After studiously skirting political waters for years, Taylor Swift is basically doing the backstroke in the deep end: Her new music video released Monday puts LGBTQ rights center stage, with celebrations of gay culture and marriage — and claps back at the people who oppose them.
Swift’s “You Need to Calm Down” video concludes with an overtly political message asking her fans to sign a petition on Change.org that urges the Senate to pass the Equality Act, which would provide a national ban on discrimination based on sexual orientation. Swift first posted the petition on June 1, the start of Pride Month, and “Calm Down” helped boost interest. As of Monday afternoon, more than 217,000 people had signed on (including Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, who wrote on the petition page that he was “so grateful” to Swift for starting it).
Of course, since it’s Taylor Swift — she of dance-floor earworms and flossy, high-style videos — her dose of politics comes with more than a spoonful of sugar to make it go down easy. Joining her on the three-and-a-half-minute video are A-list gay icons including Ellen DeGeneres, RuPaul, Adam Lambert, Laverne Cox, Jesse Tyler Ferguson, and the cast of “Queer Eye.” And it wouldn’t be a Swift video without a reference to her personal life: The final image is of the singer (dressed as a carton of french fries), embracing fellow pop star Katy Perry (in a hamburger costume), a pairing that serves as a visual hatchet-burying with Perry, with whom she had publicly feuded.
There’s a shout out to same-sex marriage — and the gay rights organization that fought for it. “Why be mad?” Swift sings, as the camera pans to a wedding scene for Ferguson and his real-life husband, Justin Mikita. “When you could be GLAAD?