Look at what Travisquerse did to her.
Taylor Swift claimed on Monday that her gross song “started in a very innocent place” about her fiancée, “Wood.”
The 35-year-old pop star explained to viewers of The Life of a Showgirl album that the ninth track on the “The Life of a Showgirl” album was inspired by “all these superstitions.”
Swift said, “I’d bring this to the studio and do something like, ‘I want to do something like a timeless sounding song.”
“And it all started in a really, really innocent place,” the Grammy winner claimed. “I don’t know what happened, man.”
She said, “I got there” and “I started playing viving,” and the song had changed.
“I don’t know we’re here, but I love the songs,” the songwriter said. Later he added, “The spice level on this album is high.”
The song features lyrics, particularly on “Redwood Tree,” “Hard Rock,” and “New Heights of Masculinity.”
The American Music Award winner spoke to SiriusXM’s “Morning Mash Up” about her mother Andrea Swift’s response to the hit on Monday.
“She thinks the song is absolutely about superstition,” Taylor told listeners. “That’s the joy of double entenders.”
She joked about the smatty song, “It’s on top of (Andrea’s) head.”
Taylor concluded, “You see in that song what you want to see in that song.”
Kelse, 36, has yet to publicly respond to her fiancé song about him, but she celebrated the album on Sunday by watching “Showgirl Official Release Party” in theaters.
The Kansas City Chief Sprayer was called “Oparite” from his partner’s 12th record in an August podcast episode filmed just before Kelce’s proposal to Swift.
The song is a clear homage to him, “The Fate of Ophelia” and “wi$h li$t.”