While we are spending our August locked down, Joe Alwyn and Taylor Swift stepped out to get some fresh air. The couple has been quarantining together in the United States.
23.07.2020 - 21:57 / justjared.com
Taylor Swift says that two of the songs on her new album Folklore were co-written by someone named William Bowery, but fans think this is a pseudonym for someone special in her life!
The 30-year-old singer announced the surprise album on Thursday morning (July 23) and she mentioned on Instagram, “I wrote and recorded this music in isolation but got to collaborate with some musical heroes of mine.”
Taylor said that she wrote two songs with “William Bowery,” but fans can’t find any information
While we are spending our August locked down, Joe Alwyn and Taylor Swift stepped out to get some fresh air. The couple has been quarantining together in the United States.
If this Taylor Swift “Betty” Friends theory is true, then Folklore officially wins all the medals for best pop-culture-inspired album of the year. And no, that’s not an official Recording Academy category, but it might as well be.
Taylor Swift's "Cardigan" single off her Billboard 200 No. 1 album Folklore matches the LP's top rank by debuting at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 this week (dated Aug. 8).
Taylor Swift fans have claimed that the singer has subtly dissed Kanye West on her new album ‘Folklore’.On the song ‘Peace’, Swift sings, “But there’s robbers to the east/Clowns to the West.”In the lyric video accompanying the track, which you watch below, “east” is in lowercase letters but “West” begins with a capital “W,” leading Twitter users to believe she’s referring to Kanye.“In peace Taylor Swift capitalized West and not east and no one can convince me that she isn’t calling Kanye a
Folklore merch in the mail, along with the sweet note from Swift herself. Just ask Whitney Cummings, who was not sent the “cream cable knit cardigan with black matte buttons, dark gray trim, light gray star embroidery” in the mail.
Taylor Swift’s friendships with Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds growing stronger by the year.The Gossip Girl alum first publicly revealed she is a fan of Swift in September 2015 after Lively was accused of throwing shade at the singer-songwriter.“…Sooo, turns out this WASN’T a video shoot for John Legend’s cover of Bad Blood,” the actress wrote alongside a photo from a L’Oreal campaign shoot at the time via Instagram.While social media users thought Lively was poking fun at Swift’s star-studded
Taylor Swift fans are determined to decipher the lyrics on her new album, Folklore, and the fandom thinks one line is a nod to her ex-boyfriend Joe Jonas.On the track “Invisible Strings,” Swift, 30, sings, “Cold was the steel of my axe to grind / For the boys who broke my heart / Now I send their babies presents.”Fans began speculating that the cryptic lyric is a reference to Jonas, also 30, who is expecting his first child with his wife, Sophie Turner.“‘Boys who broke my heart / now I send
Taylor Swift fans believe that a song from her new album “Folklore” may have revealed the name of Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds’ third child. The 30-year-old singer made the surprising announcement on Thursday that she would drop a new album at midnight on Friday amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
Taylor Swift fans think one of her songs is a shout-out to Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds' youngest daughter, who was born last October. The A-list couple has yet to reveal their third child's name but a few Swifties are speculating as to whether Swift's song, «Betty,» off her new album, , is in honor of the little one.While the song itself is about the mistreatment of a girl named Betty, the only other two names mentioned in the song are Inez and James, which are the names of Lively and
Folklore, is receiving , and the praise is well-deserved. is arguably her strongest in years: a stripped-down, acoustic return to form that feels instinctual, , and nuanced. Naturally, that means there's a trove of new lyrics for .
Taylor Swift fans think they’ve spotted a hidden message in her new track “Betty”.