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53 year-old male murderer listening to Taylor in prison since Red


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Posted

Not life in prison :deadbanana2: at least he's been enjoying constant Swift output :clap3:

 

I still remember Lover's release as it coincided with a huge shift in my life and CS being released this year as a single kinda made it come back full circle :clap3:

Posted

vigilante **** must set them off 

Posted
2 hours ago, Click Clack said:

monique-queens-of-comedy.gif

‘Don’t look at me, you got a murderer at home and everybody knows that’ :katie2:

Posted

The story was quiet emotional…

Posted
2 hours ago, liam13 said:

he committed murder way before becoming a swiftie tho :chick1:

How does that change anything. Still a murderer. I laughed at people hoping she meets him, like are some of you okay? 

Posted

Lam being a Fearless and Peak Now stan :clap3:

Posted

Preach Now stan, taste :clap3:

 

Innocent.mp3 :eli:

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Posted

RIP Ed Gein you would've loved Taylor Borderline Personality Swift :heart2:

Posted
18 minutes ago, Shelter said:

How does that change anything. Still a murderer. I laughed at people hoping she meets him, like are some of you okay? 

a swiftie becomes a murderer is different than a murderer becomes a swiftie after spending years in prison :coffee2: seriously

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Posted

Finally read through the whole piece :dies: at least he's eligible for parole next year after 20 years of incarceration. The way he glossed over folklore/evermore but he mentions champagne problems at the end.

Posted
3 hours ago, Shelter said:

How does that change anything. Still a murderer. I laughed at people hoping she meets him, like are some of you okay? 

This is a little above your pay grade in terms of emotional maturity, maybe sit this thread out. 
 

OT: very emotional and well written piece, thanks for sharing 

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Posted

Good for Taylor, I guess :clap3:

Posted

This was actually such an interesting read. Hoping the parole board Can truly sense if he’s rehabilitated next year and make the right call. 

Posted

The article is so good. 

Not only about the Taylor's parts but also about how the hell you gets to listen to music in prision.

 

I need to hear his opinion on reputation, folklore and evermore though.

Posted

Midnights being illegally smuggled into prisons:dies: Iconic.

 

Very emotional article.

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Posted

Good read :clap3:

Posted
On 9/2/2023 at 3:25 PM, Mean Trees said:

Nope. The preference for white aesthetic is global and goes beyond the white race. 

Did you even care to read the article before typing this nonsense? :lmao:

 

OT: The way she connects with people in a way very few artists in history have done it :clap3:

Posted

This article was phenomenal, my god. He delivered outstanding diction, prose, and a vivid, detailed emotional recount of his life.  It literally brought a tear to my eyes. The power of music isn’t spoken on enough. It gets you through some of the lowest moments of life. I’m very proud and happy he was able to share his story and I hope for his salvation from incarceration. The American prison system isn’t one of rehabilitation at all, and so I hope he’s also able to reintegrate into society comfortably. 

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Posted
Quote

Recently, she asked me, “If you could go anywhere, do anything, that first day out, what would you want us to go do?” That question keeps me up at night, too. 

We all know the answer is the Eras Tour

Posted (edited)
Quote

There was, in her voice, something intuitively pleasant and genuine and good, something that implies happiness or at least the possibility of happiness. When I listened to her music, I felt that I was still part of the world I had left behind.

This part right here is so valid. A lot of people focus on what they perceive as Taylor’s weaknesses (vocal capability, choreography, etc) without even attempting to understand her biggest strength: the joy and hope and strength that she exudes while writing from the heart. It takes courage to share your secrets and fears and desires to the public. She wears her heart on sleeve so proudly and declares her feelings unabashedly. Her songs are human emotion in its purest form. And that’s what connects a lot of us to her artistry and makes us such avid fans of her discography. 
 

Last Kiss is forever a reminder of my first heartbreak. It takes me back to the vulnerability of innocent, hopeful, and pure young love being crushed for the first time ever. State of Grace takes me back to my first year of high school, strutting confidently into the freshman wing as I entered the final phase of my teenage years.
 

These memories stay with me far beyond any of the sales or streams a lot of people think Swifties stan her for. She’s so much more than her success. She’s a reflection of our lives and our memories and our experiences, and the way we felt over the years as we grew into the people we are today. That kind of connection to an art form is basically unbreakable. It’s so valuable and meaningful to have. Very few other fanbases are lucky enough to have it.
 

Boy bands offen capture that same essence in a bottle for a brief period of time but they tend to just represent a fraction of their fans’ lives, typically the preteen-college stage. Taylor has basically been the narrator of a lot of her fans’ lives for close to 2 decades at this point.

Edited by WeFoundTrouble
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Posted

This part got me. :weeps:
 

Quote

I’m fifty-three, and I’ll get my first chance at release in 2024. I couldn’t help but think of “Daylight” again. “I’ve been sleeping so long in a twenty-year darknight,” Swift sings. “And now I see daylight.”

 

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Posted (edited)

I ain’t reading a write up by a murderer who stans Loser.

 

 

Edited by Taylor fanboy
Posted (edited)
On 9/4/2023 at 6:25 PM, WeFoundTrouble said:

This article was phenomenal, my god. He delivered outstanding diction, prose, and a vivid, detailed emotional recount of his life.  It literally brought a tear to my eyes. The power of music isn’t spoken on enough. 

Yeah, it looks like it was a written by someone with a Master's or PhD degree that works for New Yorker magazine. 

Edited by Aristotle
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Posted
16 hours ago, Bloo said:

This part got me. :weeps:
 

 

 

4 minutes ago, Aristotle said:

Yeah, it looks like it was a written by someone with a Master's or PhD degree that works for New Yorker magazine. 

I’m gonna read it again :chick3: It was so inspiring 

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