Taylor Swift Chooses Chaos
New York magazine
|October 20-November 2, 2025
The Life of a Showgirl may be her most polarizing album yet.
Craig Jenkins on Taylor Swift's The Life of a Showgirl ... Alison Willmore on If I Had Legs I'd Kick You... Nicholas Quah on The Chair Company.
ACROSS FIVE YEARS of tireless activity, Taylor Swift has repeatedly envisioned herself in the shoes of doomed women in history and literature. Last year’s The Tortured Poets Department, which recounted Swift's breakups with rocker Matty Healy and actor Joe Alwyn, disappeared into fantasy. She played a gun moll on the run; she was a diabolical mathematician. The pithy “Who's Afraid of Little Old Me?” suggested she'd rather keep to herself and terrify neighborhood children like To Kill a Mockingbird's Boo Radley than observe any cookie-cutter standards of living. But lately, she’s been getting her way: She bought the masters for her first six albums and bagged a football-player fiancé.
Yet Swift’s latest release, The Life of a Showgirl, her most combative work since 2017's Reputation, captures a millennial at the doorstep of traditional American family life with reservations about plunging into stability. Instead of focusing on the joys of cohabitation or an allergy to controversy, like Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco did in their album, Swift has chosen chaos. As she continues to work through residual resentments from last year, her lyrics often clash with the careful slickness of the production. She wants us to know she’s happy but also hated. Though Showgirl is more streamlined than Poets's exhaustive sprawl, it’s not entirely free from that album’s frustrating self-aggrandizement and headline-grabbing snark. Swift still feels a bit too in the comments section.
Opener and lead single “The Fate of Ophelia” tells of Swift’s relationship with NFL tight end Travis Kelce in storybook terms. Unlike the noblewoman in Shakespeare’s
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der October 20-November 2, 2025-Ausgabe von New York magazine.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON New York magazine
New York magazine
Will You Come and Get Me?'
The provocative festival hit The Voice of Hind Rajab reenacts the 5-year-old girl's call to emergency dispatchers in Gaza just before she was killed.
12 mins
December 15-28, 2025
New York magazine
The Eyes Wide Shut Conspiracy
Did Stanley Kubrick warn us about Jeffrey Epstein?
13 mins
December 15-28, 2025
New York magazine
He Just Got It
Robert A.M. Stern embraced New York as a collective project.
5 mins
December 15-28, 2025
New York magazine
REASONS TO LOVE NEW YORK (RIGHT NOW)
OUR 21ST ANNUAL REMINDER OF WHY WE WOULDN'T WANT TO LIVE ANYWHERE ELSE. RENT HIKES, RAT KINGS, AND ALL
7 mins
December 15-28, 2025
New York magazine
The Revenants
Marjorie Prime is a thoughtful, well-wrought play that's cool to the touch
4 mins
December 15-28, 2025
New York magazine
Solo Act
In Pluribus, Rhea Seehorn plays the loneliest woman in the world, a role that creator Vince Gilligan wrote just for her.
7 mins
December 15-28, 2025
New York magazine
The War on Everything Doctrine
Hegseth's deadly missile strikes mirror Trump's domestic priorities.
5 mins
December 15-28, 2025
New York magazine
Kumail Nanjiani Strikes Back
The stand-up manages to come across as relatable—even after years in Hollywood
5 mins
December 15-28, 2025
New York magazine
Where the Wild Chairs Are
A designer’s unconventional furniture upends his traditional prewar apartment.
2 mins
December 15-28, 2025
New York magazine
What We Give Our Children
THERE ARE INFINITE WAYS to delight a child with a gift-and as many ways to miss the mark. Seven Strategist staffers with kids of their own discussed the best presents for all types of little ones, from newborns to hard-to-please tweens, that won't end up in the regift pile.
3 mins
December 15-28, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

