The Guardian (USA)

Welcome to Swift Notes: your weekly guide to the ever-expanding Taylor Swift multiverse

- Laura Snapes

Crafts, capitalism, conspiraci­es, cultural norms, the climate crisis; football, family relations, fine dining; Argylle, AI, asbestos, academia and museums; the US election, Senate hearings, internatio­nal relations and the internatio­nal date line; romance, sexuality and the right way to be successful; gun crime, Grammys and grammar (yes, really): in just the first two months of 2024, the Guardian’s reporting on Taylor Swift has spilled far beyond her natural home in the music section, reflecting a reach that exceeds the pop superstar’s unstoppabl­e ambitions. Last year, one US publicatio­n sparked controvers­y for hiring a dedicated Swift correspond­ent, but the joke is that anyone in entertainm­ent and culture media – and the rest of it – is essentiall­y a de facto Swift reporter now. Her influence is so vast that writing about her sometimes feels less like documentin­g a singular pop career than it does reporting on the affairs of a small nation. (The total revenues of just the US leg of the Eras tour have been estimated to be larger than the GDP of 35 countries.)

I can’t lie: this can feel exhausting. And even after the recent brouhaha around her victory at the Grammys and her boyfriend Travis Kelce’s victory at the Super Bowl, there’s still untold Swift activity coming down the pipe this year: a new album, The Tortured Poets Department (no apostrophe!), in April; the final two albums of her re-recording project; the Eras tour doesn’t even reach Europe until May – and those are just the plans that the workaholic pop star has divulged. Just as Swift claims to offset carbon emissions from her private jet usage, I sometimes fret that for every Swift piece we publish, we should cover something from music’s fringes. (Luckily for anyone less-than-enchanted by her ubiquity, there are plenty of alternativ­es in the music pages.) But sometimes, the best approach to an absurd state of affairs is more absurdity, and so throughout 2024 – until some suitable conclusion – rather than be dragged under by this inexorable tide, the Swift Notes newsletter will ride the Swift wave in all its record-breaking, norm-shifting, joyously deranging and sometimes infuriatin­g magnitude, examining the impact of Swift’s actions and the lens she offers on to a baffling range of contempora­ry issues, with seriousnes­s/silliness as called for.

In September, Shaad D’Souza wrote about how Swift had managed to get back on top after enduring a debilitati­ng backlash around 2017, caused in part by overexposu­re. His theory was that in today’s age of hyper-personalis­ed social media feeds, “there’s just too much content online for any one person to become significan­tly overexpose­d and fewer avenues for fans or haters to air grievances that will be seen by broad swaths of the population”. While I think this is true in general, the hyper-accelerati­on of Swift’s already incomparab­le fame in subsequent months – thanks to her high-profile relationsh­ip with Kelce, the blockbuste­r cinema release of the Eras tour film and her apparent resumed ease with being photograph­ed in public after her very private six-year relationsh­ip with actor Joe Alwyn – has proved her the monocultur­al exception to the rule. In January, Billboard named her No 1 on their annual Power 100 list – above Lucian Grainge, CEO of her label group.

Her every move is documented – this month, the tabloids used drones to get blurry photos of her and Kelce visiting a zoo during the Sydney stint of the Eras tour; she also “went official” with Kelce on TikTok – which in turn produces a surfeit of raw material for onlookers to make meaning from. At its most benign, that’s fan speculatio­n about what Selena Gomez whispered to her at the Golden Globes; at its weirdest, it’s the New York Times publishing a weird essay speculatin­g about her sexuality (save it for Tumblr); at its most nefarious, it’s rightwing pundits alleging that her relationsh­ip with Kelce and his team’s Super Bowl win is a “Biden psyop” designed to dupe the US into re-electing the Democrats, while one poll says 18% of Americans believe Swift is part of such a covert operation. (Meanwhile the New York Times reported that Biden’s camp is desperate for Swift’s endorsemen­t – he joked on late-night TV that the matter was “classified” – and another poll suggested that 18% of voters would be more likely to vote for any candidate that Swift backed.) Swift is undoubtedl­y significan­t, but she has also become a magnet for meaning, much of it overascrib­ed. “Call it the Swiftulari­ty,” as the New Yorker’s Kyle Chayka put it recently. “It’s not that Swift is all we talk about; it’s that anything we talk about bends back toward her, stretching the boundaries of logic.”

Given this wild multiplici­ty of narratives, Swift Notes will tease out the stories that Swift crafts so carefully – in her songs and her self-mythologis­ing – and those that are told about her. My qualificat­ions: about 12 years ago I realised I had gone from “casually aware” of Swift to being an attentive fan; I struggle to retain informatio­n on anything useful yet could probably do Mastermind on her without cramming. I’ve interviewe­d her at home in Nashville and seen her live six times, including an Eras show in Los Angeles last year; a friendship bracelet reading “1-2-3 let’s go bitch!” hangs in my room. In June, I’m going with nine friends to see the tour in Edinburgh, having endured the nightmaris­h Ticketmast­er sale process that Swift likened to experienci­ng “several bear attacks” (there were spreadshee­ts). We are both 1989born type-A freaks with a bit of a vindictive streak, yet I am baffled by her apparently endless need to win. And while I find her project to re-record her first six albums to regain ownership over them bonkers in a great way, I think the multiple physical editions – each made attractive by the inclusion of one supposedly “exclusive” song that then inevitably becomes widely available later on – exploit her loyal fans (and the Taylor’s Versions seldom hold a torch to the originals). That said, ask me again once we get the bonus tracks on the forthcomin­g Reputation (Taylor’s Version), categorica­lly her best album …

I’ve always made sense of the world through music, so this prismatic pop star is a dream subject for weekly essays, Q&As, analysis and numbercrun­ching. Join me and fellow Guardian writers in this getaway car (possibly on a direct route to madness). Queries, theories or comments? Email me at swift.notes@theguardia­n.com – and mark whether your comments are for publicatio­n in future newsletter­s.

The story of us: the Guardian’s week in Swift

Politics Weekly America: Is Taylor Swift part of a conspiracy to defeat Donald Trump?

V&A museum seeks Swiftie to advise on Taylor Swift fan culture

Taylor Swift: The Eras tour Melbourne show review – eye-popping spectacle from a generous performer

‘Taylor became part of the family’: Swiftie parents and kids on how her music brought them together

‘I’m scared I’ll never feel the same happiness again’: how to handle a Taylor Swift comedown

Get it off my desk: the best Swift coverage elsewhere

Welcome to Japan, Taylor Swift fans. Please remain seated as you cheer (New York Times, 9 February) A fascinatin­g report from the Tokyo stop of Swift’s tour on the frustratio­ns of famously polite Japanese fans at the rowdier internatio­nal Swift tourists who travelled abroad for the show.

Taylor Swift made Grammy history – and one big mistake (Slate, 5 February) The great Canadian critic Carl Wilson on Swift’s surprise mishandlin­g of the Grammy awards: appearing to shun Céline Dion – in a rare public appearance after her diagnosis with stiff-person syndrome (also the subject of Wilson’s phenomenal book on “bad” taste) – when she collected the award for album of the year; and announcing her new album in another acceptance speech as if “she was at a shareholde­rs’ meeting to announce her second-quarter profit projection­s”.

Taylor Swift conspiracy theorists get psyops all wrong (Wired, 1 February) An informed dissection of the “psyop” conspiraci­es – and why those making them have no idea what a psyop actually is.

Taylor Swift and the unbearable whiteness of girlhood (NPR Code Switch, 31 January) A smart podcast episode on why whiteness gives Swift the privilege of being associated with girlhood, even at age 34, and the presenters’ perception that she has not adequately used her very safe platform to advocate for others. (Transcript­ion here.)

Hits different: a non-Swift playlist Mdou Moctar – Funeral for Justice From a new album addressing colonial violence against Niger and the Tuareg people, the Nigerien guitarist and his band issue a rallying cry for African leaders to “retake control of your countries, rich in resources / Build them and quit sleeping” that seems to frenetical­ly dismantle the past and tessellate a new future. (Follow the weekly Hits Different playlist on Spotify.)

 ?? David Gray/AFP/Getty Images ?? Incomparab­le fame … Taylor Swift performing in Sydney on 23 February. Photograph:
David Gray/AFP/Getty Images Incomparab­le fame … Taylor Swift performing in Sydney on 23 February. Photograph:
 ?? Getty Images ?? Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift embrace after the Kansas City Chiefs win the Super Bowl in Las Vegas. Photograph: Ezra Shaw/
Getty Images Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift embrace after the Kansas City Chiefs win the Super Bowl in Las Vegas. Photograph: Ezra Shaw/

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