it’s Hailey. You better believe I played the superstar and new father’s 2010 smash hit “Baby” on repeat all weekend.

    [ad_2]

    LKC

    Source link

  • Gypsy Rose Thinks Taylor Swift Wrote This Song About HER! – Perez Hilton

    Gypsy Rose Thinks Taylor Swift Wrote This Song About HER! – Perez Hilton

    [ad_1]

    Is Gypsy Rose Blanchard totally delusional? Or is she onto something??

    The convicted murderer has become an unexpected celeb after being released from prison, getting invited onto talk shows and even hearing some shoutouts from celebs. But did she get the ultimate A-lister nod from Taylor Swift?!

    According to sources close to Gypsy spilling to TMZ, girl believes Tay wrote a whole ass song about her! Yes, for real!

    Apparently the huge Swiftie heard Fresh Out The Slammer on The Tortured Poets Department last month and freaked the eff out — because she was dead certain the track was all about her!

    What’s her evidence? Well, first off she obviously is obviously “fresh out the slammer,” having famously gotten paroled in December after seven years in the clink. And the song is literally about a girl being released from prison and rushing into the arms of her lover. And that’s what happened to her — as she went “runnin’ back home to” husband Ryan Anderson. Though that obviously didn’t work out too well in the end…

    Photos: Gypsy Posts Shocking Then-And-Now Pics From Munchausen Abuse Days

    Per sources, lines like “camera flashes, welcome bashes” really spoke directly to Gypsy. She’s had paparazzi taking snaps since she got out, her family threw a party for her.

    Is it really so crazy? Gypsy’s case is incredibly famous. Surely Tay must have heard about it. It’s certainly possible she used it for inspiration!

    However, the song is only literally about prison. Figuratively it doesn’t really match up with Gypsy’s story. See, in the context of the rest of the album, the prison in the song has been interpreted as a metaphor for a relationship in which Tay didn’t feel free to be herself. Fans think it’s about the years she spent with Joe Alwyn as he wanted to stay out of the spotlight, which made her feel caged. That theory is supported by the TTPD epilogue poem, which seems to position Joe as the prison and rebound guy Matty Healy as a “tidal wave” — and then her clumsy rescuer who turns out not to be worthy of her. She writes:

    “Out of the slammer and into a tidal wave / How gallant to save the empress from her gilded tower / Swinging a sword he could barely lift. / But loneliness struck at that fateful hour / Low hanging fruit on his wine stained lips / He never even scratched the surface of me / None of them did.”

    If the experiences Tay was writing about were her breakup with Joe and fling with Matty, all that happened a year ago. Seems likely the songstress wrote about it all before Gypsy even got out.

    As for whether Taylor even knows about Gypsy’s fandom? If she does, she hasn’t mentioned it. The sources say Miz Swift hasn’t reached out to the ex-con in any way. And Gypsy isn’t surprised, considering the controversy surrounding her case. She understands why Tay wouldn’t want to risk tainting her image like that.

    What do YOU think, Perezcious readers? How likely is it Taylor Swift wrote a song about Gypsy Rose??

    [Image via Gypsy Rose Blanchard/Instagram/Taylor Swift/YouTube.]

    [ad_2]

    Perez Hilton

    Source link

  • Here’s What Taylor Swift Changed For The European Leg Of The Eras Tour

    Here’s What Taylor Swift Changed For The European Leg Of The Eras Tour

    [ad_1]

    If you’re a diehard Swiftie like us, your immediate reaction to learning the title of ‘Who’s Afraid Of Little Old Me?’ was probably “me, Taylor.” Which is totally understandable! We’ve been following along with the Eras Tour for over a year and she still finds new ways to surprise us. And the European leg is like a new show entirely, now that we have The Tortured Poets Department in our lives.

    Let’s take a look at what changed throughout the show and its setlist, one era at a time! These changes are accurate as of the first night in Paris on May 9th, 2024.

    Pre-Show Playlist

    First off, the changes started before Taylor even took the stage! Taylor added three new songs to the playlist that echoes throughout the venue before she goes on. 

    The Intro

    The nostalgic Eras Tour intro includes Taylor saying the name of each era, so naturally, she had to add in The Tortured Poets Department! Listen closely and you’ll hear her say the album name between the 1989 quote and Red album title. 

    Lover

    At the first show in Paris, Taylor unveiled a new orange and magenta bodysuit with matching boots! Not much changed throughout this set, but we did lose ‘The Archer.’ We thank her for her service! The closing song is now ‘Lover’ with an extended outro. 

    Fearless 

    Thankfully, since the Fearless set is only three songs, Taylor didn’t rearrange anything! Again at the first Paris show, she revealed a new black, silver, and gold fringe dress that we think pays homage to the iconic fringe dress she wore on the 2009 Fearless Tour. We’re not crying, there’s just something sparkly in our eye.

    Red 

    The first major change of the show is that the Red set is now the third era in line, instead of evermore! The setlist remained the same aside from the switch in its placement. We also got a new ‘22’ shirt saying “this isn’t Taylor’s Version,” which we’ll need for when we’re out in public and mumble under our breaths about how a store is playing the wrong version of her music.

    Speak Now

    Taylor really brought us back to the Speak Now World Tour with the refreshed version of the Speak Now set! Unfortunately, we’re back to it being only one song, but we can’t complain too much because we adore ‘Enchanted.’ Before Taylor takes the stage, the screens show updated visuals with stunning flowers, and the dancers come out to keep the crowd entertained. 

    reputation 

    At the opening night of the European leg in Paris, Taylor had the opportunity to do the funniest thing ever and give every era a new costume except reputation. And she did it! Nothing changed during this set – not even the red and black snake bodysuit – so all you fellow rep stans out there are safe.

    folklore & evermore

    The sets with the most change are folklore and evermore, which have been combined! But we did lose the ‘seven’ spoken interlude as a result. As Taylor explained it in Paris, she “reunited the sisters, combined them into one chapter.” Even the new Paris costume combined the eras, giving us the folklore style with a golden yellow color like the evermore dress. We think it makes perfect sense and we love getting to hear them together. Some sacrifices, though: ‘tis the damn season,’ ‘tolerate it,’ ‘invisible string’-slash-’the 1,’ and ‘the last great american dynasty.’ 

    Check out the setlist for this section below:

    • ‘cardigan’ (sitting on the cabin where she sang ‘invisible string’ and ‘the 1’)
    • ‘betty’ 
    • ‘champagne problems’ 
    • ‘august’ x ‘illicit affairs’ 
    • ‘my tears ricochet’
    • ‘marjorie’ 
    • ‘willow’ 

    After ‘willow,’ Taylor disappears into the stage to get ready for the next era.

    1989 

    The visuals between everlore/folkmore and 1989 have the same concept as the folklore1989 transition from the first leg, but they go from a mountain scene to a bright city rather than centering around the folklore cabin. No setlist changes here, though we got a new costume combination! Taylor wore a glittery pink top with a blue skirt in Paris, complete with one pink boot and one blue boot. It honestly reminds us of the mix-and-match jackets and skirts she wore on the original 1989 Tour, and we’re so excited to see what combos she wears in the future. 

    For the first time ever, Taylor leaves the stage after the 1989 set instead of staying on for surprise songs!

    The Tortured Poets Department 

    Welcome to the Eras Tour setlist, TTPD! We had our fingers crossed for you and you so delivered. The set starts with a screen visual that draws from the ‘Fortnight’ music video, complete with a road, cages, and even papers falling from the sky. There’s also a little snippet where she sings the “oh, oh, oh” from the chorus of ‘My Boy Only Breaks His Favorite Toys.’

    Taylor described the album as “Female Rage: The Musical” in Paris, so it’s no surprise that this section is really theatrical. There’s even a skit before ‘I Can Do It With A Broken Heart’ where she collapses on the floor, then has to get all dressed up in a new outfit to put on a show. And keep an eye on the visuals during ‘ICDIWABH,’ because there are nods to songs like ‘Peter.’

    • ‘But Daddy I Love Him’
    • ‘So High School’
    • ‘Who’s Afraid Of Little Old Me?’ (with a moving platform!)
    • ‘Down Bad’
    • ‘Fortnight’
    • ‘The Smallest Man Who Ever Lived’
    • ‘I Can Do It With A Broken Heart’

    Surprise Songs

    Surprise Song O’Clock got a little facelift in Paris with a new, all-pink dress, but it’s the same instruments and chaos as always! Paris Night 1 got ‘Paris’ on guitar, fittingly, and ‘loml’ on piano. Be sure to stay tuned and keep up with what pairings she gives us!

    Midnights

    We’re so excited that Midnights can still be the closing set of the Eras Tour! The setlist stayed the same, though Paris got a new blue bodysuit with cutouts. We couldn’t think of a better ending for the show, especially with this ‘Karma’ lyric:

    “Ask me what I’ve learned from all those years
    Ask me what I’ve earned from all those tears
    Ask me why so many fade but I’m still here…” 

    What do you think of the new Eras Tour setlist? Did she cut any of your fave songs? Let us know in the comments below or hit us up on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter!

    Check out more sweet Taylor Swift content! 

    TO LEARN MORE ABOUT TAYLOR SWIFT:
    FACEBOOK | INSTAGRAM | TIKTOK | TWITTER | YOUTUBE 

    [ad_2]

    Madison Murray

    Source link

  • Kim Kardashian Posts Photo With Taylor Swift’s Former BFF Karlie Kloss Amid Reignited Feud! – Perez Hilton

    Kim Kardashian Posts Photo With Taylor Swift’s Former BFF Karlie Kloss Amid Reignited Feud! – Perez Hilton

    [ad_1]

    Did Kim Kardashian just hit back at Taylor Swift?

    When the 34-year-old singer dropped The Tortured Poets Department last week, it didn’t take fans long to figure out she penned a brand-new song about her longtime feud with her nemesis. We mean, the name of the diss track, slamming a massive bully, is thanK you aIMee. Not subtle.

    Following the latest call-out from Taylor, a source told People Kim was “over” their feud and “thinks Taylor should move on” — since “it’s been literally years.” However, it doesn’t look like Kim moved past their beef quite yet either. Not after this shady social media move!

    Related: Kim Kardashian Confirms Weird Rumor About Her Daily Coffee!

    To wish her friend Derek Blasberg a happy birthday on Monday, Kim took to Instagram Stories to share several pictures of them together over the years — and that just happened to include one snapshot of them posing next to Khloé Kardashian and Karlie Kloss. You know, Taylor’s former BFF Karlie Kloss?! Yeah, that one! Check it out (below):

    (c) Kim Kardashian/Instagram

    Wooww…

    So much for being “over” their feud! It’s hard to argue this post wasn’t a reaction to the diss track. Out of all the pics she could have posted of her friend Derek, she chooses one with Karlie from two years ago? Karlie who had a major falling out with the pop star? All this just three days after the release of TTPD. Talk about a not-so-subtle jab! Jeez!

    Taylor Swift and Karlie Kloss celebrating one another at the Victorias Secret Fashion Show in 2013
    Taylor Swift and Karlie Kloss celebrating one another back when they were still besties at the Victorias Secret Fashion Show in 2013. / (c) Michael Carpenter/WENN

    And, of course, the photo has fans in a frenzy on social media right now. Many speculated Kim must be “big mad” at Taylor if she’s pulling out the big guns to get back at her. See the reactions (below):

    “Kim reposting a karlie pic from 2022 oh she’s big mad”

    “Kim Kardashian posting Karlie Kloss right now is truly f**king crazy oh my god”

    “not kim posting a pic with karlie today that was taken TWO YEARS ago??? i smell drama.”

    “Kim Kardashian sharing a two-year-old photo of her and Karlie Kloss to her story four days after Taylor Swift dropped a song about her is SOOOOO rich…we are SOOOOOO back”

    “the ‘thanK you aIMee’ get together since when are they friends”

    “Wow I thought this was fake but maybe she does deserve the ‘thanK you aIMee’ comments”

    “NOT KIM POSTING A PHOTO WITH KARLIE KLOSS OH ITS WAR”

    Uh oh! This reignited feud is heating up fast, Perezcious readers! What are YOUR thoughts on the photo? Do you believe this was a response to the diss track? Sound OFF in the comments!

    [Image via MEGA/WENN]

    [ad_2]

    Perez Hilton

    Source link

  • Some Other Critics Didn’t Love Taylor Swift’s New Album Either – Here’s Why! – Perez Hilton

    Some Other Critics Didn’t Love Taylor Swift’s New Album Either – Here’s Why! – Perez Hilton

    [ad_1]

    Over the past few days we’ve seen some of the ugliest side effects of fans’ devotion to Taylor SwiftPaste magazine literally kept its music critic’s name secret because they were afraid of the danger the poor person might be in for trashing her new album. They didn’t think The Tortured Poets Department was good, now they have to be protected like a juror from Trump’s scary followers? That’s awful.

    The truth is, not everyone is always going to agree on art — and that’s OK! In fact, plenty of reviewers weren’t just gushing about TTPD. Several gave it mixed or even mixed-negative reviews overall.

    Related: Taylor Shouts Out The Most Positive Reviews

    We thought maybe in light of the theoretical response to that one harsh review, we’d take a look at some of the others to prove that point. So what did some critics take issue with? Let’s take a look:

    NME

    NME gave the album 3 out of 5 stars, calling it “a rare misstep” for Tay. Ouch, right?

    Reviewer Laura Molloy calls TTPD “a knottier, if inferior, sequel to Midnights” which is “mostly devoid of any noticeable stylistic shift or evolution.” She writes:

    “It mostly descends into a monochromatic palette, existing in the same Jack Antonoff-branded synth pop as Midnights, yet struggling to capture any of its brightness.”

    Molloy makes a point of praising Taylor’s lyrics generally before says this album bucks the trend and “delivers some of her most cringe-inducing lines yet.” She calls out the title track’s already infamous:

    “You smoked then ate seven bars of chocolate / We declared Charlie Puth should be a bigger artist / I scratch your head, you fall asleep / Like a tattooed golden retriever.”

    She didn’t even like what Taylor was doing with But Daddy I Love Him, singling out the lines:

    “These people only raise you to cage you… God save the most judgemental creeps/Who say they want what’s best for me”

    We imagine those are plenty of fans’ favorites on the whole damn album! Like we said, people are going to disagree on art! As it ever was. And again, that’s OK!

    Pitchfork

    Pitchfork is always hard to please, so 6.6 out of 10 may feel like condemning Taylor as mediocre — but it’s not shocking either. Writer Olivia Horn blames the “burden of expectation” — speculating Tay went ham to fill the “widening gap between Taylor Swift the artist and Taylor Swift the phenomenon” with “a firehose of material.”

    Horn’s evaluation seems to be that Taylor wasn’t precious enough and should have adhered to that old writing rule, kill your darlings. She says TTPD is “conspicuously wanting for an editor”:

    “She piles the metaphors on thick, throws stuff at the wall even after something has stuck, picks up the things that didn’t stick and uses them anyway.”

    Horn seems to feel the album is more miss than hit as a result. She mostly is unimpressed with everything that’s so familiar, especially musically — though she calls out But Daddy I Love Him as fresh and exciting and “reaching flights of fantasy unlike anything else on this album.”

    The New Yorker

    The New Yorker‘s review calls the album “too long and too familiar.” We’re sensing the pattern here.

    Writer Amanda Petrusich calls out the lyrics like NME did, also singling out the Charlie Puth line, calling it “one of the weirdest verses of Swift’s career.” She goes on to say:

    “Even the greatest poets whiff a phrase now and then, but a lot of the language on the record is either incoherent (“I was a functioning alcoholic till nobody noticed my new aesthetic”) or just generally bewildering (“Florida is one hell of a drug”).”

    Petrusich does point out lyrics she loves though, like:

    “Now I’m down bad, crying at the gym / Everything comes out teen-age petulance / F**k it if I can’t have him.”

    That was a line Molloy couldn’t get her head around, either! Like we said, it’s all subjective! Again, THAT IS OK! Honestly, it’s even great! You can’t expect something to 100% hit home with one person without getting a little bit further away from a listener with very different life experiences.

    The New York Times

    The New York Times‘ Lindsay Zoladz says some of TTPD is “a return to form” but as it goes on “Swift’s lyricism starts to feel unrestrained, imprecise and unnecessarily verbose.” She references the art form Taylor has embraced as evidence of why it doesn’t work very well — poetry. She explains:

    Sylvia Plath once called poetry ‘a tyrannical discipline,’ because the poet must ‘go so far and so fast in such a small space; you’ve got to burn away all the peripherals.’ Great poets know how to condense, or at least how to edit. The sharpest moments of The Tortured Poets Department would be even more piercing in the absence of excess, but instead the clutter lingers, while Swift holds an unlit match.”

    It seems overwhelmingly those who didn’t love the album are of a similar way of thinking — in releasing so many tracks, Taylor seemingly didn’t narrow it down to the best she was capable of. It sounds like they think we got something like the assembly cut — the unedited version of a movie with all the footage before it gets tightened up and made to work as a real piece of solid entertainment. They all feel like it’s hit and miss, maybe at too low a quotient. Like a mediocre SNL episode.

    These are all painstakingly well-considered reviews by good writers. But importantly they don’t consistently agree on what the hits and misses are. So again, there’s no need to read these reviews as attacks. Everyone is just giving you their take! So take away what you can from the reviews, let it help solidify your opinion whether in agreement or disagreement. It’s all part of the experience of a new piece of art, y’all! Enjoy!

    [Image via Taylor Swift/YouTube.]

    [ad_2]

    Perez Hilton

    Source link

  • “Fortnight” Video: Being in (Unrequited) Love/Artistically Inclined Will Send You to the Loony Bin

    “Fortnight” Video: Being in (Unrequited) Love/Artistically Inclined Will Send You to the Loony Bin

    [ad_1]

    Despite Taylor Swift’s pervasiveness, it’s probably more likely that Gen Zers would associate the word “fortnight” with the misspelled (as “Fortnite”) video game of the same name. As opposed to, you know, Swift’s first single from the song-packed album that is The Tortured Poets Department. And they certainly wouldn’t associate it with its actual definition: “a unit of time equal to fourteen days (two weeks).” For those previously unschooled in this highly British/highly Austenian term, Swift has decided to bring it back into the mainstream. Along with the idea that being in love—unrequited or otherwise—(especially as a woman) and being artistically inclined (especially as a woman) is a recipe for ending up in the loony bin. Or at least being branded as “crazy.” Not quite “right” in the head.

    In fact, this has always been the unfortunate case for women. And this is precisely why Swift gives callbacks to artistic women of the past (including the likes of Emily Dickinson and Clara Bow) while imprisoned in the mental institution of her self-directed video for “Fortnight” featuring, unexpectedly, Post Malone (who was just as unexpected in the part of Beyoncé’s romantic interest for “Levii’s Jeans” from Cowboy Carter). Those who have watched Swift flout the so-called rules when it comes to how many times one is “allowed” to write a song obsessing over the details of a failed relationship will understand, then, why she might fear getting thrown in the booby hatch (even though no pop star has more of a right to be afraid of that than Britney Spears). 

    This phobia comes to light repeatedly in the imagery presented throughout The Tortured Poets Department. And it’s all established with the first verse in “Fortnight” that goes, “I was supposed to be sent away/But they forgot to come and get me/I was a functioning alcoholic/‘Til nobody noticed my new aesthetic” (this concern about being “sent/taken” away also shows up in Midnights’ “Hits Different” via the lines, “Is that your key in the door?/Is it okay?/Is it you?/Or have they come to take me away?”). Apart from the fact that this sounds vaguely like what happened to Lizzy Grant in terms of being “sent away” to boarding school for her early-age alcoholism, it also does set the tone for Tay’s “new aesthetic” (that she introduced at the 2024 Grammys in her white ball gown with black elbow-length evening gloves) in the “Fortnight” video: Emily-Dickinson-in-a-mental-institution-chic (and yes, it’s been overly spotlighted this year [for the ostensible marketing tie-in of TTPD] that Swift is distantly related to Dickinson—they’re sixth cousins…three times removed!). Or, if you prefer, Clara-Bow-in-a-mental-institution-chic. Take your pick. 

    Considering Swift names a song after the silent movie actress on TTPD, it’s only natural that Bow’s signature look (as it pertains to her maquillage) should be mimicked here—along with the music video’s own mimicry of a silent movie aesthetic. Particularly as that song (“Clara Bow”) alludes to the ways in which the entertainment industry chews up and spits out women—no matter how successful—like grist for the mill. Particularly once a “newer (read: younger) edition” comes along. This very thing happened to Bow when silent movies turned into “talkies” and she couldn’t successfully make the transition (it was her Brooklyn-y accent, goddammit). Swift likely marvels, at times, over her contrasting ability to continue enduring not only in a marketplace with ever-changing whims and tastes, but in one that doesn’t exactly believe in “romance” anymore. Funnily enough, it doesn’t seem like Swift herself is a “romance acolyte” anymore either…that is, if the reams of lyrics on TTPD are anything to go by.

    So it is that the image of her waking up chained to a bed frame affixed to the ceiling of her “cell” (all topsy-turvy, like her love life) is what opens “Fortnight.” Followed by a nurse delivering her dose of “Forget Him” pills. This being a nod to the lyrics, “I took the miracle move-on drug, the effects were temporary.” Yes, that must be why she’s still trapped in this institution (prison itself is also frequently wielded as a metaphor on the album). One that she can only get out of by traveling through the “secret gardens of [her] mind” (a lyric from “I Hate It Here”). And so she does, walking through a door that leads into a more Kafkaesque administrative room. In walking through it, her dress changes from a white gown to one of black Victorian mourning (and this is where she looks quite Dickinsonesque). Sitting down at a typewriter (cue the lyrics on “The Tortured Poets Department” that go, “I think some things I never say/Like, ‘Who uses typewriters anyway?’”) across from Post Malone’s, the two both write their side of the story, with colors eventually spilling out of the top (his blue, hers pinkish—how gender normative) and rising up to clash against the other’s story. Clearly, they have some opposing opinions on how it all went down. 

    As their colors touch, however, things go into flashback mode, with Swift (now dressed in pants and a jacket) and Post (dressed in the same pants and jacket as Swift) lying next to one another—while Swift holds a copy of a book called Us (très original)—in a manner that echoes the overhead shot from Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind when Joel (Jim Carrey) and Clementine (Kate Winslet) are on the ice together (as Ariana Grande already taught us last month, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind is very happening this year). But Swift subs out ice in favor of many, many white pages that we soon see are in a daguerreotype-like silhouette of her own head shape. 

    In the next scene, Swift runs to Post Malone and embraces him eagerly, even though, as the camera closes in to show him caressing her face and shit like that, it’s obvious she’s feeling kind of cringe-y because she can’t quite keep a straight face. Still, Post Malone being Swift’s love interest is believable enough thanks to the fact that she’s currently dating another grizzly bear named Travis Kelce. As they stare at one another from afar in a subsequent moment, the pages of “their story” swirl around them as Swift tries to reach out for him again. 

    Alas, this escape into the past was all in her head, nothing more than a memory (whether real, embellished or imagined). This we’re made to remember when we see her back in the mental institution—this time strapped into an electrode-based machine that looks like it’s going to give Swift the best electroshock therapy money can buy (for whatever bygone era she’s pretending to be in). Crazier than Swift is supposed to be, however, is the random cameo by Ethan Hawke as one of the doctors helping to administer the “therapy.” Except it’s not that random at all when you realize Josh Charles, who also co-starred in Dead Poets Society with Hawke, is one of the doctors, too. See how meta Swift just got…again? Another not-random-at-all-though-it-might-seem-that-way moment occurs when a black dog crosses into the scene as well. But no, “The Black Dog” is a song on TTPD, not to mention the name of a pub in London (with Swift’s pointed specificity in mind, that’s definitely not a coincidence) and known for being a harbinger of death and/or a messenger of evil/from hell. So yeah, the tortured relationship “Easter eggs” abound.

    By the end of the video, all of the pages in the Kafkaesque admin room are burning up around Taylor, as though the story between her and her ex-beloved never really happened. As though all the time and effort she put into turning it into art was for nought. Meanwhile, the Taylor of the “padded room,” so to speak, heaves a piece of furniture into the observation mirror, shattering glass everywhere.

    So you see? When all is said and done, being a “crazy bitch” isn’t for the faint of heart (nor, apparently, is it suited to the physically feeble)…but Swift certainly knows how to romanticize it nonetheless. 

    [ad_2]

    Genna Rivieccio

    Source link

  • An Honest Review of Taylor Swift’s New Album, “The Tortured Poet’s Department”

    An Honest Review of Taylor Swift’s New Album, “The Tortured Poet’s Department”

    [ad_1]

    By now, I’ve expected almost everyone to have streamed Taylor Swift’s new album: The Tortured Poet’s Department. Thanks to Swifties, and those curious to see if the album was about ex Joe Alwyn or ex Matty Healy (hint: both). TTPD broke Spotify’s streaming record in less than 12 hours. And then, two hours after the album released, she dropped a second installment…The girl never sleeps.


    With 14 total albums, The Tortured Poet’s Department is a bit of a stylistic shift from her previous release, Midnights. We’re introduced to a heartbroken Swift, one who embodies vengeance and yearning through synth beats and biting lyrics. Her two features include Post Malone, on “Fortnight”, and Florence and The Machine, on “Florida!!!” You can listen to the album here:

    Produced alongside her go-to squad, Jack Antonoff and Aaron Dressner, Swift continues to challenge herself as an artist despite having conquered every accolade. While some songs lay flat (and maybe this has something to do with Antonoff’s production methods), others shine as instantaneous classics amongst Swift’s already impressive, groundbreaking discography.

    The main takeaways from Taylor’s insight on her past few years is that Matty Healy had a much bigger impact on Swift’s story than we thought. We learn that Joe Alwyn cheated on Taylor in Orlando, Florida, and that’s why the state is mentioned so often throughout. And, furthermore, we learn that she still hates Kim Kardashian.

    While this may not be the best album in her extensive collection, there are a handful of gems that stand out. With 31 songs total, The Tortured Poet’s Department can seem a bit redundant at times…and other times, Swift’s voice is often drowned out by stylistic beat choices and synths that don’t make much sense.

    The fire for Swift burns bright throughout the world, but it’s important to note that she’s constantly churning out music. To be in creator-mode 24/7 means that not every song is going to be their best work…It’s statistically impossible, but Taylor will fare well nonetheless.

    This isn’t your average album review, so I won’t delve into every song and lyric that may mean something…but here’s your essential rundown:

    Popdust Hits: “Florida!!!”, “But Daddy I Love Him”, “Who’s Afraid Of Little Old Me”, “My Boy Only Breaks His Favorite Toys”

    Popdust Misses: “Down Bad”, “The Tortured Poets Department”, “I Can Fix Him (No Really I Can)”, “loml”

    Songs About Joe Alwyn: “Florida!!!”, “So Long, London”, “loml”, “I Can Do It With A Broken Heart”, “How Did It End?”

    Songs About Matty Healy: “The Tortured Poets Department”, “Guilty As Sin?”, “Down Bad”, “Chloe or Sam or Sophia or Marcus”, “The Smallest Man Who Ever Lived”, “I Can Fix Him (No Really I Can)”

    Songs About Travis Kelce: “So High School”, “The Alchemy”

    Songs About Kim Kardashian: “thanK you aIMee”

    Popdust’s Rating: ⚡⚡⚡ 1/2

    [ad_2]

    Jai Phillips

    Source link

  • Taylor Swift’s ‘The Tortured Poets Department’ Album: Feuds with Matty Healy, Joe Alwyn, and Kim Kardashian – 247 News Around The World

    Taylor Swift’s ‘The Tortured Poets Department’ Album: Feuds with Matty Healy, Joe Alwyn, and Kim Kardashian – 247 News Around The World

    [ad_1]

    Taylor Swift’s album “The Tortured Poets Department” has sparked a wave of speculation and analysis among fans, with many interpreting the lyrics as references to her relationships with Joe Alwyn, Matty Healy, and even a mention of Kim Kardashian. The album, released on April 19, 2024, is seen as a reflection of Swift’s personal life, with fans eagerly dissecting the lyrics to uncover hidden meanings and references to her past and present relationships.

    The album’s title itself seems to hint at a connection to the WhatsApp group chat “The Tortured Man Club,” which included Alwyn, Mescal, and Scott. This group was formed around the time Swift and Alwyn’s relationship ended, adding a layer of intrigue to the album’s themes.

    Taylor Swift’s ‘The Tortured Poets Department’ Album: Feuds with Matty Healy, Joe Alwyn, and Kim Kardashian

    Swift’s relationship with Joe Alwyn, which lasted six years, is a significant theme in the album. The breakup, which followed the release of “The Tortured Poets Department,” is believed to have influenced many of the songs. The album’s title and the timing of its release suggest a direct reference to this relationship, with fans noting the album’s exploration of themes such as marriage, babies, and breakups.

    Matty Healy, the frontman of The 1975, is another figure who appears to be referenced in the album. Swift’s romance with Healy occurred between her breakup with Alwyn and the start of her relationship with Travis Kelce. Healy attended multiple shows on Swift’s Eras Tour and was spotted with her on various occasions before their reported split in June. The song “But Daddy, I Love Him” is seen by some as a response to fan backlash over Swift’s relationship with Healy, who has a history of controversial comments. The lyrics of this track seem to address the criticism and public scrutiny Swift faced during her relationship with Healy.

    The album also includes references to Kim Kardashian, although the specific nature of these references is not detailed in the provided sources. However, given Swift’s history of public feuds and her tendency to address her relationships and public figures in her music, it’s plausible that Kardashian’s role in Swift’s life and public persona could be a topic of discussion in the album.

    Swift’s “The Tortured Poets Department” is described as an anthology of new works that reflect events, opinions, and sentiments from a fleeting and fatalistic moment in time. The album is seen as a way for Swift to process her emotions and experiences, with some tracks laced with longing and heartache, while others express anger and disbelief at the public’s dissection of her love life.

    “The Tortured Poets Department” is a deeply personal album that reflects on Swift’s relationships with Alwyn, Healy, and possibly others, including a mention of Kardashian. The album’s lyrics and themes provide a window into Swift’s emotional journey, offering fans a glimpse into her personal life and the public scrutiny she faces.

    Don’t Miss | Charlie Sheen’s Daughter Sami Unveils Unexpected Style at Coachella

    [ad_2]

    247 News Around The World

    Source link

  • Inside Taylor Swift’s LONG History With Matty Healy! – Perez Hilton

    Inside Taylor Swift’s LONG History With Matty Healy! – Perez Hilton

    [ad_1]

    OK, so we’re hearing some more casual Taylor Swift fans are taken aback by just how much she has to say about Matty Healy!

    After all, shouldn’t her new album, The Tortured Poets Department, be all about Joe Alwyn, her boyfriend of six years?? What’s with all the emotion surrounding her rebound guy she was with for like a month and change?

    Related: All The Lyrics Taylor Revealed At That Tortured Poets Department Pop-Up!

    Well, she actually has a longer history with the frontman from The 1975, going all the way back to 1975… Sorry, no, we just got swept up. But it does reach back to 2014 — before she and Joe even met! So rewind with us and get a better understanding before diving into TTPD

    2014

    (c) MEGA/WENN/Amelia Dimoldenberg/YouTube

    Taylor first met Matty as a fan! She attended one of his concerts in El Lay in November 2014, along with her pals Selena Gomez and Ellie Goulding. She got to go backstage afterward because… well, she’s Taylor Swift!

    This was still in the era when folks were perpetually wondering if she was getting back together with Harry Styles. But she apparently had her eyes on a different Brit singer! Right away she and Matty hit it off — he later revealed they exchanged numbers! Speaking on an Aussie radio show, he says candidly:

    “I mean, bloody hell, what am I going to do? Go out with Taylor Swift? …I wouldn’t say no.”

    Fair enough!

    Soon after Tay is spotted sporting a The 1975 tee, and whispers are already starting. By December the rumors are flying these two are secretly dating! She attends another of Matty’s concerts, and an Us Weekly source spills they’re giving it a try:

    “It’s very new and they’re having fun. They’re seeing where things go.”

    The insider says it was Matty who did the pursuing, frequently texting the Style singer.

    2015

    In January, Matty puts an end to the headlines by definitively denying they’d been dating for two months — or at all! He told Shazam Top 20:

    “It is bloody fake. It’s all fake. It’s all a farce. There’s no, like, relationship or anything happening… We met each other. We exchanged numbers in the same way a lot of people in this kind of world do. And we spoke occasionally, and then she’s the biggest pop star in the world. I’m in Australia. There’s no, like, relationship or anything happening. It’s just funny how people really, really buy into that. So that didn’t really happen. As much as it’d be amazing for me if it did, unfortunately it didn’t.”

    And everyone believed him. Why wouldn’t they? He sounded pretty convincingly rejected!

    Then in February the pair are photographed together again, albeit in a big group, at a Brit Awards party. But any continued speculation doesn’t last long. Because that same month she also meets Calvin Harris, so…

    2016

    Matty upsets the Swifties for the first time over a year later in March 2016, touching on his relationship with Taylor in an interview with Q Magazine. He says it was just a “flirtation” and once again reiterates they never actually dated. However, he also sounds like a bitter incel, declaring dating her would have been “emasculating” anyway. Here were those too-cool-for-school remarks:

    “So the one time I did have a flirtation with a girl, it ends up going everywhere…I mean, I got on E! News and people were like, ‘Who’s Matt Healy?’ so that was cool. But I didn’t make a big deal out of it myself. It’s not really anything to talk about, because if she wasn’t Taylor Swift we wouldn’t be talking about her. She wasn’t a big impact on my life.”

    Her fans were NOT happy with him for what they read as dismissive, snide, even misogynistic. His statement in response was as effusive as it was defensive. He tweeted out:

    “Now I may admit to being an idiot on occasion, but I am not a misogynist. This suggestion makes me really sad. I was for a very short time immersed in a celebrity world that I found confusing and scary. At that time, I had fears of being ‘somebody’s boyfriend’ (remember this is all speculation as we never dated!) before even being recognized for my music or presence as a person in my own right.

    Now I don’t pride myself on being more intelligent, or worldly, or wise, or progressive, or even regressive than the next man but I DO pride self on being honest. I was being HONEST about all the thoughts, feelings, and situations that come along when people ASSUME you are dating the most famous woman on the planet. I am telling you from experience it’s an all-consuming whirlwind and something that for me elicited a lot of self-exploration.

    Now if you want to talk about Taylor Swift, that is easy…. Since she came to my show in December of 2014, I would say that 90 percent of journalists that have interviewed me have asked about either her as a person or what our ‘interaction’ was like. I have said on countless occasions that I found her to be one of the most gracious, hard working, creatively gifted, and beautiful women that I have had the pleasure to meet. I personally have a lot of respect and admiration for her. Why would I not? I didn’t even date Taylor, but the media’s incessant and brutal obsession with her has meant that even a guy who DIDN’T DATE HER has been so battered by their never-ending questions that he’s inevitably said something that can be lifted and molded into something that resembles ‘shade’. It’s really sad.”

    For a long time no one thinks of Matty as anyone’s boyfriend.

    2019

    In September 2019, during an appearance on the Green Room podcast, Matty sends a very unsubtle shout-out saying he’d like to work with Taylor — specifically on a more acoustic album like her early stuff. He declares:

    “Taylor Swift doing an acoustic record? I can’t think of a record that would sell more than that. Like, Taylor Swift’s intimate return to country. Of course, you’d wanna produce that! She’s [probably] gonna sit on that idea, but Taylor, if you ever want someone to help you set up the mics for your acoustic record, just so you know, I’m there.”

    She may not have been “a big impact” on his life, but she at least thinks well enough of him to be interested… in collaboration, that is. This is well into her relationship with Joe Alwyn.

    2022

    Over three years later, in November 2022, Matty first denies and then confirms yes, he and The 1975 did end up collaborating with Tay! They worked on her Midnights record, but his stuff didn’t make the final cut.

    January 2023

    Taylor surprises the audience at The 1975’s show in London with a guest appearance in which she debuts Anti-Hero and then covers their track The City.

    She’s still dating Joe Alwyn at this time, so far as anyone knows. But just around the corner…

    April 2023

    Taylor and Joe’s breakup is first reported. Their relationship was so private it’s not 100% clear at this time when they actually ended things. But the concert appearance with Matty a couple months prior is about to make folks raise an eyebrow because…

    May 2023

    Despite sources saying she wasn’t interested in dating at the moment, Taylor is almost immediately rumored to be seeing Matty Healy! A source tells The Sun on May 3 this isn’t just casual either:

    “She and Matty are madly in love. It’s super-early days, but it feels right. They first dated, very briefly, almost ten years ago but timings just didn’t work out. Taylor and Joe actually split up back in February, so there was absolutely no crossover. Both Matty and Taylor have been touring over the past few weeks, so it’s been a lot of Face-Timing and texting but she cannot wait to see him again.”

    Whoa! So fast! That report continued by making a distinction with the Joe relationship that would become important in the Travis Kelce era:

    “They are both massively proud and excited about this relationship and, unlike Taylor’s last one — which was very much kept out of the spotlight, deliberately — she wants to ‘own’ this romance, and not hide it away. Taylor just wants to live her life, and be happy. She’s told pals Matty is flying to Nashville over the weekend to support her on the next leg of her tour.”

    This early report is met with skepticism, but then Matty does fly 17 hours from The Philippines to Nashville to attend her May 5 concert. And fans realize both mouthed the same words onstage at their shows:

    “This one is about you. You know who you are. I love you.”

    Then they’re actually photographed together coming home to her condo after midnight! The world goes from dubious to 100% sold overnight!

    About a week later, on May 11, the newly minted couple go on a very public date at NYC hotspot Cipriani. They move fast — on May 18 they’re seen kissing in public for the first time.

    However, during this time Swifties are digging into Matty’s past and not liking what they’re seeing — that is to say a streak of apparent sexism, homophobia, and more in podcast conversations. Is his problematic behavior a dealbreaker for Tay? Because…

    June 2023

    Just over a month after the first report they were dating, the word was out they were already dunzo.

    Taylor Swift CANCELS Membership To Elite NYC Club After Guest Exposed Her Matty Healy Romance!
    (c) CBS Sunday Morning/Tape Notes Podcast/YouTube

    The next month, there’s a report they got back together, but Tay’s people tell People:

    “They are absolutely not together and aren’t even in contact anymore. She is enjoying being single and has been spending time in the studio and hanging out with friends in New York City. This is all B.S.”

    They “aren’t even in contact anymore”? Sounds like a bad breakup!

    August 2023

    The bad blood rumors aren’t helped by Matty being overheard possibly talking trash about Tay to another girl just a couple months later.

    Oh, and then The 1975 were definitely on the 1989 (Taylor’s Version) album… but got booted — and there’s proof. Maybe it was a creative decision, maybe it was because Tay didn’t want to have to see the guy’s name on her work. But in any case, it was definitely over for good — and it ended badly.

    Kinda sounds like the kind of rollercoaster love affair that inspires some passionate songs, right? What do YOU think, Perezcious readers? Was Matty her one-that-got-away for all those years? Only to break her heart when they finally came together? Let us know your take on all this in the comments (below)!

    [Image via MEGA/WENN.]

    [ad_2]

    Perez Hilton

    Source link

  • Taylor Swift Wrote an Entire Album About Matty Healy? Him?!

    Taylor Swift Wrote an Entire Album About Matty Healy? Him?!

    [ad_1]

    If you had told me in early 2023 that Taylor Swift would write an entire album about being madly in love with Matty Healy, and angry at the world we didn’t support that forbidden love, well, I would have told you that she could never.

    It just goes to show you can never know the person from the artist because here we are—an entire, emotionally raw album seemingly about Matty f-ing Healy, frontman for The 1975. I cannot.

    That’s right, Swift’s eleventh studio album, The Tortured Poets Department, is all about that f-ing guy. You’ll recall they were linked publicly last year but soon ended, and forgotten about. Only not, because it turns out Swift is big mad at the world over the relationship, if the album is any indication.

    Let’s dissect that, should we? This is a man who has proudly given the Nazi salute at one of his shows. He’s a gross idiot. I’ve dated unemployed men who would get mad at me when I went clothes shopping because their hobby was to make doll’s clothing and wouldn’t I be more considerate to invite them to see the latest women’s fashion so they could be re-created it for the dolls?! However, I’ve never dated a man who I have known to give the Nazi salute, so clearly, I have better standards than Swift, and I have terrible standards.

    So doing the Nazi salute alone is enough to end things but with someone like that, there’s always more, isn’t there? Healy has proudly said—with his whole chest— that he happily watches degrading pornography that involves Black women being treated atrociously, discussing it during a podcast!

    As if that’s not enough to dump his ass faster than you can say “Taylor’s Version,” it came out that he appeared on a podcast of other obnoxious edgelords who had previously bashed Taylor’s mom’s appearance, calling her “Miss Piggy.” What? I’m sorry, but if you willingly associate with someone who said that about my mother, we’re going to have a real f-ing problem. I certainly wouldn’t be singing that our relationship “happens once every few lifetimes” like she seemingly does in “The Alchemy” or calling it “screeching tires of true love” going on to sing “I know he’s crazy / but he’s the one” as she does in “But Daddy I Love Him.” My version would be more akin to “you better run if you see me/ because one of us is going to jail tonight” on a song titled “Matty Healy is the WORST.”

    Look, no one said I had the same caliber of songwriting artistry as Taylor Swift, but clearly, I have better taste in the terrible-decisions-for-men-department. (It doesn’t quite have the same ring as The Tortured Poets Department, though.)

    I don’t understand releasing an entire album about a failed relationship with a genuinely bad person and declaring to the world it was true love—even more, announcing that the real reason you broke up is that he left you: “they just ghosted you/now you know what it feels like” (“The Smallest Man Who Ever Lived”) and that you’re angry at everyone in your life who tried to save you from him: “they slammed the door on my whole world/the one thing I wanted”; “I tell you something right now/I’d rather burn my whole life now/ than listen to one more second of all this bitching and moaning/ I’ll tell you something about my good name/ It’s mine alone to disgrace/ I don’t cater to all these vipers dressed in empath’s clothing” (But Daddy I Love Him.) I tell you, the way the FBI could torture me and I’d never admit to that.

    The whole album is … a choice. Not one I would make, but Swift has made it clear she doesn’t give a f**k. On the one hand, I admire it. It’s rare a mega star just takes a massive, brutally honest swing for the fences with their work. On the other hand, that swing is for Matty Healy, so … I guess my real takeaway here is that when those celebrity gossip mags try to tell us “Stars! They’re Just Like Us!” we should all point to this album and say “no they’re not.”

    (featured image: Ashok Kumar/TAS24/Getty Images for TAS Rights Management; Michael Hickey/Getty Images)


    The Mary Sue is supported by our audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn a small affiliate commission. Learn more

    [ad_2]

    Kate Hudson

    Source link

  • The Abbey to host album release party for Taylor Swift’s ‘The Tortured Poets Department’

    The Abbey to host album release party for Taylor Swift’s ‘The Tortured Poets Department’

    [ad_1]

    click to enlarge

    Photo via Le Petite Fete/Facebook

    Celebrate the ever-growing discography of one of pop culture’s biggest names this month at the Abbey.

    The Orlando venue will host an album release party for Taylor Swift’s latest release, The Tortured Poets Department, with vendors, drinks, interactive contests and more at 9 p.m. Thursday, April 18.

    Swift is known for her elaborate theming and fully immersive storylines, so the party hosted by Orlando-born Le Petite Fete is sure to follow suit. With themed decorations and refreshments, the Abbey will be turned into a palace of all things Swiftie.

    A DJ will play Swift’s music throughout her “eras” before transitioning to Tortured Poets at midnight when the album is released. There will be a lip-sync battle, bracelet trading, photo opportunities and vendors. And for those whose outfits are never going out of style, there will be a costume contest.

    Le Petite Fete hosts affairs tailored to pop-culture darlings like Britney Spears, the Jonas Brothers, Olivia Rodrigo and Harry Styles — and of course, the Taylor parties that made their name and fame. They promise “surprises and delights” for fans to look forward to at this month’s celebration.

    The party is open to Swifties who are 18 and older, but those who are 21 and up can also enjoy themed alcoholic drinks.

    Subscribe to Orlando Weekly newsletters.

    Follow us: Apple News | Google News | NewsBreak | Reddit | Instagram | Facebook | Twitter | Or sign up for our RSS Feed

    [ad_2]

    Alexandra Sullivan

    Source link

  • For Taylor Swift, “God I Love the English” No Longer Applies

    For Taylor Swift, “God I Love the English” No Longer Applies

    [ad_1]

    Having recently opted for “all-American boy” Travis Kelce, it seems the days of Swift’s fetish for British men are over. Though, for a while there, it was going quite strong, starting with Harry Styles in his One Direction era. Swift then moved on to Calvin Harris (who would probably specify he’s Scottish, not British—but still), then Tom Hiddleston, then Joe Alwyn. The latter British bloke being her longest relationship at approximately six years (though maybe less, if one is to go by “You’re Losing Me” being written in early December of 2021). Even so, Swift didn’t seem to be fully convinced she was entirely “over” British peen, briefly dabbling with The 1975’s Matty Healy before quickly realizing how damaging he was to her “brand.” In fact, Ice Spice’s involvement in the entire dalliance (with comments Healy made about Ice Spice on a podcast quickly resurfacing during their time together) appears to be something Swift is still making up for now (after already giving her a feature on a “remix” of “Karma”), carting her along into the multimillion-dollar box (a.k.a. suite) seats she enjoyed while watching “her man” play in the Super Bowl. 

    And what she’s also apparently making up for is all that lost time without some good old-fashioned American dick in her life. We’re talking the kind of sausage that is as American as they come: an Ohio-born football player for the NFL. As for Kelce’s own recently-ended long-term relationship, it was with sports and fashion influencer Kayla Nicole Brown. Having been with her for five years (albeit on-again, off-again), it seems as though Kelce, too, wanted to make an about-face, “type”-wise. Because yes, Taylor Swift is about as far from a Black woman as you can get. Nonetheless, she’s been doing her best to get as close to one as possible by way of Ice Spice, who is clearly spicing up Taylor’s fucking life more than Travis Kelce. A man that has only served to bland-ify it with his Americanness and general lack of a “cosmopolitan” nature (let’s put it this way: he isn’t going to be putting a dress on or reading aloud from a book of Romantic poetry anytime soon). What her British boyfriends all possessed, even if only by sheer virtue of actually being in the arts as opposed to being football players. And that’s not a trait to be overlooked. For, as Swift saw forever crystallized in a meme of Kelce screaming like a wild animal in his coach’s face, it’s no good when someone has that much sports-driven testosterone coursing through their veins. You never know when it’s going to cause a rage flare-up. Though perhaps Kelce knows better than to fly into one around Swift, lest he risk having his temper tantrum immortalized in a song. 

    Although Swift isn’t a stranger to dating the all-American boy, including Joe Jonas and a Kennedy (Conor), Kelce is arguably the biggest cliche of what that trope represents. And it’s unlikely that, with future boyfriends, Swift will be able to ever top such a stereotype of what it means to “be American.” Unless, of course, she should decide to go the Lana Del Rey route and date a cop. But no, not even Swift could make cops “chic.” Football, on the other hand, is something easy to breathe life into once more (especially through a highly publicized end-of-game kiss, delivered in a Hollywood ending fashion). After all, it’s no secret that, in the U.S., all of life is just an extended metaphor for high school. Where the jock and the thin blonde girl are treated as royalty while the rest of the “student body” merely looks on with the requisite amount of awe and reverence. Thus, although some might have been growing fed up with Swift’s British bloke fetish, at least what could be said for it was that it didn’t reinforce the already barely latent idea that all the world’s a high school, and those with the “objectively” good looks and wealth are the ones who will be perennially rewarded by society’s capitalist values. 

    And yet, what’s also rather ironic about Swift’s sudden one-eighty toward embracing the cheerleader role in her football player boyfriend’s life is that she, at one point, viewed herself as someone who was not “football player’s girlfriend” material. In truth, it was the very song about this “difficulty” of hers that put her on the map beyond just the country music radio scene: “You Belong With Me.” In the accompanying music video, Swift plays the so-called dweeb (mainly because she has giant black-rimmed glasses holding her back from being seen as the “hot” girl) who lives across from her “cute” friend. Who, quel choc, happens to be a football player that she can’t seem to attain. Not only because she’s a “nerd,” but because he already has a cheerleader girlfriend (also played by Swift, in a very bad brunette wig…let’s just say she’s not sporting the same quality hair as Rachel McAdams in her ten-thousand-dollar [some even say twenty-thousand-dollar] wig for Mean Girls). Thus, “Nerd” Swift is relegated to the sidelines in a far crueler way than she is now, forced to watch the object of her affection look out toward Brunette Swift instead of her, all bedecked in her marching band attire. 

    By the end of the video, though, Swift, in the style of a true high school rom-com formula, takes off her glasses, puts on a form-fitting gown and shows up to the prom so that the football player dude can see how “hot” she actually is without her dweeb costume. Naturally, the two end up together. And Swift ostensibly admitted that she was never born for the “unpopular girl” role. Yet she held off for this long on returning to Brunette Taylor status by giving in fully to the high school fantasy/fairytale she conveyed to us long ago in 2008 (though the single and video were released in 2009). One she perhaps tried to stave off for several years with British men, assuring listeners at one point, “God I love the English” on Lover’s “London Boy.” Ultimately, however, Swift has succumbed to her most puerile desires from the Fearless era in seeking out the validating comfort of the all-American jock. And there’s no doubt that Matty Healy helped give her the final push back in that direction. With The Tortured Poets Department slated to be a scathing spotlight on her years spent with Alwyn, listeners will soon know even more about why Swift has returned to preferring her own Uh-muhr-ih-cuhn breed. Cemented by featuring a song on the album called “So Long, London.” De facto “Hello ‘Murica.”

    [ad_2]

    Genna Rivieccio

    Source link

  • Taylor Swift Wasn’t Planning To Announce New Album At Grammys! The Plan WAS… – Perez Hilton

    Taylor Swift Wasn’t Planning To Announce New Album At Grammys! The Plan WAS… – Perez Hilton

    [ad_1]

    Taylor Swift wasn’t actually planning on announcing her new album at the Grammys… That was a last minute call!

    Swifties were delighted to hear the announcement of the Blank Space singer’s 11th studio album, The Tortured Poets Department, on Sunday night. Tay was accepting the award for Best Pop Vocal Album when she shocked everyone with the news. It led a lot of people to wonder how she knew she would win and be able to make the announcement in the first place!

    Well, the answer is simple — it wasn’t always the plan to announce it during the awards show!

    Related: Taylor Gifted Entire Time THESE Luxe Items After Grammys Win!

    In fan-captured footage from her Wednesday Eras Tour stop in Tokyo, the 34-year-old explained she actually planned on making the surprise announcement IN Tokyo… But at the awards ceremony, she decided — if she got on stage — she’d do it then and there:

    “I had this plan in my head, and I told my friends — I told Jack [Antonoff], but I hadn’t really told many other people. I thought, ‘Okay, so if I’m lucky enough to get up there and win one thing tonight, I’m just going to do it. I’m just going to announce my new album.’”

    She added:

    “And luckily enough, that ended up happening. My backup plan was that I was going to do it tonight in Tokyo.”

    Inneresting!

    She went on to give fans some new details about the upcoming body of work:

    “I’ve been working on it for about two years, I kept working on it throughout the US tour. When it was prefect in my opinion — when it was good enough for you — I finished it. I am so, so excited. Soon you’ll get to hear it. Soon we’ll get to hear it together.”

    She added:

    “Everyone asks, ‘Why do you make so many albums?’ It’s like, ‘Man, because I love it so much. I’m having fun. Leave me alone.’”

    Watch the full video (below):

    Thoughts, Perezcious readers?? Sound OFF in the comments!

    [Images via CBS/YouTube & photo.wenn.com]

    [ad_2]

    Perez Hilton

    Source link