All posts tagged "taylor swift"

Newsom mocks Trump with Taylor Swift-themed video as new album drops

Taylor Swift's new album "Life of a Showgirl" dropped Friday, and California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) didn't waste any time dropping a new video mocking President Donald Trump set to one of the bops.

The video is set to Swift's "Actually Romantic," a song reportedly about another rift between the pop star and Brat songstress Charli XCX, who penned the song based on her popular album “Everything Is Romantic,” The New York Times reports.

In the video posted on Newsom's socials, it takes clips from Trump and Newsom visiting fire burn areas in the Golden State and chatting, shaking hands, then cuts to all the times the president has called California's governor "Newscum" and criticized him online.

"But it’s actually sweet," the lyrics go. "All the time you’ve spent on me."

Then, the montage moves to a recent post from Trump saying Swift is "not hot" and ends with an image of Newsom's latest swag attack featuring a white tank top in red text saying "Trump is not hot."

'Trump truly spins out': Report shows why Taylor Swift brings out president's 'anger' most

Mega-star Taylor Swift brings out Donald Trump's anger more than other left-wing celebrity, in part because the singer has what Trump wants, according to a new report.

As Swift takes over the news media with her new album announcement, Alex Galbraith, a news and politics editor for Salon, explains why he thinks Trump is jealous of her.

In a segment called "The tortured president’s society," the writer declared, "Donald Trump wants stans."

"The president may seem unpredictable and brash, but he’s easy to understand when you realize he wants a fan army to love him uncritically. All of the nicknames, all of the attempts to force a catchphrase, the focus on merchandising and branding, it’s all a push to create fan interest," Galbraith wrote. "Trump’s angriest moments come when something stands between him and the IV drip of love from the MAGA mob. As the Epstein-based schism among his base has shown, Trump truly spins out when he fails to control the narrative."

The editor continues, noting that, "In that light, it’s easy to explain his hate for Taylor Swift. He wants what she has."

"The pop star has an iron grip on her own story. Her every move is calculated to stir up speculation from the horde of Swifties, whose devotion is typically rewarded thanks to Swift’s own attention to detail," he wrote. "Swift announced her 12th album earlier this week. Her ultra-calculated announcement dropped at 12 minutes after midnight. The announcement itself was teased in an Instagram post of 12 photos of Swift wearing orange on her Eras tour. A simultaneous announcement was teased by her boyfriend Travis Kelce’s podcast in a clip with an orange background."

According to Galbraith, "Trump is far too impulsive, and the people around him too sloppy, to ever pull off something so meticulous. His strongarming of data-producing agencies, museums and libraries is an attempt to make history show that he was always adored."

Read more right here.


Ex-Trump aide explains how she thinks 'Taylor Swift's endorsement matters' in swing states

Former White House communications director Alyssa Farah Griffin highlighted the recent numbers from VOTE.gov and explained how she thinks Donald Trump's campaign is discounting Taylor Swift at their own peril.

Among the things Swift asked her followers to do was register to vote, ensuring that her Gen Z fans can participate in the election. Swift then again announced the website from the MTV Video Music Awards. Swift won the category of "Artist of the Year."

CNN's Betsy Klein gave a list of the registration numbers from VOTE.gov sorted from swing states.

ALSO READ: 'I want Vance to apologize': We went to Springfield and found community hurt — and divided

There were 1,187 new registrations in Arizona, 2,124 new voters in Georgia, and 1,062 new voters in Michigan. North Carolina, which was just shifted from Republican-leaning to a toss-up by the Cook Political Report, had 2,213 new registrants. In Nevada, there were 580, 2,127 in Pennsylvania, and 1,350 in Wisconsin through VOTE.gov.

Registrations spiked among younger voters in July after Harris took over the campaign.

Trump's vice presidential running mate, Sen. J.D. Vance (R-OH) said that he isn't certain the Swift endorsement does much for garnering actual voters.

"I don’t think most Americans, whether they like her music, are fans of hers or not, are going to be influenced by a billionaire celebrity who I think is fundamentally disconnected from the interests and the problems of most Americans," he told Fox News.

Griffin took to the social media site X to suggest that the numbers from VOTE.gov show exactly how important Swift has been already.

"THIS is why Taylor Swift’s endorsement matters," she wrote. "There’s little evidence that even an iconic celeb like Tay will sway registered voters. Her power is in driving unregistered voters to register & turn out. In 2020 only 67% of Americans voted - in 2016 ~60%. Nearly 1/3 of Americans," didn't vote.

Republicans were cautioned against blowing off the singer's power during an episode of "Morning Joe" after Vance's statement.

'Insane': Republicans warned against blowing off Taylor Swift's Harris endorsement

During a very long "Morning Joe" panel discussion on the debate night endorsement of Vice President Kamala Harris by pop superstar Taylor Swift, NBC Capitol Hill correspondent Ali Vitali expressed surprise Republicans are not taking it seriously.

Speaking with hosts Joe Scarborough, Willie Geist and Jonathan Lemire, Vitali went to so far as to say it was "insane" that Republicans aren't in a panic over a wave of new voters heading to the polls in November.

"Look, the only thing I was thinking about when you guys were talking is this idea that she doesn't have an impact," Vitali began. "This is a woman who made grown people, adults, make friendship bracelets. Everyone from, you know, senators on Capitol Hill on the Democratic side to Nikki Haley when I was covering her campaign, were wearing them and sporting every manner of slogan."

ALSO READ: 'Hugely offensive': Dems blast 'crazy' Trump's new J6 debate claims

"So the idea that Taylor Swift doesn't have impact is insane to me," she asserted. "Also, she's a universal voice who speaks to universal experience, and she speaks predominantly to women. I think that, for most women who might be Swifties, who might not be in the zeitgeist of talking about politics, she's bringing awareness."

"When 337,000 people went to Vote.gov, not all of them necessarily registered to vote but a good amount probably did and it gets them to start thinking about what is at stake in this election" she continued. "Devaluing a Taylor Swift endorsement is generally saying that you don't understand how women who are Swifties talk to people in their lives, are probably pretty Type A, if I think about all my friends who were Swifties. I mean she is someone who has influence over a large swath of voters, who are, again, predominantly women, and who will probably be motivated by the central issues of this election."

Watch below or at the link.

- YouTubeyoutu.be

'Infuriating': Trump's A.I. Taylor Swift endorsement backfires with swing state Swifties

Former President Donald Trump has aroused the ire of some Swifties in a key swing state.

The Philadelphia Inquirer reports that some local fans of Taylor Swift are not happy about Trump posting a fake AI-generated endorsement suggesting that the pop music icon has endorsed his 2024 campaign.

Swift has not yet made an endorsement in the 2024 race, although she backed President Joe Biden in the 2020 election and it's widely expected that she will encourage her followers to back Vice President Kamala Harris at some point in the next few weeks.

Given this, 23-year-old Swift fan Marissa Slattery told the Inquirer that she was dismayed by Trump's audacity.

“It’s kind of just more like infuriating than anything else, because people that are fans of her know that it’s not true, but people that don’t know much about her and see him posting that would just take it at face value,” she said.

ALSO READ: 'I told the truth': Ex-Trump aide Grisham defends from MAGA attacks after revealing text

22-year-old Swift fan Caroline Macaluso, meanwhile, believed that Trump was playing with fire by falsely claiming Swift's endorsement.

"Does he think that nothing’s gonna happen?” she asked. “I mean, Taylor has very, very publicly endorsed registering to vote and always making sure that you’re ready to vote, and during the 2020 election was publicly endorsing Joe Biden and Kamala Harris."

She also added that “Swifties are a force to be reckoned with" and could tip the election against Trump this fall.

Swift in 2020 strongly denounced Trump's reaction to the protests against the killing of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police and accused him of being a racial arsonist.

"After stoking the fires of white supremacy and racism your entire presidency, you have the nerve to feign moral superiority before threatening violence?" she wrote on Twitter. "‘When the looting starts the shooting starts’??? We will vote you out in November."

Taylor Swift and Beyoncé singing at Democratic National Convention? Delegates are dreaming

CHICAGO — Tuesday night at the Democratic National Convention might have looked a bit like a concert as delegates wore flashing, light-up bracelets in the United Center during its ceremonial roll call for presidential nominee Kamala Harris.

Later, former first lady Michelle Obama cemented her rockstar status with a rousing speech that had some delegates falling all over themselves.

And a real musical artist even showed up on the convention floor — rapper Lil Jon strutted among delegates changing the words of his hit song “Get Low” to support Harris and her running mate Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, doing so as the Georgia ceremonial roll call was announced.

ALSO READ: Why Kamala Harris may get a big convention polling ‘bounce’

Still, Democratic delegates had no problem dreaming even bigger about potential musical guests for Wednesday and Thursday when asked by Raw Story who they hoped might surprise the thousands of people gathered at Chicago’s United Center.

“John Legend,” said Robert Rios with the U.S. Virgin Islands delegation, expressing love for his “Ordinary People” song.

Robert Rios, U.S. Virgin Islands delegate. (Photo by Alexandria Jacobson/Raw Story)

“Madonna,” said Beth Davidson, a New York delegate and Rockland County legislator. “Shows my age.”

“Jennifer Hudson,” John Gumbs Jr., another delegate from the U.S. Virgin Islands, said.

But pop megastars Taylor Swift and Beyoncé got the most resounding votes — and their names have been circulating the rumor mill for surprise musical guests, even if reports indicate Swift won't be in Chicago this week. (A top party official didn’t rule out the possibility of a Beyoncé appearance, Forbes reported, and remote video for either musician is always an option.)

ALSO READ: Donald Trump deep in debt while foreign money keeps coming: disclosure

“Oh, Beyoncé,” said Crystal Martinez, a delegate from California, saying her hopes for an appearance from the star were “the highest.”

“Taylor Swift,” said Hannah Wroblewski with the Nebraska delegation, who considers herself a Swiftie and showed off a friendship bracelet that said “Vote.”

“Beyoncé” said Carol Blood, a Nebraska state senator.

Carol Blood and Hannah Wroblewski of the Nebraska delegation. (Photo by Alexandria Jacobson/Raw Story)

“A tie between Taylor Swift and Beyoncé,” said Keri Thompson, a Massachusetts delegate.

“How about together?” Raw Story asked.

“That would be even better,” Thompson said.

Keri Thompson and Leslie Templeton of the Massachusetts delegation. (Photo by Alexandria Jacobson/Raw Story)

Thompson theorized a Swift appearance could be within reach.

“We do have the wristbands that Taylor uses at her concerts. At least they’re using that idea,” Thompson said. “Taylor's still in London, but she’s almost done.”

Leslie Templeton, another Massachusetts delegate chimed in, “I would cry. I would cry for either, actually.”

If Madonna doesn’t show up, Davidson would be happy to see either Swift or Beyoncé.

Beth Davidson, New York delegate. (Photo by Alexandria Jacobson/Raw Story)

“They can't do a duet? I like them both for different reasons,” she said. “My daughter's a Swiftie, but I’m with Queen Bey.”

Gumbs would want to hear Beyoncé — specifically her song “Listen” — if given the choice between the two, as would Rios.

John Gumbs, Jr. of the U.S. Virgin Islands delegation. (Photo by Alexandria Jacobson/Raw Story)

“It's a powerful song, especially what's going on and being able to have our own voice,” Gumbs said. “We as Americans need to have our own voice and speak up and fight for what's right.”

Swift has not yet endorsed Harris although some experts predict it’s likely. She endorsed President Joe Biden in 2020.

Beyoncé has given a subtle endorsement to Harris by allowing her to use her song “Freedom” during her first visit to her campaign headquarters and in a campaign video.

Musical performances have long been features of national political conventions, and the Democrats’ 2024 affair — the first in-person convention in eight years — is no exception.

But there have already been hitches.

“Fire and Rain” singer-songwriter James Taylor was scheduled to perform Monday but got cut as speeches ran past midnight Eastern time. The Monday convention speeches started late in part due to pro-Palestine protesters tearing down security fencing, delaying buses carrying delegates.

Gumbs, for one, didn’t really care about Taylor — the older male one — getting scratched, but Martinez said she hoped the legendary performer would play on one of the convention’s final two days.

“Maybe he'll have an opportunity to come back,” Martinez said. “I grew up with James Taylor, so it would be neat, but I understand.”

Crystal Martinez, California delegate (Photo by Alexandria Jacobson/Raw Story)

Spokespeople for the Democratic National Convention did not immediately respond to questions from Raw Story about musical performances on Wednesday and Thursday.

'Great news!': Far-right Project 2025 overtakes Taylor Swift and NFL in Google searches

The world is more interested in Project 2025 than the NFL — and Taylor Swift. At least when it comes to Google searches.

That's according to Google Trends graphics making the rounds on social media that show rising interest when it comes to the GOP's plan to overhaul the federal government compared with the pop mega-superstar and America's most popular sport.

A graphic shared Tuesday evening by the pro-democracy group Resolute Square showed Project 2025 overtaking Swift in early July.

"Keep it up, America. The more people that learn about Trump's Authoritarian plan for America, the more Americans will show up at the polls to stop him.Real Patriots hate fascists! (& love Taylor too)," the group wrote on X.

And on Wednesday afternoon, MSNBC's "The Beat with Ari Melber" shared a graphic compiled by the Biden-Harris Campaign showing searches for Project 2025 overtook the NFL and Swift around the same time.

Since the debate, Biden has pushed for Americans to look closer at the coalition's plan, writing on X this week: "Google Project 2025." His campaign even created a website highlighting what it calls (in all caps) "Trump allies' 920 page plan to give Trump more power over your daily life, gut Democratic checks and balances, and consolidate power in the Oval Office."

The plan — cobbled together by numerous Trump allies, though he denied knowledge of its agenda — would dramatically expand presidential power and replace up to 50,000 government workers with Trump loyalists.

MAGA opponents cheered on social media that people seem to be taking an interest in the extreme plan.

Read also: Kamala Harris blasts Trump for Project 2025

"Good. About time," wrote @pbj6162.

"Project 2025: Let's make it the talk of the town until the elections are done. The future of our nation deserves more than a footnote," said @Nto79549105.

"Cook," wrote @JDCocchiarella.

"As they should!" said @randallrex Wednesdayy. "Everyone needs to know about #Project2025 and the dangers it brings to all Americans besides white Christian Nationalists!"

"Great news!! I bring it up to people all the time," said @TrvlinJunkie. "The majority haven’t even heard of it. I’m sharing whatever videos I come across on it and posting the searchable Project 2025 document itself."

'You aren't cool': Experts react to judge in Trump probes quoting Taylor Swift in opinion

A federal judge, who has been involved in former President Donald Trump's Jan. 6 Capitol election insurrection criminal case — took some creative license in his decision to nix a federal approval for Indiana's Medicaid expansion plan.

Chief Judge James "Jeb" Boasberg paraphrased pop phenom Taylor Swift's track "Exile" in the middle of his formal 66-page ruling.

"Because they’ve seen this film before (and they didn’t like the ending), Defendants seek to leave out the side door," reads the Memorandum Opinion.

The mention was cited at the bottom of the page to: "Taylor Swift, Exile, on Folklore (Republic Records 2020)."

The line harks directly to the lyrics of "Exile" that features the chorus: "I think I've seen this film before / And I didn't like the ending /I'm not your problem anymore / So who am I offending now? / You were my crown, now I'm in exile, seein' you out / I think I've seen this film before /So I'm leaving out the side door."

The judge challenged the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and its 2020 approval to grant waivers to Medicaid that was brought forward by former Gov. Mitch Daniels in 2007 and pushed even further by former Gov. Mike Pence.

Boasberg has been thrust in the thick of grand jury investigations dealing with trials of Capitol rioters and notably directed former Pence, who had served as Trump's vice president, to testify before a grand jury about his contacts with the 45th president in the days leading up to the "Stop the Steal" protest that exploded into a massive melee.

That testimony was preserved in a sealed proceeding.

POLITICO reporter Kyle Cheney admired the move, tweeting: "Judge Boasberg sneaks a Taylor Swift reference into a 66-page opinion overturning HHS' approval of Indiana's Medicaid waiver."

"Did not have Judge Boasberg pegged as a Swiftie," former prosecutor and MSNBC legal expert Joyce Vance responded.

This is not only disrespectful to litigants but it makes opinions harder to read," Constitutional attorney Anthony Michael Kreis wrote Thursday. "Stop it. You’re a judge. You aren’t cool. (Unless I know you personally.)"

'Ewwwww': Internet erupts after 'Trump gets weird' about Taylor Swift in interview

Many wish they could unhear former President Donald Trump, who just turned 78, gush about mega star Taylor Swift by involving the word "beautiful" five times.

Trump was captured in a new recording fawning over the 34-year-old Swift.

"Yeah, I think she's beautiful," he said in the recording played on CNN's "Out Front" with Erin Burnett. "Very beautiful. I find her very beautiful.

ALSO READ: Rep. Byron Donalds, his gigantic Jim Crow myth and a forgotten fact about Black voters

"I think she's liberal; she probably doesn't like Trump. But I hear she's very talented. But I think she's very I think she's very beautiful, actually. Unusually beautiful."

The recording was conducted by "Apprentice in Wonderland" author and Variety co-editor-in-chief Ramin Setoodeh.

The response to the physical looks of the musician who is nearly 50 years his junior had some convulsing.

Peter Henlein was disgusted by the remark, but then questioned whether it stood up to remarks the 45th president made about his grownup daughter Ivanka.

"Trump gets weird talking about Taylor Swift and how beautiful he thinks she is," according to his tweet. "But this is way less weird and creepy than when he talks about his own daughter. At least he doesn’t say he wants to f--- Taylor Swift."

His aides at one time accused Trump of marveling over "Ivanka’s breasts, her backside, and what it might be like to have sex with her, remarks that prompted [ex-aide John] Kelly to remind the president that Ivanka was his daughter,” Miles Taylor, a former chief of staff at the Department of Homeland Security, wrote in his book "Anonymous."

Legal expert Bradley Moss also was grossed out. "So cringe," he wrote on his Twitter/X account. "He’s giving me the ick."

"I didn’t have Trump crushing on Taylor Swift on my 2024 BINGO card," writes Crazy Fenaker.

@CatsforPeace2 tweeted: "He is so freaking creepy."

"He's a dirty old man," reads the response from @luckyblue2022. "The way he was talking about her was revolting."

@SherryRoush59 also felt sickened: "I needed a bleach shower after i first heard."

Perhaps it was Julie Zebrak who viscerally channeled what many couldn't in one word: "Ewwwww."

Watch below or click here.

A neuroscientist explains how Taylor Swift hijacks your brain and what it means for Trump

If you’re reading this, it is likely that Taylor Swift has hijacked your brain.

Don’t worry — you are not alone. Tens of millions of Americans have also recently had their cognitive system invaded by the same mental contagion. If you enjoy her music, this might be a pleasurable infection. If her tunes grate on your nerves, the constant activation of your Taylor Swift neurons could be a curse.

But your personal pleasure or suffering is not the only reason we should be interested in Taylor Swift’s global influence. Why? Because whether we realize it, her influence will likely play a significant role in the 2024 presidential election. America’s sweetheart, who is dating one of the biggest stars of football — a sport that commands the unwavering devotion of red America — will likely be supporting Democratic President Joe Biden rather than Republican Donald Trump.

ALSO READ: ‘Leave the drama to them:’ Mother of Lauren Boebert’s grandson speaks out

This undoubtedly has Trump sweating. Hours before the kickoff of Super Bowl LVIII, the former posted a message on his social media platform Truth Social, taking credit for a bill that he claims made Swift so much money and should cause her to be indebted to him. Trump also predicted there’s “no way” Swift “could endorse Crooked Joe Biden.”

Trump’s desperate plea makes it clear that Swift’s decision of who to endorse is a big deal. If Election 2024 is close, as expected, the Swifties of the United States could theoretically tip the scales.

The key to understanding Swift’s growing influence, from a scientific view, is understanding how she has become a meme, and one of unparalleled viral power.

In a world saturated with social media content and trends, the term "meme" has slipped into common vernacular, often evoking silly or clever images that have gone viral. But the original concept of a meme, as proposed by evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins, is a well-known scientific framework for understanding cultural phenomena, including the meteoric rise of Taylor Swift. Dawkins introduced the term in his 1976 book, The Selfish Gene, not to explain digital trends per se, but to describe a unit of cultural transmission.

ALSO READ: ‘Grab any cheerleaders?’ Fans decry Trump’s S.C. football appearance as a ‘terrible look’

A meme, in its original conception, is an idea, behavior, trend or philosophy that spreads from person to person within a culture. It is the cultural counterpart to the biological gene, often defined as a replicator of cultural information. Memetics, the mental counterpart to genetics, is the academic field that studies how memes propagate, evolve and affect societies.

Cultural transmission refers to the way in which information is passed along within a community, not through genetic inheritance but through communication and imitation. Every time a Taylor Swift song gets played on the radio, an Instagram reel, or sung by someone on the subway, the Swift meme is being propagated through our society.

Virality is a meme's ability to spread rapidly and widely from one individual to another, often through the internet. Adaptation, in memetics, involves a meme's change over time to fit its cultural environment better, enhancing its survival and propagation. Every time Swift’s cultural relevance begins to wane, she reinvents herself to adapt to a changing culture — and you can be sure her relationship with NFL star Travis Kelce was another way to do just that. This doesn’t mean the relationship isn’t genuine. It simply means that Swift’s decisions about her love life and her career cannot be disentangled from her role as a vehicle for cultural trends.

Lastly, social contagion is the phenomenon by which ideas and behaviors are transmitted through social networks, echoing the way diseases spread. Swift's ascent to stardom can be likened to the spread of a mental virus, an idea that found fertile ground in the hearts and minds of millions, then spreads and replicates easily.

The Swift meme thrives because it taps into universal themes — love, heartache, growth, resilience — while also embodying the specific zeitgeist of our times. For Swifties, it offers a mirror in which they see their own struggles and triumphs reflected. In this reflection, they find connection, and a sense of belonging to something larger than themselves. This is the essence of social contagion and why certain memes, like Swift's songs and persona, become embedded in the collective psyche.

Taylor Swift performs onstage during the iHeartRadio's Z100 Jingle Ball 2019 at Madison Square Garden on Dec. 13, 2019, in New York City. (Photo by Kevin Kane/WireImage)

Recently, though, the Swift meme has transcended Swifties and pierced the collective consciousness of America more generally, as can be seen by this data from Google trends that plots the popularity of her name since 2004. Notice the exponential growth that has occurred in just the last few months as she criss-crossed the world on her Eras Tour and cheered boyfriend Kelce during his months-long run to victory earlier this month in Super Bowl LVIII.

In the two weeks since the Super Bowl, a flurry of over-the-top articles have been published that demonstrate the shocking virulence of the Swift meme. In an article that appeared in The Sunday Times Magazine, an esteemed professor of literature argued that Taylor Swift should be taught alongside Shakespeare. The professor went as far as to say that attending a Swift concert had been “one of the best nights of [his] life.”

A New Yorker article called “Listening to Taylor Swift in Prison” was also recently published, with teaser text that says, “Her music makes me feel that I’m still part of the world I left behind.” What is interesting is not just the stories of grown men who have caught the Swift bug, but the media outlets that are all publishing Swift stories, which have been virtually all of them.

Of course, the article you are reading is also part of this phenomenon. I, too, have become a Swiftie, after falling in love with her most recent studio album in 2022, Midnights, which is far more mature than any of her previous releases both musically and lyrically. Though despite the fact that I’ve listened to it maybe 100 times, I still think teaching it alongside the Bard is pretty insane. That means the social contagion has only hijacked a limited region of my neural machinery. You can protect yourself against the Swift meme by simply avoiding her albums and any content about her.

But this is easier said than done.

And that brings us back to the 2024 election.

A legitimately big question for the future of the nation is, will Swift, the 2023 TIME Person of the Year, publicly endorse Biden, and if so, how much of her memetic influence will she use to see that her candidate wins? It is this question that our scientific analysis can help answer.

Since we’ve determined that her career and personal decisions are intimately intertwined, it is almost certain that she won’t endorse Trump, despite her popularity with red America and a viral video — it was a complete fabrication — of Swift supposedly holding a flag reading “Trump Won.” During the 2020 campaign, Swift was publicly critical of Trump and advocated that Americans vote him out of office.

At this point, she literally can’t without losing all her media support and becoming enemy number one of the left.

The articles from websites such as The New Yorker are memetic influences that effectively trap Taylor Swift in a blue bubble and ensure that she doesn’t flip on the powers that catalyzed her stardom.

But this doesn’t necessarily mean that Swift will publicly back Biden this year, even if she did in 2020. Biden's team, of course, is actively dreaming of the day Swift does.

It’ll be interesting to see just how political she dares to get as the election approaches. The safest route for the continued spread of the Swift meme is for her to lay low and not rock the political boat much. That’s the prediction that memetics makes, and this Swiftie is pretty confident that we can trust the science.

Bobby Azarian is a cognitive neuroscientist and the author of the book The Romance of Reality: How the Universe Organizes Itself to Create Life, Consciousness, and Cosmic Complexity. He is also a blogger for Psychology Today and the creator of the Substack Road to Omega. Follow him on X and Instagram @BobbyAzarian.