So Taylor’s quitting at least the fame part of being a musician, then? Seeing as The Lucky One was a song where Taylor ended up envying the women who were smart enough to take the money and their dignity and get the hell out before Taylor herself came around the music industry and all?
We could take it this literally. Or we could read it like this…
It is beyond ridiculous to think this world renowned poet who cherishes love would chose to be married at essentially work. In front of an intimate crowd of 1,000 of her closest acquaintances. Come on. If fans / the gp believe this then I have a bridge to sell them.
So maybe the plan is something like spreading rumors about when the wedding will be. People get excited. Then it doesn’t happen. Then they get excited again. And it doesn’t happen again. And people, on their own accord, start wondering what’s wrong. Instead of being told to believe something is wrong with the English teacher and the gym teacher. A couple so perfect in their minds there’s no possible future except end game. So when it all comes crashing down they are a little more prepared to say goodbye because it was their own conclusion that something was amiss.
So if you’re going to draft another fake wedding location then you might as well have a little fun with it. Hence the chose the rose garden over Madison square reference.
I don’t know. That’s one idea.
Bottom line is the lucky one reference doesn’t have to be a literal goodbye to fame.
I think Taylor has repeatedly toyed with the idea of some kind of departure from fame. But I can’t say if that is absolute or it’s more like a step down off the pedestal she’s been placed on.








