894 Likes, 5 Comments - Oakley (@oakleyofla) on Instagram: āDonāt let this face fool you #maltipoo #puppyā
@ Villanelle
DEAR READER

#extradirty
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@theartofmadeline

Origami Around
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
ojovivo

if i look back, i am lost
$LAYYYTER
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

JVL
Sade Olutola
šŖ¼
Stranger Things
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
Acquired Stardust

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oozey mess
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@intheclear13
894 Likes, 5 Comments - Oakley (@oakleyofla) on Instagram: āDonāt let this face fool you #maltipoo #puppyā
@ Villanelle
Jack Leopards & The Dolphin Club is Princess Consuela Bananahammock 2.0
Nils Sjƶberg *wink* *wink*
Taylor told the truth moodboard
This! ššššŖšŖ
@taylorswift
someone: hey i genuinely care about u and i like u a lotĀ
my brain: ?? ? time for Joke?? make Joke??? yes??
Miss Americana š¬ January 31 on Netflix
taylorswift.lnk.to/MissAmericana
*me completely regretting not shooting my shot and send my application to win a ticket to go to Sundance
OK JUST REALIZED WE STARTED THIS DECADE WITH TAYLOR RELEASING MINE, A SONG ABOUT DREAMING OF FINDING REAL LOVE, AND WE ARE ENDING THIS DECADE WITH THE SINGLE LOVER IN WHICH SHE FOUND IT....
Whoever taught @taylorswift how to use IGTV, thank you for your service š±š±š±
Have you seen the moon tonight? Is she just showing up to say Happy Birthday to @taylorswift ???
āI want to first thank Billboard from the bottom of my heart, for this honor, and for naming me as their woman of the decade. So, what does it mean to be the woman of this decade? Well, it means Iāve seen a lot. When this decade began, I was 20 years old, and Iād just put out my self-titled debut album when I was 16, and then the album that would become my breakthrough album, which was called Fearless. And I saw that there was a world of music, and experience beyond country music, that I was really curious about. I saw pop stations send my songs Love Story and You Belong With Me to #1 for the first time. And I saw that as a female in this industry, some people will always have slight reservations about you: whether you deserve to be there, whether your male producer or cowriter is the reason for your success, or whether it was a savvy record label ā it wasnāt. I saw that people love to explain away a womanās success in the music industry, and I saw something in me change due to this realization. This was the decade that I became a mirror for my detractors: Whatever they decided I couldnāt do is exactly what I did. Whatever they criticized about me became material for musical satires or inspirational anthems, and the best lyrical examples I can think of are songs like Mean, Shake It Off, and Blank Space; basically, if people had something to say about me, I usually said something back, in my own way. And this reflex dictated more than just my lyrics. When Fearless did win Album of the Year at the Grammys, and I did become the youngest solo artist to ever win the award, with that win, came criticism and backlash in 2010 that Iād never experienced before as a young, new artist. All of a sudden, people had doubts about my singing voice, was it strong enough, was I a little bit pitchy? All of a sudden they werenāt sure if I was the one writing the song because sometimes in the past I had had cowriters in the room. At that time, I couldnāt understand why this wave of harsh criticism had hit me so hard. I believe a popular headline back then was āa Swift Backlash,ā which is clever ā you gotta give it to them. And now I realized that this is just what happens to a woman in music if she achieves success or power beyond peopleās comfort level. I now have come to expect that with good news comes some sort of pushback, but I didnāt know that then. So then, I decided that I would be the only songwriter on my third album, Speak Now, and that I would tour constantly, work on my vocals every day, and perfect my stamina in a live show. I decided I would be what they said I couldnāt be. I didnāt know then that soon enough people would decide on something else I wasnāt quite doing right, and the circle would keep going on and on, and rolling along, and I would keep accommodating, overcorrecting, in an effort to appease my critics. Theyāre saying Iām dating too much in my 20s? Okay! Iāll stop and just be single ā for years. Now theyāre saying my album Red is filled with too many break-up songs? Okay! Iāll make one about moving to New York, and deciding that really my life is more fun with just my friends. Oh, theyāre saying my music is changing too much for me to stay in country music? Alright, okay, hereās an entire genre shift, and a pop album called 1989. Oh, you heard it? Sick! Now itās that Iām showing you too many pictures of me with my friends. Okay, I can stop doing that too. Now Iām actually a calculated manipulator rather than a smart business woman? Okay, Iāll disappear from public view ā for years. Now Iām being cast as a villain to you? Okay, hereās an album called reputation and there are lots of snakes everywhere. In the last 10 years, I have watched as women in this industry are criticized and measured up to each other and picked at for their bodies and their romantic lives and their fashion. Or have you ever heard someone say about a male artist, āI really like his songs, but I donāt know what it is. Thereās just something about him I just donāt like?ā No ā that criticism is reserved for us. But you know, Iāve learned that the difference between those who can continue to create in that climate usually comes down to this: who lets that scrutiny break them, and who just keeps making art. Iāve watched as one of my favorite artists of this decade, Lana Del Rey, was ruthlessly criticized in her early career, and then slowly but surely, she turned into, in my opinion, the most influential artist in pop. Her vocal stylings, her lyrics, her aesthetics. Theyāve been echoed and repurposed in every corner of music, and this year, her incredible album is nominated for Album of the Year at the Grammys because she just kept making art. And that example should inspire all of us, that the only way forward is forward motion. That we shouldnāt let obstacles like criticism slow down the creative forces that drive us. And I see that fire in the newer faces in our music industry, whose work I absolutely love. I see it in Lizzo, Rosalia, Tayla Parx, Hayley Kiyoko, King Princess, Camila Cabello, Halsey, Megan Thee Stallion, Princess Nokia, Nina Nesbitt, Sigrid, Normani, H.E.R., Maggie Rogers, Becky G., Dua Lipa, Ella Mai, Billie Eilish, and so many other amazing women who are making music right now. Female artists have dominated this decade in growth, streaming, record and ticket sales, and critical acclaim. So why are we doing so well? Because we have to grow fast, we have to work this hard, we have to prove that we deserve this, and we have to top our last achievements. Women in music, onstage, or behind the scenes, are not allowed to coast. We are held at a higher, sometimes impossible-feeling standard. And it seems that my fellow female artists have taken this challenge, and they have accepted it. It seems like the pressure that couldāve crushed us made us into diamonds instead, and what didnāt kill us actually did make us stronger. But we need to keep advocating for women in the recording studios, behind the mixing board, in A&R meetings, because rather than fighting to be taken seriously in their fields, these women are still struggling to have a chance to even be in the room. We now find ourselves fully immersed in a vast frontier that wasnāt around last decade, and that is the streaming world. In music, weāre always walking hand in hand with technology, and sometimes that is so awesome, like how now weāre able to just drop a song that we made yesterday. Iāve spoken out in the past about the future of revenue flow for creators, songwriters, and producers who are being left behind due to these rapid shifts and changes. I still donāt think that record contracts or producersā agreements have fully aught up, and I hope that in the next decade, we can keep searching for the right solution for producers, songwriters, and creators. Donāt you? Lately, thereās been a new shift that has affected me personally, and that I feel is a potentially harmful force in our industry. And as your resident loud person, I feel the need to bring it up. And that is the unregulated world of private equity coming in, and buying up our music, as if it is real estate, as if itās an app, or a shoe line. This just happened to me without my approval, consultation, or consent. After I was denied the chance to purchase my music outright, my entire catalog was sold to Scooter Braunās Ithaca Holdings in a deal Iām told was funded by the Soros family, 23 Capital, and the Carlyle Group. To this day, none of these investors have ever bothered to contact me or my team directly, to perform their due diligence on their investment, on their investment in me, to ask how I might feel about the new owner of my art, the music I wrote, videos I created, photos of me, my handwriting, my album designs. And of course Scooter never contacted me or my team to discuss it prior to the sale, or even when it was announced. Iām fairly certain he knew how I would feel about it, though, and let me just say that the definition of the toxic male privilege in our industry is people saying, āBut heās always been nice to me!ā when Iām raising valid concerns about artists and their right to own their music. And of course heās nice to you. If youāre in this room, you have something he needs. The fact is that private equity is what enabled this man to think, according to his own social media post, that he could ābuy me,ā but Iām obviously not going willingly. Yet the most amazing thing was to discover that it would be the women in our industry who would have my back, and who would show me the most vocal support at one of the most difficult times and I will never ever forget it, like ever. But to conclude, I will say that in 10 years, I have seen forward steps in our industry. In our awareness, our inclusion, or ability to start calling out unfairness and misconduct. Iāve seen the advent of social media, the way it can boost the breakthrough of emerging artists. And Iāve seen fans become more engaged and supportive than ever before. Iāve leaned on that support, and it has kept me in a place where, no matter what I always wanted to keep making music for them. I was up on a stage in New York City in 2014, accepting Billboard Woman of the Year, and I was talking about the future of streaming, how we needed to make sure that the female artists, writers, and producers of the next generation were protected and compensated fairly. This was before my record deal with Universal last year that would contractually guarantee that the artists on their roster be paid upon any sale of their Spotify shares, unrecoupable, so thank you for that. This speech Iām referring to was on my 25th birthday, and Iām about to turn 30 tonight! But my exact quote during this speech was, āI really just feel like we need to continue to try to offer something to a younger generation of musicians. Because somewhere, right now, your future Woman of the Year is probably sitting in a piano lesson, or in a girlsā choir, and today, right now, we need to take care of her.ā Iāve since learned that at that exact moment, an 11-year-old girl in California really was taking piano lessons, and really as in a girlsā choir. And this year, she has been named Woman of the Year, at the age of 17. Her name is Billie. And those are the stories we need to think about every day as we do our jobs within this industry. The ones where peopleās dreams come true and they get to create music and play it for people. The ones where fans feel a connection to music that makes their day easier, makes their night more fun, makes their love feel more sacred or their heartache feel less isolating. The ones where all of you in this room stand as an example for someone else in the next generation who loves the same thing that we love: music. And no matter what else enters the conversation we will always bring it back to music. And as for me, lately Iāve been focusing less on doing what they say I canāt do and more on doing whatever the hell I want. Thank you for a magnificent, happy, free, confused, sometimes lonely, but mostly golden decade. Iām honored to be here tonight, I feel very lucky to be with you, thank you so much.ā
ā Taylor accepting Billboardās Artist of the Decade Award on December 12, 2019
Taylor: āscream really loudly for the people watching this all over the world on the internetā
Me watching a blurry livestream from my couch:
Can Taylor dress up like Dragon Villanelle or something??
Ahhhh I got it!!
S/o to my sister who just came back from NYC šš
*screams in Spanish*
I just finished reading Taylor's dairy in the way home from the airport.
Fun fact: My sister was shocked by New Yorkers. She said she saw people walking around in their underwear lol
@taylorswift @taylornation
I'M SORRY, I JUST NEED TO SAY THIS.
So first of all, I am a french swiftie (check my username) and we are very happy, grateful and excited to have a show in our country very soon : The City of Lover Concert.
But. It is a private concert, so tickets must be won. NRJ radio station is in charge of GIVING tickets to fans.
Here are the issues, from less important to the very problematic ones.
1. They told us weeks ago that they were going to make us win ticket for Taylor's exclusive show and that we just needed to listen the radio. So we did. And for WEEKS, they didn't say a damn thing about it (when they would tell us eveyday to listen their radio if we wanted to win tickets). And when they started to do so, they were like "we are giving you free tickets!" And we were like "how?? When?? Tells us!". But nothing. No informations. They just wanted to have people to listen their stupid radio.
2. People who know people who work at nrj have free tickets, without even being fans. They are just locals. For example, the day Taylor went to Paris at the nrj radio station, there was a random man that was invited just because he was also there the day before ! He wasn't even a fan of Taylor and barely knew her.
3. Also tonight, a swiftie won her tickets and she was crying because she was so happy and they were just laughing, didn't pay attention to what she had to say, they were just talking to each other like she wasn't there which is very rude.
4. A young swiftie of 14 y/o won but they made her believe she will not have her tickets because she is under 18y/o (which is false). They hung up TWO times, and then pretented to not hear her on the phone for a very long time when they cleary could hear her, the girl was in panic but it made them laugh even harder.
5. This week, they started giving tickets BUT in order to have a chance to win, they made you call a paid number, without even telling us that it is a paid number.
6. Just tonight, they had a young boy on the phone asking advices for his coming out in they just told him to not come out when he has already said that it was very important for him. They also said it wasn't homophobic if his parents wouldn't accept him being gay.
7. They also make jokes like "wanna see Taylor at her exclusive show? Have sex with me and I'll give you tickets! Hahahahaha".
So I know Taylor has good relationship with the team and especially with Cauet but they just don't treat everyone the same way they does with her.
I'm a huge Taylor's fan and it truly pains me to see this radio treating us like that. You can also see on twitter multiples fans complaning about it. We were so mad and sad when we learned that NRJ was in charge of giving tickets.
I just though @taylornation and @taylorswift should know. idk if they will ever see this or even care about it but at least some on you now know the situation.
I made a book for Taylor and itās 170 pages and 500 swifties participated in it!!! Itās reallly long!!! I wanted to show you what it looked like and hopefully I can give it to her someday!!!šāØ š š @taylorswift @taylornation āØ
I asked swifties to send lovely comments that they want to say to Taylor and theyāre all so sweet!! I wanted to collect them all in a book so Taylor could maybe see all the amazing comments that you sent!! Itās 179 pgs and 500 swifties!!! šāØāØ @taylorswift @taylornation āØš