Recently, Taylor Swift sat down with Us Weeklyto share 25 things nobody knows about her. And in true Taylor Swift fashion, we learned almost nothing about her actual personality besides the fact that she might actually be a robot.
They range from weird:
16. I love sushi but I usually ask for soy paper instead of seaweed paper because once I ate actual seaweed at the beach as a child, and it left a lasting bad impression.
To very weird:
10. I can’t watch Pocahontas without crying.
To okay maybe Taylor’s kind of insane:
5. I talk to my mom on the phone roughly three times a day.
To wait, yeah she’s def insane:
20. When I was in high school, I used to give my friends Mace for their key chains so they could defend themselves if they needed to.
To nevermind, everything’s cool and Taylor is still totally sane:
22. I used to have a pug named Nelly. It was named that because I really liked the rapper Nelly. When I performed with Nelly on my tour, I did not tell him this.
Oh, Taylor. Keep being you, girl.
About The Author: Maria Pasquini
Maria Pasquini writes about celebrities and makes a lot of jokes. Hopefully you find some of them funny. Follow her on Instagram and Twitter.
Ten works, five of them new, make up the exhibition, including a large-scale installation measuring approximately 3 meters that can be walked through by the public. The Contempo Gallery presents the first solo exhibition by Sandra Lapage, titled “Cortejo de um cão da lua”, on view from June 20 to July 18 in São Paulo.
Born in Queimados, in Rio de Janeiro’s Baixada Fluminense region, LARINHX occupies a singular place in contemporary Brazilian music. A singer, songwriter, producer, and curator, she has built a career that moves across multiple creative fields, earning influence both behind the scenes and in the spotlight. Her name has become closely associated with projects and
Few groups in Brazil’s new music scene have managed to build such a distinctive identity as Os Garotin. Drawing from soul music, R&B, samba, and MPB (Brazilian Popular Music), the trio formed by Leo Guima, Anchietx, and Cupertino has found a language that feels both familiar and entirely new at the same time. After attracting
Clementaum belongs to a new generation of artists who understand the dancefloor as a form of spectacle. Blending music, performance, and image-making, her presence evokes the energy of a pop star while remaining deeply rooted in the club culture that shapes her identity. Through fast-paced beats, tribal percussion, ballroom references, and an aesthetic profoundly connected