Why Taylor Swift Getting Booed at the Super Bowl was Even More Chilling Than You Think - Donald Trump and his 'distinctly male' FootballGaters threaten to derail the new, inclusive NFL that Taylor and feminism are building. "(I, honestly, could have cared less about the actual game play from a journalistic standpoint)"

https://www.glamour.com/story/why-t...er-bowl-was-even-more-chilling-than-you-think
https://archive.is/95Vvy

Why Taylor Swift Getting Booed at the Super Bowl was Even More Chilling Than You Think

From my seat at Super Bowl LIX, the crowd’s disparate reactions to Swift and Trump felt like a chilling microcosm of our culture.
By Stephanie McNeal
February 10, 2025


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Since Donald Trump took office, there have been several times I felt chilled by the rapid increase in misogyny seeping in our culture. But watching Taylor Swift at Super Bowl LIX booed by a crowd of thousands on Sunday night was a new low.

It was just a football game, people might say. Or Swift— who is famously dating Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce—got heckled by some rowdy Eagles fans excited to be at the biggest sporting event of the year. So? Don’t take it so seriously.

But I was there at the game. When Swift’s face appeared on the Jumbotron, an almost instant—and distinctly male—dissent erupted from around me. Swift, of course, was there to support her boyfriend, and was far from the only celebrity in attendance. In fact, the screen showed a new famous person—from Paul McCartney to Anne Hathaway and Lady Gaga—nearly every time there was a break in the play with virtually no response from the crowd.

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Swift was different. As soon as she appeared on screen, the crowd seemed to delight in jeering and heckling her, and the mood shift was palpable. I watched in real time as Swift, alongside her friend Ice Spice, took in the response, her brow furrowing in confusion and then apparent discomfort.

Looking at the camera, she distinctly said, “What is going on?” And girl, same, because we were all wondering what the hell was happening.

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Perhaps the moment would have felt less visceral if not for the fact that less than an hour earlier the crowd had exploded—this time with applause—to see Trump on that same screen. As an image of the president, stonefaced and standing in a salute, was shown to the crowd during Jon Batiste’s national anthem performance, the roar of approval and cheers was deafening (of course, there were those in the crowd who booed the president and cheered for Swift as well, but from my vantage point, it was clear what the overall sentiment was).

To me, the disparate reactions felt like a message. That the Super Bowl, one of the biggest cultural events in the country, has been reclaimed by Trump and the type of toxic masculinity he appears to be the beacon of. And he and his supporters seem to be living for it.

Just look at the president’s response shortly after he left the game. Not only did he acknowledge that Swift was booed by the crowd, he delighted in it. As he had many, many times before (including saying he “hated” Swift after she endorsed his 2024 rival Kamala Harris) the president weaponized his massive following against her.

“The only one that had a tougher night than the Kansas City Chiefs was Taylor Swift," Trump the president wrote on Truth Social. "She got BOOED out of the Stadium. MAGA is very unforgiving!"

By calling her out, Trump looked to play by the now-standard internet misogyny playbook. It wasn’t enough that Swift was publicly mocked, now he needed to troll her about it, attempting to humiliate her even further. We all got normalized to this sort of conduct in 2016, when the president mocking his apparent enemies on Twitter became a near daily occurrence (surely he has something better to do, right?). But it's still worth calling out how gross—and frankly ridiculous—this sort of conduct is. And when the Twitter rant becomes real life, in the form of a stadium full of thousands and thousands of people, it's chilling. The online bullies of 2016 are now, in 2025, very real.

It’s important to place these two moments in the context in which they exist. Though there are nuances to both, Trump and Swift exemplify two factions of American culture currently struggling for dominance.

Ever since Swift started dating Kelce in 2023 and started coming to his NFL games, our cultural conversation around the sport has shifted radically. Suddenly, football—especially the Chiefs—was for the girls. Women’s interest in the sport skyrocketed, and a spokesperson for the NFL told me the league grew its following among women by 21% from 2023 to 2024. Women began to watch the game, follow the players and WAGs (sports content by women creators has grown 40% year on year, according to YouTube) and buy merch (you couldn’t walk through the street this weekend in New Orleans without being enticed to buy a “go Taylor’s boyfriend” or “in my Chiefs era” T-shirt).

According to Market Watch, Swift is estimated to have brought nearly $1 billion in brand value to the league since she started dating Kelce, and has elevated other women in the NFL in the process. As I wrote last year, interest in the wives and girlfriends of NFL players has also become a huge part of the sport (one which the league, by the way, enthusiastically embraces), and several WAGs like Chanen Johnson and Chariah Gordon have become bonafide internet stars. In fact, the entire reason I traveled to the Super Bowl in the first place was to cover the WAGs and Swift for Glamour and YouTube, from the game day fashion to the cultural moments during the game and the surrounding events (I, honestly, could have cared less about the actual game play from a journalistic standpoint).

Taylor Swift at Super Bowl LIX, therefore, is a representation of a new NFL—one that isn’t just for men. This NFL is one that’s about the entire experiences of the league, one that anyone can enjoy whether or not they care about the sport. In this new, inclusive NFL, both the men and the women by their side are the stars. Those interested in football and those interested in fashion can enjoy the league together. In this sense, Swift is a true NFL star—one that’s certainly worthy of being shown during the game.

Of course, there are those who hate this.

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When Swift was first being embraced by many in the NFL, a large and vocal contingent of the league’s (male) fans came out in fierce opposition. They complained online that Swift was “ruining football” and was a “distraction.” The backlash grew so big during Swift’s first season as a WAG in 2023 that the NFL put out a statement defending their choice to capitalize on the insanely good marketing opportunity of having one of the most famous women in the world at their events. I know, what a concept!

In the stands last night, though, it felt like the bros were winning. As they jeered and booed, I could hear the undercurrent of hatred and felt the real-life manifestation of the trolling I had previously only seen virtually. Trump is president, they seemed to say, and the era of inclusivity in the NFL is over. Swift, and all of us who have had fun watching her in her WAG era, need to be put in our place. It felt gross and mean. It also felt significant.

In an era where Trump is singlehandedly dismantling decades of diversity, equity, and inclusion that generations of women, people of color, and queer people have fought for, the Super Bowl felt like a microcosm of a larger problem. Not only does it feel like Trump and his ilk want Swift out of football, it’s like they want to return our entire country to a time when they were in control, had all the power, and could say whatever they wanted without repercussions.

And if it seems scary online, it’s even more chilling when you’re forced to confront it face to face.
 
And when the Twitter rant becomes real life, in the form of a stadium full of thousands and thousands of people, it's chilling.
Sort of like when the repeated words of journalist scum (but I repeat myself) demanding someone do anything to get rid of Trump become real life in the form of assassination attempts. Frankly I found that infinitely more chilling than some celebrity getting boo'd but I'd bet you won't spend a half second of introspection about your ties to that, journalist.
 
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I'm a Chiefs fan, and don't think we would be nearly this hated if this glorified cheerleader wasn't foisted upon us and the rest of the country.
Don’t lie, Chiefs have been getting hated ever since Mahomes started getting praised as greater than Brady and being shielded by refs. It’s the nature of being a dynasty.
 
None of these people give any more a shit about football than I do. This performative, machiavellian, faux-concern bullshit is the exact animating force behind the booing of that stupid bitch.
There's an entire paragraph devoted to this:

As I wrote last year, interest in the wives and girlfriends of NFL players has also become a huge part of the sport (one which the league, by the way, enthusiastically embraces), and several WAGs like Chanen Johnson and Chariah Gordon have become bonafide internet stars. In fact, the entire reason I traveled to the Super Bowl in the first place was to cover the WAGs and Swift for Glamour and YouTube, from the game day fashion to the cultural moments during the game and the surrounding events (I, honestly, could have cared less about the actual game play from a journalistic standpoint).​

They know they don't care about the sport, and they don't care. The "new NFL" is going to be centered around celebrity gossip, fashion, and glamorous relationships. Who needs football when you have 'ships?
 
Don’t lie, Chiefs have been getting hated ever since Mahomes started getting praised as greater than Brady and being shielded by refs. It’s the nature of being a dynasty.
I know, but Swifties exacerbate the hatedom.

How do you think I feel, having these twits jump on the bandwagon after decades of living in a city with lolcow sports teams? Where the hell were these "superfans" in the dark days of Brody Croyle and Tyler Thigpen?
 
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By calling her out, Trump looked to play by the now-standard internet misogyny playbook. It wasn’t enough that Swift was publicly mocked, now he needed to troll her about it
I love how they seethe about this so hard. It's what makes him so great, it's so funny how mad they get with a few words from Trump. They write entire articles to drive home the leftists' using too many words trope.

In an era where Trump is singlehandedly dismantling decades of diversity, equity, and inclusion that generations of women, people of color, and queer people have fought for, the Super Bowl felt like a microcosm of a larger problem. Not only does it feel like Trump and his ilk want Swift out of football, it’s like they want to return our entire country to a time when they were in control, had all the power, and could say whatever they wanted without repercussions.
I happen to know a trans man of color who hated Trump and Taylor Swift. They would have boo'd both of them, so this "only straight white guys who like Trump hate Taylor" thing is nonsense. Many more people hate Taylor swift than you realize.
 
As I wrote last year, interest in the wives and girlfriends of NFL players has also become a huge part of the sport
So basically, something that interests you, but not the core fandom has taken over the sport to the annoyance of the people who actually spend money on it, it being the essence of the thing that the WAGs are riding the coattails of, and you're aggrieved because they're not grateful to you for showing up?

Fuck you lady.
 
In addition to the problem that football is being flooded with "fans" who aren't actually fans of the sport itself, there's also the issue that the public has seen far too much of Taylor Swift over the years. Over-exposure is a thing, and people get fatigued by a given fad pretty quickly.
 
So basically, something that interests you, but not the core fandom has taken over the sport to the annoyance of the people who actually spend money on it, it being the essence of the thing that the WAGs are riding the coattails of, and you're aggrieved because they're not grateful to you for showing up?

Fuck you lady.
Even though the majority of football fans are men?

And the majority of men don't enjoy soap opera?

They must still silently and respectfully approve of the minority that don't!

Wh.... why are they not being silent and respectful? Must be misogyny!



And once again, the irresistible leftist urge to "reimagine" everything leads to confusion as to why people get upset when they walk into a furniture store and are offered fruit instead, and blame it on their tiny little brains being incapable of deep thinking, or the ethnicity of the shop owner.
 
Swift was different. As soon as she appeared on screen, the crowd seemed to delight in jeering and heckling her, and the mood shift was palpable. I watched in real time as Swift, alongside her friend Ice Spice, took in the response, her brow furrowing in confusion and then apparent discomfort.

Looking at the camera, she distinctly said, “What is going on?” And girl, same, because we were all wondering what the hell was happening.
Hey Tay, remember that time you let Ticketmaster rip off all of your fans? You think maybe that might have something to do with it? No, it must be muh soggy knees of course!

an almost instant—and distinctly male—dissent erupted from around me
At the bar I was sitting in, everybody booed her. The Philadelphia people didn't like her because they consider her a turncoat, and the KC people didn't like her because they consider her a carpetbagger.
 
Chanen Johnson
I've seen this skank pop up on Instagram. She looks like she's wearing a purge mask and her content sucks. It's all joking about leaving her husband due to something with his job. The comments all hate her.
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The dumb skank who wrote this greatly overvalues what the female audience brings to the NFL. Cope and seethe and OD on boxed wine bitch.
 
I love how they seethe about this so hard. It's what makes him so great, it's so funny how mad they get with a few words from Trump. They write entire articles to drive home the leftists' using too many words trope.


I happen to know a trans man of color who hated Trump and Taylor Swift. They would have boo'd both of them, so this "only straight white guys who like Trump hate Taylor" thing is nonsense. Many more people hate Taylor swift than you realize.
I know a blind autistic woman who hates her lmao
 
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