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@julietsaveme
Taylor Swift arriving at Electric Lady Studios. (June 15, 2026)
TAYLOR SWIFT and TRAVIS KELCE New Heights Live (15 June 2026)
They might be bigger…but we’re faster and never scared
"Hi. The quality of my speaking voice is the product of two things that I’m not sorry for. One is that I went to, I was lucky enough to go to a Knicks game last night. I screamed for 100% of it, and then I got home and I was like, ‘You gotta stop screaming. You’re screaming too much. You’re screaming instead of talking. You’re too excited.’ And I was like, ‘Okay, I’m not going to scream tonight.’ And then I got to witness the amazing performances that I saw tonight, and then I just kept screaming. I just never stopped screaming. And so this is what you get, and again, I make no apologies for that. I’ve had a blast. Tonight has been amazing.
I want to begin by thanking the person who introduced and inducted me tonight, and thinks this is the first time he has inducted me into something. But what he may not be taking into consideration is that through his decades of spellbinding storytelling, Steven Spielberg has unknowingly inducted me and countless others into his sacred club of expansive world-building. From the time he was a kid, every time he dreamed something up, he wanted to do anything humanly possible to be able to show it to you. I watched his films pivot between different genres, from action, to sci-fi, to historical epic, to drama, to comedy, romance, fantasy, to musical, and I watched him ace every single genre. And that kind of limitless creativity isn’t just inspiring to burgeoning filmmakers. Because of examples of Steven’s, I trusted my imagination, regardless of it was taking me somewhere new and uncharted, and then every time I dreamed something up, I wanted to do everything humanly possibly to be able to play it for you.
A few months ago when the Songwriters Hall of Fame asked me about my heroes and the creatives who shaped my storytelling and who I might want to present this award to me, I said Steven’s name. And about an hour later to my absolute delight, I ended up on the phone with him and his legendarily effervescent wife, Kate Capshaw, who is here tonight. And he was telling me, yes, absolutely, he would be thrilled to be here. I was completely blown away because the man has a massive film called Disclosure Day that’s coming out at midnight tonight, and he’s still going to agree and show up to do this for me a few hours before it comes out. Wouldn’t that be impossibly hard to balance? Wouldn’t that be too difficult, scheduling-wise? I’m trying to give him an out. At which point, Kate said something I’ll never forget. She said, ‘Good and true things are easy.’ And if I look back at my entire 23-year career in music: the ups and downs, the industry battles, the trials and tribulations, the tears and the cheers and the dogpiling of doubt, the criticisms, both fair and unfair, the complete loss of privacy, the world tours, and the ego wars, and the twists of fate, the absolute magical chaos of this path that I chose when I was too young to remember it ever being a choice at all. Songwriting was the easiest thing I ever did. Not because it didn’t take effort – it definitely did; not that it wasn’t frustrating at times, because it could be; and not that my songwriting didn’t haunt me relentlessly until I cracked the perfect internal rhyme scheme for the third line, the second verse of the book where my teachers called me out in class for not paying attention – because that definitely happened. But when I say that songwriting was the easiest part for me, I think what I mean is that it was instinctual. No one taught me how to do it. I had to be taught how to entertain a crowd, and learn choreography, and be less annoying, and navigate the industry, and fiercely protect my own sanity. I had to learn all of that over time, through difficult lessons and massive amounts of trial and error and chaos and calamity. But songwriting, for me, was pretty much the only thing I ever just naturally did.
I Knew It, I Knew You Toy Story 5 Premiere
You've Got A Friend In Me Toy Story 5 Premiere
It’s a *Toy* Story 🤠
You knew it! My new original song “I Knew It, I Knew You” for Disney and Pixar’s Toy Story 5 will be yours on June 5th. I’ve always dreamed of getting to write for these characters who I’ve adored since I was a 5 year old kid watching the first Toy Story movie. I fell instantly in love with Toy Story 5 when I was lucky enough to see it in its early stages, and I wrote this song as soon as I got home from the screening. Sometimes you just know, right?
You can pre-order now exclusively on my site and catch Toy Story 5 in theaters June 19th ☁️☁️☁️☁️☁️
13 clouds and 13 photos
Late one night, you dug me out of my grave and saved my heart from the fate of Ophelia ❤️🔥❤️🔥❤️🔥❤️🔥
Taylor Swift stuns for The New York Times "30 Greatest Songwriters"
(April 28, 2026)
Sleepless in the onyx night but now the sky is opalite
The 30 Greatest Living American Songwriters Taylor Swift | The New York Times Magazine
The 30 Greatest Living American Songwriters Taylor Swift | The New York Times Magazine
“I kinda like being a narrator that’s not the person I relate to. So the narrator in Clara Bow is either a studio, like a Hollywood studio person, or a label executive who’s sitting in my mind, behind a desk, and meeting with a brand new starlet who has just come to town. The exec says ‘You look like Clara Bow in this light, it’s remarkable. You’re so special, you’re amazing, we’re going to make you just like her. In my mind, that girl was Stevie Nicks, right? So Stevie Nicks sits down, they tell her she looks like Clara Bow, she’s got those big moon eyes, and, ‘We’re gonna make you just like her. Don’t worry. We’re gonna put you through this machine, and you’ll be a god. The second verse says, ‘You look like Stevie Nicks in this light, the hair and lips.’ So in my mind, that was me that sat down opposite that desk, right? I sit down at a record label and they’re like, ‘You look like Stevie Nicks. We’ll make you the next Stevie Nicks.’ And basically you learn that like, you’re in a machine, and they’re trying to make you into a woman that they just idealized and then discarded. The entertainment industry love-bombs women, right? ‘We love you. We don’t know who you are, why are you even here?’ And so in the last verse, in my mind, it’s a new artist that sits down across from a record label desk, and they say, ‘You look like Taylor Swift in this light, we’re loving it. You’ve got edge, she never did, the future’s bright, dazzling.’ And cause that’s another thing you get when you’re a female in the music or entertainment industry, movies, whatever. It’s like, ‘Oh, you’re like this person that we—they name a big name,’ and they’re like, ‘But you’re gonna be so much better, no, no, no, you’re gonna be cooler. You’re gonna be so much better.’ Like, to offset the comparison.”
— Taylor to The New York Times on Clara Bow (x)
“Songwriting is something that, it’s a very intimate, tiny little thing, for me. I have a lot of things I like to do. I like to bake, I like to make art, I like to paint, I like to sew, I like to write songs. And I try to keep it as like, dear to me as those other things I just named. I have to know that like, there’s certain things we have as a tradition between me and my fans. They love for an emotional song to be track 5—there’s like special things like that. But at the same time, there’s sort of so many of them now, which is great, but there’s corners of my fanbase who are gonna take things to a really extreme place. There’s nothing I can do about that. There’s people who are gonna try to like do detective work, figure out the details, ‘who is that about? What is this?’ When it gets a little bit weird for me is when people act like it’s sort of like, a paternity test. Like, ‘This song’s about that person,’ because I’m like [sighs], ‘That dude didn’t write the song. I did,’ But that’s part of it. You have to hold tight to your perception of your art and your relationship with it, and then you just have to kind of like [blows] ‘There it goes! Hope you like it! If you don’t now, hope you do in five years!’ And if you never do, I was doing it for me anyway.”
— Taylor to The New York Times on fan perception of her art (x)