United States | Lexington

This is not a story about Taylor Swift and the Super Bowl

Well, maybe a little

An illustration of Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce surrounded by the press.
Illustration: KAL

This is not a column about Taylor Swift. It is possibly something more ridiculous, a column about all the columns about Taylor Swift. And yet attention must be paid, because so much attention is being paid. That is the ineluctable logic of the media-politics complex, a philosophical school of which Donald Trump is the American Aristotle. Ms Swift is no slouch, either.

Any news organisation would be deceiving readers about the reality of American life by ignoring the national convulsion over the relationship between Ms Swift and Travis Kelce, a tight end for the Kansas City Chiefs, an American-football team competing in the Super Bowl on February 11th. And yet any news organisation must also reckon with the complexity that this reality has its basis in unreality, not in fact-free lies about a stolen election but in fact-free speculation about whether the romance is a real love affair, or a cross-branding triumph by two marketing savants, or, darker yet, a “psychological operation” hatched by the Pentagon to re-elect President Joe Biden. (The Pentagon has denied this.)

Explore more

This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Love story”

Who is in control? Xi v the markets

From the February 10th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from United States

Are America’s leading presidential candidates up to it?

Americans are worryingly unconfident in the sanity of the two men

America is educating a nation of investors

Encouraged by research, more states are requiring schools to teach personal finance


Lauren Boebert’s primary is a window into everyday Trumpism

Republican primary voters’ favourite thing is anything that horrifies Democrats


More from United States

Are America’s leading presidential candidates up to it?

Americans are worryingly unconfident in the sanity of the two men

America is educating a nation of investors

Encouraged by research, more states are requiring schools to teach personal finance


Lauren Boebert’s primary is a window into everyday Trumpism

Republican primary voters’ favourite thing is anything that horrifies Democrats


Donald Trump has finally got it right about the January 6th insurrectionists

They were “warriors”—that’s the problem

New research exposes the role of women in America’s slave trade

In the bondage of others they saw their freedom