Taylor Swift has been sorted into Slytherin,mayline monrroe the erotice review and she's bringing a new banger to their house parties.
If the snake videos weren't enough of a clue, Taylor's enemies have driven her to a poisonous place -- or so she'd have us believe. "Bad Blood" will go down as a bratty tiff compared to "Look What You Made Me Do," a message from the all-new Taylor Swift, a first offering from Reputationthat's dripping with lethal venom.
"I'm sorry, the old Taylor can't come to the phone right now," she sarcastically snarls during the break. "Why? Oh! 'Cause she's dead!"
RIP sunny, lovelorn Taylor. Long live dark, vengeful Taylor.
May she forever reign in terror.
SEE ALSO: You'll never guess how many times 'Taylor Swift' appears on the 'Reputation' coverIf this first single in three years is to be believed, Swift has been progressively provoked from shaking it off to lashing out -- a pivot to villainess that we we've been rooting for, because frankly, it's about time she showed her true self.
And like that other slinky, scaly anthem it evokes -- Britney Spears' "I'm a Slave 4 U," she's not trying to hide it -- "Look What You Made Me Do" is complete with forked tongue. It starts right from the first verse: "I don't like your little games," Taylor softly hisses after a creepy strings-and-plinky-piano intro, ending it with "No, I don't like you."
For all of those who believe that Taylor's real life spills into her lyrics, well -- have fun fan-theorizing this one:
I don't like your perfect crime
How you laugh when you lie
You said the gun was mine. Isn't cool
If it wasn't for that cryptic gun reference, we might think "Look What You Made Me Do" is a string of Game of Thronesreferences. Hard not to think here of Arya Stark's current vengeance tour as the rest of the song plays out, starting here:
But I got smarter I got harder in the nick of timeHoney I rose up from the dead I do it all the timeI got a list of names and yours is red underlined
Phew. The last time Taylor told us about her list, she was going to write our name into a blank space on it. Now she's looking to cross it off.
And then there's the constant refrain of "Oo, look what you made me do," words that ooze with the unhinged logic of a deranged killer in a Tarantino movie. This isn't an emotional outburst or wistful "Say you'll remember me"; this is Taylor looking at the wreckage of a vindication, a stinging fait accompli of vengeance.
And calling it your fault.
The world moves on another day another drama drama But not for me not for me all I think about is karma And then the world moves but one thing's for sureMaybe I got mine but you'll all get yours
And so let the speculation begin: Who, in her life, is getting theirs?
Is it Katy Perry, whose Swish Swishvideo dropped (and dropped, and dropped) this very morning? That is some instant karma indeed, and just the kind of calculation we've come to expect from Taylor. Too good to be coincidence.
What about Tom Hiddleston? Ha! That just seems silly. He's too sweet for Taylor's malevolence games; but rumors have certainly flown, and will fly again when we get the rest of this record. And just how long is that enemies list, anyway? Who's on there that we don't know about?
Whoever they are, they're scared now.
It's hard to imagine anyone could sustain this kind of bile for an entire sequence -- they're called diss tracks, not diss albums, after all -- but if Swift is going this serpentine at with her first single, it's not hard to imagine Reputationslithering from head to tail when it comes out Nov. 10.
Don't make any sudden moves, wear heavy boots.
Topics Game Of Thrones Music Celebrities
Sharp's AQUOS R2 Compact boasts two notches, if you can't get enoughCritics slam Amazon's HQ2 deal as 'corporate welfare'Instagram adds new shopping features to make it even easier to buy stuffA dad let his daughter bite a deer heart and some people are madOpen letter to Facebook asks for 'antiEvil genius dubs Alex Jones' voice into 'Detective Pikachu' trailerPeople think this makeup brand's tweet makes fun of something harmfulCat is determined to relax despite tooThese women are challenging sexist dictionary sentence examples on GoogleNetflix has a cool easter egg to salute Marvel great Stan Lee10 books by women who are changing the worldFarage showed up at a Trump rally and people wondered who he wasSamsung's next flagship might have a new AI chip, 8K video recordingObama lost in virtual reality prompts hilarious Photoshop battleThese women are challenging sexist dictionary sentence examples on GoogleReclaiming our Mohawk heritage, one appBailey the dog has the dream job of scaring away seagullsNEXT is an exhibit featuring the world's most diverse gamesMark Zuckerberg: It's 'untrue' Facebook hindered Russia investigationFarage showed up at a Trump rally and people wondered who he was The Sixties Diaries by Ted Berrigan Cooking with Cyrano de Bergerac by Valerie Stivers A Laborer Called a Writer: On Leonard Cohen by Carina del Valle Schorske At the Joan Didion Estate Sale by Sophie Haigney Find My Friends by Sophie Haigney The Review’s Review: Real Housewives Edition by The Paris Review Barry Lopez's Darkness and Light by Sierra Crane Murdoch Emma Cline, Dan Bevacqua, and Robert Glück Recommend by The Paris Review Diary, 1995 by Melissa Febos Why Write? by Elisa Gabbert The Ritz of the Bayou: Nancy Lemann’s Shabby In Occupied Cities, Time Doesn’t Exist: Conversations with Bucha Writers by Ilya Kaminsky Odysseus’s Kinesphere by Annie Ghosts, the Grateful Dead, and Earth Room by The Paris Review Mountains Hidden by Clouds: A Conversation with Anuradha Roy by Pankaj Mishra Diary, 2001 by Nell Zink Diary, 2011 by Andrew Martin Diary, 1988 by Elif Batuman Deep Emotion, Plain Speech: Camus’s The Plague by Laura Marris E. E. Cummings and Krazy Kat by Amber Medland
2.1975s , 8287.2109375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【mayline monrroe the erotice review】,Inspiration Information Network