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Does Taylor Swift Get a Pass? Travis Kelce ‘Is Building an Undergound Man Cave’ at $6 Million Kansas Mansion—Complete With Golf Simulator

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Politics
Taylor Swift endorsing Kamala Harris shows importance of music in 2024 election

Politics tamfitronics Taylor Swift endorsed Kamala Harris for president in a statement Tuesday on social media. Photo by Derek C. French/UPI | License Photo

Music generates passion and emotion, so it’s little surprise that popular tunes have been featured in presidential contests since the days of George Washington and Thomas Jefferson.

But as a scholar of music’s role in American politics and patriotism, I’ve never seen music assume as much electoral importance as it has in recent months.

Taylor Swift’s endorsement of Kamala Harris is headline news, as were the mere rumors that Beyoncé might perform at the Democratic National Convention. Donald Trump, too, has his pop culture supporters, including Kid Rock and Lee Greenwood.

In a tight race, music has the potential to make a big difference. Most voters today have already made up their minds, and the presidential race remains a statistical dead heat, according to polls. In this situation, I think music offers a deceptively simple, emotional hook that can inspire the party base without alienating those few undecideds in the middle.

When crowd size matters, getting your supporters to sing, scream and dance can cultivate an aura of electoral triumph.

Fired up, ready to go

Music had a starring role in this year’s dueling nominating conventions.

Beyond the expected fare of the national anthem and the background music that filled the voids between speakers, pop hits were used to transform each party’s typically tedious state-by-state roll call. When Florida’s 125 votes took Trump over the top, confirming that he would be the official Republican nominee, organizers played Kool & The Gang’s 1980 No. 1 hit, “Celebration.”

Over at the Democratic convention, celebrity emcee DJ Cassidy turned the relatively banal proceedings of the roll call into a dance party. As each state and territory was called to vote, a signature song burst forth to introduce, welcome and energize the crowd. Alabama’s call-out was Lynyrd Skynyrd’s “Sweet Home Alabama,” Eminem’s “Lose Yourself” announced Michigan, while California featured the music of native emcees Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg.

And in a moment designed to go viral, Atlanta native and crunk rapper Lil’ Jon answered the call for Georgia with the guttural shout “Heyaaah … ” followed by the opening lyrics of his party anthem “Turn Down for What?”

Soon afterward, Axios posted a full Democratic convention roll call playlist on Spotify, and its 61 songs showcase a tactical musical advantage held by Democrats.

None of the artists featured at that convention have publicly objected to their songs being used. In contrast, dozens of musical artists have disavowed Trump’s use of their music at rallies. In 2024 alone, they include ABBA, Adele, Celine Dion, Foo Fighters, Jack White and the heirs of Isaac Hayes.

Rather than fulminate against these slights, Trumpworld seems to embrace the headlines they generate. The objections of these artists reinforce the candidate’s trademark outsider status, and are yet another sign that he and his supporters are scorned by the nation’s political and cultural elites.

Both candidates’ soundtracks claim very different ideological territory. Harris favors youth-oriented hits with a high proportion by artists of color and women. Her selections send a message. Playing Chappel Roan’s “Femininomenon,” for example, signals both an inclusive, affirming message about gender fluidity while also suggesting to fans who know the song that it’s about time for a woman to be in charge.

Trump often features classic hits, including James Brown’s 1966 single “It’s a Man’s Man’s Man’s World,” which emphasize traditional masculinity. Rock anthems and patriotic hymns dominate the Make America Great Again playlist, such as Kid Rock’s “American Bad Ass” and Queen’s “We are the Champions,” though the British band has protested its use. Greenwood’s “God Bless the USA” has become an unofficial Republican hymn, and rally attendees routinely sing along.

Sonic stars and stripes

Simply put, I see the musical contest between Trump and Harris as a battle for vibes.

Each party’s base wants to hear an affirming, confidence-building musical message loud and clear. Whether it’s a current hit or a classic one, chart-toppers convey familiarity and popularity.

The fundamental question, however, is whether this soundscape of enthusiasm can fuel a victory.

Harris’ campaign notched a win after receiving Beyoncé’s permission to use “Freedom” as the candidate’s theme song. In contrast, the Trump staffer who used the same song in a video triggered a cease-and-desist letter. Trump’s team pulled the video and stopped using the contested track.

Harris’ embrace of Beyoncé’s political anthem connects the vice president to the pop star’s own biography as a tough, independent and successful woman of color. The song’s propulsive drumbeat tells a story of determination, using “freedom” to “break chains all by myself” and “keep running ’cause a winner don’t quit on themselves.” Harris would probably love voters to see her in this same light.

Yet Harris’ song choice is also surprising, in that it appeals to the raw patriotism of one of the nation’s defining values. American flags have long served as the obligatory backdrop of both national parties. But Republicans, particularly in recent decades, have gone into overdrive to claim patriotic symbols as their own, perhaps so voters see them as the nation’s true patriots.

I see Harris’ overt use of patriotic songs, whether it’s “Freedom” or the Civil War-era “Battle Cry of Freedom,” as a strategic reclamation of patriotism for the Democratic Party.

Political fandom

These playlists, pop star endorsements and battles over usage rights may show how presidential politics has become less a contest of ideas and more a form of passionate fandom that’s rooted in notions of celebrity, popularity and tribe.

Young voters, however, do seem to be discovering their political voice through music and social media. British singer Charli XCX’s “Kamala IS brat” endorsement may have given an early boost to Harris’ campaign, but some influencers declared its politicization as proof of brat summer’s early death.

Nonetheless, music has quickly become a weapon in the campaigns’ battle to win younger voters, with the demographic more tightly contested than it’s been in previous cycles. In this regard, Swift’s post-debate endorsement of Harris to her 283 million followers takes on more significance. The megastar could bring more young people into Harris’ camp, especially since her country music roots mean that Swifties span the ideological spectrum.

The strength of a democracy ultimately depends on the people exercising their power through the ballot box. If music gets more Americans to the polls, regardless of whom they vote for, Americans are more likely to have a result that they can trust.

For that reason alone, I’m happy to keep singing along.Politics tamfitronics The Conversation

Mark Clague is a professor of musicology, arts leadership & entrepreneurship at University of Michigan.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article. The views and opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of the author.

Politics
Taylor Swift and Brittany Mahomes Embrace Each Other, Politics Be Damned

Politics tamfitronics

If you need proof that Taylor Swift has changed her ways, look no further than the contrast between the past few days and her behavior circa 2016. Amid rampant speculation about her relationship, friendships, and political views, Swift spent the weekend having fun in public.

On Thursday, Swift was in her now-customary VIP box at boyfriend Travis Kelce’s regular season opener with the Kansas City Chiefs. On Friday the couple dined out at Lucali in Brooklyn. Come Saturday, the two attended supermodel Karen Elson and Electric Lady Studios owner Lee Foster’s wedding (in an off-white Zimmerman dress, no less), and on Sunday, Swift and Kelce headed to Queens for the U.S. Open, where they were anything but inconspicuous. Swift, in a red and white linen dress from Reformation, sang and danced with a Gucci-clad Kelce, and even caught up with fellow NFL WAG Brittany Mahomes for a quick, headline-generating hug. Swift, who is famously adept at staying out of the spotlight when she wants to, is defiantly living her life, having a good time where all of us can see it.

This is especially notable when you consider what she’s said in the past about feeling like she needed to go dark in response to public criticism. In her 2020 Netflix doc, Miss Americanashe described her 2016 disappearing act like this: “Nobody physically saw me for a year. That’s what I thought they wanted,” she said. “I had to deconstruct an entire belief system, toss it out, and reject it. It woke me up from constantly feeling I was fighting for people’s respect. It was happiness without anyone else’s input.”

Much was made of Swift sitting separately from Brittany Mahomes at Arrowhead Stadium on Thursday, opting instead to root for the home team alongside Kelce’s parents, just as Brittany has come under fire for her political views: She apparently liked and then unliked an Instagram post from Donald Trump. The Republican presidential nominee took notice and thanked Brittany for her “support” in a recent social media post.

Swift has spoken out against Trump in the past, endorsing Joe Biden in 2020 while accusing Trump of “stoking the fires of white supremacy and racism your entire presidency,” but has not voiced a stance on the 2024 election. Patrick Mahomes has declared himself the Switzerland of America, announcing that he will not publicly endorse a candidate but instead generally encourage people to vote. Brittany, apart from her liking and unliking and subsequent vague tweet pleas for everyone to just be nice, hasn’t issued a statement.

A source familiar with the pair’s friendship noted to Vanity Fair that people can have different political ideas or beliefs and still be friends.

Taylor Swift, Brittany Mahomes, Travis Kelce, and Patrick Mahomes at the 2024 US Open.MediaPunch/Bauer-Griffin

It’s not unlike when Kelce and Mahomes’s teammate, Harrison Butkerdelivered a commencement address last spring, in which he called Pride Month a “deadly sin” and shared his opinion that women’s greatest achievements were at home and with their families, rather than in the workplace. On New Heightsthe podcast he co-hosts with brother Jason KelceTravis said that Butker was a great teammate, and of the speech, “I can’t say I agree with the majority of it or just about any of it outside of just him loving his family and his kids and I don’t think that I should judge him by his views, especially his religious views, of how to go about life. That’s just not who I am.”

While Swift, Kelce, and the Mahomeses have remained tight-lipped on who will get their vote, Trump has been more than happy to sound off about each of them: He recently shared AI-generated images implying that Swift had endorsed him, and mirrored his past comments that Swift was “unusually beautiful” in a recent social media post thanking the Mahomeses for their “support,” mentioning what he thought of Brittany’s appearance (“beautiful”) before her actual name. Asked by Vanity Fair to specify what support, exactly, Trump was thanking the couple for in the post, a spokesperson for Trump did his best impression of an ouroboros and said, “I’d point you to President Trump’s post on Truth Social.” Earlier this year, Trump even had something to say about Kelce, posting on social media that “I like [Taylor’s] boyfriend, Travis, even though he may be a Liberal, and probably can’t stand me!”

But as Swift once again finds herself at the center of gossip, just like in 2016 at the height of her feud with Kim Kardashian and Kanye Westwhen she tried to exclude herself from the narrative by disappearing as best she could, the older and wiser Swift is making a different choice: She’s living her life. As she and Kelce mugged and enthusiastically sang The Darkness’s “I Believe In a Thing Called Love” to one another in the stands on Sunday at the Open, the sentiment couldn’t have been clearer. As Swift herself once said, haters gonna hate. It’s just that she’s now taking her own advice and shaking it off.

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