Even when Taylor Swift is winning, her fans think she's losing
Swifties started conspiracies and a #RespectTaylorSwift campaign based on a minor amount of negative feedback

Taylor Swift is the biggest star in the world, and The Tortured Poets Department is, so far, the biggest album of the year. Those facts can be proven in numerical terms: the record-breaking tour, the record-breaking concert film, the record-breaking vinyl sales, the record-breaking streaming numbers. But feelings, to flip a phrase from professional conservative complainer Ben Shapiro, don’t care about facts. Though Swift is indisputably on top, her fans still feel the need to protect Swift from perceived slights and imagined industry sabotage. The days following the release of TTPD have been marked by fans’ conspiracy theories and a demand, trending on Twitter on Tuesday, to #RespectTaylorSwift.
Within less than a week of TTPD’s release, a growing number of online Swifties have begun proliferating conspiracy theories regarding what one fan described as a “full on media takedown attempt.” The reviews for the album are largely mixed-to-positive, but it’s the “mixed” these fans can’t seem to get over, nor the fact that many of the critical reviews highlighted the same issues: Swift’s hyper-productivity impacting quality, the overlong double record needing editing, the production motifs becoming repetitive, among others. “Something is fishy about the critics being too harsh to TTPD. Scores being changed, the album split into two, using [Twitter] arguments… This is not just them being unprofessional and bitter towards Taylor I bet someone behind the scenes is pushing this…” one fan posted on Twitter/X. Another wrote, “taylor has literally [alienated] the industry due to her tremendous success. but you can’t tell me this hate train isn’t calculated. there’s behind the scene PR running to defame her. luckily, she’s too strong to fail this time and that’s what they can’t digest.” These two tweets have over 20,000 likes and thousands of shares combined.
The Swifties have “evidence,” such as it is, to support their otherwise baseless claims. For instance, some noticed that Genius Lyrics seemed to have subtracted a number of views from the TTPD song pages after the initial release. Never mind that this is not a metric of success anyone else is tracking or paying attention to; never mind that Genius’s own social media posted in celebration that Swift held the top 10 positions in its “Songs of the Week” chart. Elsewhere, Swifties were suspicious that TTPD’s Metacritic score was split into two albums (the original and The Anthology). Further, they took issue that her score was impacted by three different reviews from Sputnikmusic (On Sputnik, multiple staff members and users can review the same album). The outcry overshadowed the fact that the double album’s Metacritic scores were “generally favorable” at 77 and 69.