Penticton Herald

Travis Kelce, Taylor Swift gear flies off shelves

- By HeatHer HollingSwo­rtH, nick ingram & mark VancleaVe

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — An ignitable cake burns away a Kansas City Chiefs logo to reveal pop superstar Taylor Swift ‘s image underneath. Prayer candles feature the Grammy winner and her star tight end boyfriend Travis Kelce. Sweatshirt­s are emblazoned with “Kelce’s Best Catch” and “Go Kansas City Swiftie.”

With the Chiefs preparing to face off against the San Francisco 49ers in Kansas City’s fourth Super Bowl appearance in five years, stores can hardly keep in stock any of the caps, sweatshirt­s and other odds and ends (some odder than others) commemorat­ing the sports and pop crossover romance.

Highlights of their courting are featured in the merch. On tour in Buenos Aires, for instance, Swift changed a lyric in her song “Karma” from “Karma is the guy on the screen” to “Karma is the guy on the Chiefs.” Now Karma sweatshirt­s are proliferat­ing, part of the surge of Chiefs merchandis­e hitting store shelves in Kansas City and far beyond.

“I think it’s amazing,” said Katie Mabry van Dieren, owner of Shop Local KC, which sells merchandis­e made by local artists, including the Karma sweatshirt­s. “I have never shipped so many items from our stores to different states.”

She said she thought the busiest weekend would be when Kansas City hosted the NFL draft in April. But she said Swift’s The Eras Tour concert stop at Arrowhead Stadium over the summer blew that away.

The July concert also was what set the stage for the relationsh­ip. Kelce was thwarted in his effort to woo the superstar with a friendship bracelet. But the romantic gesture, and public admission of defeat on his “New Heights” podcast, caught Swift’s attention nonetheles­s. It also fueled a hot market for Chiefs-themed friendship bracelets.

“I hope Taylor and Travis stay together forever,” van Dieren said. “That would be great for us.”

About 73 per cent of adults say they plan to watch the game this year, about 10 per cent higher than in recent previous years. And the romance that has been dominating headlines throughout the NFL season might be helping drive interest.

The “Taylor Bowl” is what Maddie Schmitz, owner of Something Sweet by Maddie Lou in the Minneapoli­s suburb of Coon Rapids, is calling this Sunday’s contest in Las Vegas.

The self-described Swiftie is behind the ignitable, so-called burn-away cakes. She uses an edible image printer with edible inks to print the Chiefs- and Swift-themed images on two sheets of – you guessed it -- edible paper.

“A lot of women are ordering these, in secret and then bringing them to the Super Bowl party to surprise their husbands because it is a whole Chiefs-themed cake on the outside, but then on the inside reveals the Taylor Swift love that all of the females seem to have for her,” Schmitz said.

She isn’t the only romance confection­er. Dolce Bakery, in the suburb of Prairie Village, Kansas, has an entire “Swiftie Collection” of heart-shaped cakes it is hawking.

Pre-game news conference­s are sprinkled with questions about the songstress.

After Swift earned her fourth career Grammy for album of the year on Sunday, Kelce vowed that he has to “bring home some hardware.” Even NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell was asked a few times about Swift, who was front-and-center in the stands when Kelce scored a touchdown while leading the Chiefs to a 17-10 victory over the Baltimore Ravens in the AFC title game.

Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas said the city has been lucky to have experience­d the economy jolt. “She is welcome,” he said in a pre-playoff statement, “to stay forever.”

Anything Swift wears is particular­ly hot. For instance, a ring bearing Kelce’s jersey No. 87 is backordere­d after it was spotted on Swift’s finger.

The ring’s maker, Emily Bordner, from eb & Company, suspects that Donna Kelce bought the ring for her son’s star-studded sweetheart. The Kansas City store also gave the superstar of NFL moms (her oldest son, Jason Kelce, is a center for the Philadelph­ia Eagles) a pair of sold-out earrings bearing her youngest’s number on a Chiefs jersey. Swift has since been spotted wearing those, too.

It’s been all hands on deck ever since, with Bordner’s husband, mother and all her friends enlisted to help out.

“Bananas,” she said. “It’s been absolutely bananas. I don’t think I’ve ever worked this hard in my entire life, hands down. Absolutely not.”

At Westside Storey, it all started when Swift placed an order last fall. She later was spotted wearing a hat and sweatshirt the Kansas City boutique sent her, recalled Chris Harrington, the store’s owner. He said he initially thought the flood of business would be short-lived, just a fun story to share when the mania ebbed.

“People talk about the Taylor Swift effect, and you hear about it or read about it or whatever, but to like, personally experience it, you know, is is another level,” he said, adding that it is “almost becoming like an identity of the store.”

The store generally does well when the Chiefs do, but this year is far busier than other recent Super Bowl years. Harrington credits the couple’s star power, saying it has elevated everything to a “global level.” Often, he added, customers are on a mission.

“They were sent from their sister in Philadelph­ia to just buy a product in the store that Taylor shopped at,” he said. “So it’s crazy.”

He acknowledg­es that “everybody has an opinion” on the romance. But, he adds: “I love it for a million reasons.

I’ve had just about enough of winter and am itching to get my hands dirty. I can’t do that yet in my New York garden, but I have been distractin­g myself by growing microgreen­s and dwarf strawberri­es on the kitchen counter.

It will be another month before I bring out my seed-starting supplies, but I can do some pregaming by testing my old stash for viability.

In the past, I’ve had luck growing seeds several years past their expiration dates. You can, too, but it will take some forethough­t: Attempting to grow seeds that turn out to be duds could set you too far behind to start over. And that’s a gamble no gardener wants to take.

On the other hand, tossing seeds just because they’re two, three or even five years old could be wasteful. So, before springing for new ones, conduct a simple test on each batch of your leftover seeds:

Wet a paper towel and wring out excess water.

Fold five to 10 seeds of the same type, depending on their size, into the towel and place in a zipper-top plastic bag. If you’re testing more than one type of seed, label each bag so you don’t mix them up.

Check on the seeds in five days, and again every day afterward for up to three weeks, lightly moistening the paper towel as needed. Each seed type has its own schedule, but those treated this way should germinate more quickly than those sown in soil.

After a few days have passed with no new root sprouts, do the math: If you started 10 seeds, and seven of them germinated, that’s a 70 per cent germinatio­n rate, which indicates you should plant 30 per cent more seeds than you need (1007030). So if you want 10 plants, you should start 13 seeds and expect about 10 to sprout.

After the test, many gardeners discard their germinated test seeds, but – waste not, want not! – you can transplant them into containers when their sprouted roots are about an inch long (don’t wait longer or they may die).

Fill seed trays or other containers with potting mix, then create small planting holes in each compartmen­t. A pencil works nicely for this. Next, using disinfecte­d tweezers and taking care to avoid touching the root end, place one sprout, rootside-down, into each hole. Cover the root with soil, leaving the seed (or what remains of it) exposed above the surface. Water gently, then place under lights and treat as you would convention­ally sown seeds.

So, this begs the question: Can the paper towel trick be used as a deliberate seed-starting method?

The answer is yes, and this can be especially helpful if you’re late to germinatin­g your seeds and want to get them into the garden ASAP.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Maddie Schmitz, owner of Something Sweet by Maddie Lu, displays one of her “burn away cakes” in Coon Rapids, Minn. Schmitz created the Taylor Swift/Travis Kelce cakes just in time for NFL football’s upcoming Super Bowl.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Maddie Schmitz, owner of Something Sweet by Maddie Lu, displays one of her “burn away cakes” in Coon Rapids, Minn. Schmitz created the Taylor Swift/Travis Kelce cakes just in time for NFL football’s upcoming Super Bowl.
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